What's New
| VCS Adds "VCS on TV" News Clips to Web Site |
Television News Coverage of VCS Advocacy VCS now posts links to television news broadcasts featuring Veterans for Common Sense and our highly successful advocacy efforts on issues you care about. |
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| Disabled Iraq War Veteran with Service Dog Beaten by McDonalds Employee |
October 30, 2009, Brooklyn, New York (Courthouse News Service) - A disabled Army captain who was wounded in Iraq claims McDonald's employees beat him with garbage can lids after he brought his service dog to the restaurant. Luis Montalvan says the attack came as he was photographing the restaurant after he repeatedly complained about the treatment he received there. |
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| Deployment at All Costs: Military Arrests Mom, Sends Child to Protective Serivces |
Soldier mom refuses deployment to care for baby November 16, 2009, Savannah, Georgia (Associated Press) – An Army cook and single mom may face criminal charges after she skipped her deployment flight to Afghanistan because, she said, no one was available to care for her infant son while she was overseas. |
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| Fort Hood Fallout: Camp Lejeune Whistle-Blower Fired |
A psychiatrist who tried to prevent Fort Hood-style violence among Marines about to "lose it" instead loses his job November 16, 2009 (Salon) - Last April, two Marines at Camp Lejeune predicted to a psychiatrist that some Marine back from war was going to "lose it." Concerned, the psychiatrist asked what that meant. One of the Marines responded, "One of these guys is liable to come back with a loaded weapon and open fire." |
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| New York Times Profiles VA and Secretary Shinseki |
No Longer a Soldier, Shinseki Has a New Mission November 11, 2009 (New York Times) - It was a sad homecoming of sorts. On Tuesday, Eric Shinseki, the secretary of veterans affairs, returned to Fort Hood, Tex., where he was a division commander in the mid-1990s, to pay tribute to two veterans affairs employees who died in the shootings there last week. |
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World of Paine
Written by Matthew Harwood
Thursday, 18 June 2009 11:30
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June 12, 2009 -Two hundred years ago this week, the radical journalist and pamphleteer Thomas Paine died an ignominious death. But during his life, Paine was renowned as the philosophical architect of the American Revolution, a true democratic populist who voiced ideas that are still considered dangerous. Common people can govern themselves justly and democractically. Liberty should not be forsaken for security. Both of these principles must guide our foreign relations.
In many ways the forefather of modern advocacy journalism, Paine is largely unrecognized as such today. Still, those modern writers hoping to change the world with their words could profit from Paine’s example; for in his time, Paine made people believe they could “begin the world over again”—and they did. Armed with his democratic principles, an adversarial idea of what free expression meant, and a pen poised like a dagger, Paine took aim at everything sacred in his era: monarchy, aristocracy, and revealed religion. Common Sense had the temerity to argue that the American colonies needed no king and could establish a republican government to govern itself. The Rights of Man went further, defending any people’s natural right to overthrow hereditary government when it was not responsive to their needs and interests—which, according to Paine, was all the time. And while The Age of Reason, a withering attack on revealed religion, earned Paine his exile from America’s founding pantheon, its logic is one that still guides the best journalism: “When opinions are free, either in matters of govemment or religion, truth will finally and powerfully prevail.” Advancing the stories and ideas that challenge the powerful in order to protect the common good, Paine’s work embodied the best journalistic principles; in many ways, he was the prototypical crusading journalist. Many these days are arguing that “crusading journalism” is the sort of journalism that we need the most, the sort of journalism that is most likely to succeed in these dire times of torture, terror, and financial turpitude. Slate’s Jack Shafer even argues for a return to “yellow journalism”—not of sensationalism, but of passion. Yet despite all Paine did for letters, it’s disturbing to note how few of today’s journalists have heralded his life or his contribution to the craft. One reason is that many modern reporters tend to forget that the modern press is ultimately a creation that favors a particular political system: democratic government responsive to its citizens’ desires. Concepts as “equal time” and “objectivity” taken to illogical extremes, along with the profession’s integration into the country’s elite, have led many journalists to play it safe with routine, easy work that rarely challenges the powerful. (Take The New York Times’s recent prostration before the Pentagon’s study on Guantanamo recidivism, for example.) Paine understood that the powerful lie to retain their power, and he excoriated them for doing so. Professional journalism’s recent struggles have much to do with the Internet, innovation, and economics; but the profession is also suffering because the mainstream media have largely forsaken the hard, investigative pieces that make enemies of the powerful. But while Paine’s spirit is in short supply throughout many newsrooms today, there is one infinite space where it flourishes: the Internet. Wired’s Jon Katz understood this more than a decade ago: [Paine’s] mark is now nearly invisible in the old culture, but his spirit is woven through and through this new one, his fingerprints on every Web site, his voice in every online thread. If the old media (newspapers, magazines, radio, and television) have abandoned their father, the new media (computers, cable, and the Internet) can and should adopt him. If the press has lost contact with its spiritual and ideological roots, the new media culture can claim them as its own. If Thomas Paine were alive today, there’s little doubt you would find him blogging from www.commonsense.org, challenging concentrated power, conspicuous wealth, and a culture amusing itself to death. Paine would likely have cherished the chance to engage his readers in debate, and spur them to direct action for better government and a more equitable economy. When people pick up a newspaper or view it online, they need to feel that the multitude of voices within are devoted to them: a democratic people determined to stay that way. One man, with one voice, did that for the American colonies—and it changed the world. No matter what form journalism takes in the coming years, it will only remain relevant if it follows Paine’s example and treats people like citizens worthy of serious conversations. The profession forgets this at its own peril. Or, as Paine would say: “Character is much easier kept than recovered.”
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