What, you think smears don't happen in the military? I'm pretty sure she'd never have made O-7 with that on her record.
Now there's the voice of
Credibility
phhhhhhfft
Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, should say former or retired or helper of the Nazi Germans to destroy our country. If I could I would bring charges of treason against this person, but I have been told that even though we are informed that we are still under the UCMJ, when retired, that it is not so.
Karpinski should have known what her guards were doing, and is directly responsible for them. Don Rumsfeld wasn't running Abu Ghraib.
Affirmative action repurcussions.
The General is Anita Hill in a uniform
Karpinski is the one I read about yesterday on a thread that said she is helping Germany bring about charges against Rumsfeld......that Karpinski.
I keep expecting Karpinski to show up as the spokesperson for Dykes on Bykes.
I knew this traitorous hussie probably had some smut in her past. Probably just the beginning considering she is connected to the Clintons.
Looks like the payback is working two ways, however. The woman is delusional if she thought that conniving generals in glass barracks could throw stones unchallenged.
How coincidental that her history should surface now, hah.
Madam, don't mess with Texas (or the equivalent).
Leni
Man! She looks like Rummy in this pic.
About 25 years ago I used to do criminal defense work, as many attorneys did early in their career, and I practiced in an area near quite a few military bases. Shoplifters at the PX were tried in the Federal Magistrate's Court -- the same place where Sandy Berger entered his guilty plea -- and, over the years, and with unsettling frequency, I represented military wives who were accused of shoplifting at the PX. These cases always fell into the same pattern. The defendant was a middle-aged woman, typically of plain appearance, and one who showed (what to me were) clear signs of depression. Her husband was always at one of those critical career junctures, on the cusp of either being promoted to the next rank, or forced out. The items she was accused of shoplifting/ concealing were typically luxury items, and often perfume, as in this case. Oddly, there was no financial stress in the family, and, thus, no need to shoplift an item that could easily have been purchased.
The initial interview always went the same way. The client was deeply ashamed and quick to criticize and/or degrade herself for what she had done, although she could never give any coherent reason for having done it. However -- and this is the point, I think -- she usually never asked about the consequences to herself, but rather, first and foremost, she worried about the effect all this would have on her husband's career. She was not necessarily sorry for having shoplifted -- she hardly knew why she did it anyway -- but she way tremendously alert to the effect it would have on her husband.
I probably represented more than a dozen women who fell into this exact pattern, and the similarity of these cases has always impressed me. If I had to speculate, I'd say that they felt overlooked, and neglected in favor of their husband career in the military, and this was perhaps their way of drawing attention back to themselves -- albeit in a very destructive way.
Probably lifted Old Spice. :-)
I recall the prison incident, someone mentioned she is a friend of #97.
I think we should all wait until we hear what Dan Rather has to say about this...
Just reported that she's the "star witness" in the big german/us lawsuit against Rummy.....