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Why Can't She Take It Like a Man?
Newsmax.com ^ | 22 May 2004 | Dr. Jack Wheeler

Posted on 05/23/2004 2:38:47 PM PDT by txradioguy

We know conclusively that the Abu Ghraib abuse scandal is as phony as a Bill Clinton sex denial because there are no calls for the resignation or indictment of the one individual most responsible for the abuses. That would be the officer in charge of Abu Ghraib and all U.S. military prisons in Iraq, the commander of the 800th Military Police Brigade, Army Brigadier General Janis Karpinski. And why have there been no calls for her resignation? Let’s be honest. It is because she is a woman.

Thus the frightening lesson of the abuse scandal: Political correctness trumps national security even in wartime.

Yes, Democrat Demagogues are willing to sacrifice America’s national security, to trash the morale and honor of American soldiers risking their lives in Iraq, and lose the War on Terrorism in order to defeat George Bush in November – so they use the abuse scandal as an excuse to go after Donald Rumsfeld. But be assured that if Karpinski was a man, demands for his accountability would be loud and clear.

It would be expected that if Karpinski were a man, he would have taken those demands like a man. But Karpinski is not and so has not. She has taken them like a woman – whining, making excuses, and complaining that it’s not her fault, that she’s being “scapegoated.”

I am waiting for feminists, or any woman who is simply proud of being female, to denounce Janis Karpinski as reinforcing the negative stereotype of women unable to accept responsibility, and humiliating her gender worse than were the Abu Ghraib prisoners under her jurisdiction.

In fact, we owe the entire Abu Ghraib scandal to the leadership failure and gross incompetence of Janis Karpinski – and to the fear of her superiors to do anything about her ineptitude because she was a woman. She should have been relieved of her command last summer but was not.

Near the town of Mahawil in southern Iraq, U.S. Marines uncovered a mass grave site holding the remains of some 15,000 Iraqis. They were slaughtered for taking part in the Shia uprising against Saddam in the early 1990s. Saddam’s agent responsible for conducting the mass killings was Mohammed Jawad Anayfas; the grave site is on land owned by him.

In July 2003, Anayfas was captured by US forces and turned over to the Military Police Brigade under Karpinski’s command. The Brigade Headquarters managed to lose his paperwork – so instead of contacting her superiors, Karpinski ordered Anayfas set free.

Soon thereafter, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz came to Iraq and visited the Mahawil gravesite, where he was informed by Marine Lt. Gen. James Conway how outraged the local Iraqis were over Anayfas’ release. Visibly upset, Wolfowitz vowed Anayfas would be recaptured and tried as a war criminal. Anayfas is still at large and Karpinski received no reprimand.

When confronted by the Iraqi public outcry – for Anayfas was only one of several war criminals whose paperwork was lost and she released – Karpinski proceeded to evade responsibility and fabricated an entire string of deceptive excuses. Just like she is doing now.

Wolfowitz knew of Karpinski’s incompetence and evasion of responsibility last summer – and did nothing. Even he lacks the courage to question the political correctness of feminizing the American military.

Such feminization is epitomized by Lynndie “They told me to hold the leash” England, the Army Private happily smiling in the infamous photos and pointing to a prisoner’s exposed genitals. She too has hired lawyers who loudly declare she’s just an innocent “farm girl” and nothing but a “scapegoat.” No more than Gen. Karpinski is she willing to accept the responsibility of her actions.

In his investigation of the abuses, Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba recommended that Karpinski be relieved of her command. Even though she received a letter of admonishment from Joint Task Force-7 Commander Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, she has only been suspended from her command, not relieved.

The true scandal of Abu Ghraib is the unwillingness of the female military personnel involved to do a mea culpa. If there is any vast conspiracy on the part of their superior officers, it is not to “scapegoat” them, but to refuse to treat them as men, as accountable and responsible as men.

Donald Rumsfeld stood straight up to the world and accepted responsibility for Abu Ghraib. He took it like a man. War is not woman’s work. It is man’s work – not because men are more brutal or stronger, but because they can endure the stresses of combat and be accountable for the failures those stresses inevitably create. They don’t whine, deviously evade, blame others, make up excuses, and whimper “It’s not my fault!” If they do, they are despised and looked upon with contempt by their male comrades.

Janis Karpinksi deserves America’s contempt. She deserves to be court-martialed and dishonorably discharged. If she wishes to regain some small measure of respect from her fellow citizens – and of her own self-respect – she needs to stand up, accept her responsibility, and take it like a man.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: abughraib; iraq; iraqipow; karpinski; oif; prisonabuse; prisonscandal; waronterror
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To: King Prout

I've heard some of the same things you've heard.

Sometimes you just get a bunch that are bad.


61 posted on 05/24/2004 8:50:11 AM PDT by tiamat ("Just a Bronze-Age Gal, Trapped in a Techno-World!")
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To: tiamat

the important thing is that we reject them when their unfitness becomes undeniable - unlike our moonrock-worshipping friends, who elevate their worst to the highest pedestal of adulation.


62 posted on 05/24/2004 10:03:44 AM PDT by King Prout (the difference between "trained intellect" and "indoctrinated intellectual" is an Abyssal gulf)
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To: King Prout

Maybe this will shake things up.

The military isn't SUPPOSED to be about Social Programing, dammit!


63 posted on 05/24/2004 10:07:13 AM PDT by tiamat ("Just a Bronze-Age Gal, Trapped in a Techno-World!")
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To: Gabz
I'll go even further.

I think that you'll probably see Spanish declared the official language of the United States-though that doesn't seem as implausible a scenario as it once would have-before we start drafting women.

Not that your point about the inequality of the situation isn't completely valid, but I just don't think that most people look at it from that perspective.

64 posted on 05/24/2004 10:28:53 AM PDT by The Scourge of Yazid ("Women are like a union. Cold and distant.")
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To: tiamat

no, it isn't.
the military has two valid jobs:
1. kill people
2. bust s*** up
anything else is at BEST window-dressing, and at worst cripplingly counterproductive.
but, you see, to leftists, that IS THE IDEA.


65 posted on 05/24/2004 10:31:13 AM PDT by King Prout (the difference between "trained intellect" and "indoctrinated intellectual" is an Abyssal gulf)
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To: King Prout

You're right!

Bunch of our friends were in the process of getting out during Clinton.

One guy did his 20, signed up under Reagan and watched in complete horror as Clinton romped and stomped....

( "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" my tender, goat-smelling....)

It's going to tak us years to get it back and Bush has GOT to win this next one!


66 posted on 05/24/2004 10:37:43 AM PDT by tiamat ("Just a Bronze-Age Gal, Trapped in a Techno-World!")
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To: King Prout; tiamat
I believe Stephen Buyer said that, though without the expletive.

I like your version better.

67 posted on 05/24/2004 11:10:26 AM PDT by The Scourge of Yazid ("Why don't just ask Gerard? Gerard knows everything.")
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To: ItsonlikeDonkeyKong

I think the only people not seeing it from my perspective are the rabid femi-nazis. I've shut a bunch of them up when they start spouting their crap just by asking when they are going to support a move to have 18 year old women register with selective service.

As a woman I do believe I should be granted the same consideration and pay for a job that I am as equally capable of and qualified for as a man. As a woman I also believe there are many jobs that I am not as capable of doing as a man. As an intelligent person I can tell the difference.


68 posted on 05/24/2004 11:54:01 AM PDT by Gabz (We're Rural, Not Stupid on the Eastern Shore of VA)
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To: Gabz
Exactly.

These are probably the most hypocritical, myopic people out there.

Just look at the how NAG, Eleanor Smeal, and all of their shrewish buddies handled the accusations of Paula Jones, Kathleen Willey, et. al., who had legitimate allegations of sexual assault on the part of Bill Clinton. Then compare it to how they reacted to the preliminary accusations leveled against Republicans like Bob Packwood and Daniel Crane.

69 posted on 05/24/2004 11:59:59 AM PDT by The Scourge of Yazid ("Why don't we just ask Gerard? Gerard knows everything.")
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To: ItsonlikeDonkeyKong

Agneda driven hags.


70 posted on 05/24/2004 12:20:30 PM PDT by Gabz (We're Rural, Not Stupid on the Eastern Shore of VA)
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To: Gabz
That should be the new name for the Dixie Chicks!

Or, maybe The Indigo Girls.

I'm not sure which one it suits better.

71 posted on 05/24/2004 12:26:25 PM PDT by The Scourge of Yazid ("Why don't we just ask Gerard? Gerard knows everything.")
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To: ItsonlikeDonkeyKong

neither am I!!!!!


72 posted on 05/24/2004 12:27:51 PM PDT by Gabz (We're Rural, Not Stupid on the Eastern Shore of VA)
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To: txradioguy
The true scandal of Abu Ghraib is the unwillingness of the female military personnel involved to do a mea culpa. If there is any vast conspiracy on the part of their superior officers, it is not to “scapegoat” them, but to refuse to treat them as men, as accountable and responsible as men.

This is the scandal throughout the military. I saw it in the Air Force 25 years ago, and it only seems to have gotten worse.

73 posted on 05/25/2004 3:45:57 AM PDT by guitfiddlist
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Comment #74 Removed by Moderator


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