How the Left Sabotages the Literary Right
American Thinker
Jack Cashill
7/27/2012
Excerpt:
"My biggest complaint," writes "ebmlaw" in his Amazon review of Terry Lakin's new book Officer's Oath, "is about the parts where the author graphically describes being raped by a convicted child molester (or "ch'mo" as he calls them) while in prison."
For those who may not know, Terry Lakin is the medical doctor and former U.S. Army lieutenant colonel, who, according to "Whiskey 35 Alpha," refused to deploy to Afghanistan because "he had concerns about that scary back (sic) man in the White House." Clarification is added by "J. Powell," who elaborates, "[Lakin] treasonously abdicated his duties - AN OBLIGATION HE MADE AN OATH TO FULFILL - to make a political point about our first black president which is based entirely on well-documented lies."
Having helped Lakin with his memoir, I am fully certain that none of these reviewers bothered to read the book. They, or people like them, occupy Amazon and haunt the pages of all conservative authors. On the subject of Barack Obama, "the back man in the White House," they are quick to impute racism even to people like Lakin who have not a racist bone in their bodies.
The role of these unseemly little saboteurs is to pull down the overall review numbers and sow the seeds of doubt in the minds of would-be purchasers. In the case of Officer's Oath, they slightly offset the great majority of five-star reviews with their one-star reviews to bring the composite review number down to four. I do not know if their efforts are coordinated or if devious minds just happen to think alike. Perhaps both.
I was particularly impressed by the creativity of ebmlaw. With seeming prudence, he cautions the readers, "Although I understand his need to describe that experience [prison rape], I think [Lakin] could have done so without so much graphic detail." Yes, Lakin did go to prison. Yes, there were ch'mos at Leavenworth, but no, there is not a hint in this G-rated book that anyone gets molested or raped or in any way abused, let alone Lakin himself.
How, I wonder, do these clowns psych themselves for such petty nonsense? I have grown inured to them in writing my own books, but I cringe for Lakin's sake when I read them. As Mr. Powell acknowledges, the military stripped Lakin "of nearly $2 million in lifetime pension and family benefits." To replace that money, S. Murphy assures us, "now [Lakin] comes out with this cheap piece of trash book in an attempt to squeez (sic) out a few odd birther bucks to help replace the pension he threw away."
As Powell sees it, Lakin's willingness to give up his pension makes him "the dumbest birther out there, as well as a convicted criminal." He adds, "He should consider himself and his family lucky that he only had to serve six months at Ft. Leavenworth, and not the rest of his life." It is hard enough to read this swill about a book you have written, but it is much harder still to read it about the life you have lived.
Lakin, perhaps the most humble and honorable man I have ever met, is the first military resister in memory that the left has not embraced. Of all his hardship deployments, Bosnia included, his exile to Leavenworth was easily the hardest. After he bid a tearful farewell to his wife and three young children, his military minders chained his hands together and attached those chains to a band around his waist. They chained his legs and attached those too. They then loaded him into a van and drove him to Reagan National.
There, Lakin endured his ultimate humiliation, a seemingly endless perp walk, a shuffle really, through a concourse filled with flags and patriotic bunting and the happy sight of returning soldiers. None of the display had lost its appeal, but Lakin could not overlook the irony of his being chained and bound amidst it all. Thanks to a deepening Christian faith and an abiding love for his country, Lakin manfully survived the ordeal and emerged a stronger person for it."
..................................
View the complete article at:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/...ary_right.html
American Thinker
Jack Cashill
7/27/2012
Excerpt:
"My biggest complaint," writes "ebmlaw" in his Amazon review of Terry Lakin's new book Officer's Oath, "is about the parts where the author graphically describes being raped by a convicted child molester (or "ch'mo" as he calls them) while in prison."
For those who may not know, Terry Lakin is the medical doctor and former U.S. Army lieutenant colonel, who, according to "Whiskey 35 Alpha," refused to deploy to Afghanistan because "he had concerns about that scary back (sic) man in the White House." Clarification is added by "J. Powell," who elaborates, "[Lakin] treasonously abdicated his duties - AN OBLIGATION HE MADE AN OATH TO FULFILL - to make a political point about our first black president which is based entirely on well-documented lies."
Having helped Lakin with his memoir, I am fully certain that none of these reviewers bothered to read the book. They, or people like them, occupy Amazon and haunt the pages of all conservative authors. On the subject of Barack Obama, "the back man in the White House," they are quick to impute racism even to people like Lakin who have not a racist bone in their bodies.
The role of these unseemly little saboteurs is to pull down the overall review numbers and sow the seeds of doubt in the minds of would-be purchasers. In the case of Officer's Oath, they slightly offset the great majority of five-star reviews with their one-star reviews to bring the composite review number down to four. I do not know if their efforts are coordinated or if devious minds just happen to think alike. Perhaps both.
I was particularly impressed by the creativity of ebmlaw. With seeming prudence, he cautions the readers, "Although I understand his need to describe that experience [prison rape], I think [Lakin] could have done so without so much graphic detail." Yes, Lakin did go to prison. Yes, there were ch'mos at Leavenworth, but no, there is not a hint in this G-rated book that anyone gets molested or raped or in any way abused, let alone Lakin himself.
How, I wonder, do these clowns psych themselves for such petty nonsense? I have grown inured to them in writing my own books, but I cringe for Lakin's sake when I read them. As Mr. Powell acknowledges, the military stripped Lakin "of nearly $2 million in lifetime pension and family benefits." To replace that money, S. Murphy assures us, "now [Lakin] comes out with this cheap piece of trash book in an attempt to squeez (sic) out a few odd birther bucks to help replace the pension he threw away."
As Powell sees it, Lakin's willingness to give up his pension makes him "the dumbest birther out there, as well as a convicted criminal." He adds, "He should consider himself and his family lucky that he only had to serve six months at Ft. Leavenworth, and not the rest of his life." It is hard enough to read this swill about a book you have written, but it is much harder still to read it about the life you have lived.
Lakin, perhaps the most humble and honorable man I have ever met, is the first military resister in memory that the left has not embraced. Of all his hardship deployments, Bosnia included, his exile to Leavenworth was easily the hardest. After he bid a tearful farewell to his wife and three young children, his military minders chained his hands together and attached those chains to a band around his waist. They chained his legs and attached those too. They then loaded him into a van and drove him to Reagan National.
There, Lakin endured his ultimate humiliation, a seemingly endless perp walk, a shuffle really, through a concourse filled with flags and patriotic bunting and the happy sight of returning soldiers. None of the display had lost its appeal, but Lakin could not overlook the irony of his being chained and bound amidst it all. Thanks to a deepening Christian faith and an abiding love for his country, Lakin manfully survived the ordeal and emerged a stronger person for it."
..................................
View the complete article at:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/...ary_right.html