Monday, June 29, 2009

I've gone on this media tour because I just want to be left alone!




KEYSER, W.Va. — More than two years since leaving her prison cell, the woman who became the grinning face of the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal spends most of her days confined to the four walls of her home.

Former Army reservist Lynndie England hasn't landed a job in numerous tries: When one restaurant manager considered hiring her, other employees threatened to quit.

She doesn't like to travel: Strangers point and whisper, "That's her!"

In fact, she doesn't leave the house much at all, limiting her outings mostly to grocery runs.

"I don't have a social life," she says. " ... I sit at home all day."

She's tried dyeing her dark brown hair, wearing sunglasses and ball caps. She even thought about changing her name. But "it's my face that's always recognized," she says, "and I can't really change that."

England hopes a biography released this month and a book tour starting in July will help rehabilitate an image indelibly associated with the plight of the mistreated prisoners.

It's difficult to forget the pictures that shocked millions in 2004: In one, she holds a restraint around a man's neck; in another, she's giving a thumbs-up and pointing at the genitals of naked, hooded men, a cigarette dangling from her mouth.

"They think that I was like this evil torturer. ... I wasn't," she says. "People don't realize I was just in a photo for a split second in time."

In an interview with The Associated Press to promote her biography, "Tortured: Lynndie England, Abu Ghraib and the Photographs that Shocked the World," the 26-year-old England said she's paid her dues and repeatedly apologized.

While admitting she made some bad decisions, England says it wasn't her place to question the "softening-up" treatments sanctioned long before she arrived.

"We were just pawns," said England, who's appealing her conviction and has her next hearing in July. "People were just playing us."

A jury of five Army officers, however, rejected England's claims that she was only following orders and trying to please the father of her child, former Cpl. Charles Graner Jr., who's currently imprisoned for his role.

Christopher Graveline, the lead prosecutor at her trial and now an assistant federal prosecutor in Michigan, said England and the other defendants are free to present their side to the media.

"But they presented the same facts to the jury, and the jury rejected them," he said.

England was convicted of conspiracy, mistreating detainees and committing an indecent act, one of 11 soldiers found guilty of wrongdoing at Abu Ghraib.

Since April, when newly released memos revealed the Bush administration had sanctioned certain so-called "enhanced interrogation" tactics, some have called for pardons of soldiers like England — or at least acknowledgment that they were scapegoats for higher-ups.

Graveline rejects such calls. He and investigator Michael Clemens have their own book coming out in January, "The Secrets of Abu Ghraib Revealed: American Soldiers on Trial," which they say aims to correct misunderstanding and misinformation.

The detainees in the photos involving England, for example, were not suspected terrorists, Graveline says, but some of the thousands of "Iraqi-on-Iraqi criminals" at the massive prison. None of the men in the England photos was ever interrogated.

"The idea that she and her colleagues were working somehow for military intelligence is not supported by fact," he says.

After serving half of a three-year sentence, England returned to the cocoon of a few friends and family in Fort Ashby, a quiet town of about 1,300 in West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle, 150 miles west of Washington, D.C.

Biographer Gary Winkler, a local author who spent countless hours with England and her family, says England's family has closed ranks, hoping to protect her — and themselves. He said he has mixed feelings about her.

"Some days I liked her. Some days I hated her," he says. "Some days I thought she should be in prison still, and some days I felt sorry for her."

England, who's put on a little weight and let her hair grow since mugging for the camera, says she struggles with depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and anxiety. Antidepressants help, and she has learned to deal with personal insults much as she dealt with the horrors of war: She just got used to it.

England says the most painful jab came in a note from a stranger who suggested her mother "shoot herself for raising somebody like me, and that I should kill my baby and kill myself, or give up my child for adoption, because the way I was raised they didn't want him to turn into some evil monster, too.

"... and then at the end of it they were like, 'Oh, God bless you,"' she adds with a wry laugh.

As a teenager, England hunted squirrels and fantasized about becoming a storm chaser. As a woman, she has more worries than dreams.

She worries about whether she's a good mother to her 4-year-old son Carter.

"Normal moms have jobs. They get up, they take their kids to school, they go to work, they come home, they cook, they clean, they do all that," she says. "I'm home all day."

She says she submitted hundreds of resumes for all kinds of jobs, but no one would give her a chance. She stopped trying months ago and depends on welfare and her parents to get by.

She also fears for her life, though she's 4,000 miles from Iraq: "I'm paranoid about that one guy who still hates me."

Even if she could go back and change something, England says she wouldn't. If she hadn't met Graner, she says, she wouldn't have her son, the one bright spot from an otherwise dark time.

"I couldn't have Carter exactly as he is without anybody else except Graner," she says, "so to me that's the whole reason for me meeting him."

What she wants most now is what most mothers want, to give her child a good life.

And as for herself? "I don't think beyond day to day."

Hey! YA'll! Take I-60 out of Framersville to Junction 13, go on out past the old Murphys place and hang a leftie (I love to say hang a leftie!) on Route 7. I'm right next to the third silo on the right. Call first, I'll make a pie! But leave me alone! Bring your guns, we'll have a bug-shooting contest with the kids! XOXOXO

Thursday, June 25, 2009

In the name of Jesus

NSFtW (not safe for this world)Far more disturbing than pink fluffy naked suits.

Watch the following at home, in private, with Kleenex, a bible (but only the good parts) and fast forwarding is definitely recommended.

And thank you Mom for giving me support, respect and acceptance some 25 years ago. I love you.

Monday, June 22, 2009

I don't care who you'ar, that right there is funny:

On the newly legal Iowa Gay Marriage: (and really, Iowa? Really?)

Read the article first, just to get your own take, then come back to the following.

From CNN "Same-sex weddings, heartland style"

The quote is CNN's, the parenthesis's mine:

Many activists who followed the Iowa case, Varnum v. Brien, to the state's Supreme Court were anticipating the April 3 announcement.

But for Beau Fodor, (Buttfor Bofodor? What's a Buttfor? Answers may vary.) news of the decision on television that morning -- "between 'Martha Stewart' and 'The View,' " (but after Christopher Lowell and before American Gladiators, with picture-in-picturing mens gymnastics and Tivo-ing his "stories" ) he said -- came as a complete shock.

"How did this happen?" the Des Moines designer and event planner remembers thinking before turning the station to compare newscasts. "Are you kidding me, universe?" (Stop it, you silly universe, stop teasing me)

And then, while resisting (unsuccessfully) the urge to pinch himself, the revelation: "Oh my god. (OMG!!!!) I could be a gay wedding planner." (Umm, I'm pretty sure you already are, Nancy-Beau. I'm sure you already are)

Friday, June 19, 2009

Oh, we'll move on alright!

Now a quiz:

Why will we all be using Orbitz for all of our future travel needs? Bridget you will get 1 penalty point if you forward to your mother as a phone-a-friend.



Baby steps, Obama. Baby steps.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Steve Turner's Come and Gone

Good God, Mr. Obama must be so very good. So much better even than the Messiah that "Gods Own Party" claimed he would be. For this to be the whimpering screed coming out of (I have a name now) Gail Gitcho RNC spokesperson:

"If President Obama wants to go to the theater, isn't the presidential box at the Kennedy Center good enough?"

Belasco Theatre-New York City = "Joe Turner’s Come and Gone"
Joe Turner’s Come and Gone chronicles the lives of newly freed African-American slaves. The play deals with issues of race, and the racial tension between the freed slaves and the white working class looking for the same jobs.

Kennedy Center-DC = "Shear Madness"
Engages the audience to help solve the scissor-stabbing murder of a famed concert pianist who lives above the unisex hairstyling salon.

Now, which is better suited to a President? And what would have been said if he did, you know, ride his bicycle down the street to the nearer theatre and saw that Madcap and Zany Who-dun-it? You know, just to save a couple thousand dollars.

Although I do take offense at some on the left comparing the Obamas choice to that of Condolezza Rices' choice of The Lion King back in August of 2005. The Lion King was not about African-Americans. It was about African-Animals! Well, Africans with animal puppets on their heads.

(Wow, I made a post that combines Theatre and politics, is vaguely racist and get to call someone a cunt!)

Did I miss that? "Hey, Gitcho, you are a capital K cunt and shut the fuck up until you have something to say, or longer"