
Mission
Rejected
U.S. Soldiers Who Say No to Iraq
Peter Laufer; Foreword by Norman Solomon
Disillusioned, outraged, and betrayed, American soldiers are taking a
stand against the war in Iraq. A shattering journey of revelation, pain,
and betrayal, Mission Rejected takes the reader deep into the turmoil of
U.S. troops confronting the Iraq War. Some of these soldiers have
decided not to fight in Iraq. Others, who have served in the “Sand Box”
only to return so appalled by their experience and by what that
experience has done to them, choose to declare, in the words of the old
Phil Ochs song, “I’m not marchin’ anymore!”
Consider Specialist Jeremy Hinzman, who chose Canada over his military
career. When queried about his obligation to follow orders, his answer
came fast: “I was told in basic training that, if I’m given an illegal
or immoral order, it is my duty to disobey it. I feel that invading and
occupying Iraq is an illegal and immoral thing to do.” Meet Sergeant
Camilo Mejía, who said from prison, “Behind these bars I sit a free man
because I listened to a higher power: the voice of my conscience.”
Increasing numbers of U.S. soldiers are returning from Iraq horrified by
what they witnessed and what they did. Journalist Peter Laufer tells how
these soldiers are transformed from trained warriors to activists in the
struggle to end the Iraq War. He puts their experiences into context by
drawing on the lessons of the Vietnam War and citing the historical
precedents for troops who refuse unconscionable orders.
Mission Rejected probes the universal issue of resistance to war by the
very men who chose to defend the nation.
Joshua Key vividly recalls Iraqi people he saw up close: “I would never
wish this upon myself or my family, so why would I do it upon them?” And
he relives out loud what he will never forget: “I’m fighting a war for
months and months. All I’m seeing is death, destruction, and chaos.”
—Mission Rejected
"This is a book about what people do as soldiers and what war does to
them. Most of all, Mission Rejected is about conscience."
—Norman Solomon, from the Foreword
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WEATHER
WARFARE by Jerry E. Smith
Subtitle: The Military's Plan To Draft Mother Nature
"WEATHER WARFARE: The Military's Plan to Draft Mother Nature" covers the
history of "weather control" from the Rain Makers of the 1890s through
the development of cloud seeding in the middle of the twentieth century,
to today's "off the shelf" technologies of precipitation enhancement,
hail suppression and fog dispersal. I cover the many programs to
manipulate hurricanes, such as Project Cirrus and Project Stormfury, and
what evidence there is of being able to control hurricanes in the 21st
Century.
It also covers Defense Secretary Cohen's claim that "Others ... can ...
set off earthquakes, volcanoes remotely through the use of
electromagnetic waves." Starting with Nicola Tesla's earthquake machine
of the 1890s I trace the possibility of "earthquakes on demand" from the
development of a "tsunami bomb" during World War II (as revealed by
documents recently declassified by the New Zealand government), through
Project Faultless which caused a massive earthquake in the Nevada desert
after a high yield atom bomb was intentionally detonated on a fault
line, to evidences of human initiation of several major quakes and the
2004 Christmas tsunami with "scalar" or other electromagnetic waves.
Also included is an update on recent developments at HAARP. I analyze
what they are willing to admit to having done with it and where the
program may go in the future. The US Air Force insists that it has no
interest in "controlling the weather" yet HAARP represents the
expenditure of hundreds of millions of dollars and a decade of research
and construction in a program whose avowed purpose is to modify the
atmosphere. What, if any, is the difference between "modifying the
atmosphere" and "controlling the weather"?
NOTE: Order Weather Warfare and get FREE the book:
The Case for the Face: Scientists Examine the Evidence
for Alien Artifacts on Mars
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A
Soldier's Dying Heart by Randy Stamm
About The Book:
The one SOLDIER is that I want to thank more than all is Command
Sergeant Major Thomas J. Clark for showing me early in my career of what
a soldier is all about, for being a soldier and friend for the last
eighteen years and being there through thick and thin, good and bad. I'm
one of those guys that only knows how to read one publication and that
is the Army Times. To this day, I still order it to see what is going on
in the Army, since I am a soldier at heart and still praise soldiers
still putting their lives on the line for all of us each and every day.
This all started in late 1991 after arriving back to Germany after
Desert Shield/Storm. I was a normal aggressive soldier and family man
that had a whole career ahead of him until one day when it all started
falling apart. Now I take medications to wake up, to go to sleep, and
anything in between, just to function semi-normally on a daily basis.
The only people that understand are the other soldiers just like me that
are having the same problem, and sometimes I have to look and see what
is going on in the real world. The secret is the Government does not
care about you unless you are under the ground, and then they don't care
what you have done for them.
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