Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Leavin' a bit of work for the next guy......

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Joseph Stiglitz gives us the rundown on this administrations ruinous policies in "The Economic Consequences of Mr. Bush"


"In breathtaking disregard for the most basic rules of fiscal propriety, the administration continued to cut taxes even as it undertook expensive new spending programs and embarked on a financially ruinous 'war of choice' in Iraq. A budget surplus of 2.4 percent of gross domestic product (G.D.P.), which greeted Bush as he took office, turned into a deficit of 3.6 percent in the space of four years. The United States had not experienced a turnaround of this magnitude since the global crisis of World War II.

"Agricultural subsidies were doubled between 2002 and 2005. Tax expenditures -- the vast system of subsidies and preferences hidden in the tax code -- increased more than a quarter. Tax breaks for the president's friends in the oil-and-gas industry increased by billions and billions of dollars. Yes, in the five years after 9/11, defense expenditures did increase (by some 70 percent), though much of the growth wasn't helping to fight the War on Terror at all, but was being lost or outsourced in failed missions in Iraq. Meanwhile, other funds continued to be spent on the usual high-tech gimcrackery -- weapons that don't work, for enemies we don't have. In a nutshell, money was being spent everyplace except where it was needed. During these past seven years the percentage of G.D.P. spent on research and development outside defense and health has fallen. Little has been done about our decaying infrastructure -- be it levees in New Orleans or bridges in Minneapolis. Coping with most of the damage will fall to the next occupant of the White House."



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Wednesday, October 24, 2007

It's About the Oil....Part 3......

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Jack Miles sums it up;

Before the invasion of Iraq in March 2003, media mogul Rupert Murdoch said, "The greatest thing to come out of this for the world economy, if you could put it that way, would be $20 a barrel for oil." In the twenty-first century's version of the "Great Game" of nineteenth century imperialism, the Bush administration made a colossal gamble that Iraq could become a kind of West Germany or South Korea on the Persian Gulf -- a federal republic with a robust, oil-exporting economy, a rising standard of living, and a set of U.S. bases that would guarantee lasting American domination of the most resource-strategic region on the planet. The political half of that gamble has already been lost, but the Bush administration has proven adamantly unwilling to accept the loss of the economic half, the oil half, without a desperate fight. Perhaps the five super-bases that the U.S. has been constructing in Iraq for as many as 20,000 troops each, plus the ill-built super-embassy (the largest on the planet) it has been constructing inside the Green Zone, will suffice to maintain American control over the oil reserves, even in defiance of international law and the officially stated wishes of the Iraqi people -- but perhaps not.....



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Monday, October 22, 2007

I Want A New Drug......

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Spineocrat!!




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Thursday, October 11, 2007

It's About the Oil......Part Duex.....

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Andrew Sullivan links to as clear and concise a reading of the real plan for the Iraq invasion as I've seen. Looked at from this perspective, all our actions start to make perfect, greedy sense.

Money Quote;

Iraq has 115 billion barrels of known oil reserves. That is more than five times the total in the United States. And, because of its long isolation, it is the least explored of the world’s oil-rich nations. A mere two thousand wells have been drilled across the entire country; in Texas alone there are a million. It has been estimated, by the Council on Foreign Relations, that Iraq may have a further 220 billion barrels of undiscovered oil; another study puts the figure at 300 billion. If these estimates are anywhere close to the mark, US forces are now sitting on one quarter of the world’s oil resources. The value of Iraqi oil, largely light crude with low production costs, would be of the order of $30 trillion at today’s prices. For purposes of comparison, the projected total cost of the US invasion/occupation is around $1 trillion.

Who will get Iraq’s oil? One of the Bush administration’s ‘benchmarks’ for the Iraqi government is the passage of a law to distribute oil revenues. The draft law that the US has written for the Iraqi congress would cede nearly all the oil to Western companies. The Iraq National Oil Company would retain control of 17 of Iraq’s 80 existing oilfields, leaving the rest – including all yet to be discovered oil – under foreign corporate control for 30 years.


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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

When They Tell You It's Not About Oil.....

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....it's about oil.


Middle Eastern expert Dilip Hiro explains (money quote);

According to high flying, oil insider Falah Al Jibury, the Bush administration began making plans for Iraq's oil industry "within weeks" of Bush taking office in January 2001. In an interview with the BBC's Newsnight program, which aired on March 17, 2005, he referred to his participation in secret meetings in California, Washington, and the Middle East, where, among other things, he interviewed possible successors to Saddam Hussein.

By January 2003, a plan for Iraqi oil crafted by the State Department and oil majors emerged under the guidance of Amy Myers Jaffe of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University. It recommended maintaining the state-owned Iraq National Oil Company, whose origins dated back to 1961 -- but open it up to foreign investment after an initial period in which U.S.-approved Iraqi managers would supervise the rehabilitation of the war-damaged oil infrastructure. The existence of this group would come to light in a report by the Wall Street Journal on March 3, 2003.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Anyone Seen My Nukes??

So. How did those nuclear armed cruise missiles "accidentally" get to Barksdale AFB, LA? We either have an extremely corrupted nuclear missle tracking and moving plan, or it was done on purpose. Neither one of these options are good. Hang on gang, it's time for us all to don our tin foil caps......

Larry Johnson from TPM has an interesting and informative post on this.


Money Quotes;

Recently the news media reported a USAF B-52 taking off from Minot AFB, ND and landing at Barksdale AFB, LA with six nuclear weapons aboard. The big question is how or why this could happen?

First of all I have to say we are not privileged to all of the information and may never know the underlying circumstances of this occurrence. The Department of Defense declared this entire event was a mistake and would investigate what actually happened.

Obviously there are two possibilities: 1. this was an error and the events that occurred were a tragic mistake of far reaching proportions; and 2. the nuclear weapons were moved on purpose.

The United States has had nuclear weapons for over sixty years. Through out this time the tracking, storage and movement of these weapons has been performed without any type of security problem. The chain of custody procedures has been refined to the nith degree to insure that there will never be a mistake. The access to, movement of, and custody of these weapons is so tightly controlled, each serial numbered weapon has to be signed for when possession of it changes (from one person to another), then only after receiving a lawful order to do so. In order to load a nuclear weapon onto an aircraft the Weapon’s Depot Commander must receive a lawful order from above. The order is sent down (in writing) to one of the bomb shelter custodians and the weapon is signed out to a Loader. The Loader, loads the weapon onto an aircraft and will keep the weapon/aircraft under surveillance with the aircraft under armed guard by the Security Police in an isolated protected area until the Aircraft Commander performs his pre-flight inspection on the aircraft and signs a receipt for each of the weapons by serial number. Once delivered at their destination the Aircraft Commander would receive a receipt for the weapons by serial number from the receiving facility.

With all of the necessary orders and paperwork required just to move a nuclear weapon from one room in a storage facility to another, it can be stated with some sort of certainty that this was not a casual mistake as the Department of Defense has eluted to.

Then if the movement wasn’t a mistake, it obviously was done with some sort of purpose in mind.

The destination of the aircraft was Barksdale AFB, LA from which a number of the strikes on the Middle East have initiated. Speculation would lead us to believe the weapons were being stockpiled at this facility for a possible strike somewhere in the world. Additional speculation would also lead us to believe the strike was to occur in the very near future. Why else the need to forego the normal overland transportation procedures for nuclear weapons and risk flying them to their destination in violation of a treaty with the Russians. Also how is it the press was aware of this movement? After all who would be suspicious of a B-52 taking off from a B-52 base and a B-52 landing at a B-52 base. This event goes on many times each day for practice missions and training. Some one had to have leaked the information to the press that the U.S. was moving nuclear weapons by air in a treaty violation.

This leads us to two possible scenarios.
1. Whoever leaked the information would have been someone in a position of authority knowing what was going on and concerned the U.S. was actually attempting to use nuclear weapons somewhere in the world and wanting to stop it by exposing it. This someone would have had to have a security clearance of some kind and violated the trust under which it was issued thus being exposed to severe penalties and jail time for potential treason etc. Facing such severe penalties someone would have to be totally committed to his/her own conscience/moral beliefs. This preemptive exposure would put the U.S. on a difficult footing and loss of the surprise factor, thus potentially curtailing the mission.
2. The other possibility would be the information on the flight was leaked on purpose in an attempt to influence a foreign government, group or situation to move in a particular direction. That the U.S. was “Saber rattling” and the stakes were high enough to risk antagonizing the Russians to accomplish it. (With the possibility the Russians were supporting the action and willing to overlook the violation as exemplified by their lack of response in the entire situation.)

In either case we have only seen some minor actions taking by the Department of Defense in an attempt to say; well, by accident we left a few nuc’s laying around on some missiles we were going to destroy and they accidentally got loaded onto a plane that by some coincidence happened to be going to a base other than the one it was assigned to (we rarely fly B-52’s assigned at one station to another station). B-52’s usually take off from their home base, fly their mission anywhere in the world by aerial refueling and then return to the base from which they departed. Often these flights take over 20 to 30 hours. If this was a mistake what is happening to the general officers in the chain of command who would have had to issue lawful orders for the movement of those weapons and all those in the custodial chain who would have had to sign for each weapon as they gained possession of them? It just doesn’t add up. Especially when there is a line item in the budget before Congress to upgrade the missiles the Air Force says they were about to destroy. There appears to be too many loose ends still dangling. In addition to all of this did anyone notice how quickly this entire situation quieted down. Usually the press would play on such a world shaking event for months. They do for other things like the first birthday of Anna Nicole’s daughter. We’ve heard about that for weeks on end. But, for a world event with treaty violation implications, no protests from the other treaty signers or other major world players, we get about three days of news attention and it goes away. It seems the exposure has played its roles and has gone away with hopes all is forgotten.

In closing, again we are not privileged in knowing all of the facts and undercover goings on in this matter to be fully aware of what the real intent of this action, but it appears to be more than what the surface information appears.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

More War, More Fear equals More Power....

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Andrew Sullivan outlines the potential Republican strategy for holding on to power. Six years ago I would have thought this a crazy notion. Doesn't sound so crazy now considering what this administration has done so far.

The chances of national reconciliation in Iraq have gone backward, not
forward, this past year, and the U.S.'s empowerment of anti-Shiite propaganda in
Anbar will only isolate Maliki further. The best that can happen is an
indefinite occupation of a dismembered Iraq to slow down genocide and make
ethnic cleansing more orderly. But even that is a very risky proposition. And
the events of last week mean that the Republican party now owns the Iraq
occupation more exclusively and deeply than they ever had - and indeed intend to
maintain it for another decade.

One option: Change the subject by launching wars against Syria and Iran,
and so polarize the country that the choice is framed as: MoveOn or America?
That's much better than having, you know, an actual debate about the merits of
the war in Iraq and the war against Islamist terror. On that, Republicans lose.
If the war is far wider and more terrifying, if the enemies can be multiplied
and amplified, then the dynamic plays to the advantage of the GOP. It's for us
or against us again.
Remember it doesn't matter to the current Bush
Republicans if they cannot persuade a majority of thie necessity of extending
the war to Iran and Syria. They have dropped attempting to persuade a majority
on the war. They are concerned only with shoring up their own party, which can
enable them to launch new wars before the current presidency ends.

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Friday, September 21, 2007

The Road To Victory....er, Corruption.....

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The Times reports that there might be a bit..oh, a few billion dollars worth....of contract irregularities. What a surprise. Tell me you didn't see this one coming.....

Military officials said Thursday that contracts worth $6 billion to provide essential supplies to American troops in Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan — including food, water and shelter — were under review by criminal investigators, double the amount the Pentagon had previously disclosed.

In addition, $88 billion in contracts and programs, including those for body armor for American soldiers and matériel for Iraqi and Afghan security forces, are being audited for financial irregularities, the officials said.

Taken together, the figures, provided by the Pentagon in a hearing before the House Armed Services Committee, represent the fullest public accounting of the magnitude of a widening government investigation into bid-rigging, bribery and kickbacks by members of the military and civilians linked to the Pentagon’s purchasing system.



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Friday, September 14, 2007

Nothing up my sleeve.....presto....the road to Victory

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What a sad state to which we have fallen. It's like we've given away our ability to deal with the truth.

Bush and his puppet general trot out a review of the surge that can't even pass the guffaw test, and we all settle down for another year of "This time for sure!".

Everyone but the "nuke 'em till they glow and shoot 'em in the dark" crowd knows that Georgie is playing out the string so he can hand this stinking dungball over to the next guy. All this so Republicans can point and say "You lost the war!!" Trust me, everyone will know that's bullshit as well.

But for some reason it does not seem that we can stop this. For some reason we will continue to sleepwalk through this nightmare. For some reason we will continue to allow this Kabuki theater to play out in front of us. For some reason we will continue to pretend that "it is what it is".

In the meantime, more US dollars and more US lives get flushed down the Mesopotamian toilet.

My question is why?

Short Answers to Long Questions.....

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From the Times;

... [Bush's] only real plan is to confuse enough Americans and cow enough members of Congress to let him muddle along and saddle his successor with this war that should never have been started.





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Friday, August 31, 2007

New Orleans Today.....

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The ever vigilant and direct Charles Pierce on the current state of New Orleans (and the U.S. as a whole);

....it should be noted Tom Joyner did a first-class radio broadcast from the Ninth Ward on Wednesday morning. Things got so heated about the presidential photo-op later in the day that Mayor Ray Nagin started to sound very uncomfortable. (He does, after all, still have to deal with this pack of thooleramawns for a living.) Excellent radio all the way around. Meanwhile, here's some of the latest from the indomitable Times-Picayune. The numbers are mind-blowing, at least to me -- I mean, 105,000 buildings lost -- most of them residential structures -- and $14 billion-with-a-B in damages. In an American city. In my lifetime. And not just any American city, but one that is more important to the cultural identity of this country than any other except (maybe) New York. My favorite word in all the world is "self-evident," as in, "We hold these truths to be self-evident." Mr. Jefferson is saying that the monumental heresies to follow -- all men created equal, endowed by their Creator with certain unalienables, etc., etc. -- are so obvious that they almost don't need to be explained, but that he will explain them anyway. That word set freedom itself free, which was the case in New Orleans more than it was in any other place I can name. An America without a New Orleans is just Great Britain with better beachfront property.

This, I believe, is in no small part why an administration with a cramped and vicious vision of the country, an administration dedicated to the depths of its rotted, vestigial soul to making this country less free, an administration that has us seriously debating how much torture is enough and whether the president should be forced to abide by the laws he signed, an administration that would sell the entire constitutional order down the river for a three-point bump in a poll full of fools, would allow this particular city to be so grievously wounded and then die in recovery. What are we to make of a country that allows these soulless, vacant fools to govern it with impunity? We are all in New Orleans, now, standing in the wreckage of a graveyard. The sun rises hot and merciless. The help never comes. And New Orleans, the birthplace of our national soul, just turns out to be the place where they took our national soul to die.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Cheney vs. Cheney

Seems prophetic, huh. Asshat should have listened to his 1994 self.



The True Republican Agenda


Matt has it right. Money quote;
The Republicans' strength as a coalition is that the movers and shakers behind it in the business community have a much more coherent agenda than does the interest-group coalition behind the Democrats. The formula isn't fool proof, and it can hit stumbling blocks every once in a while like a recession (1992) or a badly misfiring war (2006), but over the long run if you think of the modern Republican Party as an organized conspiracy for the purposes of concentrating America's wealth and income in the hands of the smallest possible number of people, it's been wildly successful for the past 30 years and we've yet to see any really clear evidence that the basic formula has stopped succeeding.


Monday, August 13, 2007

Rove

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Andrew Sullivan sums it up.

The man's legacy is a conservative movement largely discredited and disunited, a president with lower consistent approval ratings than any in modern history, a generational shift to the Democrats, a resurgent al Qaeda, an endless catastrophe in Iraq, a long hard struggle in Afghanistan, a fiscal legacy that means bankrupting America within a decade, and the poisoning of American religion with politics and vice-versa. For this, he got two terms of power - which the GOP used mainly to enrich themselves, their clients and to expand government's reach and and drain on the productive sector. In the re-election, the president with a relatively strong economy, and a war in progress, managed to eke out 51 percent. Why? Because Rove preferred to divide the country and get his 51 percent, than unite it and get America's 60. In a time of grave danger and war, Rove picked party over country. Such a choice was and remains despicable.

Rove is one of the worst political strategists in recent times. He took a chance to realign the country and to unite it in a war - and threw it away in a binge of hate-filled niche campaigning, polarization and short-term expediency. His divisive politics and elevation of corrupt mediocrities to every branch of government has turned an entire generation off the conservative label. And rightly so. It will take another generation to recover from the toxins he has injected, with the president's eager approval, into the political culture...

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Don't be a lapdog....

I come to you today to explain why I voted against the recent FISA bill. You may have heard some members of the press criticizing my vote; you may have heard members of the President’s party charging me with being “soft on terror.” I think that is a despicable charge, and I want to suggest to the President’s remaining supporters that their disdain for our nation’s civil liberties belies their claims to be defenders of “freedom.”

But I didn’t vote against the FISA bill only because I believe in Americans’ civil liberties. I also voted against it because I believe we have no reason to trust this President and his attorney general with any further expansion of executive powers. Their open contempt for Congressional oversight, for the American system of checks and balances, has been startlingly clear for years now. This is a President who simply does not believe he is accountable to anyone or anything– not even to the Constitution, which he is sworn to uphold but which he reads as a blueprint for simple executive fiat. And this is an attorney general who believes he can manipulate the judiciary branch for partisan purposes, and then lie gleefully to Congress about it– when, of course, he is not refusing to answer questions altogether.

I want to remind you all– and my colleagues in the President’s party– that whenever we have given this President the benefit of the doubt, the results have been disastrous for our country. Over four years ago, this President plunged us into a war that most Americans now recognize as one of the most militarily, politically, and diplomatically destructive wars this country has ever embarked upon. He justified that war, as he now justifies spying on Americans, as part of a “war on terror”; but the war in Iraq has been a terrible setback in our struggle against Islamic extremism, and the President’s domestic spying program, like his creation of secret detention-and-torture sites around the globe, has badly eroded our nation’s moral fiber. This President has shown time and again that he cannot be considered worthy of our trust; he has broken his vow to uphold the Constitution of the United States, and he has appointed an attorney general who believes, incredible as it may sound, that he himself is above the law. There is no reason whatsoever to give the President the powers he now demands.

The vast majority of the American people know this already. Less than thirty percent of them approve of the job this President is doing. To put this FISA bill in perspective, one would have to imagine Richard Nixon in 1974, with his 27 percent approval rating in the depths of the Watergate scandal, demanding from Congress the right to spy on his enemies– including his enemies in Congress. It would have been unthinkable for that Congress to give in to President Nixon’s demands, in order to help the President further undermine the Constitution and the rule of law; and it would be just as unthinkable today for this Congress to give in to President Bush’s demands, in order to help the President further undermine the Constitution and the rule of law. I will not be party to anything so foolish or destructive. I voted against this bill because I am loyal to this country and I do not trust this President– and I am proud of my vote.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

The Executive "Get Out Of Jail Free" Card.....

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From FireDogLake;

Donald Rumsfeld is evidently refusing to testify before Henry Waxman’s committee regarding the death of Pat Tillman. This comes on the heels of Fred Fielding refusing to release documents to the committee regarding Tillman’s death, citing “executive privilege:”

“There is no Executive Privilege claim that holds any water when the matter is the death of an American soldier - especially one who had been used by the Administration as a poster for the war,” said Jon Soltz, an Iraq War veteran who heads the group, in a statement sent to RAW STORY. “By refusing to release every pertinent document, the White House is fostering a climate of distrust among those in the military, hurting efforts to recruit new soldiers, insulting the memory of Pat Tillman, and causing undue pain to his family. Unless the President has something to hide, he should release all the documents requested by Republicans and Democrats on the Committee.”

As Jill recently mused, “Executive privilege now is defined as ‘Anything that would get us into trouble if released.’”

All this Tillman noise really sounds like a cover-up. I just wonder what they're really trying to keep from the public and the Tillman family.

Update: Apparently it's just a "perfect storm of mistakes". That sounds like a good definition of the whole Bush presidency. What it's really called is "more bullshit".

-UF

Who got da Money?

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This post by Eric Alderman
is so good I'm going to post it in it's entirety. It clearly encapsulates the real changes in wealth between the very rich, rich, poor, and very poor in this country over the last 25 years. It's well written, easy to understand, and backed up with facts. And it's scary. I don't think these changes have really sunken in to the public at large. The really rich, and the really poor stay hidden from the general public, for the most part. But the income disparity is real, it's effect on the middle class is growing, and the way it changes our democracy now and in the future should have us all concerned.

In the decade since the passage of NAFTA, labor productivity in the U.S. manufacturing sector rose between 70 percent and 80 percent, while real wages rose only 6 percent. In Mexico, productivity rose 68 percent, while real wages rose 2 percent. In Canada, the numbers are 34 percent and 3 percent, respectively.[i] The question for any democratic society is how to address this. Alas, we in the United States have done so by conducting what one conservative writer terms "a massive social experiment" in economic inequality. Over the last quarter-century, the portion of the national income accruing to the richest 1 percent of Americans has doubled. The share going to the richest one-tenth of 1 percent has tripled, and the share going to the richest one-hundredth of 1 percent has quadrupled.[ii] For working people, wages and salaries now make up the lowest share of the nation's gross domestic product since the process of collecting this data began more than 60 years ago.[iii] For the poor, just in the years since 2000, the number of Americans living below the poverty line has increased by nearly a third.[iv] Meanwhile, the average CEO of a Standard & Poor's 500 company took home $13.51 million in total compensation in 2005, a year in which the top 1 percent of Americans earned nearly 22 percent of all income.[v] Believe it or not, by 11:02 a.m. of the first workday of work on the first day of 2007, one of these average CEOs "earned" more money than the minimum-wage workers in his company will make for the entire year.[vi] The media tend to treat these trends as merely "the way the world works," but this is actually the essence of conservative ideology. As the political philosopher Michael Walzer pointed out in 1973:

At the very center of conservative thought lies this idea: that the present division of wealth and power corresponds to some deeper reality of human life. Conservatives don't want to say merely that the present division is what it ought to be, for that would invite a search for some distributive principle -- as if it were possible to make a distribution. They want to say that whatever the division of wealth and power is, it naturally is, and that all efforts to change it, temporarily successful in proportion to their bloodiness, must be futile in the end."[vii]

And yet, one cannot help but ask, why is this not the case in Europe or Japan?[viii] In fact, among major world economies, the United States in recent years has had the third-greatest disparity in incomes between the very top and everyone else; only Mexico and Russia are worse.[ix]

Only in the United States are the super-wealthy so powerful and their ideological interests so well tended and defended that their interests have come to stand as "principles" in our political discourse. As the historian Eric Foner notes in his history of "freedom," Franklin Roosevelt explained that "individual freedom" could not be said to "exist without economic security and independence ... for the average man which will give his political freedom reality." And his successor, Harry Truman, would use the phrase "economic freedom" in his 1950 State of the Union address to mean "a fundamental economic freedom for labor." But by the time of Ronald Reagan's second inaugural, the same phrase had come to imply not the right to organize or achieve economic security and independence, but deregulation, tax cuts, and an attack on unions on behalf of powerful corporations and their wealthy owners and investors.[x] By the second Bush presidency, following more than 20 more years of conservative agitation, the ideological demands of the super-rich had grown ever more extreme. For instance, Kenneth C. Griffin, who received more than a billion dollars in 2006 as chairman of a hedge fund, the Citadel Investment Group, could explain to a New York Times reporter in the summer of 2007, "The income distribution has to stand," adding, "I am proud to be an American. But if the tax became too high, as a matter of principle I would not be working this hard."[xi] Just what "principle" Mr. Griffin had in mind, he did not say. Meanwhile, this period in American history witnessed a pitched battle between members of the Democratic Congress and a Republican-supported group of private-equity billionaires fighting to retain their tax privileges. These included, as Warren Buffett explained, the right to "pay a lower part of our income in taxes than our receptionists do, or our cleaning ladies, for that matter." They insisted on this right, because to force billionaires to pay what bartenders must, would, according to wealthy Bush administration "pioneer" Wayne Berman, "disrupt thousands of partnerships around the country that provide the economic engine," and "punish innovators."[xii] In no other democracy in the world are the wealthiest members of society so generously indulged. This argument, so patently absurd from the standpoint of basic fairness, was nevertheless sufficiently respectable for its adoption by New York Sen. Charles Schumer, the third-ranking Democrat in the Senate leadership, one of the key architects of the 2006 electoral victory, and a self-described "progressive" politician (though not, in his own estimation, a "liberal"). Of course, Schumer had good political reasons to go to bat for one of his most important sources of campaign funds, and one that happens to be located in the state he represents, but the mere spectacle of a prominent center-left politician fighting against a tax increase for plutocrats without shame or apology demonstrates just how influential the power of money has become in 21st century America.

[i] Jeff Faux, "Crashing the Party of Davos," Democracy, No. 3, Winter 2007

[ii] Jonathan Chait, "Freakoutonomics," The New Republic, November 6, 2006

[iii] Clay Risen, "Trading Stories," TNR Online, September 19, 2006

[iv] Figure is based on U.S. Census statistics, "Harper's Index," Harper's Magazine, June 2007

[v] The Corporate Library's 2006 CEO Pay Survey, September 29, 2006

[vi] The CEOs of America's largest corporations (the Fortune 100) make an average of $17.6 million per year. That is $67,692 per day, or approximately $8,461 per hour. At the beginning of this year, the federal minimum wage was set at $5.15 per hour, or $10,712 per year (for a 40-hour workweek). It takes the average CEO 2 hours and 2 minutes to earn $10,712. The CEO of Fortune 100 companies earn $10,712 in 1 hour and 16 minutes. It takes the average minimum-wage worker 52 40-hour weeks (2,080 hours) to earn $10,712. See "Survey of CEO salaries at companies with $1 billion plus of revenue," CNN.com Money Line, June 21, 2006; "Survey of CEO salaries at Fortune 100 companies," USA Today, April 11, 2006. See also David Cay Johnston, "Income Gap Is Widening, Data Shows," New York Times, March 29.

[vii] Michael Walzer, "In Defense of Equality," Dissent, 1973, reprinted in The New York Intellectuals Reader, Neil Jumonville, editor, (Routledge, April 2007)

[viii] Kurt Andersen, "American Roulette," New York magazine, January 8

[ix] Jonathan Chait, "Freakoutonomics," The New Republic, November 6, 2006

[x] Quoted in Eric Foner, The Story of American Freedom, (W.W. Norton, 1999), Page 269

[xi] Quoted in Louis Uchitelle, "The Richest of the Rich, Proud of a New Gilded Age," The New York Times, July 15

[xii] Evan Thomas and Daniel Gross, "Taxing the Super Rich," Newsweek, July 23

Monday, July 23, 2007

Today's DoubleTake.....

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The fox who was responsible for the large mess in the henhouse vows to stick around to fix things up, and restore the henhouse to it's former glory, honest. The idiot farmer who hired him agrees, however, the chickens are less than convinced.......


Gonzales to stick around.

I believe very strongly that there is no place for political considerations in the hiring of our career employees or in the administration of justice. As such, the allegations of such activity have been troubling to hear. From my perspective, there are two options available in light of these allegations. I could walk away or I could devote my time, effort and energy to fix the problems. Since I have never been one to quit, I decided that the best course of action was to remain here and fix the problems. That is exactly what I am doing.


What a load of crap.....



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Friday, July 20, 2007

'Cause I Said So, Part II

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David Kurtz takes a closer look at the real need for Executive Privilege;

Money quote;

As long as we're going to be discussing the parameters of executive privilege in the weeks and months ahead, can we start by revisiting the now commonly accepted notion that the President can only get free and unfettered advice if those giving the advice know it will remain confidential?

Presidents do have a strong interest in this principle. But the President's interest, in this instance, is not in line with the public interest. In fact, executive privilege offers the President and his advisers a perverse disincentive to look after the public interest. Isn't the prospect of public exposure of hare-brained ideas, controversial proposals, and malfeasance and misdeeds the very sort of incentive the public wants looming over the President and his advisers, a dagger of accountability?

The concoction of cover-ups, frauds, and misadventures in the White House over the last 35 years is precisely what should be exposed to public scrutiny. The logic, such as it is, for executive privilege would apply equally to governors, mayors, and officials at all levels of government. Yet we don't usually grant such broad privileges to other government officials.




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'Cause I Said So.......

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Well, that's a bit more polite than what those in this administration really are thinking. It has now reached a point where "executive privilege" really means "Fuck you, I can do whatever I want, whenever I want". Not really surprising coming from a spoiled little rich kid used to always getting his way, and surrounded by people who labor intensively to clean up his messes. Daddy must be proud. Conservatives must be proud.

So, having stacked the U.S. Justice Department with lackeys (especially in D.C.), and having had the good fortune to replace 2 Supreme Court Justices with strong executive advocates, Georgie Boy can pretty much stonewall his way till the end of his term. Now if he can just figure out a way to cancel the next election, we can officially become a Banana Republic.

Executive Privilege - Bush's New Twist

Bush administration officials introduced a bold new assertion of executive authority Thursday in the dispute over the firing of nine U.S. attorneys, saying that the Justice Department will never be allowed to pursue contempt charges initiated by Congress against White House officials once the president has invoked executive privilege.

"A U.S. attorney would not be permitted to bring contempt charges or convene a grand jury in an executive privilege case," said a senior official, who spoke on condition of anonymity and said his remarks reflect a consensus within the administration. "And a U.S. attorney wouldn't be permitted to argue against the reasoned legal opinion that the Justice Department provided. No one should expect that to happen."

Mark Rozell, a professor of public policy at George Mason University who has written a book on executive-privilege issues, called the administration's stance "astonishing."

"That's a breathtakingly broad view of the president's role in this system of separation of powers," Rozell said. "What this statement is saying is the president's claim of executive privilege trumps all."





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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Accountability

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Why can't we hold this administration accountible for their crimes. Enough talk, talk, talk. It's time for do, do, do.

Mr. Rove should be in jail for the overt politicization of federal employees.

Partisan campaign or electoral activities on federal government property are illegal.

Money Quote From ThinkProgress;

This week’s report that officials in the Office of National Drug Control Policy made politically motivated appearances in the months leading up to the 2006 elections are only the latest example of the Bush administration’s misuse of federal employees.

For example, the Wall Street Journal reported in 2003 that Karl Rove or his top aide, Ken Mehlman, “visited nearly every agency to outline White House campaign priorities, review polling data and, on occasion, call attention to tight House, Senate and gubernatorial races that could be affected by regulatory action.”

Monday, July 16, 2007

The Obscenity Prayer

Seems I'm in a video mood today.

Here's a timely video with music by one of my favorite artists; Rodney Crowell.

Enjoy......

Feel Good....not

From the Houston Chronicle;

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Strange Bedfellows......

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Andrew Sullivan and Glen Greenwald come to a consensus.

This Administration has done more damage to this country than I could ever have imagined.

The Bush Paradox

Glenn Greenwald sees it in his new book, "A Tragic Legacy":

The president who vowed to lead America in a moral crusade to win hearts and minds around the world has so inflamed anti-American sentiment that America's moral standing in the world is at an all-time low. The president who vowed to defend the Good in the world from the forces of Evil has caused the United States to be held in deep contempt by large segments of virtually every country on every continent of the world, including large portions of nations with which the U.S. has historically been allied. The president who vowed to undertake a war in defense of American values and freedoms has presided over such radical departures from the defining values and liberties of this country that many Americans find their country and its government unrecognizable. And the president who vowed to lead the war for freedom and democracy has made torture, rendition, abductions, lawless detentions of even our own citizens, secret "black site" prisons, Abu Ghraib dog leashes, and orange Guantánamo jumpsuits the strange, new symbols of America around the world.

And yet this tale of Manicheanism gone awry, of a utopian vision ending in a dystopia, of the terrible dangers of any moral crusade that sanctifies "any method necessary" (in Giuliani's language) in its well-intentioned pursuit of evil is not a new story. It is one of the oldest stories human beings have told to themselves. Human beings seem to need to relearn it with each generation; and I can only express remorse that, in my time, I needed a lesson as well.

The genius of the American constitution, however, is that it provides the framework for such immoral moralism to be checked and moderated. Alas, we have also seen these past few years how dependent such a system is on the integrity and courage of the people in it.

It depends on an elite willing to stand up against their own power, and it depends on a people alert to the erosion of their freedom. Today, both guardrails against tyranny appear weakened, and the pushback against a radically authoritarian executive has been weak. We have an elite class in Washington either too cowardly to stand up to the power grab or too co-opted by the perquisites of power to care. And we have a people seemingly content to watch freedom being stripped from them - because, right now, it's mainly people with brown skin and funny names being railroaded by the executive branch. Al-Marri and Padilla can be distanced. And the Hollywood fantasies of Jack Bauer can distract from an honest moral assessment of how far we've degenerated in so short a time.

There is still a chance to repair the damage - but given how much we have lost since 9/11, the constitutional consequences of another major attack are likely to be terminal to the American experiment in liberty. If a Giuliani or a Cheney is in power on such a day, we can kiss goodbye to the constitution. If I sound overly alarmed by what has happened to American liberty, it's because I honestly didn't expect to see habeas corpus, the most basic freedom we have, so casually thrown away and torture so casually enshrined in the American system. I never believed an American president would not only claim but exercise the power to detain any person in America and jail and torture them with impunity - indefinitely. But these are the facts; and my own book was an attempt to account for them within the conservative philosophical tradition. Glenn Greenwald comes from a very different place, but we have sadly come to the same conclusion.

America has exchanged some if its basic freedoms for the patina of phony security - and so easily. The Republican party, to its historic shame, has been the main vehicle for the replacement of doubt, empiricism and calm judgment with certainty, fundamentalism and raw force. We have terrible enemies abroad, seeking to destroy our way of life. But this truth should never blind us to the danger within as well. Al Qaeda can only give us death. It is up to us to surrender the liberty they despise. In so many ways, we already have.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Plausible Deniability......

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How can we, as a country, purport to be the beacon of democracy when our leaders willfully ignored the lawless actions at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo that defied the Geneva conventions and our own military regulations?

The general who headed the military's own internal investigation now states that the torture and mistreatment of prisoners was not the act of a few renegades, but was tacitly supported by the top levels of this administration, who even now continue to hide behind a farcical shield of "plausible deniability".

May their lawless actions be subjected to the full light of day, and may they be held acountable and prosecuted to the full extent of our judicial system.

"Here . . . comes . . . that famous General Taguba—of the Taguba report!" Rumsfeld declared, in a mocking voice. The meeting was attended by Paul Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld's deputy; Stephen Cambone, the Under-Secretary of Defense for Intelligence; General Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (J.C.S.); and General Peter Schoomaker, the Army chief of staff, along with Craddock and other officials. Taguba, describing the moment nearly three years later, said, sadly, "I thought they wanted to know. I assumed they wanted to know. I was ignorant of the setting."

In the meeting, the officials professed ignorance about Abu Ghraib. "Could you tell us what happened?" Wolfowitz asked. Someone else asked, "Is it abuse or torture?" At that point, Taguba recalled, "I described a naked detainee lying on the wet floor, handcuffed, with an interrogator shoving things up his rectum, and said, 'That's not abuse. That's torture.' There was quiet."


Is this what our country now stands for?

Friday, June 15, 2007

Quote of the Day

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Nice rebuttal to any concept of "democracy building strategy" in our invasion of Iraq on Andrew Sullivan's blog.


"We tried to construct a constitutional order [in Iraq] for a non-dictatorial, national political settlement."


We did what, exactly? Here's what we did. We disbanded the army, throwing thousands out into the street with no pay, no pension, no way to support their families. We shut down the state-owned industries that produced goods and services basic to the national infrastructure, throwing thousands out into the street with no pay, no pension, no way to support their families. And then we expected investors to line up while we threw reconstruction dollars at Halliburton and KBR and other American firms under no-bid loopholes in U.S. Government Procurement Law. Worse still, we eviscerated the civil service by purging it of Baath party members (who wasn't a member of the Baath Party? The cleaning crew?) thus ripping out the bare bones that would have supported the construction of constitutional order. Never mind throwing thousands out into the street with no pay, no pension, no way to support their families. We sat back while all these constitutionally and economically disenfranchised people looted what remained, said "stuff happens" and then proudly we pointed to purple fingers and claimed victory.

We burned down the house, that's what we did.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Saying of the Day....

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Sometimes in this hectic world it's important to take some time to evaluate one's behavior. Many times we are quick to anger and quick to focus only on one's personal needs. I read this quote today and it seemed to resonate with me;

Try to have a large radius of tolerance and a small radius of entitlement.


Words to live by.

-UF

Friday, June 01, 2007

The "We Don't Torture" Lie.....

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We do torture. Specifically by the order of this administration. And we modeled our torture based on what we learned from our worst enemies. Sad and sick.

It goes without saying that these atrocities should be investigated and the people responsible for these sorry decisions should be placed on trial.

Many of the controversial interrogation tactics used against terror suspects in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo were modeled on techniques the U.S. feared that the Communists themselves might use against captured American troops during the Cold War, according to a little-noticed, highly classified Pentagon report released several days ago. Originally developed as training for elite special forces at Fort Bragg under the "Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape" program, otherwise known as SERE, tactics such as sleep deprivation, isolation, sexual humiliation, nudity, exposure to extremes of cold and stress positions were part of a carefully monitored survival training program for personnel at risk of capture by Soviet or Chinese forces, all carried out under the supervision of military psychologists.

The report, completed last August but only declassified and made public on May 18, suggests that the abusive techniques stemmed from a much more formal process than the Defense Department has previously acknowledged. By 2002 the Pentagon was looking for an interrogation paradigm to use on what it had designated as "unlawful combatants" captured in the "war on terror." These individuals, many taken prisoner in Afghanistan, were initially brought to the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo, although others were subsequently hidden away in CIA secret prisons or turned over to U.S.-allied governments known to practice torture. That same year, the commander of the detention facility at Guantanamo began using the abusive "counter resistance" techniques adopted from SERE on prisoners at the base, and according to the Pentagon report SERE military psychologists were on hand to help.


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Thursday, May 31, 2007

More DOJ troubles brewing......

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The Bush Administration: Turning Justice into “Just Us,” since 2001.

From Think Progress
;

Yesterday, the DoJ announced that it was expanding its investigation of Goodling’s partisan hiring practices to include “scrutiny of hiring in the Civil Rights Division, which oversees voting rights.” A central figure in the expanded probe is Bradley Schlozman, a former Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division currently serving in the Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys. He is set to appear next Tuesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Schlozman is reported to have repeatedly inquired about applicants’ political affiliations


Update: More smoking guns here;

The Los Angeles Times looks into why Thomas Heffelfinger, the former U.S. attorney for Minnesota, was targeted for removal and finds circumstantial evidence that Heffelfinger might have made himself a marked man by raising objection to the implementation of a voter ID law in the state. Some familiar characters crop up -- namely Bradley Schlozman and Hans Von Spakovsky, the two Republican lawyers who reigned over the Civil Rights Division's voting rights section.



Wednesday, May 30, 2007

A Thorn By Any Other Name......

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From Talking Points Memo;

"Enhanced interrogation", the Bush administration's preferred newspeak for torture, appears to have been coined by the Nazi Party in 1937.

There are way too many facile comparisons of whatever group or individual we dislike to Nazis. But when the shoe fits.


And this shoe fits like a finely designed Italian leather loafer.

And to make things worse, it doesn't even work....

As the Bush administration completes secret new rules governing interrogations, a group of experts advising the intelligence agencies are arguing that the harsh techniques used since the 2001 terrorist attacks are outmoded, amateurish and unreliable.

The psychologists and other specialists, commissioned by the Intelligence Science Board, make the case that more than five years after the Sept. 11 attacks, the Bush administration has yet to create an elite corps of interrogators trained to glean secrets from terrorism suspects...

In a blistering lecture delivered last month, a former adviser to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called “immoral” some interrogation tactics used by the Central Intelligence Agency and the Pentagon...

...some of the experts involved in the interrogation review, called “Educing Information,” say that during World War II, German and Japanese prisoners were effectively questioned without coercion.

“It far outclassed what we’ve done,” said Steven M. Kleinman, a former Air Force interrogator and trainer, who has studied the World War II program of interrogating Germans. The questioners at Fort Hunt, Va., “had graduate degrees in law and philosophy, spoke the language flawlessly,” and prepared for four to six hours for each hour of questioning, said Mr. Kleinman, who wrote two chapters for the December report.

Mr. Kleinman, who worked as an interrogator in Iraq in 2003, called the post-Sept. 11 efforts “amateurish” by comparison to the World War II program, with inexperienced interrogators who worked through interpreters and had little familiarity with the prisoners’ culture.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Killin' for the Children......

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You know you've reached the bottom of the barrel when all you have to trot out is fear mongering "they're coming for your children" line. Well that's all the President had at his news conference yesterday;

President: I would hope our world hadn't become so cynical that they don't
take the threats of al Qaeda seriously, because they're real. And it's a danger
to the American people. It's a danger to your children, Jim. And it's really
important that we do all we can do to bring them to justice.


Yes, it's all about the children. If we don't fight those nasty islamofacisterroristerriblebadarkskinneduglynastyguys they will come here and kill our children.

Well, I agree with Charles Pierce and his response to this pandering;

Look, sport. I'll take care of my kids. One of the ways I'll do it is to make
sure that you and your creepazoid vice-president don't send them off to be
killed on the basis of lies, trickeration, and the fact that you never flattened
Daddy on the front lawn that night you were sockless. Another of the ways I'll
do it is to make sure they fight as hard as they can to recapture the
constitutional rights -- and the culture of civil liberties -- to which they are
entitled by nature and by nature's god, to make sure they never again have to
live under a government staffed by legacy idiots and the products of fourth-rate
right-wing diploma mills. The last way I'll do it is to make sure they recognize
and appreciate those things about this country that actually are worth fighting
for -- most of which you wouldn't recognize if they fell off a shelf onto your
head. Protect my kids? Ace, I wouldn't hire you to mow my lawn.


It's time to call a spade a spade.

72%

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That's how many Americans think this country is on the wrong track. That's what we call a landslide.....

So, in a democracy this should matter......why does it feel like it doesn't?

Analysts? Who needs analysts.....

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Documents released as part of a Senate Intelligence Committee investigation show that the Bush administration was warned by U.S. intelligence analysts about the challenges it now faces as it tries to stabilize Iraq.

They don't believe these realities when it's right in front of their eyes, why would they have believed a report that objected to their forgone conclusions.....

Highlights from the reports;

_ Establishing a stable democracy in Iraq would be a long, steep and
probably turbulent challenge. They said that contributions could be made from 4
million Iraqi exiles and Iraq's impoverished, underemployed middle class. But
they noted that opposition parties would need sustained economic, political and
military support.
_ Al-Qaida would see the invasion as a chance to accelerate
its attacks, and the lines between al-Qaida and other terrorist groups "could
become blurred." In a weak spot in the analysis, one paper said that the risk of
terror attacks would spike after the invasion and slow over the next three to
five years. However, the State Department recently found that attacks last year
alone rose sharply.
_ Domestic groups in Iraq's deeply divided society would
become violent, unless stopped by the occupying force. "Score settling would
occur throughout Iraq between those associated with Saddam's regime and those
who have suffered most under it."
_ Iraq's neighbors would jockey for
influence and Iranian leaders would try to shape the post-Saddam era to
demonstrate Tehran's importance in the region. The more Tehran didn't feel
threatened by U.S. actions, the analysts said, "the better the chance that they
could cooperate in the postwar period."
_ Military action to eliminate Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction would not cause other governments in the region to
give up such programs.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

The Path to Barbarism....

Digby today, while discussing the recent stoning of an Iraqi girl, focuses on the slippery slope of authoritarianism and fundamentalism, and how, no matter the level of sophistication, these traits lead to the same results;

This is why I have contempt for tribalism, fundamentalism and authoritarianism. When it gets right down to it, it's always, in the end, about mob rule. A gang of violent bullies, often at the behest of some authority figure, "sends a message" by publicly humiliating, maiming or killing one of their own who had the temerity to fail to properly conform. Whether for God or country or tribe, it's always some poor victim, lying on the ground, covering his or her head, surrounded by people who have turned into animals.

There are a lot of manifestations of this particular human organizational style, some much more sophisticated and stylized. The violence becomes more ritualized and the humiliation takes other forms but underneath it all, the same impulse to dominate drives a fair number of people of all cultures. It's just a matter of degree.

This is the reason why it's so important to preserve our secular, reason-based constitution and fight against this horror of government endorsed torture and indefinite imprisonment. It is a very, very thin line between civilization and barbarism and every step we take away from the rule of law is a step toward becoming that primitive mob of killers. After all, I'm sure they felt justified too.


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From Bad to Worst......

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From Tom Schaller;

Sadly, it's official: With eight days still to go, May 2007 caps the deadliest six-month period for America of the entire Iraq war -- 540 dead, and counting. May also ends the first six-month period during which at least 80 American service personnel (never mind contractors) died every single month.

Kicked To The Curb.....

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So Paulie Wolf reaches out and tries to score his sweetie a plumb gig at the joint where he works. What does he get for his troubles? He loses his job over it, and his squeeze, now realizing he's unemployed, gives him the boot.

Mmmmm, boy. Are you tasting the Schadenfreude?

Reason.....

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Al Gore's new book, "The Assault On Reason" has some interesting things to say about our abilities to use reason to self govern, and how we may be abandoning the very thing that makes our country unique. (hattip to Andrew Sullivan)

Money quote:

For the first time in American history, the Executive Branch of our government has not only condoned but actively promoted the treatment of captives in wartime that clearly involves torture, thus overturning a prohibition established by General George Washington during the Revolutionary War.

It is too easy — and too partisan — to simply place the blame on the policies of President George W. Bush. We are all responsible for the decisions our country makes. We have a Congress. We have an independent judiciary. We have checks and balances. We are a nation of laws. We have free speech. We have a free press. Have they all failed us? Why has America's public discourse become less focused and clear, less reasoned?

Faith in the power of reason — the belief that free citizens can govern themselves wisely and fairly by resorting to logical debate on the basis of the best evidence available, instead of raw power—remains the central premise of American democracy. This premise is now under assault.

Friday, May 18, 2007

The 28%ers

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Keep feeding the base that reality free red meat.....

From Paul Krugman;

What we need to realize is that the infamous “Bush bubble,” the administration’s no-reality zone, extends a long way beyond the White House. Millions of Americans believe that patriotic torturers are keeping us safe, that there’s a vast Islamic axis of evil, that victory in Iraq is just around the corner, that Bush appointees are doing a heckuva job — and that news reports contradicting these beliefs reflect liberal media bias.

And the Republican nomination will go either to someone who shares these beliefs, and would therefore run the country the same way Mr. Bush has, or to a very, very good liar.

.
-UF

Troop Support??

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In the watch what they do not what they say department;

Bush Threatens Veto Over Troop Pay Raise, Military Widow Benefits



-UF

Impeachment?

_______________________________________________

I don't know how much more info we need to assign a Special Prosecutor to the warrant less wiretapping scandal. Each day there are new, more damning revelations. These clowns utter disregard for the rule of law and our constitutional guarantees make it imperative that we take these actions as seriously, and I don't think impeachment should be off the table.

Of course, when your personal butboy Fredo is running the DOJ you can certainly play the stall game.

Charles Pierce writing in Altercations sums it up;

OK, I'm convinced.

Impeach him. Impeach them all. Start chucking people into the hoosegow for contempt, and as material witnesses. Stuff this White House so full of subpoenas that it bursts. Blow this government apart.

I held off on this because I thought the process was both legally unjustifiable and politically futile. I believe it is still the latter. The difference is I don't care any more that it is. The Comey testimony -- coupled with the astonishing arrogance it takes simply to ignore congressional subpoenas as though they were something someone slipped under your windshield wiper -- pushed me all the way over the edge. The president spied on Americans and thereby broke the law. Repeatedly. The president was told he was breaking the law by members of the Department of Justice who had no reason to lie to him on the subject. (John Ashcroft noticed, for pity's sake.) The president knew he was breaking the law so he sent the White House chief of staff and the White House counsel out to behave like Mr. Wolf in Pulp Fiction. (Sorry, Andy Card. I liked you when we were both young and ambitious in Massachusetts, but it's off to Allenwood for a spell until you come clean.) The clean-up crew failed, and he kept breaking the law anyway. Repeatedly. They spied on their political opponents. They used their steroidal view of executive powers to justify it in their tiny little minds. That's what they're hiding. I have no doubts any more that the administration has committed more crimes than we know. And every day they remain unpunished -- hell, every day they remain in office -- we become more deeply complicit in their offenses. It's time to govern ourselves again.

This can't be a matter of political calculation any more. It simply can't. It's a fundamental question of what kind of government we want to have. Yet nobody of any clout in the Democratic Party wants any part of it. ...And the Republicans -- as demonstrated by the performance of the Ten Little Idiots trying to out-butch each other the other night -- are utterly hopeless. Look, Brainiacs, when John McCain tells you that torture doesn't work, take his bloody word for it, OK? Move along.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

I get it!

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Just like Tony Soprano in the desert this week, I've had an epiphany!

Our current administration is modeling itself after the Godfather movies. Deep down you know exactly what I'm talking about, the corollaries are obvious and the players...right out of central casting. Fredo, Sonny, the Consigliari......Of course, I'm not very original and this is not new thinking. A quick google shows that it's been discussed in depth at various web sites.

But, while it used to be a fun joke, I'm beginning to think there are clear signs of a Mafia ethic to the way these clowns are working Washington DC.

-Former Deputy AG Comey testified this week on the strong arm tactics used against John Ashcroft, while he was in the hospital for God's sake, to attempt to get DOJ sign off on the administration's domestic serveillance initiative. You've got to be quite the lowlife dirtbag to make John Ashcroft look like a constitution loving stand up guy.

-Subpoenas? What subpoenas. This group will just ignore subpoenas.

A complete contempt for the rule of law. It's time to cook these guys.

-UF

Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Habeas Corpus back in the Saddle?

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Now is the time for our Democratic Representatives to step up and demand that we restore Habeas Corpus. Call your Congressperson and tell them it's important that this main tenant of our Constitution should be restored.

The Times says; Bring it back.

Glenn Greenwald sums it up;

The Military Commissions Act of 2006 is, without question, the single worst law enacted during the Bush presidency, and is one of the most destructive laws passed in the last several decades. It is not merely a bad law. It vests in the President the power to detain people indefinitely with no meaningful opportunity to contest the government's accusations. That is the very power the Founders sought first and foremost to prohibit......

Inmates and Asylums....

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Geez..... Remember when we used to just ignore the batshit crazies on either side of the political spectrum. Sure, we'd casually laugh when we saw one babbling incoherently on a street corner. But now, the nutcases on the right are actually written about, quoted, given air time, and generally treated as if their opinions are something more than the inane spoutings of ideological gasbags. From Ann Coulter to Michael Savage, it's just amazing to me that we pay any attention to them what-so-ever.

The AP really needs to ignore this drivel.

-UF

Monday, May 07, 2007

Anybody Home? Nope.........

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So. What happens when you try to wage a war with insufficient personnel, planning, or any type of coherent organized strategy?

This.

The government's response to the disaster was undermined by ongoing National Guard deployments to the Middle East, Gov. Kathleen Sebelius said.

"I don't think there is any question if you are missing trucks, Humvees and helicopters that the response is going to be slower," Sebelius said. "The real victims here will be the residents of Greensburg, because the recovery will be at a slower pace."

It's called the "Law of Unintended Consequences". You see, incompetent stumblebums re-deploy National Guard troops and equipment, that were intended to provide support for natural disasters in this country, off to the never ending war in Iraq. So when a disaster hits in a place like Greensburg, Kansas, - well, what a surprise - we don't have the National Guard infrastructure to effectively provide necessary support.

Your tax dollars at work......

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Mission Accomplished.....

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Four years and counting. A look at the numbers.

-UF

Friday, April 27, 2007

This Dog Won't Hunt....

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Richard Clarke chief counterterrorism adviser on the U.S. National Security Council under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush lays some serious smackdown on Georgie's current Iraq stratergery.....

Be Our Guest

Does the President think terrorists are puppy dogs? He keeps saying that terrorists will "follow us home" like lost dogs. This will only happen, however, he says, if we "lose" in Iraq.

The puppy dog theory is the corollary to earlier sloganeering that proved the President had never studied logic: "We are fighting terrorists in Iraq so that we will not have to face them and fight them in the streets of our own cities."

Remarkably, in his attempt to embrace the failed Iraqi adventure even more than the President, Sen. John McCain is now parroting the line. "We lose this war and come home, they'll follow us home," he says.

How is this odd terrorist puppy dog behavior supposed to work? The President must believe that terrorists are playing by some odd rules of chivalry. Would this be the "only one slaughter ground at a time" rule of terrorism?

Of course, nothing about our being "over there" in any way prevents terrorists from coming here. Quite the opposite, the evidence is overwhelming that our presence provides motivation for people throughout the Arab world to become anti-American terrorists.

Some 100,000 Iraqis, probably more, have been killed since our invasion. They have parents, children, cousins and fellow tribal clan members who have pledged revenge no matter how long it takes. For many, that revenge is focused on America.

At the same time, investing time, energy and resources in Iraq takes our eye off two far more urgent tasks at hand: one, guarding the homeland against terrorism much better than the pork-dispensing Department of Homeland Security currently does the job; and two, systematically dismantling Al Qaeda all over the world, from Canada to Asia to Africa. On both these fronts, the Bush administration's focus is sorely lacking.

Yet in the fantasyland of illogic in which the President dwells, shaped by slogans devised by spin doctors, America can "win" in Iraq. Then, we are to believe, the terrorists will be so demoralized that they will recant their beliefs and cease their terrorist ways.

In the real world, by choosing unnecessarily to go into Iraq, Bush not only diverted efforts from delivering a death blow to Al Qaeda, he gave that movement both a second chance and the best recruiting tool possible.

U.S. military raids in Iraq have uncovered evidence that Iraqis are planning attacks in America, perhaps to be carried out by terrorists with European Union passports that require no U.S. visas. But such attacks here over the next several years are likely now no matter what happens next in Iraq - and that is because of what Bush has already done, not because of any future course we choose in Iraq.

But we can be sure that when the next attacks come in the U.S., if Bush is down on the ranch cutting trees, he and whatever few followers he retains by then will blame his successor. You can almost hear them now: If only hissuccessor had left enough U.S. troops in the Iraqi shooting gallery to satisfy the blood lust of the enemy, as Bush did, then they wouldn't have come here.

The truth: If not for this administration's reckless steps to push America into war - and strategic blunder after strategic blunder that has satisfied the blood lust of the enemy - fewer evildoers would follow us home like the dogs that they are.

Clarke served as chief counterterrorism adviser on the U.S. National Security Council under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. He is now chairman of Good Harbor Consulting.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

That thing got a Hemi?

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My, my. From Lee Iacocca;

"I hardly recognize this country anymore. The President of the United States is given a free pass to ignore the Constitution, tap our phones, and lead us to war on a pack of lies. Congress responds to record deficits by passing a huge tax cut for the wealthy (thanks, but I don't need it). The most famous business leaders are not the innovators but the guys in handcuffs. While we're fiddling in Iraq, the Middle East is burning and nobody seems to know what to do. And the press is waving pom-poms instead of asking hard questions."


Read it all here.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

RIP David Halberstam

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Killed in a traffic accident here in the Bay Area. Mr. Halberstam was the role model for what a thinking journalist should be. He will be missed.

From Glen Greenwald today;

David Halberstam's death yesterday is certain to prompt all sorts of homage from our media stars describing Halberstam as a superior journalist, someone who embodied what journalism ought to be. And it is true that he was exactly that.

But modern American journalists -- as Halberstam himself repeatedly emphasized -- have become the precise antithesis of those values. The functions Halberstam and the best journalists of his generation fulfilled are exactly those that have been so fundamentally abandoned, repudiated and scorned by our nation's most prominent and influential media stars. And most legitimate media criticisms today are grounded in exactly that gaping discrepancy.

Read the rest here.

Then set your TIVO to watch this Bill Moyers PBS special on how our mainstream media failed in it's duty leading up to the war in Iraq.

-UF