Tuesday, August 22, 2006

An Immodest Proposal

My poor mailman. Every day he brings more pounds of mail from Howard Dean, Hillary Clinton, Al Gore, James Carville, Charles Schumer, the DNC, the DFA and it never ends. All are asking, begging, shaming, cajoling, entreating me for money, and it's money that I'm happy to give. However, I also think back to 2004, 2002, 2000 and remember receiving the same appeals. I often responded to those pleas by writing out checks and in 2004 when the full ugly stink of the Bush presidency was apparent, I dipped into my meager pocketbook to the tune of a couple grand.


However, I also remember the anger and frustration at seeing my candidates ducking bullets instead of returning fire, of meeting slime boat attacks with a curious silence and the surprising and still puzzling news that the end of the 2004 campaign saw the loser with 15-20 million still in the bank.


So this year, I'm drawing the line.


Attention: Dr. Howard Dean, Hon. Rahm Emanuel, Sen. Charles Schumer, et al. If I'm going to continue to share my paltry means with the Democratic Party, I expect you to do a few things that I would be embarrassed to know that you haven't done yet.


1. Rent a nice economical but secure room somewhere and gather together a group of politically knowledgeable, dependably partisan and aggressively persuasive people with a fax machine and the fax numbers of all significant newsrooms across these 50 States. Tell this group that their job is to monitor all trash, sewage and other effluent spilling forth from the Republican noise machine and immediately formulate an effective response for each and every piece of poison and toxic waste that floats into the political discourse. Then fax it out to the media universe to counter lies, to set the record straight but most of all, to seize the initiative and not let Karl Rove once again control the conversation.


2. On the other side of the room, gather together a similar but more devious group with their own matching fax machine. Tell these people to dig up dirt about any Republican that is in a close race with a Democrat. And let me define dirt: Anything that exposes the Republican as being an enthusiastic corporate shill (to the detriment of their constituents), or a stealth religious fanatic or simply any kind of a hypocrite (which covers most of the current Grand Old Party).


3. On the 12th anniversary of the "Contract with America," I implore Minority Leader Reid and Minority Leader Pelosi to devise a catalogue of liberal ideals.


My immodest proposal is


We hold these truths to be self-evident:


  a. That no one is above the law no matter what position they hold in the government and each of the three branches of government is in all circumstances fully accountable to either and both of the other two.


  b. That all Americans are born equal as human beings and are entitled to maintain their self-respect and their freedom from catastrophic circumstances and should thus be provided at least minimal access to food, shelter and medical care.


  c. That while all citizens have a serious responsibility to their nation, their government should at all times respect their privacy, show them due respect and refrain from interfering in their affairs.


  d. That taxes are a burden to be shared by all and those who have reaped the greatest rewards from our free and prosperous society should return a greater share than those who have not.


  e. That families are the cornerstone of our nation and that families, in whatever form they exist, are to be supported so that they both provide a healthy nurturing environment for children to grow and develop as well as provide a medium for human affection, devotion and love to thrive and prosper.


  f. That social security and Medicare reflect our nation's unswerving commitment to fully guarantee a comfortable, safe and secure life for each and every citizen as they age.


  g. That while our nation's giant corporations provide essential products and services that generate much of our wealth, their interests must be balanced with the interests of its workers, our small businesses and the global environment.


  h. That consumers have a right to safe, usable and honest products and services and that the penalties for failing to deliver those should be grievous, since a breech of contract between supplier and consumer strikes at the very heart of the American business enterprise.


  i. That those whose labor drives our economy have full and unencumbered recourse to air grievances, block unfair and unsafe workplace practices, negotiate fair compensation and have the freedom to organize without hindrance.


  j. That this nation's history eloquently speaks to the necessity of having a viable two-party system and that the genius of our Constitution lies largely in its intricate and essential checks and balances which must never be subverted or undermined.


4. Finally, I implore all of the above-named Party figures. Please develop a third group whose mandate is to prepare, to brief and to groom all Party spokespersons who will appear on "talking head" shows, who will give press conferences, who will provide spin, who will in any way represent the message, the vision and the spirit of the Democratic Party, especially on the electronic media, so that they don't look unprofessional, so that they make compelling and lucid arguments, and so that they don't look weak and clueless against articulate, highly prepared and aggressive Republicans.


5. And most important of all. Please find a way to develop, disseminate, and enforce message discipline. Unless and until Democratic spokespersons are on the same page with the Party's message (and there should be one), the Republicans will continue to play them off one against the other.


And who am I to be making these demands of the High and the Mighty? In a word, I am nobody. I am simply a voice in the crowd, a random citizen saying what I feel needs to be said. I am one of the horde of small contributors who together hope we can make a difference.


I am also serious when I say that I have no intention of sending good money after bad. If the leadership of the Democratic Party elects not to make a convincing stand against Republican hegemony this election cycle, then there's nothing that my paltry few dollars can do to stem the tide. If the corporate heroin is so irresistible, if the elites' siren song is so compelling, then my lonely voice in the crowd must remain in obscurity. I can only say, I tried.


Finally, and sadly, I'm hearing other like voices in this bluest part of the bluest of states. And that news should serve as a wake-up call to Party leaders.


Patience is not unlimited. And time is running out.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Half of Americans Still Think Saddam Had WMDs

This is not only unbelievable, but profoundly disappointing and even downright scary. Read the article posted on Alternet. Amitabh Pal, of the Progressive, writes a full discussion including who's at fault for this disinformation.

Saturday, August 12, 2006

This Week in Review: 1984, Meet Soviet America

The only good thing I can say about the terror bombshell dropped on US voters last week is that it was an "August Surprise" and not an "October Surprise." But don't think for a minute that Karl isn’t planning a “September Surprise," an "October Surprise" and even a "November "Surprise."

My thought above dramatizes the mental state the Bushoviks have created over time to provide themselves with Election Insurance. Dramatic disclosures dropped during election cycles smell bad because they've used them shamelessly and repeatedly in the past. And we’ve all heard the tale of the boy who cried wolf, right?

But the reality is far worse. It's time we acknowledge the stark truth of US politics: This country is in the grip of a clique with aggressive ambitions and with a propaganda machine whose only purpose is self-preservation and self-propagation.

Welcome to the merger of 1984 with Soviet America.


Ned Lamont's victory over Joe Lieberman highlighted a glaring truth: The US has moved decisively from speaking Standard English to Orwellian Newspeak.

War is peace. Lies are truth. And we are so there.

Lamont's victory as a "tragedy" for the Democratic Party has been plastered across cable and broadcast news and trumpeted by everyone from Lieberman himself, to Mehlman, Cheney and Bush. The Party has fallen into the hands of dangerous "left wing fanatics" who hate America and want to “cut and run” from Iraq.

These are only the latest and most egregious examples of a ruling class willing to say and do anything to stay in power. And their ambitions clearly run beyond staying in power. They are entrenching themselves deeply into American government, American society and above all into American culture to install their agenda permanently into American history. Since their hateful agenda requires self-propagation, it is not an easy sell, so they must lie, spin, and exaggerate to candy coat the bitter pill.

This is reminiscent of the Russian press during the Soviet era. State-run organs like Izvestia , Pravda and the Tass News Service unabashedly and shamelessly spouted the party line, however counter-intuitive and transparent the lie. The problem was that everywhere one looked there were obvious signs the ideology had failed. Therefore the “truth” had to be “sanitized” to maintain dogmatic purity. The result was that after a while no one took Soviet "journalism" seriously. Soviet citizens shrugged and rolled their eyes a lot when they read a newspaper or watched TV.

Soviet Realism should be very familiar to Americans in the Bush era. The whole reign of Bush II has been the World Series of incompetence and cluelessness. The only reason it has eluded exposure has been the compliant and complicit US press. With the near total collapse of American journalism and it’s metamorphosis into a mouthpiece for the corporate elites (aka Republican Party et al), any hope of everyday citizens getting unbiased news has nearly evaporated.

The only near-term remedy for Newspeak in the press, is the same aggressive hostility with which the Right has so successfully neutered the MSM. Now even mild critical mention of a Republican coming from journalists is met with a thermonuclear email dump, foaming mouths with teeth bared across talk radio and outraged fulminations from False (Fox) News.

So, folks, are we in for a penny, or in for a pound?

Until and unless the left begins to grow some backbone, show some outrage and make itself feared, then I suspect we are going to continue drifting in the political doldrums much as we have since Bush II’s accession.

It’s near impossible for individuals to become effective agents of change without affiliating themselves with a group. The groups are out there and they need to aggressively recruit citizens to fill out their ranks. Just as concerned citizens need to find a group and join up. And then they need to join the battle.

I wrote a suggestion to MoveOn.org recently (viewable here). I urged MoveOn to launch an intensive media watch, much like the right has done and perhaps modeled on the very effective NRA model. When media outlets tilt against progressive interests, they should be instantly and intensely enlightened. Should that not work, should the outlet continue to undermine progressive interests, then start a drive to cancel subscriptions and avoid advertisers. Progressives who are part of Nielsen and Arbitron surveys should avoid cable news channels and broadcast news throughout the survey period.

Only by hitting in the profit center will any impact be felt, will any changes result.

Over the long term, a Democratic Congress and a Democratic President need to restore the “fairness doctrine.”

The policy of the United States Federal Communications Commission that became known as the "Fairness Doctrine" is an attempt to ensure that all coverage of controversial issues by a broadcast station be balanced and fair.



Airwaves in the United States are the property of the people. They are leased out on the condition that the lessee serve the public interest and not become a political tool. If political viewpoints are to be presented through the electronic media, they should either be balanced by alternative viewpoints, or be paid for by those wishing to express that opinion. One-sided advocacy must stop.

Finally, and this could be the subject of an entire posting of its own, we simply must find a way to separate money from politics. We must implement campaign finance reform. Otherwise, the rich will always win and the rest of us will always dine on their crumbs.

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Hate Bush? Nah. Can't Be Bothered.

Right wingers often try to defuse criticism of The Leader by accusing critics of being "Bush Haters." Talking heads of the O'Reilly, Krauthammer, and Jacoby ilk hurl the term like a thunderbolt from Olympus. I guess to them (and all "right-thinking" people like them) hating Bush is on par with hating apple pie, Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother Theresa.

My own reply to the "allegation" of Bush hating is, "No." My reaction to Mr. Bush is on the one hand, a profound and an anguished embarrassment, and on the other thorough-going outrage. When you consider the line of Presidents from Washington to Clinton and find George W. Bush there, it's a total mismatch. He just doesn't belong. Of course, Right Wingers will quickly point out that Bill Clinton doesn't belong there either, but I'll refute that. There are many things that you can legitimately lay at Bill Clinton's doorstep, but he was no lightweight. He had a vision, he had the political acumen to survive breathtaking adversity (often of his own making), and he was unfailingly well-spoken and clearly focused on the issues of his time.

George W. Bush, from the first moment I became aware of him, failed my own personal smell test. For a time I couldn't figure out what bothered me about him. I finally fell back on my 20 years as an airline airport supervisor. In dealing with many angry, frustrated and often volatile people, I developed a keen nose for sensing a phony. And that's what bothered me about George W. Bush. The man is a phony.

His biography explains a lot. He is the scion of a wealthy New England establishment family. His grandfather and father were wildly successful, both in business and politics. He is likely not one who learned to take "no" for an answer. His journey through the Ivy League was preordained and funded both financially and academically by family tradition. His military obligations were dealt with as such families deal with those things: Calls were made, strings were pulled, outcomes were secured. Even irresponsibly walking away from the commitment was rewritten and covered up. Later, various ill-starred business failures were cushioned, resolved and reversed by the omnipresent family retainers.

Simply put, this man is a spoiled brat with a hyper-developed sense of entitlement. His biography was easy to revise and refashion into the Right Wing idol he is today. His past peccadilloes were simply "not discussed" because they happened "before he found Jesus." (Try and imagine that working for Bill Clinton.) He ran for President in 2000 as a "compassionate conservative" who assured America that he was a moderate, a centrist who would bring respect back to the Presidency.

In short, George W. Bush is the result of packaging, of product placement, of costuming and makeup. His persona was created to gratify the various right-wing appetites for an action figure that would poke a stick in the eye of the hated "liberals." Whether his political views were thoughtfully arrived at and genuinely held, I have no way to know. Whether his religious conversion, his finding Jesus, was bogus and a political calculation, I would not presume to guess. However, when cast against the backdrop of the rest of his life and his actions of late, one has to think that it's all about appearance, about selling the product, about controlling the agenda.

Almost everything George W. Bush did after taking office belied his moderate campaign assurances. One of his first appointments was John Ashcroft as Attorney-General, a certifiable right wing extremist and religious fanatic to boot. To date, he has done nothing to demonstrate any integrity, any honesty, any acknowledgement that he only holds office with the support of a scant 50% of the population. Yet he has recklessly and ruthlessly implemented an extremist and esoteric agenda which clearly benefits only a small clique of wealthy and powerful interests.

It would be very easy to "hate" George W. Bush, but that would give him far too much credit. He is a figurehead, a puppet and a shill for the corporate elites who paid for his elevation to office and whose interests he so fervently promotes. Hate in that context is simply not a useful tool to express ones view of Bush.

Embarrassment is unavoidable. That the packaging worked, the contrived religiosity sold and the strained "authenticity" was bought hook, line and sinker by half of this country is profoundly disillusioning.

Outrage is almost automatic. One can scarcely glance at Bush's trail of blunders, favoritism and perversion of our institutions and history without feeling a withering and intense outrage that this wonderful country has fallen into such unworthy hands, that this land for which so much blood has been spilled has fallen into the grip of Philistines whose only thought is to promote and enrich themselves.

As the old saying goes: Don't get mad, get even.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Do You Belong to the "Democrat" Party?

I think that the first time I consciously remember hearing it was in a comment by Bob Dole. It grated from the first time I heard it and I guess I wondered if Dole just misspoke. Then I heard it again and then again and it quickly became clear that big time dissing was underway. The "Democrat" Party.

Hendrik Hertzberg's "Talk of the Town" in the Aug 7 & 14 issue of
The New Yorker discusses this issue at length. Click here to read the article.

It's almost the perfect put down for the Republicans to use because it sounds like bad grammar which helps burnish their good ole boy credentials and exalts the ignorance to which they seem so fervently to aspire.

Hertzberg's article speaks to the pejorative use of the noun "democrat" in lieu of the adjective, "democratic." It's like saying, "You're NOT democratIC." By misspeaking the name it quickly transitions into a put down.

I find it grating, but it falls a few terabytes short of being devastating. Again, most of the negative impact reverts to the speaker because they simply sound ignorant and ill-spoken.

The one development that I would vigorously protest, would be if the butt-heads in the media adopted the usage, and started saying "Democrat" Party. The name "Democratic Party" has been around even longer than Republican Party and if any name changes are to be made, it should be up to the members of the DemocratIC party to make them.

How would the Republicans like it if Democrats started referring to them as Repugnants? The Repugnant Party. I'm sure that's how most of us feel anyway, but of course most of us are way too polite to start doing that.

At least it's good English.

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

The Storm-Tossed Sea of Debt

Digby at Hullabaloo devotes a lot of space today to one of the US's scariest and least discussed problems, personal debt. Now that Bush has paid off his campaign contributors in the banking/finance industries by tightening the bankruptcy laws, the highway robbers can reach even deeper into our wallets. Click here to read. Below is a quote that Digby cites from a study by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research. Click here to see.
In a survey of 1,000 adults, we find a public widely aware of the problem of growing household debt and overwhelmingly supporting solutions to this issue. The public’s concern over this issue results from perceptions of an economy performing unevenly, from perceptions of rising costs of living, and for a surprising and pressing number, from first-hand experience with excess or unmanageable debt.

Topping most people's list of scary items are catastrophic medical issues. There is no forgiveness, no slack, no margin for error. A case of cancer, a serious accident, or any number of unanticipated calamities can knock even the most frugal and sensible saver right out of the water.

There is also too much spending for toys and items of no consequence. Driving around Silicon Valley, you can see driveways laden with boats, monster (and beyond) trucks with bells, whistles and huge tires, seadoos, huge RVs and none of those come cheap. I'm constantly amazed to see teenagers at the car wash with shiny, new wheels that cost major bucks. Are people paying cash for all of this? Who can say, but those toys can add up to some huge monthly payments.

But what do we expect? I grew up in the 50's and TV was mercifully absent until I was in high school. Now kids are bombarded with commercials before they even learn to talk. Every stage of life is now marked by a "demographic." My mother once complained about a silly car commercial and I pointed out that she wasn't part of the target demographic.

It's almost disappointing how vulnerable and how easily manipulated people are by ads. But having said that, millions of dollars are spent on research, testing and production so that each ad strikes its target with maximum impact. We are a nation being driven to consume. It's almost portrayed as a patriotic duty to consume in order to keep the economy firing on all cylinders, keep the corporate coffers flush with ever-increasing revenue.

So is it any wonder that the pursuit of goods is driving so many deeper into debt? Digby's post isn't easy on the banking industry either, and rightly so:
It isn't taxes that are keeping American up at night and it probably isn't jobs, at least on a massive scale. It isn't even terrorism or the war.

It's debt. People are going to be looking for some help with this problem and one place to start would be to rein in these avaricious credit card companies who got a nice handsome payoff with that heinous bankruptcy bill. This is an issue to which average Americans can relate: greedy credit card companies who can literally raise your rates for any reason at all causing your debt to cascade from manageable to overwhelming overnight. It wouldn't be hard to fix. There used to be laws against usury --- we can just dust them off.

Not a day goes by that I don't get not one, but several pitches from banks to apply for their credit cards. I recently canceled one of my MasterCards because I just didn't use it anymore. I had to actually argue with the representative to get her to cancel the account. They don't let go lightly.

Where is all of this headed? I'm a cycle believer, and I think that if (God forbid) we don't have an economic disaster of some kind, that people are just going to get sick and tired of buying, of getting, of having.

It's ironic that we keep hearing about "values voters" and the rise of religion in the US, while at the same time what we see are "values shoppers" and the continuing upward spiral of consumerism. Materialism is winning so far. It will be interesting to see how long we can sustain this decades-long shopping spree without bankrupting vast segments of the population, as well as the Treasury of the US.

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Anger--When All Else Fails

James Wolcott has two very angry columns today. And he makes some very good points and quotes some very poignant narrative from Beirut. To read click here and here.. And Kevin Drum has a very different take. Click here.

In my view there should be more anger over this Middle East savagery. There should in fact be blinding, foaming outrage at the level of barbarism that is meted out in the name of the United States and Israel and Hezbollah and Hamas. It was apparently not enough for Bush and his gang to drive Iraq into an insane and bloody civil war, but now they're urging Israel to rain destruction on Lebanon and perhaps Syria and Iran as well.

Whatever or whomever is nominated as "root cause" of this bloodshed, the delivery service is decidedly the US and Israel and their vicious counterparts Hamas and Hezbollah.

Yes, Hamas and Hezbollah are the original fomenters and the provocateurs. They are not nice people. They are as barbaric and as self-aggrandized a pack of criminals as have ever waltzed across the world stage. And their crimes are magnified by their dispersal among the civilian population of Lebanon. Yet the Israelis, knowing this, persist in killing all in the fashion of Arnold Amaury (Slay them all. God will know his own.)

In fact, it's hard to argue that the Likud (and succeeding) governments in Israel have played their cards very well over the years. While the Palestinians have been near impossible to deal with, Israel has still largely controlled the game. When one extremist group or the other committed an atrocity in Israel, the government made no distinction between the extremists and the rest of the population, but punished all as one, refusing to recognize that the Palestinians are a diverse people with all levels of political involvement from the extremists to the disengaged.

Israel's population is likewise stratified from the most conservative Likudniks and strident settlers to religious Hassidim and secular Russians. Israelis like Palestinians come in all flavors of political orientation. But the Palestinian extremists persisted in wantonly and randomly blowing themselves up in the middle of innocent Israeli crowds, prompting the population to support the most severe reaction.

So due to the actions of both sides, even the marginalized are now radicalized and the disengaged are now militant. It has been a noble achievement to go from the hopes of the Oslo accords to the despair of the intifada in a few brief years.

There are no victories in such an historic failure and few heroes. Both societies bear the guilt of their intransigence. The blood that is shed will linger over their history for generations and will spell hostility and damnation for their peoples for decades.

The Bush Administration's history of blunders and openly enabling Israeli's reactionaries to seize the initiative in the complex dance between the parties has effectively ceded the moment to the most extremist factions on both sides. One hears from all of the talking head "experts" that the situation is spinning out of control so completely and so rapidly that no one may be able stop it now. We may soon see the entire region go up in flames.

Anyone who happily embraces that legacy has sunk so far into barbarism that redemption is beyond all the powers of heaven and earth. God help us all.

On the Same Page as Digby

See my post below and then read Digby. Here's what he has to say on the same subject at Hullabaloo. He sees Rove twittering with delight also because:

Karl Rove must be very happy this morning. He is convinced that "war" (it doesn't matter who or why) always accrues to the Republican party's benefit. And the media agree that when things heat up, they really want the guys with the big swinging members in charge.


Read the whole thing. He puts it much better than I can.

Friday, July 21, 2006

The Summer of our Malcontent or July Surprise

The news for the past week has been déjà vu all over again. Remember 2002?…The last Congressional mid-term elections. It was Iraq then, and in summer 2002 we were being programmed to go to war with Saddam Hussein who was going to have nuclear weapons and all kinds of other Weapons of Mass Destruction real soon. Condi said:
"The problem here is that there will always be some uncertainty about how quickly he can acquire nuclear weapons. But we don't want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud."
Source: Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer, CNN (9/8/2002).
Quoted from http://www.bushoniraq.com/rice6.html

This week we hear that we’re already engaged in World War III, or is it World War IV? Newt Gingrich and the ubiquitous haranguing Neo-Cons can’t seem to decide, but it’s “definitely another World War”. (Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich says "America is in World War III and President Bush should say so.")

Come on folks. Are we going to buy into this again? The Repugs launched the Iraq adventure midsummer of 2002, just in time to whip up fervor among the electorate and propel their candidates to an unusual mid-term gain for the Party holding the White House.

On the one hand, I’m thinking that people are a lot wiser and a lot more skeptical now after watching the Katrina fiasco unfold and after months of unceasing bad news from Iraq. But even on Air America, both Ed Schultz and Randi Rhodes still get callers who are fully committed to war with Hezbollah and Hamas and of course Syria and Iran “who are behind it all.”

I guess that there’s that one knee-jerky element of the population that just never gets it. It’s hard not to lapse into pejoratives, but in reading comments to some of the blogs, it’s definitely a less well-educated segment of the population. If they can’t do grammar and they can’t do spelling, you’ve just got to think that they don’t do history or politics too well either.

However, I’m sitting here in front of the TV watching the flames lick higher and higher in Israel and Lebanon and my profound skepticism keeps a close eye pealed for Karl Rove’s fingerprints, as well as a keep-Congress-Republican angle, in addition to a new campaign to spread fear and anger among the unplugged and disengaged electorate.

War drums are already deployed across the Corporate Media. False News, CNN and the NBC conglomerate have all crafted signature screens and martial music for breathless “Breaking News” interrupts. Gabberatchiks are providing the usual talking heads with platforms to relentlessly advance The Agenda.

No doubt task forces are in place with war rooms humming throughout the corporate establishment hatching plans to get in early and grab those government no-bid contracts and suck in billions in easy loot.

Ominously, I keep hearing that Syria and Iran are the “real problem.” The tone sounds a lot like the above remark from Condi, the sort of flat pronouncement framed with infallibility which strikes terror into soccer moms and drives testosterone levels off the charts in NASCAR dads. It’s the perfect prop for generating doubt about the opposition party and providing Republican candidates with a powerful tool to singe their adversaries in the upcoming general election.

So I hope that Howard Dean and Company are watching all of this unfold and are developing a better strategy than the slack-jawed, deer in the headlights confusion that saw us falter in 2002.

Sorry for the Lapse

I'm sorry that I've fallen silent for over a week, but family matters and my pesky day job have reasserted their claims on my time. I'm hoping to be more consistent in my posting. With all the excitement in the world today, heaven knows, there's all kinds of material just waiting to be blogged. Cheers!

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

What in the World Do We Do with Iraq?

What should we do about Iraq? Should we follow Cindy Sheehan’s advice and pull the troops out ASAP? Or do we listen to Congressman Murtha and redeploy the troops to a nearby staging area where they can respond to ad hoc threats? Or what about the Bush/Republican party line to “stay the course?”

Who knows? How does a random citizen sitting in any corner of the USA gather enough information to know which plan to support given the state of the media? How does any citizen know which of the many options carries the highest promise of success and the least danger of failure? In short, who does one vote for in the upcoming Congressional elections? Those who are determined to stay the course? Or those who want to either pull out or redeploy?

There’s probably enough information around to put two and two together and come up with something resembling four.

The first thing that we have to consider is that George W Bush has never disclosed the real reason for invading Iraq in the first place. It strains credulity to believe that the CIA and other intelligence services didn’t have a clearer view of reality inside Iraq around the time of the invasion. If that is in fact the case, then their incompetence exceeds even the most exaggerated estimates. True, there were many with ample reason to want Saddam gone and Iraq under new management, but for those groups to orchestrate such a successful fraud as presented by Colin Powell to the UN simply beggars the imagination and certanly ain't consistent with their subsequent laughable performance.

So if the WMD tale is camouflage, then that leaves Oil. While an oil grab is not beyond the Bush Administration, that alone wouldn't justify a full scale invasion. It was doubtless a contributing factor, but an oil grab would be too obvious and the rest of the world would be very unhappy. But don't count it out completely, at least not yet. There’s got to be more to the story.

Saddam Hussein was one of the bad guys. Nobody disputes that. He had taken a pot shot at George H.W. Bush and was definitely not an asset to the neighborhood. Given the opportunity he certainly might start reconstituting his WMD programs and thus should be taken out while he was weak, the “oppose Hitler before he marches into the Rhineland” argument. There may have been a glimmer of attention paid to this issue, but it probably wouldn't have been particularly compelling given the huge disparity between the US’s capabilities and anything that Iraq could ever mount.

Yet another side of the oil picture, however, might bring us some clarity. However strenuous Bush and oil companies’ denials, oil is a finite commodity. X-number of barrels of oil exist and once those are found and consumed, they are gone, gone, gone. Oil company executives must have some idea where things stand in the consumption of their product. When you consider the two oil company executives who are respectively President and Vice-president of the United States, then you know that this knowledge is found at the highest levels of the US government.

With India and China industrializing and their economies growing at double-digit rates, the quest for oil has the potential to get real ugly real soon. Consider that pre-World War II Japan resorted to military action when FDR turned off their oil. Oil is the lifeblood of industrial nations. They’ve got to have it or droop and die.

So are we in Iraq because Bush’s Neocons factored in the rising geo-political need for oil thinking that it would be worth weathering domestic criticism and overseas ill-will if that would put the US government in a position to exercise influence over Iraqi oil?


If that’s the case, then that explains Bush’s “stay the course” policy in Iraq. By various reports coming out of Iraq, the US is busily building bases across the country. The cynic would conclude that Bush and the Republicans feel that they can (must) hang on to control of both houses of Congress in the 2006 elections, and then they can fully consolidate their penetration of Iraq; get the US so fully committed that pulling out would be inconceivable no matter which party was in power.

That way, when China, India et al come looking for oil, they will have to do business, not with an unpredictable Saddam Hussein, but with an American puppet government in Iraq.

Plausible? Frankly, I don’t know. But nothing else about Bush’s open-ended commitment to Iraq makes sense either.

The Democrats need to harp on Republican incompetence and total lack of any plan to gain traction against the "conventional wisdom" that the Republicans will keep us safer. The fact that three plus years after the invasion we still don’t have a clear idea why we went there in the first place, what “victory” might look like if and when we ever get it, or how in the hell to get out in any case, tells us that there never was much of a plan. There was a military plan in the beginning and it worked beautifully, but there was clearly no political plan and things went to hell very quickly and have plumbed deeper the depths of hell ever since.

How dumb is that…to invade Iraq against the expressed wishes of most of the rest of the world and not even have a plan for what to do with the country once it is conquered? The mind reels.

Thursday, June 29, 2006

No Time for Faint Hearts

The Karl Rove strategy for the fall elections is now becoming very clear. True to form, Karl has devised a plan that is as breathtaking in its simplicity as it is starkly evil. Since the weakest point in the Bush and Republican armor is Iraq, Karl has clearly decided to run ON IRAQ. What, you say? How can that be?

It's no secret. Already they are shouting campaign mantras at the Democrats, "Cut and run,"Retreat before the mission is done," "wave the white flag of surrender." AmericaBlog has a good write up plus quotes and links. It's worth a look.

I have to ask, where in the hell are the Congressional Democrats? Who's making the case against Bush and Karl? Even if the Democrats in Congress don't have a magic plan to extract us from an impossible situation, why aren't they making the case that Bush and his keystone kronies have proven one thing since the invasion of Iraq: They don't know what the fuck they're doing...period, exclamation point. But all I hear from House and Senate Democrats are meek little denials that even I don't find convincing, let alone compelling.

They need to get on the stick, or Karl and Krew will reign on come November. This latest Supreme Court decision (Hamdan v Rumsfeld) should have brought complete clarity to any remaining doubters. Bush has four solid, reliable SCOTUS votes and one more death or resignation, he's got it all. Nothing will then stand in his way to becoming Emperor George W and then God help the rest of us.

Sunday, June 25, 2006

The Rich Get Richer...and say, "Screw the Poor!"

This blog posting from a DailyKos diary covers some familiar ground, but the writer's (Brettnet) got some fresh insights which are worth reviewing. He quotes a reporter asking Gore Vidal how it is to live full-time in the United States and Gore replies:
If you care about America it's dreadful," he said. "If you are making money you don't care.

Brettnet describes sitting next to a couple of Republicans on a plane recently and they say that they regard John Edward's "two Americas" meme as divisive because they don't see it. They are completely oblivious to the existence of the poor in this country.

I often see this same attitude among the stolid middle class. But fine friends, watch out. As long as the lower percentiles get their crumbs, they may continue to tolerate this benign and clueless neglect, but if the crumbs stop flowing, watch out. If the Right thinks that it's big and bad right now, it ain't seen nuthin' yet. If the unempowered and the disadvantaged ...ever find themselves in a real corner where food and other basic needs of life become hard to get, their anger is going to grow and then explode and we should all fear for the outcome.

It's one thing for a pack of middle class Right Wing, Limbaugh-Coulter lovers to get pissed off. Besides the fact that only they really know what they are pissed off about, they've got an investment to protect. Most of them have homes, jobs and some wealth and status. If conditions ever deteriorate for the underclasses to the point that rage develops and escalates, they have nothing to lose and the Rodney King riots in South Central LA will be just the foretaste of what kind of violence and anarchy that we might face.

Nature abhors a vacuum. And vacuums come in all shapes, sizes and socio-economic statuses. For examples, study the French Revolution, the American Revolution, the Russian Revolution, post-World War I Germany and the list goes on.

It ain't pretty, but I see us plunging headlong into the trap in much the same way that we are sublimely and blissfully plunging into a global warming disaster. To quote a very tired cliche, Denial is more than a river in Egypt.

CNN in a Nutshell

This is one of the funniest commentaries that I have read in a very long time. The butt of the humor is already a butt in other respects and deserves all of the ridicule that it gets. And that bulls eye is: CNN.

Here is Nance Gregg working over CNN...couldn't happen to a nicer _____. You fill in your own description. Click here.

Saturday, June 17, 2006

The Seven Cons

Ian Welsh provides one of the best quick-reference rundowns of the seven main components of the Right Wing coalition that I have seen. His posting is at The Agonist and can be accessed by clicking here.

I slightly disagree with one element of his assessment. He assigns the lead role in the coalition to the "TheoCons" or the Religious Right. I agree that they are the muscle of the coalition, the foot soldiers, but I remain convinced that the core, the brains, the driving force is what he calls the "CorporateCons." The corporate elites provide the financing for just about everything in the Right Wing coalition, from the think tanks and their prolific publications and talking heads to the Republican National Committee with its ruthless tentacles reaching into every level of American politics.

Looking at the Reagan/Bush I era and then at Bush II, all successful initiatives benefited the Corporate elites (tax breaks, reduced regulation, laissez-faire approach to mergers, marketing tactics, “free trade” and off-shoring, etc) while a lot of noisy lip service was paid to the "TheoCon's," the Religious Right's "social issues" (abortion, gay rights, separation of church and state, school prayer, etc)without any tangible, concrete results.

In fact, my bet is that the movers and shakers among the CorporateCons are terrified that Roe v Wade might be overturned. That would de-energize the TheoCons and throw high octane gasoline on the liberal coalition's agenda and arguably give the whole Right Wing four flat tires.

Actually, none of the Religious Right’s central issues have been effectively promoted, let alone implemented, by any of the Right Wing administrations from Reagan to Bush II. I think that in addition to the above-stated reasons, the Republican Party knows that most of the Religious Right’s agenda is just too scary for mainstream America and they are playing the same slippery and cynical game with the Religious Right that they played with Southern segregationists back during Nixon’s “Southern Strategy.” They use all the code words, they make backroom assurances, but never follow through because they know well that none of it will fly in mainstream America.

I believe most Americans who consider themselves conservatives, spell the word with a lower case "c." I also believe that most are primarily concerned with raising their families and leading a comfortable and fulfilling life. To date, Republicans have succeeded in convincing them that they can best provide the political context in which that can happen. They have done it by controlling the media, playing fast, loose and scornfully with the truth, by pandering shamelessly with wedge issues and by relentlessly pushing hate and fear buttons.

And so far, it has worked. They are very lucky in having the disengaged and self-absorbed population that calls 21st Century America home. They are also fortunate that the preceding generation of Right Wingers effectively castrated the media and forged the entire institution into a willing and compliant tool.

Welsh's piece in The Agonist will give you good clarity on the main players on the Right.

Friday, June 16, 2006

The Media is the (Right Wing) Message

This is the text of feedback I submitted to MoveOn.org:

As Jamison Foser writes in Media Matters (http://mediamatters.org/items/200605260016),

"The defining issue of our time is the media...

The dominant political force of our time is the media.

Time after time, the news media have covered progressives and conservatives in wildly different ways -- and, time after time, they do so to the benefit of conservatives."

From Russert and Broder to the foaming mouths of talk radio, Progressives are under assault as never before. And what makes this so serious is that there is simply NO BALANCING counterweight. The So-Called Liberal Media (SCLM, thank you, Eric Alterman) is not just missing in action, it is a Right Wing red herring.

Most Americans dismiss politics as "not their thing" and as a result base their voting choices on the blather from Sunday talking heads, shameless Right-wing op-ed pages and the slanted views expressed on talk radio and cable and broadcast news.

This has to stop if Progressives are going to make any inroad into the relentless takeover of America by the Religious Right, the Corporate elites and the Neo-Con imperial expansionists.

There is only one way to address this and it's to hit them in the pocket book. I propose that MoveOn.org support existing efforts (The Daily Howler, Media Matters , Crooks and Liars, and others) to monitor TV, newspapers and periodicals and perhaps even expand their scope to include the entire media spectrum.

The results should be publicized to promote a movement to cancel subscriptions to unbalanced outlets and to focus purchasing power on Progressive-friendly media and their advertisers and away from Right Wingnut advertisers (like Domino's Pizza, Amazon.com and WalMart). Web sites like Media Matters, BuyBlue.org. should be aggressively supported. Progressives selected by Nielsen and Arbitron should be encouraged to NEVER include Right Wing-supporting media when they report their viewing and listening.

The Right has been doing this for decades with the result that they now OWN the media. NBC can get away with lionizing Ann Coulter on the Today Show and Jay Leno because there's no price to pay, there's no outcry from Progressives, their advertisers peacefully continue to advertise, their ratings remain untouched. CNN, MSNBC and Fox can maintain their stable of Right Wingnuts who cover the airwaves with venom simply because they can...there's perhaps only the slightest murmur from the Left but no other impact.

My own hometown newspaper, the San Jose Mercury-News, has been a balanced paper since I began subscribing 30 years ago. However, its parent company Knight-Ridder has recently been sold and the Mercury-News has been bought by some conglomerate I have never heard of before. I'm keeping a close eye, however, and if they start moving to the Right, my 30-year subscription is coming to an end.

I did cancel my 40-year Time magazine subscription when they put Ann Coulter on the cover with a long and supportive article.

Only with a concerted, organized and relentless effort from a group like MoveOn.org can this be effective. We can have house parties, we can have contribution drives and we can sign petitions all we want, but until we address the nature, quality and orientation of the media where most of the US population gets its news and forms its political judgements, we are simply putting out forest fires with a dixie cup.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Onward Christian Soldiers.....

There is a fascinating article by Michelle Goldberg on the Alternet, "The Tyranny of the Religious Right." Goldberg discusses the growing power and influence of evangelical Christianity:

Whenever I talk about the growing power of the evangelical right with friends, they always ask the same question: What can we do? Usually I reply with a joke: Keep a bag packed and your passport current.

I don't really mean it, but my anxiety is genuine. It's one thing to have a government that shows contempt for civil liberties; America has survived such men before. It's quite another to have a mass movement -- the largest and most powerful mass movement in the nation -- rise up in opposition to the rights of its fellow citizens. The Constitution protects minorities, but that protection is not absolute; with a sufficiently sympathetic or apathetic majority, a tightly organized faction can get around it.

The mass movement I've described aims to supplant Enlightenment rationalism with what it calls the "Christian worldview." The phrase is based on the conviction that true Christianity must govern every aspect of public and private life, and that all -- government, science, history and culture -- must be understood according to the dictates of scripture. There are biblically correct positions on every issue, from gay marriage to income tax rates, and only those with the right worldview can discern them. This is Christianity as a total ideology -- I call it Christian nationalism. (Read the rest)

One of the very troubling developments of the past several decades has been the emergence if not the explosion of Christian fundamentalism and evangelicalism. I say "troubling" not because I'm anti-religious although I am unabashedly areligious. However, the forces that are afoot across the land are not the benign Christians of our sunday school days or even the strict, no-nonsense nuns of my parochial school days.

These are fire-breathing, take-no-prisoners zealots who have set their sights on taking over the USA and changing it into a "Christian nation." One can only speculate that their vision has not yet happened because most of the people in the US are simply not interested in their style of living. However, the "Dominionists" and the "Reconstructionists" both proclaim their goal to be taking over the USA "for Jesus."

So if the majority of the population is not willing to jump on the bandwagon and join these fanatics in launching a "Christian nation," then one can only conclude that once they take over, conversions will be at gun-point, knife-point or by whatever means of intimidation and coercion works.

We've already seen a glimpse of this totalitarianism at the Air Force Academy. A Jewish cadet complained to his father that he was coming under increasing criticism for his religion. The criticism was coming from evangelical "Christian" cadets and the officer corps. One article that I read even implicated the Academy commandant in the move to intimidate non-Christians.

My first thought at reading about the Air Force Academy was that they were packing the officer corps with "Christian" soldiers. Then I wondered if this same scenario was playing out at West Point and Annapolis. What a perfect scheme, to infiltrate the officers' corps of the various branches. Enlisted troops do what they're told. If an officer orders them to take part in a coup d'etat, it would be hard to refuse as an individual.

All I can tell any readers that may happen along and read this is, keep your eyes open. If you see things moving in ways that you find uncomfortable, jump in and become active. These "Christians" are not just motivated, they are fanatical and literally will stop at nothing to implement their agenda. Also, I put "Christians" in quotes because that is how they describe themselves. I personally find very little similarity between 21st Century fundamentalists and evangelicals and anything that I've ever read in the New Testament. They're entire movement is about as far from anything that we hear from or see of Jesus Christ in the gospels.

Thursday, May 25, 2006

The Enron Elite Meet the Street

So Ole Jeffrey Skilling and Kenny-boy Lay couldn't put one over on the jury. I would imagine that champagne corks would be popping around the nation if Enron's victims could still afford champagne.

There is no part of me that feels sorry for these two. The destruction of lives that they apparently set in motion makes them very special thugs. Their victims may number in the tens (hundreds?) of thousands and include simple workaday stiffs like you and me who only wanted to save for their retirement and now have nothing.

To me the most distasteful part has been how Skilling and Lay have been making themselves out to be the victims. How they have tried to paint their prosecution as persecution. It sounds a lot like the gang in the White House. They always have someone else to blame for their failures. It's always them who are the victims.

What a pack of despicable scum. And I don't have any more to say about these two.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Remarkable Capitulation

Senate Democrats have again jumped into their role as Bush enablers. Four Democrats on the Senate Intelligence (?) Committee voted to confirm Michael Hayden as Director of the CIA. They included my own Senator, Diane Feinstein (see separate posting). To get a full discussion on this topic (including links), see Glenn Greenwald's, Unclaimed Territory.

Feinstein Totally Blows It!

Senator Feinstein, what in God's name were you thinking??!!

How could you even think about voting to approve the nomination of Gen Michael Hayden as the Director of the CIA? This is the man who not only oversaw the illegal and unconstitutional eavesdropping on millions of Americans' phone conversation, but who designed, promoted and implemented it. He is the focal point of the whole program.

Senator Feinstein, are you prepared to guarantee your constituents that this program will never be used for partisan political purposes? Because if your beltway blindness obscures that line of thinking from view, that's what a lot of people out in the real world feel that this is all about. This administration's leaders are committed idealogues who have demonstrated time and again that nothing stands in the way of their implementing their agenda...that has included the laws of the United States and even the Constitution of the United States. And many see eavesdropping as a further example of their grab for power.

I can't understand how you could vote for this man and still look yourself in the mirror and say that you are not violating your oath to uphold the Constitution. This nomination for most progressive Americans was a no-brainer. This guy is simply unacceptable.

So Senator Feinstein, the impact on me as your constituent is total. Quite simply, I will never vote for you again...and to visualize that, know that I have voted for you repeatedly going back to your days as a San Francisco Supervisor and later for mayor. Whatever mindless partisan the California Republican Party decides to run against you next time (and it will be a mindless partisan, I have no doubt), I will simply leave the ballot blank or vote for a Green or Peace and Freedom candidate. However, I will never vote for you again.

This action tells me that you "don't get it." You don't understand the idealogical nature of this administration and you don't understand their agenda to promote the interests of the Corporate Elites, the fanatical religious fringes and the paranoid militarists over the vast multitude of middle class citizens.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Real Men are...Republicans?

Francis Wilkinson, in the online American Prospect (tip of the hat to Donkey Rising) has a long discussion about how the Republicans have styled themselves as the "testosterone party." His central example is George W alighting on the aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln in his crotch revealing flight suit. That particular example has gone down as a mix of arrogance and pandering.

This is a fairly long article, but well worth your time.

The Real Problem with NSA Surveillance

Annalee Newitz has a great article on Alternet about the NSA phone eavesdropping episode. She wonders why the polls are finding only 53% of the population who have a problem with their telephone conversations being recorded and stored by the US Government.

Here's what disturbs me: in light of recent revelations that the National Security Agency has been illegally collecting vast databases of information about every single phone call made in the United States since late 2001, only 53 percent of US citizens polled by Newsweek think the government has gone too far in its efforts to stop terrorism.

That's a majority, but not a very large one. And in the same poll, 41 percent said they thought spying on phone calls made to and from everyone in the country was necessary.

This arouses the same sinking feeling I got many years ago when I was a young graduate student at UC Berkeley, grading my very first set of papers. From that sample, and many others in subsequent courses, I learned that 70 percent of college students in an upper-division English course at a top university cannot construct a coherent argument using evidence taken from books they've read.

That's what convinced me that most people, even highly educated ones, go through their lives without ever examining the way rhetoric works, and the way evidence is used (or abused) in its service.


I can't disagree with anything that she writes. However, I was not surprised by the percentages of approval/disapproval. I've long since abandoned any hopes that my fellow citizens will do any work to inform themselves about the compelling issues of the day.

While I'm in full agreement with Ms Newitz about the complacency and/or cluelessness of 47% of the population, I have an even worse fear about this additional "crossing of the line" by the Bush crew. Two of the possible outcomes of this arrogant and illegal tactic include this type of surveillance becoming routine and commonplace, or on the other hand, for us to overreact and pass draconian legislation which hampers legitimate and legal attempts to pursue intelligence.

Whatever else we know, we must acknowledge that Planet Earth is a dangerous and a challenging place. The most powerful nation on earth is a natural target for all sorts of terrorists, loose cannons, opportunists and bad people. No one in their right mind would suggest that intelligence gathering is not vital to our security. However, the very people whose security is at stake should not be the subject of the surveillance or should the act of gathering this surveillance be done in violation of the Constitution or the laws of the United States.

Intelligence gathering must be done with due respect for our laws and our lives as well as those of law-abiding citizens everywhere. What I don't buy is that "if people do get stepped on, they're just collateral damage" in the War on Terra. BS!

The final thought on this topic is that we have no guarantee that the Bushoviks are really gathering intelligence on Al Qaida. Given their track record and their M.O. in many past capers, they may well be using this data to spy on political enemies. These are idealogues, remember, and they have consistently demonstrated in the past that they are willing to desecrate the Constitution, violate the law and otherwise trash our national integrity and whatever mores and other long-standing customs that might get in the way of them advancing their agenda.

More Molly

Molly Ivins has two new posts that provide good information and are (as always) good reading. To see click here and here.

Saturday, May 20, 2006

Mollie Gets It Right Again

There are few things or people in this world that you can count on. Molly Ivins is one of the people that always come through with valuable insight. Click on this link to be cybernetically transported to Molly-land and read what she has to say about Dear Leader and his Partei.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Five Points About High Oil Prices

Bob Higgins at http://agonist.org talks about Tyson Slocum of The Public Citizen appearing on Stephen Colbert's Comedy Central program. Click this link to go see. You'll be glad you did.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Molehill or Mt Everest?

I apologize in advance, but I just can't get worked up over the "undocumented worker" crisis in this country. Yes, our borders should be secure. Yes, foreign citizens of any stripe should not be sneaking across our borders. Yes, "amnesty" is "not fair." I "kinda" agree with everybody and also disagree with everybody.

My take: First of all, this is not a law enforcement problem. It is an economic imbalance problem. If Mexico were a country with a real economy, a real government and real political parties, then it would most certainly solve its own problems. However, Mexico is none of those things. I remember a Senator (I believe it was Daniel Patrick Moynihan) opposing NAFTA because Mexican courts were neither impartial nor honest and getting a fair judgement relies heavily on how well the palms are greased.

My own impression (however uneducated) is that Mexico, along with much of Latin America has a stark "have/have not" problem. Enhancing that problem is the "haves" unwillingness or inability to figure out how to bring more of their population into the mainstream economic process. If you are born poor in Mexico, you are likely to remain poor unless you stumble on a very lucky break, are inordinately good looking/beautiful or are a frigging genius. Otherwise, get used to tortillas and beans and perhaps a couple of grains of rice on holidays. With prospects like those, who would want to stick around?

You can extrapolate that description to much of Central and even South America. An individual not "to the manor born" can either fall in love with manual labor (when they can find it), and enjoy the rigors of hunger and the challenge of disease without viable health care. It sounds like a regular paradise.

Now that might have flown 50 years ago, but now, whatever else the poor in Mexico may lack, they do see television and movies. Also, likely many of the same gringos now bleating loudest about the "illegal problem" have built resorts along the Mexican coasts. Now the Mexican poor may view the "other side" as they luxuriate within walking distance of desperate slums. Now the poor camposinos can clearly see what they're missing and want some of it too.

The answer to the US illegal immigration problem is not to erect an iron curtain between Mexico and the USA. That didn't even work too well for the USSR. And yes, the iron curtain was installed to keep their people in, our wall would be to keep the barbarians out. However you slice and dice, a wall will become a symbol of failure for both countries, for both societies. For Mexico it will symbolize a failed economy, a failed political system and a failed society which can't or won't provide for its citizens and from all appearances, doesn't care. For the US it will mean a failure of vision, a failure as a neighbor and perhaps worst of all, a triumph of mean-spiritedness.

The Right has shown us the ugliness of intolerance and xenophobia. It has shown us the triumph of hyper-chauvinism and the embarassment of affluent paranoia. I have heard numerous Anglos spitting nails over the "wetbacks" and not one that I've met can show any evidence that they have themselves been personally injured by an illegal alien.

What we're seeing, I believe, is what was historically called "know nothing-ism." This is a blanket hatred of the group du jour. It could be Catholics, Jews, Blacks, Irish, Italians, Poles and the list goes on. It's like the survivors in a lifeboat pulling in the life savers before anyone else can climb in. They made it, screw the rest.

Unfortunately, for a country with a very short event horizon, this will not be solved in a year. And it will not be solved ever with the steps being taken so far. The only solution I can see is for Mexican society to evolve to where it can take care of its own.

It is a total and complete disgrace for a country, as rich and as blessed by nature with resources as Mexico, to keep its citizens in such abject poverty. The US needs to start using some of its resources to help Mexico find its way toward being a viable modern state.

Short term, I don't think that anything will work. This problem has been long in the making and will likely take long to resolve.

Friday, May 12, 2006

NSA Spying Scandal

BobcatJH at Democratic Underground has another posting that asks THE big question...are they really listening for Al Qaeda or is this really just domestic political spying. You know, with this crowd anything is not just possible, but probable. Read his posting for a lot more.

Lions and Tigers and Bears!! OH MY!!

Another visit to Democratic Underground to see what BobcatJH wants to ask the administration. He's afraid that George W and minions may have some "shock and awe" up their sleeve to help get their groove back.

I sure hope not, but with this crowd, I've learned to expect not just the worst, but the worst imaginable and beyond.

Wow!! You Gotta Read This One!!

Democratic Underground has a real champagne cork popper at this URL. I've been hoping for this article for a very long time.

Update: The posting that this links to has been called into question. It hasn't been totally discredited, but obviously the predicted events have not as yet transpired, and until they do, caveat lector!

Second Update: This issue is continuing to evolve. Click here and here for the latest.

How to Start a War

This is a fascinating (and too true) post which gets right into the NeoCon game plan.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

The Colbert Effect

What is left to say about Stephen Colbert's tour de force at the White House Correspondent's and Stenographer's Association black tie dinner? The outraged Right appears to be so tongue tied that only raspy barking is coming from their pet carriers.

Most of the outrage that I have read about is coming from the Press. A good overview is presented in the Chicago Sun Times (thanks to AmericaBlog for the link) I guess that they are the one with the most to be ashamed of. Bush is just being Bush and his minions are just being good storm troopers, but the press is supposed to be (dare I say it?) fair and balanced. Well, as we all have known since early in the Clinton Administration, they are anything but.

So all in all, I would like to extend my profound gratitude and hearty salutation to Stephen Colbert, for his courageous and ballsy performance (click for video) (thanks to Crooks and Liars for the link to Google Video). I encourage all to watch it.

The Repug spin seems to revolve around it "not being funny." Well, maybe not, but I know that I wasn't looking for "funny" as much as "effective." Let's be real clear, Stephen Colbert stood feet away from George W Bush and proceeded to skewer him and his pack of jackals and their long trail of misdeeds every way but loose. In short, he did what the news media should have been doing all the while, but haven't.

Again, thanks to Stephen Colbert for speaking up for all of us...where it counts and to whom it counts.

Another Fine Mess

Well, you'd never know it by reading the daily newspaper or listening to the broadcast news or (gag) cable news, but the Bush era is exploding in a dizzying array of scandal. It's hard to know where to begin, so I won't. I'll add some links to other blogs who cover it much better than I possibly could such as Talking Points Memo, Glenn Greenwald, and Hullabaloo. There are many, many more, but I'll let you find those.

The first cynical thought that jumps into my mind, harking back to the (wink wink, elbow in the ribs) Clinton "bimbo eruptions," is "scandal eruptions." And the word on the street is that you ain't seen nuthin yet! Couldn't happen to a nicer group of creeps.

This now seems to involve the entire Repugnican experience...Congress, the Executive and of course the owners of the above, the Corporate Elites. I thought that I was pretty well jaded after living though the JFK assassination, Vietnam, Watergate, Iran hostages, Reaganomics and the right wing rabies epidemic during the Clinton administration, but I stand humbled. I am daily flabbergasted by the latest news from the front lines.

There appears to be no depth to which they won't descend. The chutzpah of Rumsfeld staring into the camera lens saying, "I'm not a liar," harks back to Nixon's, "I'm not a crook." Now we find out after Goss resigned from the CIA this week, that we've got "Hookergate." Apparently "the Dukestir's" defense contractor friends provided limousines, prostitutes and suites in (where else?) the Watergate complex in Washington. I've read that for these paragons of the anti-gay Right even may have enjoyed the services of male prostitutes. Just when you thought that this bunch had hit bottom, something else comes along that blows that bar away.

So fasten your seat belt, stow your tray tables in their original upright position and enjoy the turbulence.