| Wednesday, November 9, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, Iraqi women  weren't helped by the illegal war, Nouri wants Ba'athists and 'Ba'athists' to  repent in writing, US Senator Patty Murray takes to the Senate floor to discuss  employment and veterans, and more.     One of 2010's important books was Deborah Amos'  Eclipse of the Sunnis: Power,  Exile, and Upheaval in the Middle East which examines Sunnis who  relocated to Jordan, Lebanon and Syria, most as part of Iraq's refugee  population -- a population created by the Iraq War and so huge that it became  the largest refugee crisis in the Middle East since 1948.  People forced to flee  their homes rarely arrive in a new area on strong footing. Most refugees have to  play catch up for basic items that didn't make the journey, for cash that is  usually finite and dwindling.  In such circumstances and in countries where they  are legally forbidden to work, a black market economy develops.  For women,  black market employment has historically included prostitution.  In Syria,  Deborah Amos met a number of women engaged in the sex trade:     Another woman said her name was Abeer.  "My husband tried to  smuggle the kids to Sweden, but they got caught and are back in Baghdad," she  told me. She had divorced her husband when he set off for Sweden.  She had  agreed to the separation for the sake of her two children.  Now, she lived with  her sister, and worried about her kids. She sent her club earnings home for  them. But why had she come to Damascus, I asked; what had driven her to come  here in the first place?" "I was a journalist," she said.  In 2007, she was  hired by a television station based in Baghdad. She worked as a correspondent  until the day her mother found a ltter that had been thrown into the family  farden: "Leave in 28 hours or we will kill you."  Syria was the only open  border.  While I was pondering Abeer's choices, she clicked her cellphone shut,  took one last look at her mirror image, and moved toward [the] door.  "Have a  good night," she said knowingly, one businesswoman to another, as she made her  way into the dark nightclub. I could see why this was Um Nour's favorite club.  The system of  cost-and-rewards favored women who wanted some control over their work. It was a  freelance market. We had walked in through the front door for "free," while the  male patrons paid a steep cover charge and even more for the alcohol and snacks  delivered to the table. Um Nour explained that women paid the Syrian men at the  door at the end of the night -- but only if they left with a man. Iraq has a long historical connection to prostitution.  The Whore  of Babylon is a character in the Bible's Book of Revelations, the symbol of all  things evil. The world's oldest profession was first recorded in Mesopotamia in  the second millennium B.C. The code of Hammurabi, the ancient world's first  fixed laws for a metropolis, acknowledged prostitution and gave prostitutes some  inheritance rights.   How much choice a woman selling sex for money is debatable -- even when  we're not looking at a refugee population.  But the women in that section of  Amos' book are women who have reached their decisions apparently without being  forced into by another person.  Many Iraqi women are not so fortunate and are  forced into prostitution. Today, Hajer Nailis (WeNews) reports:   Since the U.S. invasion of Iraq in March  2003, as many as 5,000 women and girls have been trafficked for sexual  exploitation, with most ending up in Syria, according to a preliminary report  released today by the London-based Social Change Through Education in the Middle  East.Jordan is the second-ranking  destination for trafficked girls and women, according to the Nov. 9  report.
 These two bordering countries  have maintained a relatively liberal policy of granting visas to refugees while  also subjecting them to labor restrictions. That combination, the report finds,  puts girls and women at high risk of seeking money through prostitution and also  being prostituted by families and organized networks.
 "Both the Iraqi government and the Kurdistan Regional  Government have failed to address the problem of sex trafficking," the report  finds, also noting that the Iraqi constitution prohibits the trafficking of  women and children, as well as the sex trade and slavery.
     1. Between 2003-2007, 4,000 Iraqi women went missing, 1/5 of whom  is under 18  2. Tens of thousands of Iraqi girls and women are trafficked  internally and internationally into the sex trade 3. Iraqi women are trafficked mainly to Syria, Jordan, the United  Arab Emirates and the Gulf countries 4. Traffickers reportedly sell girls as young as 11, for figures  such as $30,000 5. Some traffickers have the girls operated on in severe  conditions, whereby the hymen is sewn up, so the girls can be sold as virgins  again 6. It has been reported that some girls and women are kidnapped,  drugged and forced to have sex with between 10 and 15 men every  day 7. Tafficked women and victims of sexual violence often find  themselves in jail, while authorities ignore their exploiters and the society  rejects them.     Professional traffickers target young girls and women whilst they  are still inside the Iraqi borders. These traffickers, very often women, target  young girls who have left their families (for reasons of fear of violence,  abuse, forced marriage or the threat of honour crimes) typically in places such  as public transportations in larger cities. Kidnapped, the girls may be kept for  a period of time while negotiations on their prices are undertaken, before they  are sold on. In other cases, male solicitors are recruited by trafficking gangs.  These men are used to lure vulnerable young girls, eventually persuading them to  elope whereby; again, they will be sold for sexual servitude.  Some taxi  drivers, too, are used as recruiters to lure girls with the false pretence of  help, whereas women who are already involved in the sex industry are used as  intermediaries who again pretend to offer assistance, offering to bring the  girls to shelters when, in fact, they bring them to brothels.   We noted Syria via Deborah Amos' excellent book so let's also include the  paper's discussion of the three levels of prostitution being practiced in Syria.     The first level [prostitution on the individual level] refers to a  girl or woman who has made the decision to engage in prostitution and without  the knowledge of her family. In reality, this decision is often one arrived at  as a consequence of being forced by poverty and circumstance. Whilst the  well-being and safety of these girls is absolutely important, SCEME's research  and campaigning focuses on the subsequent, and often interconnected, two levels  which relate to the forced sexual servitude of girls and women; the levels of  family and organized networks. The second level [prostitution on the family level] refers to those  forced in work with the knowledge and active involvement of family members;  these family members are most often male. This type of prostitution is also  called "secret prostitution" and is most frequently reported in the Jaramana  area of Damascus. Complexly interwoven with trafficking and forced prostitution we  also report that Iraqi girls are increasingly finding themselves in mut'a  marriages. As the Karama Movement in the Arab Region has uncovered, on Fridays  young girls are married off at price and on the following Sunday the couple is  divorced. Research suggests that rates at which these mut'a marriages are  carried out intensifies in the summer when male tourists visit Syria from the  Gulf. Some of these tourists arrive looking to pay dowries to the families or  pimps of these girls in exchange for brief marriages for the purposes of sexual  exploitation for the duration of their visit. These so called 'summer-marriages'  in which the girls and their husbands live together temporarily of course also  provide none of the legal rights associated with marriage, such as alimony and  inheritance, making vulnerable both the women involved and their resulting  children. Although this particular kind of marriage is not explicitly called  prostitution, it is in effect sexual exploitation, often forced, as means of  either securing livelihood, or generating profit.  The third level [prostitution on the level of organized networks]  involves organized networks and criminal gans which offer women and young girls  for sale to people in the local community, tourists, as well as night clubs and  casinos. Traffickers played an important role in opening such nightclubs in  collaboration with brokers in Syria, relying on the selling of the bodies of  female Iraqis. Clubs such as Al Nigma and Al Manara in the suburbs of Damascus  are frequented both by local Syrians and tourists from the Gulf and  beyond.       You want to pretend you're talking about war and women and peace -- you  want to pretend your five-part series focuses at all on women?  Then how about  you note Iraq?  You can't because it won't allow you to bulls**t the way PBS and  the US government wants.  (BS that also, it should be noted, avoids peace  activists while putting "Peace" in the title of the program.) Check out the  stories.  The series is about how the US government helped.  In some cases, well  after the fact, but always it helped.  And including the reality that the US-led  war on Iraq destroyed women's rights in Iraq doesn't allow us  to all feel so happy and pleased with ourselves.  It's nothing but junk and  garbage on supposed 'education TV.'  PBS is lying as badly as Barack when he  speaks of 'success' in Iraq.     The lies that you tell  Will leave you alone They'll keep you down They'll catch you and trip you up Keep you hangin' around -- "Love You By Heart," written by Carly Simon, Jacob Brackman and Libby Titus,  first appears on Carly's Spy album     Meanwhile, Iraq seems to be moving toward a more conservative  society, and this has affected the role of women in politics. Only one woman  serves as a cabinet member in the new Iraqi government, as the minister for  women's affairs. In the two previous governments, women held from four to six  positions. And in parliament, many of the women are relatives of party  members. The New York Times  reported this week that only 5 of 86 female parliamentarians got their seats  because they won them. The rest were placed there by party leaders to meet the  25 percent quota.  The women MPs are often locked out of party strategy sessions. But  some of them don't mind, in part because they don't believe they have the  necessary experience (as if democracy is somehow newer to Iraqi women than it is  to Iraqi men).       Women's organisations have also documented Islamist violence to  women, including acid thrown into faces, even targeted killings. In 2003 many  women in Basra  reported that they were forced to wear a headscarf or restrict their movements  because men began to harass or shout at them. Women of all ages are now forced to comply with dress codes and be  careful when they go out. Suad, a former accountant and mother of four, lives in  a neighbourhood of Baghdad that  used to be mixed before sectarian killings in 2005 and 2006. She told me: "I  resisted for a long time, but last year I started wearing the hijab, after I was  threatened by several Islamist militants in front of my house. They are  terrorising the whole neighbourhood, behaving as if they were in charge. And  they are actually controlling the area. No one dares to challenge them. A few  months ago they distributed leaflets around the area warning people to obey them  and demanding that women should stay at home." The threat of Islamist militias now goes beyond dress codes and  calls for gender segregation at university. Despite, indeed partly because of the US and British  rhetoric about liberation and rights, women have been pushed into the background  and into their homes. Women with a public profile (doctors, academics, lawyers,  NGO activists, politicians) are threatened and targeted for assassination. There  are also criminal gangs who worsen the climate of fear by kidnapping women for  ransom, sexual abuse or sale into prostitution outside Iraq. It isn't a  surprise that many of the women I interviewed remember the past  nostalgically.      "The status of women here is linked to the general situation,"  Maha Sabria, professor of political science at Al-Nahrain University in Baghdad  tells IPS. "The violation of women's rights was part of the violation of the  rights of all Iraqis." But, she said, "women bear a double burden under  occupation because we have lost a lot of freedom because of it.[. .  .]
 Sabria tells IPS that the abduction of women "did not exist prior to the  occupation. We find that women lost their right to learn and their right to a  free and normal life, so Iraqi women are struggling with oppression and denial  of all their rights, more than ever before."
 Yanar Mohammed believes the  constitution neither protects women nor ensures their basic rights. She blames  the United States for abdicating its responsibility to help develop a  pluralistic democracy in Iraq.
    Iraq doesn't get much reporting from the US mainstream media but it does  get a lot of opinion pieces -- though calling them "opinion pieces" might be  overstating since most people can back up their opinions with facts and the bulk  of the gas baggery reads like one long feelings check with maybe a little "highs  and lows" of the day tossed in.   So we get nonsense like "Who lost the war?" and "Is leaving responsible?"   and "Is the US leaving Iraq in a responsible manner?" and a host of other  garbage.   The Iraq War was a failure.  In fact, "failure" is probably too weak.  If I  attempt to give a speech and am struck with a panic attack resulting in an  inability to speak, I have failed at my speech.  If my speech makes life worse  for people, results in their deaths and more, my speech is much worse than a  "failure."  I'd call it criminal.   And the illegal Iraq War is criminal.  Last week (see yesterday's snapshot), I had to sit through the  idiotic Senate Foreign Relations Subcomittee hearing where everyone pretended  they gave a damn about women in the Middle East and of course they all avoided  Iraq because we can't be honest and discuss how we screwed up the lives and  rights of Iraqi women.  Better to just disappear it. But Republican or Democrat, what did all the senators give lip service  to?  That women's rights were indicators and measurements of how much freedom a  society had.
   So someone explain why in all the pontificating of the last three or four  weeks by various men with column inches to fill on Iraq, no one wants to address  Iraqi women?     The Iraq War is a criminal failure.  If you happen to believe it was a big  success and you're not referring to the theft of Iraqi oil, what are your  measurements?  And if you think the US should continue to stay in Iraq (as some  Republicans in Congress want and as Barack will ensure thanks to the  militarization of diplomacy) what are you measuring with?   The Iraq War has destroyed the rights of women.  We're not just talking  about the women and girls who have to live through the ongoing war.  That's bad  enough.  We're talking about robbing women of rights, removing legal rights,  overturning them.  That is what the Iraq War "accomplished."   And that is what the Senate Foreign Affairs Subcommittee didn't want to  deal with last week, what the five-part PBS mini-series works overtime to ignore  and what US gas bags in newspapers across the country refuse to pontificate  on.   Iraq is a youthful population (thanks to the sanctions and the illegal  war).  It is also known as a country of "widows and orphans."  That's another  "accomplishment" of the Iraq War that no one wants to note right now -- might  harsh the buzz apparently.  Aseel Kami (Reuters -- of course it wouldn't  be a foreign outlet) reports  on the issue, noting Gasid al-Zaidi (Minister  of Women's Affairs) "estimates there may be 2 million women breadwinners in  Iraq, most of them widows of the 2003 U.S.-led invasion and the sectarian  conflict that followed, the first Gulf war or the 1980s Iran-Iraq war" while  Relief International adds up approximately 10% of the female population when  counting widows and the International Committee of the Red Cross also finds the  number to be well over one million. Widows had a monthly stipend from the  government before the US invaded and now the program is no more.  The program  that some would argue replaced it is for widows of war victims and requires  jumping through many hoops (and as NPR has reported, often it requires knowing  an official who will help push the paperwork through).  Lourdes Garcia-Navarro (NPR's All Things  Considered -- link has text and audio) observed in October of 2008, "In  Iraq, poor widows and divorcees are often discarded by their families-in-law,  leaving them vulnerable with no way to support themselves. In this camp, some  like Alia beg. Others become prostitutes. These caravans provide roofs over the  women's heads, but little else. They are made of metal, and in the hot Iraqi  sun, they act like ovens. "  In 2009, Timothy Williams (New York Times) would  note little improvement and that "the number of widows has swelled during  six years of war, their presence on city streets begging for food [. . .] In  large cities like Baghdad, the presence of war widows is difficult to ignore.  Cloaked in black abayas, they wade through columns of cars idling at security  checkpoints, asking for money or food. They wait in line outside mosques for  free blankets, or sift through mounds of garbage piled along the street. Some  live with their children in public parks or inside gas station restrooms."     Reflecting on Iraq today in general, Ahmed Kadhum Fahad (Global Arab Network) observes, "The  question now is whether Iraqi politicians are prepared for this new phase of  self-reliance or not. For this transition to happen smoothly and efficiently,  Iraqi political parties need to set aside their divisions and work together to  forge a functioning government and economy." A functioning government would  require a Constitution that was followed but Nouri doesn't follow the  Constitution. Al Rafidayn reports that he's now demanding former Ba'athists and  "Ba'athists" apologize -- apparently for whatever haunted Chicken Nouri in all  those years he hid outside the country.  AFP adds that he wants them to publicly  repent and sign documents.  And with his past record, these documents, if  signed, will be used to lock you away if you try to run for public office or do  anything he perceives as a threat to his own continued glorification. 
 
 
 Last week, Salahuddin Province's council took a vote on the  issue of becoming a semi-autonomous region. It is a position that was popular  with the bulk of the residents of the province. An e-mail asked why we hadn't  been noting the objection from citizens? Saturday, there were two wire reports  of "tens of protesters" turning out in Salahuddin to protest a move towards  semi-autonomy. We had some real issues to note and "tens" isn't one. We ignored  the protest in Baghdad's Tahrir Square on Friday. Baghdad isn't in Salahuddin  Province. What Salahuddin Province should now be voting on (per the  Constitution, a referendum should be held in the province) is similar to what  Joe Biden proposed for Iraq as a whole. We opposed then-Senator Joe Biden's plan  on the grounds that this wasn't a decision to be made by a foreign country. By  the same token what a province does or does not do -- if they are following the  Constitution -- isn't the say of Baghdad protesters. (You can click here for an Al Sabaah report noting the demonstrators.)  The Constitution left the issue up to individual provinces. That's where the  decision should remain. (Though Nouri is attempting to hijack the issue and turn  it over to his Cabinet.) Aswat al-Iraq reports:
 
 Aswat al-Iraq: Iraq's Prime Minister, Nouri  al-Maliki, has said on Wednesday that "every piece of Iraq's territories must be  under control by the Central Govenment, warning against the announcement of  federations and regions, because the current time is not suitable for such  decisions."
 "Iraq's unity is a red line, we won't bargain upon," Maliki said  in a speech during reception of leaders of intellectuals of southern Iraq's  Karbala city, screened by Iraq's semi-official al-Iraqiya TV Satellite Station,  adding that "every part of Iraq's
 territories must be under control by the  Central Government."
 
 Joining with Nouri in opposing the Iraqi  Constitution is Moqtada al-Sadr.  Alsumaria TV reports, "Iraq's Sadr Movement  warned on Wednesday against demands to establish regions without borders  demarcation and while many disputed regions are still not settled. The movement  accused neighroing countries of seeking Iraq's partition."
   Hussein Ali Hachem became the latest Iraqi official targeted for  assassination.  Aswat al-Iraq reports that the Mayor of  Mosul's home was attacked and his guards and the attackers exchanged gunfire.     Meanwhile US Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey provided an apology to some  Shi'ites.  For what?  We just don't know and that's in part beause what should  have been a report has instead been turned into a "memo." What are we talking  about? Tim Arango's "Iraqi Shiite Anger at U.S.  Remains Strong" (New York  Times). In it, Arango reveals that US Ambassador to Iraq has offered  select Shi'ites an apology for George H.W. Bush's actions (specifically,  Shi'ites rising up in 1991 against the rule of Saddam Hussein and believing that  Bush and the US military would protect them). What did he say? The White House  tells Arango that he was not speaking on behalf of the US government. That's a  cute interpretation. He wouldn't be in Iraq if he weren't representing the US  government. Iraqis he made the remarks most likely believe that, him being an  ambassador, he was speaking on behalf of his government. Not only has the White  House distanced themselves from his remarks but what he said can't be discussed  because Jeffrey refuses to take questions on the topic.
 Barack's  administration, many will recall, got a reputation among conservatives for  scraping and bowing to foreign leaders (helped out by Barack's  not-ready-from-day-one ignorance that US presidents are representatives of the  American people who overthrew a monarchy and as such the people do not bow and  their representative does not bow before foreign 'nobles'). The White House  distancing itself from Jeffrey's remarks may have something to do with wanting  to avoid another controversy over that -- especially as election season has  already started for Campaign Obama --or it may be something  more.
 
 Regardless, James Jeffrey is a paid servant of the American people.  He is stationed in Iraq to represent the United States, not himself. That's not  his private property he resides in, that's US tax payer property. The notion  that his remarks can cause an uproar and he can declare that he's not going to  talk about what he said goes to a general lack of accountability from the  government.
 
 (For those wondering how the remarks went over, according to  Arango's report, not very well. No good will was built and it only led to  conversations along the lines of 'Iraq would have had an Arab Spring in 1991 and  our country would never have been destroyed by the war.')
 
 The remarks  Jeffrey made may have been solid ones. For people to know that, we'd have to  know the remarks. And just because the White House is distancing itself doesn't  mean that Jeffrey didn't have administration approval for the remarks he made.  At this point, no one knows but why an ambassador would feel the need to convey  an apology (personal or on behalf of the government) but then suddenly grow  reticent is very puzzling.
 
 
   US Senator Patty Murray is the Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee.  Today on the Senate floor, she spoke about veterans issues including  the Hire Heroes Act she has championed.  You can stream the speech here  ("Senator Murray begins speakin gat 5:40:31") and below are her remarks in  full:     "Mr. President, I've come  to the floor today to discuss the VOW to Hire Heroes Act -- an amendment to put  our nation's veterans back to work -- that we will be voting on tomorrow -- on  the eve of Veterans Day.  "The real meaning of Veterans Day is to remind ourselves to take  care of service-connected veterans and their families.   This amendment does  that.   "Now, Mr. President, we all realize that  this chamber has had its share of disagreements and discord  lately.  "It's no secret that we are sharply divided on any number of  economic and political issues facing average Americans right now. "But this is one issue we should  never be divided on. "I've served on the Senate Veterans'  Affairs Committee for over 16 years and I can tell you that veterans have never  been a partisan issue.   "We have all made a promise to those  who have signed up to serve.   "And we all need to keep it.    "That's why I've been so pleased to  work to put this amendment together in a comprehensive and bipartisan  manner.  "This amendment brings all ideas to the  table: Republican and Democratic, House and Senate, those from the President and  from members of Congress.   "And it uses all those ideas to address one  of the most daunting and immediate problems facing our nation's veterans:  finding work. "Mr. President, on this Veterans Day --  after almost ten years of war -- nearly one million American veterans will be  unemployed.  "It's a crisis they face with nearly  13 million other Americans - but for our veterans many of the barriers to  employment are unique. "That's because for those who have  worn our nation's uniform - and particularly for those young veterans who have  spent the last decade being shuttled back and forth to war zones half a world  away: The road home isn't always smooth. The red tape is often long. And the  transition from the battlefield to the work place is never easy.   ''Too often today our veterans are  being left behind by their peers who didn't make the same sacrifices for their  nation at a critical time in their lives.   "Too often they don't realize the  skills they possess and their value in the workplace.   "And too often our veterans are not finding open doors  to new opportunities in their communities. "But as those who know the character and experiences of  our veterans understand well, this shouldn't be the case.
 "Our veterans have the leadership  ability, discipline, and technical skills to not only find work, but to excel in  the economy of the 21st century. "And that's why two years ago I  began an effort -- to find out why -- despite all the talent and drive I know  our veterans possess -- this problem persists. "To get to the crux of this problem  I knew I had to hear first-hand from those veterans struggling to find  work. "So I crisscrossed my home state of  Washington and in communities large and small, at worker retraining  programs, in VA facilities, and in veterans'  halls.  "I sat down with veterans to talk  about the roadblocks they face.    "What I heard was heartbreaking and  frustrating.   "I heard from veterans who said they  no longer write that they're a veteran on their resume because of the stigma  they believe employers attach to the invisible wounds of war.   "I heard from medics who return home  from treating battlefield wounds and can't get certifications to be an EMT or to  drive an ambulance.  "I spoke with veterans who said that  many employers had trouble understanding the vernacular they used to describe  their experiences in an interview or on a resume.  "I talked to veterans who told me  that the military spent incalculable hours getting them the skills to do their  job in the field, but little time teaching them how to transition those skills  into the workplace.   "The problems were sometimes  complicated and sometimes simple.  "Most importantly though -- they  were preventable.   "But the more I relayed the concerns  of our state's unemployed veterans to federal government officials for answers,  the more I realized there were none. "It became clear that for too long  we have invested billions of dollars in training our young men and women with  skills to protect our nation - only to ignore them once they leave the military.   "For too long, at the end of their  career we patted our veterans on the back for their service and then pushed them  out into the job market alone. "That's why in May of this year, as  Chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, I introduced a bipartisan  veterans employment bill to ease the transition from the battlefield to the  working world.  "It's a bill that allows our men and  women in uniform to capitalize on their service, while also ensuring the  American people capitalize on the investment we have made in them.   "For the first time, it requires  broad job skills training for every service member as they leave the military as  part of the military's Transition Assistance Program.   "It allows service members to begin  the federal employment process prior to separation in order to facilitate a  truly seamless transition from the military to jobs in  government.  "And it requires the Department of  Labor to take a hard look at what military skills and training should be  translatable into the civilian sector in order to make it simpler for our  veterans to get the licenses and certifications they need.   "All of these are real, substantial  steps to put our veterans to work.  "And today they are being combined  with other great ideas in this comprehensive amendment.   "Including  an idea championed by my House counterpart, Chairman Miller, that will ease the  employment struggles of our older veterans by providing them with additional  education benefits so that they can train for high-demand jobs.   "And an idea that's been championed  by President Obama, Senator Baucus, and many others that provides a tax credit  for employers that hire veterans.  "Mr. President, with  this amendment we are taking a huge step forward in rethinking the way we treat  our men and women in uniform after they leave the military.   "And for many of us,  particularly those who grew up with the Vietnam War -- we are also taking steps to  avoid the mistakes of the past -- mistakes we stand perilously close to  repeating. "You know, each day we  read about skyrocketing suicide statistics, substance abuse problems, and even  rising homelessness among the post-9/11 generation of veterans.   "And  while there are many factors that contribute to these challenges  -- "The failure to give our veterans the self-confidence, financial  security, and dignity that a job provides often plays a crucial  role.  "So on this Veterans Day we need to redouble our efforts to avoid  the mistakes that have cost our veterans dearly -- and that have weighed on the  collective conscience of this nation.  "We must do that by passing this  amendment -- but also by looking back on a time when we stepped up to meet the  promise we made to our veterans. "Mr. President, as I've probably  mentioned on the floor here before, my father was a veteran of World War  II. "But what I don't always talk about  is the fact that when he came home from war -- he came home to opportunity.      "First to college -- then to a job.      "A job that gave him pride.      "A job that helped him and my mother  raise seven children -- who've gone on to support families of their  own.     "This is the legacy of opportunity  we have to live up to for our nation's veterans.    "This is the responsibility we have  on our shoulders.   "It doesn't end on the battlefield.    "It doesn't end after the parades on  Friday.   "In fact, it doesn't end.    "I urge my colleagues to put aside  our differences.     "To come  together.     "And to meet the challenge of  putting our veterans to work.     "Thank you Mr. President.      "I yield the  floor."     |