Here is all of what is on the front page of today's Sunday edition of the Fayetteville Observer, the hometown newspaper serving Fort Bragg. This from the paper as late as last September put the huge Washington D.C. march on the FOURTH PAGE and even cut the AP article copy in half. Why is it o.k. NOW to do stories on brain injuries and war protestors and the administration's corruption? The time to do it was FOUR YEARS AGO, THREE YEARS AGO, TWO YEARS AGO, when something could be done! (Sorry, starting to rant, it's good they are doing this, but it's also pathetic, I'm just getting pissed putting this post together.):
http://www.fayettevillenc.com/article?id=228712Matthew Uran spends hours a day at Fayetteville’s VA hospital relearning how to walk, talk and do other everyday things. He was 10 days into his deployment when his helicopter crashed during training in Kuwait. ‘Nothing is easy’By Kevin Maurer
Staff writer
Matthew Uran’s body is a prison.
He thinks clearly, but his arms and legs respond erratically. Uran used to pilot Apache attack helicopters. He once could run for miles. Now his feet drag; he has to will them to move a step at a time. His eyes sparkle, but his speech comes haltingly and his hands just hang at his sides.
“It is very difficult for me to do anything,” he says. “Nothing is easy.”
The crescent-shaped scar on the left side of his head tells his story in summary — Uran has a brain injury. He is one of the hidden costs of the war.
Dr. Deborah Warden is the national director of the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center. She told United Press International last year that the military is treating more brain injuries from the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan than in previous wars. In the past, people hurt as badly as Uran would likely have died. Now, brain injuries account for as much as 20percent of combat casualties, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs.
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http://www.fayettevillenc.com/article?id=228909Matt Ivey, left, and Ben Lassiter of Greensboro chant during an anti-war protest at Rowan Park on Saturday.Protesters says Iraq war policy is flawedBy Kevin Maurer
Staff writer
Former paratrooper Blake Callens told anti-war protesters rallying in Fayetteville on Saturday that the U.S. is not winning the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people. The war, he said, is unwinnable.
Callens was one of several speakers at a demonstration to mark the third anniversary of the invasion of Iraq. About 1,000 protesters took part, making this year’s gathering in Rowan Park smaller than last year’s. Roughly 60 people showed up for a counterdemonstration across the street. Police reported no arrests or other problems between the two sides.
Callens, a 28-year-old former sergeant turned guitar instructor, served with the 82nd Airborne Division’s 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment in Iraq and Afghanistan in 2003 and 2004. Unlike in Afghanistan where he said troops were allowed to help local citizens, Callens said a hostility between the soldiers and the Iraqis is undermining the war effort.
Callens told the crowd about an Iraqi man who came to the gate of an American base looking for medical help for his two seriously ill children.
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This photo was on the inside of the paper:
Counterprotester Doug Harris, 8, watches anti-war protesters enter Rowan Park.Look at that poor kid. What his parents must be doing to his brain.
Leak case may reveal larger chaosBy Pete Yost
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Ten months ahead of his scheduled trial in the Valerie Plame affair, Lewis "Scooter" Libby seems intent on zeroing in on three little letters the bush White House would like to forget forever: WMD.
To hear Libby's lawyers tell it in the latest court filing, Plame's CIA status was barely a blip on the radar screen as the administration tried to dodge incoming criticism. Libby's legal team descrived her CIA identity as "at most a peripheral issue" to "the media conglagration over the failure to find WMD" - weapons of mass destruction - in Iraq.