Meet Roxanne Walker…The South Carolina Broadcasters Association named Roxanne Radio Personality of the Year in 2002. She has been honored for her political opinion commentary by the Greenville Chapter of Women in Communications.

Roxanne resides in Taylors, SC with her husband Alan and the best dog in the world Allie.

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Mean People

I recently began blocking comments on my website because some hateful woman was repeatedly leaving comments which called me a cunt. That’s my least favorite word and in my opinion about the most hateful thing you can call another woman. I tried repeatedly to reason with the woman via e-mail and get her to back off but she grew increasingly more vitriolic so I put up a blocker allowing me to screen, then approve comments before they could be publicly posted on my website. I welcome comments and feedback but there’s something especially nasty about people who not only disagree with you but feel free to insult you and call you names on your own website. Kind of like going to someone’s home as a guest, eating their food, then picking a fight with them. As I approach 50, I grow increasingly certain of what I am willing to put up with and what I won’t tolerate and I will not tolerate being abused on my own site. If you choose to post hate filled messages go elsewhere.

This week, I’m dealing with Larry. Larry has been spending lots of time in the last week or so leaving lengthy and at times repetitive comments on my blog. At first I found him engaging, then just tedious. I work a full time sales job, tend to my family and my home and have a limited amount of time to maintain the website and blog. It was taking up an increasing amount of time responding to Larry and I just grew tired of it. He’s apparently pissed by my blocking him and posted some nasty comments about me elsewhere as a result. Some others piled on with their nasty comments about my career and my lawsuit most of which was just plain mean but I digress.

I’m fascinated by the amount of time and effort some people can devote to petty disagreements. I post information and blog to vent about my political opinions and also to share information I have gleaned with others. I also post on SC Hotline in an effort to enlighten some of our conservative friends. I don’t hold myself up as an expert in politics or having never made a mis-statement. The website is something I use to promote my personal business and as a means of staying active politically. Larry purports to be concerned about truth in media; hopefully he will take up a different course and focus his attention on some other medium or opinion maker besides myself. I can’t convince Larry to change his mind and I refuse to turn over my comment section to his endless objections. Comments are simply that comments to posts or blogs, they aren’t meant to serve as a forum for your personal edification.

Posted on Tuesday, June 24, 2008 at 05:09PM by Registered CommenterRoxanne Walker | Comments2 Comments

Negotiating A Neverending War

 

On Friday, Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki told reporters in Amman, Jordan that negotiations over initial U.S. proposals for bilateral political and military agreements between the United States and Iraq had “reached a dead end” after U.S. negotiators demanded control of Iraqi airspace and immunity from prosecution for U.S. troops and private contractors.” BBC reports the disagreement between Maliki and U.S. negotiators “goes to the heart of the immensely sensitive issue of who is actually in charge in the country: the Americans or the Iraqis.” The Iraqi demands are unacceptable to the Americans, and the American demands are unacceptable to the Iraqis,” Maliki said. “Iraqis will not consent to an agreement that infringes their sovereignty.” The disposition of the negotiations will determine the future of the U.S. involvement in Iraq. Last week, members of the two ruling Shia parties leaked details of the U.S. proposal, telling McClatchy News that the United States is “demanding 58 bases as part of [an] agreement that will allow U.S. troops to remain in the country indefinitely.” 

THE FUTURE U.S.-IRAQ RELATIONSHIP: A new agreement is necessary to legalize the U.S. presence in Iraq after the United Nations mandate expires at the end of 2008. In November 2007, President Bush and Maliki signed a non-binding “Declaration of Principles for a Long-Term Relationship of Cooperation and Friendship” that set out parameters for negotiating an “enduring” political, economic, cultural, and security relationship between the United States and Iraq. The Bush administration said that the proposed agreement would not be submitted to Congress for approval, with one analyst noting that this was “purely an executive agreement.” However, critics have pointed out that status of forces agreements have not traditionally committed the United States to guarantee the security of other countries. In testimony to Congress in March, the Center for American Progress’s Lawrence Korb stated that the agreement was “substantially broader in scope than standard Status of Forces Agreements. The fact that the administration does not intend to submit the agreement for congressional approval is a testament to their own recognition of how the broad the implications of this agreement are.” The United States has similar agreements with numerous countries where American soldiers are stationed on foreign soil, like South Korea, Japan, and Germany, but “none involve soldiers carrying out active combat operations.” 

IRAQI POLITICIANS UNITED AGAINST: The proposed agreement has met with vocal political opposition in Iraq. Ironically, while genuine movement toward Iraqi political reconciliation has been elusive, a diverse coalition has formed in opposition to the agreement. In Washington, D.C. two weeks ago, Sunni parliamentarian Sheik Khalef al-Ulayyan said, “When we look at this treaty, we don’t just think it’s a treaty that affirms the occupation of Iraq. … It looks like a treaty that will be the annexation of Iraq to the United States.” In a letter to Congress, more than 30 members of  Iraq’s Parliament rejected any agreement that is not “linked to clear mechanisms that obligate the occupying America military forces to fully withdraw from Iraq, in accordance with a declared timetable and without leaving behind any military bases, soldiers or hired fighters.” A representative of Iraq’s Grand Ayatollah Sistani reported that Sistani had told Maliki that everything should be done to get back total [Iraqi] sovereignty on all levels.” Supporters of Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr have held regular protests against the agreement, and Sadr has called for the agreement to be put to a popular referendum. Iran has also registered displeasure with the proposed agreement, with Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, telling Maliki that the presence of U.S. troops was “the main obstacle on the way to progress and prosperity in Iraq.” Iranian leaders have expressed concern that U.S. troops stationed in Iraq could be used in an eventual attack on Iran. Underscoring the careful line that Maliki must tread between his Iranian neighbor and American sponsor, Iraqi and Iranian defense ministers recently “signed a memorandum of understanding to boost defense cooperation” between the two countries.

THE FUTURE OF THE US IN THE MIDDLE EAST: The conclusion of the proposed agreement with the Iraqi government will have broad implications for the future U.S. military posture in the Middle East. Establishing bases in Iraq from which to project American power through the region has been one of the underlying goals of the war from its inception, and partially explains why the United States has been willing to accommodate parties such as Maliki’s Da’wa and the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (who are close to Iran but also support U.S. goals), at least in the short term. Conservative pundit Dick Morris spoke for much of the pro-war community when he told Fox News that, after 4,000 American casualties in Iraq, “I want bases out of that.” If the administration gets its way, American troops would be stationed in the heart of the Middle East for the foreseeable future — likely fueling continued extremist anti-American sentiment and political unrest. This highlights the tension between the U.S. goals of a democratic Iraq and a continued U.S. military presence in Iraq. For that presence to be legal and legitimate, it must be subject to agreement by the Iraqi government. But it is extremely unlikely that any Iraqi government that agrees to an extended U.S. presence — especially on the terms the U.S. is currently demanding — will be viewed as legitimate by the Iraqi people.

www.americanprogessaction.org

 

Posted on Monday, June 23, 2008 at 02:22PM by Registered CommenterRoxanne Walker | CommentsPost a Comment

Wilkins Breaks the Law To Raise Funds for McBush

 

Bush Appointee Breaks the Law While Helping McCain Fundraise

Posted: 22 Jun 2008 06:50 PM CDT

Looks like McCain’s maverick ways are rubbing off on others and causing them to do some crazy things… like, say, break the law.

WaPo:

A Canadian newspaper reported Thursday that Friday’s scheduled $100-a-plate luncheon speech by Sen. John McCain in Ottawa was organized in part by U.S. Ambassador David Wilkins, a former South Carolina lawmaker whom President Bush appointed in 2005.

Democrats pointed out the article late Thursday night, and alleged that Wilkins’s actions could be construed as a violation of the Hatch Act, which prohibits many kinds of political activities by government employees.

This ties in nicely with Scott McClellan’s testimony today. The main theme of his book is that this White House operates in a “permanent campaign mode,” where every action they take is politically calculated to help GOP electoral prospects. We saw it with the clueless Lurita Doan and we see it now with David Wilkins: It doesn’t matter if there are laws on the books prohibiting certain conduct; if it helps get Republicans elected, do it. And it appears that if it helps fill McCain’s empty coffers, he doesn’t have much of a problem with it either.

Posted on Monday, June 23, 2008 at 01:44PM by Registered CommenterRoxanne Walker | CommentsPost a Comment