Wonder if She Still Thinks This

Judge Janice Rogers Brown, in an August 2000 speech to the Institute for Justice [.pdf]:

    [D]emocracy need not be a good regime — as we are proving every day. Freedom and democracy are not synonymous. Indeed, one of the grave errors of American foreign policy is the assumption that merely installing the forms of a regime like ours — without its foundation — will automatically lead to freedom, stability, and prosperity.

Zen and the Art of Neoconservatism

From Kevin Carson’s neocon lexicon/guide to inner peace:

Moral Relativism. Aka historicism. The denial of any unified, objective standard of value. The diametric opposite of Moral Equivalence (q.v.).

Moral Equivalence. Judgment of the United States government by the same unified, objective standard of value as the governments of other countries. The diametric opposite of Moral Relativism (q.v.).

Moral Clarity. The Zen-like state of mind from which it is possible to accuse the same political enemy, simultaneously, of both Moral Relativism and Moral Equivalence.

Raimondo on MSNBC TV

‘I’ll be on “Connected Coast to Coast” hosted by Ron Reagan and Monica Crowley, on Friday(noon EST/9am PST). It’s a segment about military recruiting.. and why the numbers are so low. (Duh!) Right-wing nut-bar Cliff Kincaid (of “Accuracy” in Media) is going to represent the pro-war position. Which I guess means he and his whole family are going to be signing up to go to Iraq real soon now …

US sergeant charged for fragging commanders

As AntiWar.com’s Justin Raimondo asked,A nation at war with itself — who will win that one?

A U-S Army staff sergeant has been charged
with killing his two commanders last week at a base outside Baghdad.

The military says it’s believed to be the first case of an American soldier in Iraq accused of killing his superiors.

It was first believed that the June seventh deaths of Captain Phillip Esposito and First Lieutenant Louis Allen resulted from
“indirect fire” from a mortar round.

But the military now believes they died from an explosive device, possibly a grenade.

Sergeant Alberto Martinez has been charged with two counts of premeditated murder, according to a statement issued in Baghdad.

The so-called “fragging” incident happened near Tikrit.

Fragging is a term used to refer to soldiers killing their superiors.

Report by the AP

UPDATE: More detail from KRT:

TIKRIT, Iraq – (KRT) – A 37-year-old staff sergeant was charged in the deaths of two of his superior officers in the first alleged case of its kind in Iraq.

The stunning announcement Thursday of the court-martial came amid continued violence in Iraq against U.S. and Iraqi security forces. Eight Iraqi police were killed in a car bombing on the airport road in Baghdad, and the U.S. military reported the death of five Marines and a sailor in violence in western Iraq.

Staff Sgt. Alberto B. Martinez of the 42nd Infantry Division was charged Wednesday with two counts of premeditated murder for the June 7 attack that killed Capt. Phillip T. Esposito, 30, and Lt. Louis E. Allen, 34.

Martinez, a National Guardsman from Troy, N.Y., was a soldier in the division’s Headquarters and Headquarters Company. Esposito and Allen were that unit’s top two commanders.

U.S. military officials refused to comment on reports that Martinez was facing disciplinary action that could have motivated him to act.

“We don’t have an idea as to any motive at this time,” said Maj. Patrick Swan, a spokesman for the Multi-National Force in Iraq. Swan said that charges against additional soldiers could not be ruled out.

Martinez was being held late Thursday under military confinement in Kuwait and has been provided an attorney from the U.S. Army Trial Defense Service. Swan could not say whether the soldier had turned himself in or whether he had been implicated in the attack by evidence found after an extensive investigation.

The Army’s Criminal Investigation Division had been looking into the deaths of Esposito and Allen for more than a week. The two officers died about 10 p.m. on June 7 inside a former palace that has been converted to barracks for U.S. soldiers on the lush grounds of one of Saddam Hussein’s former compounds in Tikrit.

It was initially believed the men died from injuries in a mortar attack, but forensic evidence soon ruled that out. Within days, the Army announced the officers’ deaths were being investigated as crimes.