Candidate says his action figure will create jobs

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Greene: Create jobs by making action figures of me

Originally published 01:31 p.m., July 7, 2010
Updated 01:33 p.m., July 7, 2010

In a story in The (London) Guardian, South Carolina Democratic U.S. Senate nominee Alvin Greene tells a reporter that one way to create jobs in the state would be to have action figures of himself produced.

"Another thing we can do for jobs is make toys of me, especially for the holidays," Greene said in the article. "Little dolls. Me. Like maybe little action dolls. Me in an Army uniform, Air Force uniform, and me in my suit."

"That's something that would create jobs," Greene continued. "So you see I think out of the box like that. It's not something a typical person would bring up."

Guardian reporter Ed Pilkington concludes that Greene, a 32-year-old unemployed military veteran from Manning, displays "a mix of glaring inadequacy and raw political conviction."

A spokesman for Republican Sen. Jim DeMint's re-election campaign declined to comment on the article.
The Post and Courier - Greene: Create jobs by making action figures of me - Charleston SC - postandcourier.com
 
Who is Greene?

SC Dems ask surprise Senate candidate Greene to withdraw; he refuses
By MEG KINNARD
Associated Press
Originally published 02:48 p.m., June 9, 2010
Updated 05:53 p.m., June 9, 2010

COLUMBIA — A day after an unemployed veteran charged with a felony shocked South Carolina’s Democratic establishment by winning the U.S. Senate primary, party officials were still scratching their heads: What happened?

Alvin Greene, 32, didn’t raise any money. He didn’t have a website. And his opponent was a relatively better-known former legislator, Vic Rawl, who was already preparing for the general election.

Greene was considered such a long shot that his opponent and media didn’t even bother to check his background. If they had, they would have discovered he faces a felony obscenity charge after an alleged encounter with a college student last fall.

After The Associated Press reported Greene’s charge Wednesday, the leader of the state Democratic party said she asked Greene to withdraw from the race.

“I did not do this lightly, as I believe strongly that the Democratic voters of this state have the right to select our nominee,” Fowler said. “But this new information about Mr. Greene ... would certainly have affected the decisions of many of those voters.”

But Greene said he will not step aside.

“The Democratic Party has chosen their nominee, and we have to stand behind their choice,” Greene told the AP at his home in Manning. “The people have spoken. We need to be pro-South Carolina, not anti-Greene.”

Court records show Greene was arrested in November and charged with showing obscene Internet photos to a University of South Carolina student, then talking about going to her room at a university dorm.

Charged with disseminating, procuring or promoting obscenity, Greene could face up to five years in prison. He has yet to enter a plea or be indicted.

South Carolina state law prohibits convicted felons from serving in state office. Felons can serve in federal office, although the U.S. House or Senate could vote to expel any member deemed unfit to serve.

Rawl said he didn’t know about Greene’s arrest until reading media reports about it.

“It’s an absolute surprise,” Rawl said. “I can’t really make any comments, because I don’t know what’s going on.”

Greene welcomed a reporter into his childhood home he shares with his father Wednesday afternoon along the backroads to Myrtle Beach. Wearing warmup pants and a green family reunion shirt from 1993, he had to be repeatedly cajoled to get his picture taken.

He seemed overwhelmed by his new fame and admitted he has no campaign signs, staff, buttons or even a slogan. He hoped the state and national party leaders might call him back, this time to offer some help.

“I need my state and national party to help me,” Greene said. “See, I don’t have any signs. Those take campaign contributions.”

He declined to comment about his pending felony charge, but the college student he was accused of approaching described the incident to the AP. It’s not clear what Greene was doing on the campus.

Camille McCoy, a 19-year-old rising sophomore at the University of South Carolina, said she called campus police after Greene sat down next to her in a computer lab and asked her to look at his screen, which showed a pornographic website.

“I said, ’That’s offensive,’ and he sat there laughing,” said McCoy, who was 18 at the time. “It was very disgusting. He said, ‘Let’s go to your room now.’ It was kind of scary. He’s a pretty big boy. He could’ve overpowered me.”

McCoy, who is from Charleston, said she was stunned to learn that the same man she later identified from a photo lineup was running for office, much less had won a party’s nomination.

“You’re kidding?” said McCoy, who is a Republican. “Oh my gosh, that’s ridiculous!”
The Post and Courier - SC Dems ask surprise Senate candidate Greene to withdraw; he refuses - Charleston SC - postandcourier.com
 
Huh?

CNN’s Don Lemon To Alvin Greene: ‘Do You Have Any Mental Impairments?’
» 56 comments
by Glynnis MacNicol | 7:51 pm, June 13th, 2010

Despite the furor that surrounds his South Carolina primary win, and despite the rocky series of interviews he’s already subjected himself to, Alvin Greene continues to make the media rounds. Today’s utterly bizarre installment comes courtesy of CNN’s Don Lemon, who noted that his interview with Greene was one of the strangest of his career.

For those following the Greene story this interview will likely sound familiar: Greene slowly, awkwardly sticks to his talking points, reasserting that he is not a Republican plant, and that, though unemployed, he paid the nomination fee out of his own savings. He also continues to refuse to comment on the pornography charges against him.

Lemon’s interview differs from past ones in so far as he asks Greene to comment on claims from lawmakers in his own state that he may have some “mental impairments.” Says Greene: “I say that back to them then.” That is really what he said. Shortly thereafter, in what weirdly begins to resemble one side of a hostage negotiation, Lemon asks Greene if he “is okay right now?” “I’m fine,” says Greene, repeatedly. “Quite honestly you don’t sound okay,” responds Lemon, “and if you’re not you should let us know if you’re not okay.” “I’m okay.” Yes indeed! End of interview.
CNN’s Don Lemon To Alvin Greene: ‘Do You Have Any Mental Impairments?’ | Mediaite
 
Quite embarrassing for South Carolina.....and it's one of my favorite states too....
 
It is safer to say about GOP will win the SC senate election in Nov, no doubt.

Alvin Greene makes GOP to win so easy in Nov. :roll:
 
Greene wants to have a televised debate with incumbent Senator Jim DeMint. That would be a hoot to watch! :lol:
 
Greene wants to have a televised debate with incumbent Senator Jim DeMint. That would be a hoot to watch! :lol:

They should make it pay per view.......I would pay to watch it....

:hmm:.......gotta go
 
Greene wants to have a televised debate with incumbent Senator Jim DeMint. That would be a hoot to watch! :lol:

I can't imagine about what he is going to say.

I do know that SC is far safe GOP so DeMint will win the election in Nov.
 
More mystery:

Questions Persist About Alvin Greene's Mysterious Military Discharges

A week ago in the living room of South Carolina's Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate, I asked Alvin Greene if there was anything that had not yet been written about by the press that he wanted to get out. “Bring the Air Force discharge up,” Greene replied. “Y'all go and get that.”

This was not the response I had expected. Greene has based his candidacy, in large part, on his military service—a total of 13 years in the South Carolina Air National Guard, U.S. Air Force, Army National Guard and U.S. Army. Tarnishing this record are the mysterious circumstances around what he calls his “involuntary” discharges from the U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Army. In both cases, he has refused to detail the reasons for his dismissal.

Earlier in the same interview, I had asked Greene about his dismissal from the Air Force. His answer was, somewhat typically, cryptic. “I left the Air Force in September '05,” he said. “I ran through some problems, dealing with rank. It's a long story. I guess that will be the next thing they will be focusing on.” I asked him repeatedly to clarify further, and he declined to do so.

But less than an hour later, he was encouraging me to pursue the story of his Air Force dismissal. He later declined to help by granting permission to one of his former officers to discuss his service. An Air Force public affairs officer said Greene was discharged through an administrative action, not a court martial, which is consistent with Greene's characterization of an “involuntary” discharge. Otherwise, Air Force officials said they would not discuss the details.

After serving in the South Carolina Air National Guard during college, Greene served in the active-duty Air Force from July 25, 2002 to September 1, 2005. He served his duty at Shaw Air Force Base, which is located about 25 miles from his family home in Manning, South Carolina. "He was in the intel field," an Air Force spokeswoman says, adding that when he left his rank was airman first class -- to be expected for someone who had been in uniform his length of time. "But it's a very junior rank." Greene described his work at Shaw as an “intelligence specialist.”

“I'm not going to go into the duties,” Greene told me. “It's classified work."

While at Shaw, Greene won a row of ribbons and medals, according to Air Force records. They included the Global War on Terror Service Medal, the National Defense Service Medal, the Good Conduct Medal, the Armed Forces Reserve Medal, the Air Reserve Forces Meritorious Service Medal, and the Air Force Longevity Service Medal. "They're all kind of standard," the spokeswoman says. "So long as you don't mess up, you'll get them."

After Greene was forced out of the Air Force in 2005, he says he joined the South Carolina Army National Guard for seven months, leading to an active-duty posting in the U.S. Army, this time as a supply specialist. He signed up for three years in February 2007, and was discharged from service in August of 2009, according to an Army official. He was promoted to his final rank of specialist -- an E-4 rank, one higher than his final Air Force rank – in February 2009. Army officials also declined to describe the circumstances of his early departure, which Greene has characterized as “honorable.”

As in the Air Force, Greene earned a number of standard decorations in the Army, serving both in Korea, from June 2007 to July 2008 and at Ft. Riley in Kansas until his discharge. The Army awarded him the Korean Defense Service Medal, the Non Commissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon, the Army Service Ribbon, and the Overseas Service Ribbon.

None of this answers the central question of Greene's military service: Why did two branches of the military feel obliged to discharge him against his will? Greene will not say, though he says he expects the information to come out eventually, and he suggests that he will not be unhappy when it does.

Additional reporting by Mark Thompson and Elizabeth Dias
 
More mystery:

Just off the top of my head.....Seems bouncing from service to service he would have quite a bit of "broken time" which I have heard can affect promotion. Also heard that once you go 2-3 times without a promotion you are automatically discharged......at least in the Marines. Could be wrong though
 
Our family enjoys Riverdogs games at the Joe. They have fireworks after, too. :)

I saw the Savannah Sand Gnats in 99 or so........I think they are in the same league. They were playing Durham I believe
 
I saw the Savannah Sand Gnats in 99 or so........I think they are in the same league. They were playing Durham I believe
Yes, they've played against each other.
 
UPDATE:

Greene's military records have been released.

Alvin Greene reacts to release of military records
Staff and wire reports
Originally published 02:23 p.m., July 22, 2010
Updated 06:09 p.m., July 22, 2010

COLUMBIA — Alvin Greene dismissed highly critical assessments of his military service today, calling his supervisors in the Air Force and Army “ridiculous.”

Greene, who The Post and Courier reached by phone at his Manning home, said he was passed over for promotions in the military and ultimately discharged involuntarily, but honorably, due to discrimination.

“Those folks are ridiculous and yes and they only promote the terrorists and the communists and I haven’t gotten a promotion since I graduated from college and that’s just what I’m saying,” Greene said. “This is why we need to have things done differently. This is why we need to overhaul the military. We need get rid of these folks.”

Greene’s military record, obtained by The Associated Press, show that the veteran who has called himself an “American hero” was considered a lackluster service member at best. He has frequently mentioned to his 13 years of military service.

The military records, which document his superiors’ decisions to pass over Greene for promotion, cite mistakes as severe as improperly uploading sensitive intelligence information to a military server, and as basic as an overall inability to clearly express his thoughts and perform basic tasks.

...Greene wouldn’t specify why he felt discriminated against, other than that he suspected it was for his “general background.” He said his allegation that the military promotes “the terrorists and the communist” is based on the ranked given to Maj. Nidal Hasan, the psychiatrist accused of gunning down 13 people at Fort Hood, Texas, on Nov. 9, 2009.

Greene has often mentioned his military service, saying he first came up with the idea to seek political office while serving in Korea. But the veteran also has refused to go into detail about his service, merely saying he won numerous decorations and left the military honorably but involuntarily.

The records obtained by The Associated Press reveal only a small slice of Greene’s service record, his three years with the U.S. Air Force. After serving in junior ROTC in high school, Greene entered the Air National Guard in 1995, serving there until 2002.

In July of that year, he entered the Air Force, serving first as an intelligence librarian responsible for analyzing reports and briefings at Shaw Air Force Base near Sumter.

“They dismissed my potential,” Greene said. “They didn’t care what I could do ... like I said, I didn’t get a promotion after I got my college degree. There are very few enlisted troops that have college degrees. ... I was groomed and trained and educated.”


In a performance report in 2004, Greene received adequate marks for performing tasks assigned to him, complying with standards and training requirements. But Greene’s reviewer marked him as an ineffective leader who lacked organization and was “unable to express thoughts clearly.”

Greene is “usually capable of handling mundane tasks with supervision” but is “not able to adapt to any changes to daily routine,” the reviewer wrote, also noting that Greene had received multiple disciplinary actions for failing to perform his duties.


Greene also was written up for posting sensitive information on a military Internet server, a mistake that resulted in a three-day work stoppage. Records showed Greene was kept at Shaw while the rest of his unit deployed after leadership “recognized his inability to contribute to the wartime mission.”

Greene protested the denial, writing that the reviewer “only concentrates on presenting a negative perception of me by making false statements of my character” and saying the reviewer and other airmen “create a hostile work environment.”

A year later, Greene was evaluated again, this time in his new job as an analyst working with the weapons of mass destruction section. But Greene’s job had little to do with intelligence analysis and more to do with shredding documents and escorting contractors around the base, records show.

Again receiving low marks for ineffective leadership, Green also was rated as not knowing much about his duties, not performing them effectively and not complying with minimum training requirements.


The reviewer also wrote Greene “required a daily to-do list” to perform basic duties and had a “consistent inability to follow instructions or maintain basic job knowledge.” Most seriously, the reviewer wrote that Greene would represent “a threat to others” because of his inability to grasp the basics of military training.

In additional comments, the reviewer said she would not recommend Greene for promotion but did note his community service work and fundraising efforts for a holiday party. “While Alvin is a decent person, he lacks the basic skills necessary for promotion,” the summary said.

Greene also objected to that appraisal, writing that corruption to his computer “can often make it impossible for me to accomplish tasks in a timely fashion” and said another airman “cursed me out and told me I am wanted out.”

Greene said the airman who allegedly cursed at him is an example of the problems in the military.

“That’s unacceptable behavior,” Greene said. “That’s not an acceptable environment. We need to overhaul the military of those ridiculous folks and do things right. Looks like we need some oversight in the system. We need a better, there needs to be, the promotion system needs to be different. That’s an example of how we need to do things better.”

Six months after that evaluation, Greene was honorably discharged from the Air Force. A year later, he joined the Army National Guard, in which he served about six months before joining the U.S. Army.

When asked to discuss his discharge from the Army, Greene said he would not provide any records or talk about it, saying that the press would have to wait until the Army released the records.

The Post and Courier obtained Greene's Army records late this afternoon from George Wright, an Army spokesman at the Pentagon. The records are limited in the information provided. The reason for his discharge was not released, due to the provisions of the Privacy Act. The only exception to the release of a soldier’s discharge record is for bad conduct or dishonorable discharge imposed by a jury in a trail by court-martial, according to Wright.

The records show that Greene was promoted to specialist six months before his honorable, but involuntary discharge. Wright said that promotions are made in “due course for soldiers who perform their duties and display the potential for greater responsibility in that next rank.”

Greene enlisted in the Army in February 2007, and was discharged before his 3-year obligation had expired. He was last stationed with the 1st Infantry Division in Fort Riley, Kansas.

The records detail his service in the military: South Carolina Air Force National Guard from July 1995 to June 2002 and South Carolina Army National Guard from July 2006 to February 2007. He served in Korea from June 2007 to July 2008.

Greene did received awards for his services, including Air Force Good Conduct Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Korean Defense Service Medal and the Non-Commissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon.
The Post and Courier - Alvin Greene reacts to release of military records - Charleston SC - postandcourier.com




For any enlisted person to be evaluated as needing any supervision is a kiss of death to promotion.
 
Now there is a rap video about Alvin Greene:

"On the Scene" With Alvin Greene

More news out of South Carolina and surprise Democratic Senate candidate Alvin Greene: Just days after making his first campaign appearance Monday, Greene is once again claiming headlines with the release of an independently made video promoting his campaign.

The YouTube video, called "Alvin Greene is On the Scene," is a three minute rap song accompanied by a video featuring catchy lyrics about Greene's candidacy and shots of him from various televised interviews. For reasons unknown, basketball superstar Lebron James also makes an appearance several times in the video.

Among the several noteworthy rhymes scattered throughout the song are, "Jobs! Education! Justice, too! My man Al knows what's best for you," and "Shake up DC, sat in the church, And put me, you and Alvin Greene back to work!" The latter is a reference to Greene's campaign slogan, "Let's Get South Carolina Back to Work," which can be seen on his campaign website.

The video also makes reference to Greene's unemployment and the felony charge he faces for allegedly showing obscene images to a college student.

"Alvin Greene is the one for you. He knows how you feel 'cause he's unemployed, too," the song suggests, adding, "Well, Greene's a new face in politics, And he don't show porno to college chicks."

At the time of its release, it was unclear whether the video was actually from the Greene camp. In its credits, the video cites Greene as both the video's writer and director, and claimed his father filmed it. But according to CNN, Greene was not involved in its creation and doesn't know who made the piece.

"I don't know who made it," Greene told CNN. He added, however: "It sounds good. Make sure everybody hears it."
"On the Scene" With Alvin Greene - Political Hotsheet - CBS News
 
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