First the latest edition of Third went up yesterday and here's who worked on it along with Dallas:
The Third Estate Sunday Review's Jim, Dona, Ty, Jess and Ava,
Rebecca of Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude,
Betty of Thomas Friedman Is a Great Man,
C.I. of The Common Ills and The Third Estate Sunday Review,
Kat of Kat's Korner (of The Common Ills),
Mike of Mikey Likes It!,
Elaine of Like Maria Said Paz),
Cedric of Cedric's Big Mix,
Ruth of Ruth's Report,
Wally of The Daily Jot,
Trina of Trina's Kitchen,
Marcia of SICKOFITRDLZ,
Stan of Oh Boy It Never Ends,
Isaiah of The World Today Just Nuts,
and Ann of Ann's Mega Dub.
And here's what we came up with:
- Truest statement of the week
- Truest statement of the week II
- A note to our readers
- Editorial: We support Barack Obama . . .
- TV: The continued demise of the media
- Roundtable
- Truest online exchange of the week
- Book Excerpt: Hilary Rosen to the rescue!
- Crapapedia
- We do not embrace sexism (Marcia, Ann, Ava, C.I.)
- Life without water in New York City's towers (WW)
- Highlights
Now for TV. Fringe. Fox, Friday nights. And I cover streaming, so we are one week behind the airing. This one was about the bullet that saved the earth.
Etta had a necklace. They melted it down the episode before for the laser Walter made. So Peter wants to get her a new chain. Attached to the necklace is a bullet.
So Peter goes into a pawn shop to get a chain. And suddenly, as he's about to buy it, a Watcher is behind him. "Why are you thinking about baseball?" the Watcher asks as he tries to read Peter's brain. Then the Watcher says Peter doesn't want his brain read. Then the Wacher's even more suspicious so Peter has to run.
They go after him but he magnages to escape in the sewer. They toss a bomb down. It means he's knocked out but he is alive. The next day, he gives Etta the chain.
And she explains to Olivia that she found the bullet on the necklace at their old house. She had to visit the old house. She offers it back to Olivia. Olivia tells her to keep it.
I think the bullet is from Olivia. When Walter shot her in the head at the end of last season to save the earth, remember? So she died, ending Billy's plan to use her powers and then, right after, Walter extracted the bullet and Olivia's body was able to re-generate.
So anyway, the Watcher is examining a rebel who has passed as a Loyalist. And the guy is able to semi-block the probing.
Which leads the Watcher to wonder if others can as well. And he looks at the one way mirror when he says it, knowing that Broyles is watching the interrogation.
He then talks to Broyles who takes the buckle off his belt before the Watcher walks in.
He did find out something form the man, the Watcher says. They're using the Harvard lab.
Etta gets a text. The Watchers are coming, they have to leave. Walter decides to amber the lab to make it look like no one was there.
They manage to escape and are under a bridge when Peter or Olivia says they need to move but Etta says they're waiting for someone.
It's Broyles. When he met Etta, she gave him hope and that's when he went over to the rebel side. Petere's been wishing Etta would teach him to block out the Watchers. He asks Broyles how long it took for Etta to teach him?
Are you seeing where this is going?
Watcher shows up, he's shot, more follow. It finally comes down to Olivia, Walter, Etta and Peter trapped in a warehouse. Etta saves Walter but ends up shot. They double back, Olivia and Peter and get to tell her good-bye before she dies. Then they have to leave. They take the necklace with them.
And The Watcher's looking for them and tells the others that they will go back to Etta: For love.
They arrive but no one's there but Etta now dead. The Watcher, however, notices her necklace is now gone. They were here. Then he notes the explosive they left.
I believe the Watcher managed to transform out of there before the explosion but the Loyalists (humans who fight with the oppressors) were not so lucky and died.
It was a pretty good episode. I'd heard online there was a big death and was expecting Astrid. It was Etta and she's Peter and Olivia's daughter so it means something but I wasn't all torn up. Were you? Astrid's death would have been a big to do. She's a great character.
Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
| 
Monday,
 November 5, 2012.  Chaos and violence continue, the US gears up for 
Tuesday's elections, the issue of the Kurds gets some serious attention,
 the political crisis continues, and more.  
As last month drew to a close, the US Dept of Veterans Affairs announced
 that the home loan program which was created as part of the GI Bill of 
Rights back in 1944 had awarded its 20 millionth home loan.  The VA's 
Undersecretary For Benefits Allison Hickey declared, "The 20 millionth 
VA home loan is a major milestone and is a testament to VA's commitment 
to support and enhance the lives of Veterans, Servicemembers, their 
families and survivors.  As a result of their service and sacrifice, as a
 group, they prove to be disciplined, reliable, and honorable -- traits 
that are ideal for this kind of national investment."  The VA has a history page on the GI Bill of Rights of 1944 which opens: 
It
 has been heralded as one of the most significant pieces of legislation 
ever produced by the federal government -- one that impacted the United 
States socially, economically and politically. But it almost never came 
to pass. 
The Servicemen's Readjustment Act 
of 1944 -- commonly known as the GI Bill of Rights -- nearly stalled in 
Congress as members of the House and Senate debated provisions of the 
controversial bill. 
Some shunned the idea 
of paying unemployed veterans $20 a week because they thought it 
diminished their incentive to look for work. Others questioned the 
concept of sending battle-hardened veterans to colleges and 
universities, a privilege then reserved for the rich. 
Despite their differences, all agreed something must be done to help veterans assimilate into civilian life. 
Much
 of the urgency stemmed from a desire to avoid the missteps following 
World War I, when discharged veterans got little more than a $60 
allowance and a train ticket home. 
Veterans of today's wars also have The Post 9/11 GI Bill.
 ("The Post-9/11 GI Bill provides financial support for education and 
housing to individuals with at least 90 days of aggregate service after 
September 10, 2001, or individuals discharged with a service-connected 
disability after 30 days. You must have received an honorable discharge 
to be eligible for the Post-9/11 GI Bill.")  Many of the leaders on the 
Post 9-11 GI BIll are no longer in the House -- the 2010 midterms saw a 
number of them lose their seats.  It's another election year.  Voting in
 the US is done on Tuesday.  IAVA's Paul Rieckhoff (Daily   Beast) looks at what the Barack Obama and Mitt Romney campaigns have addressed or haven't addressed in their campaigns: 
Eleven
 years ago in October, American military forces launched a war in 
Afghanistan that's still raging today. One would think that the war and 
the postwar care for the veterans that fought in Afghanistan and Iraq 
would be a crucial part of the 2012 presidential campaign, but that 
hasn't been the case. 
In stump speeches and
 campaign pit stops across the country, President Obama and Governor 
Romney have made cursory references to veterans' care and benefits, but 
offered little in the way of specifics. And in the debates, the 
candidates spent more time talking about Big Bird than they did vets' 
policy. ObamaCare versus "Obama Cares" and "Romnesia" are funny, but 
also a sad commentary on the state of our political discourse. The Main 
Streets in countless American towns and cities are pushed aside for 
carefully crafted PR zingers. 
But whoever 
wins on Tuesday, America's 2.5 million post-9/11 veterans -- more than 
60,000 in Ohio alone -- will be looking to the president to address the 
education, housing, employment, and health-care challenges they face 
every day -- and to do so substantively, the same way they have tackled 
the fallout from Hurricane Sandy. Just because the war in Afghanistan 
will end someday doesn't mean it already has, nor does it mean that the 
effects of it are going away anytime soon. Quite the contrary, in fact. 
I
 have friends in IAVA but I'm not a fan of Paul's.  That's long 
established here.  So hopefully when I now say that he has written a 
very important column, it means something if even one of his detractors,
 like myself,  praise it.   
I can't praise 
Barack's lie that he ended the Iraq War, a lie he makes while also 
negotiating with Nouri al-Maliki to send more US troops back into Iraq. 
 As Tim Arango (New York Times) reported
 at the end of September, "Iraq and the United States are negotiating an
 agreement that could result in the return of small units of American 
soldiers to Iraq on training missions.  At the request of the Iraqi 
government, according to General Caslen, a unit of Army Special 
Operations soldiers was recently deployed to Iraq to advise on 
counterterrorism and help with intelligence."    Kevin Gosztola (FireDogLake)   notes: 
Each paper praised Obama for ending the Iraq War. The Chicago Tribune suggested,
 "He set and stuck to a withdrawal schedule for U.S. troops in Iraq." 
Actually, in 2008, George W. Bush negotiated the withdrawal schedule. It
 also must be noted
 the Pentagon wanted to keep 10,000 to 20,000 troops in Iraq as 
"trainers" and "anti-terrorism forces. They lowered the figure to around
 3,000. The Pentagon, along with the Obama administration pressed for 
immunity for any US troops that would remain in the country. That was 
met with opposition and, when immunity could not be ensured, the 
withdrawal officially began. The US presence did not completely end though. According to the State Department, 16,000 to 17,000 US personnel would remain in the country along with about 5,500 military contractors. The US occupation would also leave behind the world's largest embassy in Baghdad. 
How did Obama mark the end of the war? Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick in their book, The Untold History of the United States, gave it proper treatment: 
 
Voices for Creative Nonviolence's Cathy Breen (OpEdNews) is on the ground in Iraq.  Does it sound like the war ended: 
If
 anyone thinks that the war is over in Iraq, I have only to open my "At a
 Glance" calendar where I have tried to note the number of Iraqi 
casualties each day over the last nine plus years: deaths due to 
explosions, bombs, assassinations. Just a few randomly selected numbers 
from 2012 (these are the number of dead, the number of wounded is of 
course much greater). 63, 54, 78, 97, 28, 36, 105, 24, 41, 115 ... the 
list goes on and on.  
One
 of my hopes on this trip is to visit Iraqi families who have had to 
return from Syria. Having fled the violence in Iraq, they came to Syria 
where I met them as refugees. Now they are threatened once again, and 
there are no countries willing to take them. Many have returned to Iraq,
 and we are anxious to know how they are doing.    
While
 some deserve praise, some don't.  Such as a spinner spinning online in 
an attempt to bully/trick people into voting for Barack.  First, you 
would have been ripped apart in an undergrad poli sci class for your 
gross ignorance -- forget an advanced class.  No, we don't have
 to vote.  Voting is a right in the United Staes.  So is owning a gun.  I
 don't own a gun.  Second,  Ralph Nader did work in 2000 regarding party
 building and ballot access.  After that?   He continued to do strong 
work on ballot access in terms of raising awareness.  As for helping to 
build the Green Party?  The reality that the Green Party was 
'conflcited' (co-opted) is why he didn't run with them in 2004 or 2008. 
 Distortions of Nader only reveal your sublime ignorance.  In the 
future, stick to horse race 'coverage' because your tired little mind 
might be able to handle that.    As for the accusation that the Greens 
only show up at election time?  First,  isn't that the only time the 
Democrats and Republicans remember that there are voters out there?  
Second, your ignorance of what takes places in the fifty states is 
exceeded only by your ego assuming you could absorb that information 
even if the media bothered to cover it.  The Michigan Green Party,
 to name but one state, never stops working.    From your computer 
screen, you may think you see the world.  But being aware of what's 
happening on the ground would require you traveling to many states -- 
something I've done repeatedly since the month before the Iraq War 
started. 
Next topic on the elections: Barack 
Obama supporters better get outraged.  Republicans vote.  I'm sorry if 
that's upsetting news to anyone.  I've done every task in the world on 
campaigns during my lifetime and that includes getting out the vote on 
election day.  I've driven seniors to polls, you name it.  I live in a 
state that has gone Democratic in the last five elections.  We also are 
still voting -- due to the time difference -- when most states have 
stopped.  Regardless of what the prediction or, yes, 'call' is, 
Republcians still show up to vote in those last hours.  Many Democrats 
don't.  Point being, this nonsense of "Barack's going to win!"  It's 
hurting Barack and anyone who tells you otherwise doesn't live in the 
PST time zone which regularly sees how this sort of 'the winner's known'
 talk effects turnout.  It may hurt him just a little, it may hurt him a
 lot.  But you   should be demanding that media stop saying he or anyone
 has won. 
Democrats are more likely to be 
working class and they're more likely to have obstacles to voting.  You 
start saying that Barack's won, your hurting his turnout and you're 
hurting the Democratic Party turnout.  Not just in the PST states, but 
in all the states.  Encouraging people not to vote -- calling the election the day before the vote is encouraging people not to vote
 -- can also hurt Senate races, House races and state and municipal 
races.  People are busy enough as it is, don't give those who want to 
vote but are buy a reason not to.  (And I'd make this point if Mitt 
Romney were the one the press was saying would win Tuesday.  Although 
I'd be less concerned about turnout being depressed as a result because,
 again, Republicans vote regardless.  CBS could call it for Barack at 
7:30 PM EST tomorrow and Republicans on the West Coast would still show 
up at the polls.) 
Howard Kurtz (Daily Beast) observes
 a Barack defeat "will also be a crushing blow for the punditocracy that
 headed into Election Day filled with confidence that Obama had it in 
the bag." Liz Marlantes (Christian Science Monitor) tries to provide caution and that's appreciated but she also reveals a knowledge gap: 
In
 addition, the growing prevalence of early voting has provided analysts 
with a more concrete metric – allowing prognosticators to base their 
assumptions not only on what polls suggest will happen on Election Day, 
but also on what early voting patterns suggest has already happened. 
English
 lit is not poli sci.  Maybe people who didn't study poli sci shouldn't 
be presenting as 'experts.'  Liz's comment above? You have nothing to 
base a conclusion on.  The votes have not been counted.  Not even the 
early votes.  Not the mail-in votes.  Not the votes that will be cast on
 Tuesday.  You have nothing.  You don't have early prognostics. 
You
 have polling which can be an indication.  Provided the pollsters are 
doing their job correctly and provided that people aren't pissed off at 
the pollsters.  Meaning when someone says, "I'm doing a poll . . .," 
respondents aren't thinking, "I hate that polling firm/outlet, I'm going
 to f**k with this man/woman and lie about my vote." 
Predictions
 don't win elections, votes do.  Nate Silver and the rest have already 
destroyed whatever was left of campaign reporting because the coverage 
is even less about issues.  (In the film, Network, these 
worthless types were represented by the character Sybil the Soothsayer. 
 Remember when so many on the left couldn't stop citing Network 
and insisting we heed its cautionary tales?)   Now they're taking over 
the last hours of the election as well.  Supporters of the nonsense Nate
 does like to claim, "Well sports . . ."  Correct me if I'm wrong (and I
 may be, I don't follow sports) but predicting a winner in sports is 
based upon using their past performance in that season.  There has been 
no 'win' in a general election this year that you can base another one 
on.  Tomorrow is the contest. 
I don't care who
 you vote for.  If you choose not to vote in a race or not to vote in 
all races because you make that decision, that's your choice and be 
happy with it.  (I will not be voting in the presidential race, no 
candidate earned my vote.  I will be voting in other races)  But I do 
care that whomever is elected is elected by the people and not by the 
media.  The media overwhelmingly wants Barack to win.  That's been 
obvious for some time.  But preening and strutting before an election 
may not bring about their desired result.  
Trusting
 the media worked out real well in 2000, didn't it?  And it worked out 
real well with the Iraq War, too, right?  (Wrong in both cases.)  Do you
 really want to be a Quil Lawrence?  March 7, 2010, Iraq held 
parliamentary elections.  March 8th, Quil did what?  Before votes were counted, Quil was on NPR's Morning Edition telling Steve Inskeep
 that Nouri did "very well."  Maybe Barack will do "very well," too?  
"Very well," when the ballots were actually counted and Quil Lawrence 
had left the region and moved on to another story, translated as: 
Nouri's State of Law came in second to Iraqiya.  Second place isn't 
winning in an election. The political crisis continues in Iraq, not a surprise when the White House spat on the Iraqi Constitution and the will of the people to back second place Nouri over first place winner Iraqiya. All Iraq News reports MP Mohammed Jaafar al-Sadr is calling for Iraqi President Jalal Talabani to accelerate the resolution attempts. But what can be done? Saturday Ayad al-Tamimi (Al Mada) reported that negotiations had stalled as a result of disagreements with the National Alliance -- specifcially within the 'Reform Commission.' To avoid a National Conference, Nouri stalled and road blocked and then finally, in late spring, insisted what was needed was a Reform Commission. That turned out to be a paper. And all this time, Nouri and company have led people to believe that there was a paper. Turns out the paper has yet to be written but there are 'intentions' to write it, al-Tamimi notes. Yesterday, Wael Grace (Al Mada) reported a Kurdistan Alliance MP was stating State of Law (Nouri al-Maliki's political slate) was attempting to prevent a National Conference to resolve the political crisis. That seems plausible since Nouri's been attempting to do that since Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi and Jalal Talabani first began calling for one nearly a year ago (December 21st). The Tigris Operation continues with no US coverage. This is seen as yet another power grab by Nouri. Nouri is sending in military under his command to disputed Kirkuk. This has long been protected by the Peshmerga (Kurdish forces). Nouri has refused to implement Article 140 of the Constitution (hold a census and referendum) on Kirkuk to resolve the dispute and his decision to send in security forces is seen as laying the ground work for his ignoring the Constitution and just declaring Kirkuk to be part of the Baghdad-based government and not part of the Kurdistan Regional Government. (Kirkuk is oil rich.) Alsumaria reports that the Salahuddin Province's Student Council has called for Nouri to cancel the operation. Al Mada reports that Kurdistan Alliance MP Chuan Mohammed Taha has called out the operation and states that Nouri has gone beyond any powers listed in the Constitution. The RAND Corporation's Larry Hanauer examines the Kirkuk issue here. The power grabs never stop with Nouri. Last month, he fired the Governor of the Central Bank (despite not having the authority to do that) and declared him a criminal (thereby running him out of the country). Sinan al-Shabibi had been the Governor of the Central Bank since 2003. In fact, he's still listed as such on the Central Bank's website whic notes: Awards
 Career
 
How did such an applauded figure end up up charged with crimes?  Dropping back to October 21st,
 " In other scandals, Nouri fired Sinan al-Shabibi as Governor of the 
Central Bank (despite Article 103 of the Constitution making clear that 
he doesn't have that right -- Parliament does).  Since then a warrant's 
been put out for al-Shabibi who is said to be in Europe.  An unnamed MP tells Al Mada
 that Nouri fired al-Shabibi because the man refused to loan Nouri   $63
 billion that Nouri said was for the government's budget.  Al Mada notes
 that Moqtada al-Sadr is calling out Nouri's attempts to politicize the 
Central Bank and he also asks where is the reform that Nouri promised in
 early 2011?"  Shortly afterward,  Prashant Rao (AFP) reported,
 "The targeting of Iraq's well-respected central bank chief appears to 
be a move by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki to consolidate power and 
sends a bad message to international investors, experts and   diplomats 
say."  Long time Iraq observer Joost Hiltermann of the International 
Crisis Group told Rao, "The Maliki government will claim it (the move 
against Shabibi) is part of long-standing efforts to root out 
corruption.  It looks more like a long-standing effort to gain control 
over independent institutions." 
But
 that's really more what happened.  The how he ended up charged goes 
back further.  Back to the days when Nouri was having the then-head of 
Iraq's Electoral Commission arrested because he wanted to take over that
 independent body.  At the same time, he was attempting to take over 
Iraq's Central Bank, insisting it must come under his authority -- he 
targeted all the independent institutions in his attempted power 
grab.   Fear of the Arab Spring spreading into Iraq prevented Nouri from
 following up on that desire.  Now he's gone in the back door.  Mohammad Sabah (Al Mada) reports
 Nouri is accused of attempting to stack the Central bank with Dawa 
personnel in order to control it.  (Dawa is Nouri's political party, 
State of Law is his political slate.)  
Violence continues in Iraq and is encouraged by Nouri's repeated targeting of political rivals and non-stop mass arrests.   All Iraq News reports a Baghdad car bombing near a mosque has resulted in 1 death and six people being left injured.  In an update, they note the death toll has risen to 3 with eight injured. Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reports a Taji car bombing claimed 1 life and left seven people   injured. 
In addition, Alsumaria reports
 that Turkish war planes bombed erbil Sunday night  for approximately 
one hour, setting at least one section of a forest on fire.  Hurriyet Daily News adds
 that the latest attacks, beginning Saturday night, are taking place 
under the name "Panther Operation" and that Saturday's assault lasted 
two hours.  They are targeting the PKK.  Aaron Hess (International Socialist Review) described the PKK in 2008,
 "The PKK emerged in 1984 as a major force in response to Turkey's 
oppression of its Kurdish population. Since the late 1970s, Turkey has 
waged a relentless war of attrition that has killed tens of thousands of
 Kurds and driven millions from their homes. The Kurds are the world's 
largest stateless population -- whose main population concentration 
straddles Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria -- and have been the victims of 
imperialist wars and manipulation since the colonial period. While 
Turkey has granted limited rights to the Kurds in recent years in order 
to accommodate the European Union, which it seeks to join, even these 
are now at risk." 
The root of the conflict? Dr. Aland Mizell explores it at Kurdish Aspect:      
I
 am not arguing or asking Turkey to give the Kurds rights, but I am 
asking who gave Turkey or Islamists the right to deny Kurdish basic 
rights, such as birth rights to a right to life, a right to speak, a 
right to worship, and a right to a fair trial before a judge? If God has
 created the human race, skin color, languages, as well as tribes, and 
rights are natural, inalienable, God-given, and self-evident, then why 
do TUrkey and most Islamist countries deny the Kurds those rights? Today
 more than 40 million Kurds are denied basic rights not by Christians or
 Jews but by Muslim countries; yet, most Muslim countries consider Islam
 to be the only religion that administers true justice, tolerance, and 
peace on earth, and consider Christians, Jews, and devotees of other 
religions as unjust, intolerant, and cruel. But what about the more than
 40 million Kurds who live in Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria being denied
 their basic rights? Why are mroe   than 683 Kurdish people 
participating in a hunger strike in Turkey and agreeing to die? They 
have been on a hunger strike for more than 53 days, and the days move 
them closer to death. Because they are like any other human being, 
demanding to live in dignity and because death for them is the last 
resort to voice their plight even though they cherish human life and 
liberty, but will the world listen as the Kurds show solidarity in their
 suffering? Will those who learn of their hunger strike pressure Turkey 
not to play the hypocrite when it comes to the Kurdish issue but to 
value human beings? Will they pressure Turkey to let the kurds decide 
how to live and who to worship, and let the Kurds, not Turks, Arabs, or 
Persians, decide their destiny?  
At Huffington Post, Stanley Weiss makes the argument that now is the time for an independent Kurdistan: 
It
 will not be easy, but the uncertainty and plasticity in the region 
today offers an opportunity to secure a Kurdish homeland and remedy the 
capricious map-making of the early 20th century. Iraq is threatening to 
split into the pre-Iraq Sunni, Shia and Kurdish divisions of the Ottoman
 Empire, with the Kurds semi-independent and the Iran-allied Shiites 
ruling the Sunnis. Iran's economy is in free-fall. Syria will soon have 
no central control and no choice. And while no country is eager to 
surrender a fifth of its population, Turkey would do well to get ahead 
of this issue -- ending the vicious, ongoing war with the Kurdistan 
Workers' Party (PKK), saving countless lives and positioning themselves 
to reap the benefits of a long-term strategic alliance to counterbalance
 Iranian influence. Not to mention, membership in the European Union 
will forever be out of reach for a Turkey at war with itself. 
For
 proof of what's possible, look no further than Iraqi Kurdistan, a 
pro-American, pro-Israel and semi-autonomous parliamentary democracy 
most Americans have never heard of. Nurtured by an American no-fly zone 
in the aftermath of the first Gulf War, the Kurdistan Regional 
Government (KRG) was established under the Iraqi Constitution in 2005, a
 stunning testament to the success of Muslim representative government. 
Of more than 4,800 American soldiers killed in the brutal battles for 
Iraq, not a single one
 has lost their life -- and no foreigner has been kidnapped -- within 
the borders of Iraqi Kurdistan. Boasting two international airports, a 
booming oil industry and a dawning respect for the rights of women, this
 15,000 square-mile territory of nearly four million Kurds is the one 
part of President   George W. Bush's "Mission Accomplished" that was 
actually accomplished. 
Building on this 
unanticipated success, the U.S. should rethink its previous opposition 
to an independent greater Kurdistan and recognize that the advantages of
 a friendly, democratic and strategically-positioned ally far outweigh 
the outdated assumption that the Kurds' national liberation would result
 in regional conflagration.  
Lastly, Bill Corcoran writes at CORKSPHERE about Iraq and Afghanistan.  He's now planning/toying with walking away.  At the New York Times' At War, he writes: 
The
 blog passed one million hits over a year ago. But something was 
happening: both the news media and the American public were suffering 
from "war fatigue." Interest in the blog was waning. 
Blog
 viewership dropped to under 200 hits a day, and even though I was 
posting fresh material on Facebook and Twitter, it became more and more 
obvious to me that the American public was no longer very interested in a
 conflict that, in the case of the Afghan war, had entered its 12th 
year. 
I'm a realist and I'm fully aware 
that after so many years it is hard for people to continue to care 
deeply about a conflict that doesn't seem to have any end goal or sense 
of mission. So a few weeks ago, I decided I would stop the blog after 
the election. (I'm leaving the door open just a bit to a last-minute 
change of heart.) If I do stop posting, however, I intend to keep it on 
the Internet as a historical reference for anyone interested in the Iraq
 and Afghan wars. 
 You can check out his site
 (I never knew about the site until a few minutes ago).  At some point, 
most will say "enough" (I would love to and am still weighing whether or
 not we'll do six more months).  I do agree that there is war fatigue.  I
 also think there are other issues at play.  (Including the lack of 
interest on the part of the US media which tends to make a number of 
people believe that the end credits rolled, the lights came up and it's 
all over.)  I'm sorry that he doesn't feel there's an audience (our 
audience has only increased in 2012 -- the increase has largely come 
from outside the US).  I'm sadder that he feels you do something based 
on numbers.  But mainly, I'm saddened by the fact that he's obviously 
put a great deal of time in trying to keep Iraq and Afghanistan in the 
national discourse and he feels his work   didn't matter or doesn't 
now.   What he has done matters and, even if you were unaware of the 
site until this evening (like me), it being out there did and does make a
 difference.  Whether he continues with it or shuts it down, thank you, 
Bill Corcoran for focusing on something that actually mattered in a 
landscape that's otherwise so much fluff from sea to shining sea. | 
 
