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Saturday, May 21, 2005

George W. Bush's idea of a "culture of life"
Posted by Jill | 4:38 PM
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Friday, May 20, 2005

Even the rats tried to get off the Titanic
Posted by Jill | 10:22 AM

And Robert C. Pozen, whose ideas about Social Security evolved into George W. Bush's plan to eviscerate Social Security and replace it over time with private accounts, has had just about enough of being associated with Bush's plan:

Robert C. Pozen, the business executive who developed the theory behind Mr. Bush's plan to trim Social Security benefits in the future, urged the president today to drop his insistence on using a portion of workers' taxes to pay for individual investment accounts.

This was one of two blows during the day to Mr. Bush's policies on Social Security and retirement saving. In the House, Representative Bill Thomas, the Republican chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, disregarded the methods favored by the president to encourage workers to save for retirement - mostly tax incentives for the affluent - and offered completely different proposals of his own.

The president's Social Security and retirement measures have faced trouble in Congress all year, and the developments today raised further doubt about their prospects.

On the question of Mr. Pozen's defection, Trent Duffy, a White House spokesman, said, "The president is committed to a voluntary personal account as part of a comprehensive Social Security modernization plan."

On Mr. Thomas's stance on retirement saving, Mr. Duffy said Mr. Bush "understands and welcomes the chairman's ideas."

Mr. Pozen, a member of Mr. Bush's advisory commission on Social Security in 2001, said at a forum at the Treasury Department that the president's approach to investment accounts would destroy the chances for a Social Security bill in Congress and would make it more difficult to resolve the long-term financial problems facing the system.

He developed the technique known as progressive indexing that Mr. Bush embraced last month as the way to reduce the long-term cost of Social Security and get closer to the goal of permanent solvency for the system.

Under the technique, the promised retirement benefits of workers earning less than about $20,000 would be fully protected, but other workers' promised benefits would be reduced on a sliding scale as their income increased. In all cases, benefits would at least keep pace with inflation.

Unlike Democratic lawmakers who oppose on principle including investment accounts as part of Social Security, Mr. Pozen believes some form of private accounts could be useful.

But explaining his position in an interview after the forum at the Treasury, he said the president's plan to let workers divert up to 4 percent of their payroll taxes to private accounts would reduce tax revenues and lower guaranteed retirement benefits too much.

"The accounts are just too large," Mr. Pozen said.

He suggested Mr. Bush consider a surcharge on payroll taxes for people who earn more than $90,000 a year, currently the ceiling on which Social Security taxes are paid, and the possibility of using some of that added revenue for private investment accounts.

"I believe some new revenue in the system is probably necessary for a legislative solution," Mr. Pozen said at the Treasury Department forum, which was called to generate enthusiasm for the Bush administration's approach to Social Security.


This is because Pozen still has at least a marginal toehold in the reality-based community, unlike the snake oil salesman who has repeatedly invoked his name.
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George Bush and Osama Bin Laden have more in common than just business
Posted by Jill | 10:17 AM

They're also working tirelessly to bring their insane religious vision/agenda to fruition, and they believe they are the divinely-appointed architects of Armageddon.

Only the Asia Times has the courage to call this for what it is:

A report in Newsweek that US military interrogators at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, had desecrated the Koran - subsequently retracted - initially set off protests in Afghanistan in which at least 15 people were killed. These protests have escalated and are expected to come to a head on May 27, when Islamic movements in 25 countries, notably Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia, will launch mass gatherings.

A largely disjointed al-Qaeda could not have wished for better, as its underlying ideology is to stoke the fires of a civilizational battle leading to Armageddon - which the Bible sees as the final battle between the forces of good and evil, prophesied to occur at the end of the world when Christ will return to smite his enemies, led by the Antichrist. The same battle is predicted in the Islamic faith.

[snip]

In a recent interview with the Financial Times of London, Pakistan's President General Pervez Musharraf claimed that al-Qaeda was now a destroyed entity. However, the reality is different. The destruction of al-Qaeda, or its survival, is beside the point. Al-Qaeda's success will be judged by its ability to have brought about not only a politically motivated anti-US backlash among Muslims across the world, but at the same time to create the grounds for its recognition among Muslim academics.

Ideologically speaking, at the time of September 11, it was impossible for any Muslim academic to praise al-Qaeda or justify its modus operandi in the context of Islamic teachings. However, over the past three-and-a-half years, much has changed. The US has disbanded several Muslim world-wide charity organizations; put pressure on countries such as Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Kuwait to change their social dynamics; attacked Afghanistan and Iraq; rolled back Pakistan's nuclear program; and laid siege to Iran.

In this atmosphere, Muslim academics in countries as diverse as Yemen, Malaysia and Morocco, and many others, have approved of al-Qaeda at a minimum as Muqadamul Jaish - a front-line force whose existence is a guarantee for the survival of all other forces behind it. The concept of Muqadamul Jaish gained prominence toward the end of the Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq, and has gathered increasing acceptance since.

'The end is nigh ...'
The Muslim media from Egypt to Pakistan consistently paint al-Qaeda, the US-led "war on terror", the invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan and events such as those in Uzbekistan in the perspective of the "End of Time" and Har Megiddo.

In Islam, before the return of Jesus (Isa), the Mehdi (restorer of the faith), will appear at the end of time to restore justice on earth and establish universal Islam. The Mehdi will be preceded by al-Dajjal, a Muslim anti-god, who will be defeated and will try to flee from the valley of Har Megiddo, which is in the Jezreel valley, in the north of Israel. Due to its strategic location, it has seen many battles. In 1918, there was a decisive battle between the British and the Ottomans, and General Alenby won the title "Lord of Megiddo". The same area now serves as an Israeli airbase.

In Muslim legend, "Khorasan" is from where an army will emerge to support Muslims in the Middle East. Their battle will end with victory in Palestine and the revival of Khilafah (caliphate). For the past few decades, Muslim academics have described Khorasan as the Central Asian states, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

"End of Time" programs are sold in CDs and DVDs across the Muslim world, which romanticize the Taliban, al-Qaeda and Hizbut Tehrir and add to their popularity.

Al-Qaeda is working to turn the story of Megiddo and the End of Time into reality. And the president of the United States, George W Bush, believes Armageddon is at hand: "The evil one is among us," he said in 2002, in a clear reference to the Antichrist. To quote Michael Ortiz Hill, "[T]he Commander in Chief of the most powerful military force in human history has located American foreign policy within a Biblical narrative that leads inexorably towards the plains of Megiddo ..."
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No, because everything is OK if you're a Republican
Posted by Jill | 9:47 AM
Atrios:

Once upon a time an organziation called Move On (or probably Move On Pac, forget which) ran a little ad creation contest. The initial submissions, of which there were many, weren't really screened by the organization, and a couple of them admittedly crossed the line by making Bush/Nazi comparisons. Those ads were yanked immediately by the organization, but are nonetheless used to this day by the liberal media to smear Move On as an irresponsible "extremist" organization.

Now we have the junior Senator from Pennsylvania comparing the entire Senate Dem caucus to Adolf Hitler. Will the "Move On" standard of the liberal media still apply?


MEAN, IMAGINE, THE RULE HAS BEEN IN PLACE FOR 214 YEARS THAT THIS IS THE WAY WE CONFIRM JUDGES. BROKEN BY THE OTHER SIDE TWO YEARS AGO, AND THE AUDACITY OF SOME MEMBERS TO STAND UP AND SAY, HOW DARE YOU BREAK THIS RULE. IT'S THE EQUIVALENT OF ADOLF HITLER IN 1942 "I'M IN PARIS. HOW DARE YOU INVADE ME. HOW DARE YOU BOMB MY CITY? IT'S MINE." THIS IS NO MORE THE RULE OF THE SENATE THAN IT WAS THE RULE OF THE SENATE BEFORE NOT TO FILIBUSTER. IT WAS AN UNDERSTANDING AND AGREEMENT, AND IT HAS BEEN ABUSED. IN A SENSE, WHAT WE SEE HERE ON THE FLOOR OF THE UNITED STATES
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Why fundamentalist Christianity is going to leave us in the scientific dust
Posted by Jill | 9:36 AM

When all science has to be approved by the Bible thumpers, there will be no science. Do we really want to cede breakthroughs like this to the rest of the world because a few Bible-thumpers want us to revert to the 13th century?

A team of South Korean scientists announced yesterday that they have discovered a highly efficient way to clone human cells, an advance that could alter the scientific and political debate over the procedure

The researchers said they have created 11 new lines of cloned human embryonic stem cells, including, for the first time, two that are genetically matched to patients with a disease. This is the first step necessary for therapeutic cloning, a procedure in which patients might one day be treated with healthy nerve, blood, or other cells cloned from their own skin. The two disease-carrying cell lines, cloned from patients with juvenile diabetes and an inherited blood disorder, will offer researchers new ways of studying those maladies.

But the most immediate impact of the work, scientists said, was to establish the cloning of human cells as a robust, surprisingly reliable procedure. The team, led by Woo Suk Hwang at Seoul National University, for the first time cloned skin cells from men and from patients with a wide range of ages, from 2 to 56. The South Koreans announced the first successful cloning of human cells last year, but it required 242 egg cells, which are used to make microscopic embryos, to create a single batch, or ''line," of cells. By refining its laboratory techniques, the team made 11 new lines of embryonic stem cells using only 185 egg cells, more than a 10-fold improvement in efficiency.

''This is a very important paper," said Douglas Melton, a Harvard University biologist who is preparing an effort to clone human cells. ''I am very impressed by the speed with which they have done this."

Critics of cloning research have argued that treating patients will require large numbers of women to donate eggs, and egg donation carries some risk. The paper, published online yesterday by the journal Science, may dampen this concern, because the new research shows it is often possible to create a line of cloned embryonic stem cells using only the eggs gathered from a single cycle of fertility treatment in one woman. But the advances are likely to intensify another concern about the science: That the United States is falling increasingly behind.

''We are going to be playing catch-up," said Kevin Eggan, a Harvard scientist who works with Melton and who recently visited the South Korean team. ''They are the masters."

Embryonic stem cell research in the United States has been slowed by a political fight with roots in the abortion debate. Some critics of the research charge that destroying a human embryo, which researchers do to create embryonic stem cells, means taking a human life. On Aug. 9, 2001, President Bush announced that the government would not fund research using human embryonic stem cells created after that date, because he did not want the government to encourage embryo destruction. The new cell lines in South Korea, which were created with money from the government there, fall under that ban, but American scientists could study them using private funds or, in some places, state money.


I'm no scientist, and usually science news makes me glaze over, but even I can see that anyone who is truly "pro-life" should be applauding research like this. Imagine being able to cure diseases like juvenile diabetes, many congenital defects, problem heart valves, and other diseases, without dealing with organ rejection.

Because this research uses donor EGGS only, the fundie lunatics are trying to couch this in terms of the risks and discomfort of egg donation -- as if they are so concerned for the comfort and safety of women. Yet they don't seem to mind donor eggs used in fertility treatment.

It's easy to laugh at the ridiculousness of having a second Scopes trial, this time in Kansas, in the 21st century. But the blow to scientific research that a Bible-based society is going to deal is something we all ought to think about before continuing to vote in people like Bill Frist and Tom DeLay. Surely stopping a couple of gay guys they never met from marrying isn't worth the human lives that will be lost waiting for research that never happens here.
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Chew on this
Posted by Jill | 9:21 AM
I think this may be the reason they still hate Clinton so much:

NBC News/Wall Street Journal Poll conducted by the polling organizations of Peter Hart (D) and Bill McInturff (R). May 12-16, 2005. N=1,005 adults nationwide. MoE ± 3.1.

"In general, do you approve or disapprove of the job that George W. Bush is doing as president?"

Approve: 47%
Disapprove: 47%
Unsure: 6%




NBC News/Wall Street Journal Poll conducted by the polling organizations of Peter Hart (D) and Robert Teeter (R) 12/19/98 (immediately following the impeachment vote):

"In general, do you approve or disapprove of the job Bill Clinton is doing as president?"

Approve: 72%
Disapprove: 25%
Unsure: 3%

Bill Clinton had overwhelming approval by Americans even after being impeached by House Republicans than Bush, the War President, the self-styled messiah, has during a time of active war. Remember that 28-30% base I mentioned yesterday? Clinton's immediate post-impeachment numbers show he had EVERYONE ELSE. Everyone.

Maybe Americans aren't as dumb as the Administration, Bill Frist, and Fox News would have us believe after all.

(via Hoffmania)
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So where's the right-wing outrage about this?
Posted by Jill | 7:03 AM

The keystone of the right-wing outrage at Newsweek is that seventeen people died in anti-American violence. "Newsweek lied, people died", they scream, conveniently ignoring the massive lies of the administration they so mindlessly and slavishly support; the lies that got us into this mess in the first place.

One would think they actually cared about those seventeen deaths.

I say bullshit.

Despite all the frothing on the right, the substance of the Newsweek story remains intact. What does not remain intact is the claim of its source that it saw the claims of abuse on one particular memo. This is what the right is latching onto in a desperate attempt to discredit the journalist who was at the forefront of the Clinton impeachment foofarah, conveniently ignoring the fact that Richard Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has said emphatically that the violence in Afghanistan is triggered far more by rage at Hamid Karzai than about a 2-paragraph blurb in an American magazine.

But then, it's so much more fun blaming Newsweek for everything short of the crucifixion of Jesus, right? It's astounding how simple-minded these people can be, even the ones who you'd think are smart enough to know better.

What a tangled web we weave indeed.

Let me repeat: I have no great love for Michael Isikoff. In fact, it pisses me off royally when journalists do crap like this, if for no other reason than that they hand the right ammunition. If I, a humble blogger, know how these people work, how ruthless they are and how they'll resort to any means necessary to destroy anyone who disagrees with them, how come the suits at Newsweek and CBS News and everyone else who's been burned by what may be planted sources and documents don't know that yet? And what's it going to take?

This morning the New York Times is reporting horror stories about the treatment of Afghan prisoners:

Even as the young Afghan man was dying before them, his American jailers continued to torment him.

The prisoner, a slight, 22-year-old taxi driver known only as Dilawar, was hauled from his cell at the detention center in Bagram, Afghanistan, at around 2 a.m. to answer questions about a rocket attack on an American base. When he arrived in the interrogation room, an interpreter who was present said, his legs were bouncing uncontrollably in the plastic chair and his hands were numb. He had been chained by the wrists to the top of his cell for much of the previous four days.

Mr. Dilawar asked for a drink of water, and one of the two interrogators, Specialist Joshua R. Claus, 21, picked up a large plastic bottle. But first he punched a hole in the bottom, the interpreter said, so as the prisoner fumbled weakly with the cap, the water poured out over his orange prison scrubs. The soldier then grabbed the bottle back and began squirting the water forcefully into Mr. Dilawar's face.

"Come on, drink!" the interpreter said Specialist Claus had shouted, as the prisoner gagged on the spray. "Drink!"

At the interrogators' behest, a guard tried to force the young man to his knees. But his legs, which had been pummeled by guards for several days, could no longer bend. An interrogator told Mr. Dilawar that he could see a doctor after they finished with him. When he was finally sent back to his cell, though, the guards were instructed only to chain the prisoner back to the ceiling.

"Leave him up," one of the guards quoted Specialist Claus as saying.

Several hours passed before an emergency room doctor finally saw Mr. Dilawar. By then he was dead, his body beginning to stiffen. It would be many months before Army investigators learned a final horrific detail: Most of the interrogators had believed Mr. Dilawar was an innocent man who simply drove his taxi past the American base at the wrong time.

The story of Mr. Dilawar's brutal death at the Bagram Collection Point - and that of another detainee, Habibullah, who died there six days earlier in December 2002 - emerge from a nearly 2,000-page confidential file of the Army's criminal investigation into the case, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times.

Like a narrative counterpart to the digital images from Abu Ghraib, the Bagram file depicts young, poorly trained soldiers in repeated incidents of abuse. The harsh treatment, which has resulted in criminal charges against seven soldiers, went well beyond the two deaths.

In some instances, testimony shows, it was directed or carried out by interrogators to extract information. In others, it was punishment meted out by military police guards. Sometimes, the torment seems to have been driven by little more than boredom or cruelty, or both.


Now, the wingnuts will say that since these people are prisoners, anything that happens to them is deserved. To that I ask, aren't we supposed to be better than this? Aren't we supposed to set an example to the rest of the world? How can we blast people like Saddam Hussein and other butchers when officially-sanctioned butchery is official policy of the U.S. as well?

And even if you think that being Bully of the World is A-OK, shouldn't we be concerned about what this kind of dehumanization is doing to the soldiers participating in it?

You see, unlike the people who think Lynndie England and her ilk acted alone, that they are just wild cards, nasty, bad kids who violated official policy, I see the young people who are stuck working in these prisons as victims as well -- victims of a policy that dehumanizes them so that they CAN perform acts like those described in this and other reports.

Can you imagine what these kids are going to be like when they get home? How do you torture another human being on a daily basis and then go home and live a normal life?

It's very easy to put one of those goddamn ribbon magnets on your SUV, blast Toby Keith out the speakers, and claim you're supporting the troops. But if you really care about the young people that George W. Bush has sent to fight a war he hasn't a clue how he wants to win, you have to be alarmed about how military policy is turning them into animals.

And anyone who thinks that this kind of activity is scaring the kind of person in the Middle East who is willing to die for Allah in a blaze of glory, guess again. We're not engendering respect, or even fear from these people; we're engendering nothing but rage. It is U.S. policy that leads to this violence, not simply a poorly-sourced news story.
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Thursday, May 19, 2005

Above the Fray
Posted by Jill | 3:33 PM

Well, Isikoff's got some stones, I've got to give him credit for that much. In a new, astounding Newsweek article redolent with echoes of the Bush Administration using exiles like Ahmad Chalabi to cook the books relative to intelligence about Iraq, he shows that they're doing it again -- only this time the right hand and the somewhat-less-insane-right hand don't know what the other is doing:

A controversial exile movement cited by President George W. Bush as a source of information on Iran's nuclear ambitions is condemned for psychologically and physically abusing its own members in a new report by the Human Rights Watch.

In a document scheduled for public release this week, Human Rights Watch alleges that the Iranian exile group known as Mojahedin-e-Khalq (MEK) has a history of cult-like practices that include forcing members to divorce their spouses and to engage in extended self-criticism sessions.

More dramatically, the report states, former MEK members told Human Rights Watch that when they protested MEK policies or tried to leave the organization, they were arrested, in some cases violently abused and in other instances imprisoned. Two former recruits told the human-rights group that they were held in solitary confinement for years in a camp operated by MEK in Iraq under the protection of Saddam Hussein. MEK representatives in the United States and France, where MEK is headquartered, did not immediately respond to Newsweek phone calls and an e-mail requesting comment.

MEK has long been controversial because of its history of violent attacks in Iran, its relationship with Saddam's regime and its background as a quasi-religious, quasi-Marxist radical resistance group founded in the era of the late Iranian Shah. In 1997, the Clinton Administration put MEK on the State Department's list of foreign terrorist groups. MEK's U.S. supporters, among whom at one point numbered dozens of members of Congress, charged that the Clinton administration only labeled MEK as a terrorist group as part of an ill-conceived attempt to improve relations with the ayatollahs who currently run Iran. However, the Bush administration added two alleged MEK front organizations to the State Department's terrorist list in 2003.

Despite the group's notoriety, Bush himself cited purported intelligence gathered by MEK as evidence of the Iranian regime's rapidly accelerating nuclear ambitions. At a March 16 press conference, Bush said Iran's hidden nuclear program had been discovered not because of international inspections but "because a dissident group pointed it out to the world." White House aides acknowledged later that the dissident group cited by the president is the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), one of the MEK front groups added to the State Department list two years ago.

In an appearance before a House International Relations subcommittee a year ago, John Bolton, the controversial State Department undersecretary who Bush has nominated to become US ambassador to the United Nations, was questioned by a Congressman sympathetic to MEK about whether it was appropriate for the U.S. government to pay attention to allegations about Iran supplied by the group. Bolton said he believed that MEK "qualifies as a terrorist organization according to our criteria." But he added that he did not think the official label had "prohibited us from getting information from them. And I certainly don't have any inhibition about getting information about what's going on in Iran from whatever source we can find that we deem reliable."


I'll wait while you pick up your jaw from the floor, or rearrange the pieces of your head after the explosion, or whatever metaphorical expression of disbelief you like.

Are you ready?

OK.

You've gotta love the way John Bolton is sourced for this story. But it's the content that's so disturbing. I mean, here is the Bush White House, talking "war on terror war on terror war on terror war on terror war on terror war on terror war on terror war on terror war on terror war on terror" for four years now, but if a terrorist group can provide information, even if it's utter horseshit, that is in tune with what the Administration wants to do, then they're A-OK. And this is what people who support this war think is OK? What the heck is wrong with these people?

Scott Ritter said a few months ago that the invasion of Iran was on the table for June. I thought he was probably right then, and I grow more convinced every day.
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Here are the "people of faith" Bill Frist sees as his base
Posted by Jill | 12:35 PM

Isn't it funny how it's never pro-choice secular progressives who are arrested for crap like this:

The Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff's office has broken up what they call a "child sex abuse cult." Three members of a Ponchatoula church have been arrested for allegedly raping children, and in some cases, having sex with animals. Some of the kids are as young as two years old.

The Tangipahoa Sheriff's office says the alleged abuse occurred two years ago. Sheriff Daniel Edwards says his office began investigating the Hosanna Church more than a month ago, after getting information from a mother of an alleged victim. The big break in the case came Monday when the church's minister turned himself in to the Livingston Parish Sheriff's office, and allegedly named names, one of whom was a Sheriff's deputy.

Sheriff's officials say certain church members allegedly raped children and animals in a cult-like fashion at the Hosanna Church. A nieghbor says when he found out about it, "It surprised me. But I wouldn't put it pass them. They were weird looking people to begin with."

Livingston Sheriff's Detective Stan Carpenter says church minister Louis Lamonica turned himself in on Monday and admitted to having oral and anal sex with kids for years... and that's not all.

"He was basically showing the kids how to have sexual relations at a very young age. That is just something children at that age, they shouldn't have to know anything about that," says Carpenter.

Lamonica also allegedly named other church members in the child sex ring. They include Austin Bernard and Chris Labat. Labat is a patrol deputy with the Tangipahoa Sheriff's office.

Livingston Sheriff Daniel Edwards says, "It certainly doesn't make me happy to be a human being to have fellow human beings that are capable of doing what is alleged to be done here. To have a member of this Sheriff's department involved in any way is disheartening."

How many others were allegedly abused at the church? No one knows. But investigators have faith more arrests will be made as they uncover what really happened inside the church..


But hey, it's a church, and they're fundies, so Jesus has forgiven them, right?

I'll tell you what: Any religion that has as its center a doctrine that says it's perfectly OK for people to do shit like this as long as they say, "Yup, Jesus, I believe God sent you to do time for anything I damn well decide to do" is not a religion I want any part of.

This is "heartland values"? This is what a "Christian nation" looks like? This is why we are supposed to want to ban gay marriage? So that good, "Christian" guys like this can go raping two-year-olds? Fuck that, and fuck you, Frist, and DeLay, and Bush, all the rest of you sanctimonious Christofascist American Taliban assholes. You're all a bunch of perverts and closet cases who hate yourselves and your own bizarro urges so much you can't imagine a world in which people don't need Jeebus in order to behave like human beings. Mote, beam, eye, etc.

(via Shakespeare's Sister)
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Next to be placed on the list: Moveon.org, Emily's List, Human Rights Campaign, True Majority, and the Democratic Party
Posted by Jill | 10:19 AM

Wait a minute....I thought activist judges were worse than Al Qaeda. Now it's environmental groups and PETA.

Look....I'll be the first to admit that groups like PETA and the Animal Liberation Front are the kind of groups that make the left look like idiots. I don't agree with their tactics. But to call these groups terrorists, while the various loose affiliations of militias, abortion demonstrators, some of whom advocate violence, and other right-wing kooks are ignored, not only is hypocritical and fascist, but it also blinds this Administration to REAL terrorism dangers....which is probably the whole point, since what they want is to keep people so frightened that they'll fall in line and worship Der Fuhrer, George Adolph Bus(c)h.

CNN reports the hysteria:

Violent animal rights extremists and eco-terrorists now pose one of the most serious terrorism threats to the nation, top federal law enforcement officials say.

Senior officials from the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms (ATF) and Explosives told a Senate panel Wednesday of their growing concern over these groups.

Of particular concern are the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) and the Earth Liberation Front (ELF).

John Lewis, the FBI's deputy assistant director for counterterrorism, said animal and environmental rights extremists have claimed credit for more than 1,200 criminal incidents since 1990. The FBI has 150 pending investigations associated with animal rights or eco-terrorist activities, and ATF officials say they have opened 58 investigations in the past six years related to violence attributed to the ELF and ALF.

In the same period violence from groups like the Ku Klux Klan and anti-abortion extremists have declined, Lewis said.

The ELF has been linked to fires set at sport utility vehicle dealerships and construction sites in various states, while the ALF has been blamed for arson and bombings against animal research labs and the pharmaceutical and cosmetics industry.

No deaths have been blamed on attacks by those groups so far, but the attacks have increased in frequency and size, said Lewis.

"Plainly, I think we're lucky. Once you set one of these fires they can go way out of control," Lewis said.

ATF Deputy Assistant Director Carson Carroll agreed with Lewis' assessment.

"The most worrisome trend to law enforcement and private industry alike has been the increase in willingness by these movements to resort to the use of incendiary and explosive devices," he said.


I think that the FBI's real problem is that CORPORATE PROPERTY is being destroyed. As long as it's only blacks being lynched and abortion doctors being murdered and women being intimidated and harrassed, it's A-OK with those in charge. But start destroying property and the gloves come off.

Now I'm going to address the rest of this post to PETA and ELF and related groups who may have or may be thinking of using such tactics (and I'm not convinced the FBI isn't exaggerating; it wouldn't be the first time): Stop it. If you're thinking about it, stop. If you're doing it, cut it out. If you think that violence is going to further your agenda, I have three words for you: Symbionese Liberation Army. And another three: The Weather Underground. Torching Hummers may make you feel good, but it doesn't make you a freedom fighters, it makes you a vandal. You're not doing your cause any favors, you're not doing the left any favors, and frankly, I will NOT sit by and live in a fascist state because of you guys. It's bad enough I have to fight the Republicans. I don't want to have to battle against people who are supposed to be on the same team. Civil disobedience is called that for a reason. It's civil. When you give this particular version of the U.S. government an excuse to turn this into a dictatorship, they'll take it. Believe me, they will.

So knock it off. Now.

UPDATE: By increasing the list of organizations they can classify as "terrorist", the Administration can open the door to ever-more-invasive searches with ever-less-accountability. The New York Times reports:

The Bush administration and Senate Republican leaders are pushing a plan that would significantly expand the F.B.I.'s power to demand business records in terror investigations without obtaining approval from a judge, officials said on Wednesday.

The proposal, which is likely to be considered next week in a closed session of the Senate intelligence committee, would allow federal investigators to subpoena records from businesses and other institutions without a judge's sign-off if they declared that the material was needed as part of a foreign intelligence investigation.

The proposal, part of a broader plan to extend antiterrorism powers under the law known as the USA Patriot Act, was concluded in recent days by Republican leaders on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence in consultation with the Bush administration, Congressional officials said.

Administration and Congressional officials who support the idea said the proposal would give the F.B.I. a much-needed tool to track leads in terrorism and espionage investigations that would be quicker and less cumbersome than existing methods. They pointed out that the administrative subpoena power being sought for the F.B.I. in terror cases was already in use in more than 300 other types of crimes, including health care fraud, child exploitation, racketeering and drug trafficking.

[B@B comment: And being a liberal, too, I presume]

[snip]

The proposal, which is likely to be considered next week in a closed session of the Senate intelligence committee, would allow federal investigators to subpoena records from businesses and other institutions without a judge's sign-off if they declared that the material was needed as part of a foreign intelligence investigation.

The proposal, part of a broader plan to extend antiterrorism powers under the law known as the USA Patriot Act, was concluded in recent days by Republican leaders on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence in consultation with the Bush administration, Congressional officials said.

Administration and Congressional officials who support the idea said the proposal would give the F.B.I. a much-needed tool to track leads in terrorism and espionage investigations that would be quicker and less cumbersome than existing methods. They pointed out that the administrative subpoena power being sought for the F.B.I. in terror cases was already in use in more than 300 other types of crimes, including health care fraud, child exploitation, racketeering and drug trafficking.


[B@B comment: And being a liberal, too, I presume]
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Isn't this what's called "making terroristic threats"?
Posted by Jill | 9:26 AM

And don't we put people in jail for saying stuff like this? As if it weren't bad enough that Bill Frist is calling Democrats "assassins" for not marching in lockstep on Bush's corporate whore judges, now we have this little gem from hate radio host Glenn Beck (via Media Matters):

From the May 17 broadcast of The Glenn Beck Program:

BECK: Hang on, let me just tell you what I'm thinking. I'm thinking about killing Michael Moore, and I'm wondering if I could kill him myself, or if I would need to hire somebody to do it. No, I think I could. I think he could be looking me in the eye, you know, and I could just be choking the life out -- is this wrong? I stopped wearing my What Would Jesus -- band -- Do, and I've lost all sense of right and wrong now. I used to be able to say, "Yeah, I'd kill Michael Moore," and then I'd see the little band: What Would Jesus Do? And then I'd realize, "Oh, you wouldn't kill Michael Moore. Or at least you wouldn't choke him to death." And you know, well, I'm not sure.


Now, don't give me a bunch of crap against Randi Rhodes as a way of justifying this. First of all, what ran on the Randi Rhodes show (and I heard it, unlike most of the people who screamed about it), was clearly designed to be a "comedy" bit. It wasn't funny, it was distasteful, repugnant, and uncalled for, and no one said so louder than Randi Rhodes hreself -- for days on end. And she apologized for running it on her show -- which is more than Tom DeLay and Bill Frist have done for advocating the killing of judges. Randi Rhodes has never once advocated the killing of anyone, let alone the president. And when she ran a segment put together by others on her show, she took responsibility for it, apologized, and not even the Secret Service thought it warranted further attention.

But here is a guy, saying right on radio, that he's thinking about killing Michael Moore. That's an outright threat. Or it would be, if we didn't live in a country in which Ann Coulter can advocate mass execution of liberals, Tom DeLay can tell people to go out and kill judges they don't agree with, and Bill Frist uses the word "assassination" to describe Democrats filibustering judges at the same time that a judge whose husband and mother were murdered is speaking out against this kind of rhetoric before a Senate committee.

The GOP apologists had better just face it: Their party is out of control. Their leaders are out of control. They have been taken over by a 13th century theocratic bunch of lunatics who are far more un-American than I, or Randi Rhodes, or even Michael Moore, could ever be.

We dislike this president. We believe he's illegitimate. We believe he's dangerous for America. We want him out of office via impeachment and disgrace. But NO ONE on the left is advocating the killing of the president, or of Tom DeLay, or of Rush Limbaugh, or of anyone else. We don't work that way. But the other side does. Eric Rudolph and Neal the Mule-Fucker Horsley with his assassination list of abortion doctors are proof.
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Wednesday, May 18, 2005

Bill Frist is about as low a piece of scum as there is
Posted by Jill | 9:11 PM

Just when you think Bill the Cat Killer Frist can't sink any lower, he finds a way:

On the same day that a federal judge whose family was assassinated testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee about courthouse safety, Sen. Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) described Democratic efforts opposing some of President Bush’s judicial nominees as “leadership-led use of Cloture vote to kill, to defeat, to assassinate these nominees.”

Federal Judge Joan Lefkow was a target for assassination, and her husband and mother were murdered in February of this year. Democratic Whip Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) hammered Frist's comments and asked they be struck from the Senate record.

Durbin remarked, "When words are expressed during the court of the debate that those of us who oppose these nominees are setting out to 'kill, to defeat or to assassinate these nominees, those words should be taken from this record. Those words go too far."


And this man calls himself a Christian. Amazing. Actually, he's a craven, manipulative political opportunist, who'll step on anyone, even the entire country, to get votes from the insane wingnuts of the Christofascist right.
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This guy is too good to be true
Posted by Jill | 5:48 PM

Not only is Tom Westman the Hottest Survivor Contestant Ever, but he's also a thousand Benjamins richer after this past Sunday's Survivor Palaufinale AND he writes much better than he thinks he does AND has a pretty nice Web site (though someone ought to teach him about using CSS or even tables instead of those awful frames) that was pointed out to me this morning.

A leader, a family man, liked and respected by his colleagues, wins a cutthroat reality show by just being himself and never backstabbing anyone....Good Lord, is there ANYTHING at ALL wrong with this guy? A strange fetish? Maybe he kicks his dog? Leaves the seat up? Something? (He's probably a Republican...)

I smell a show on the Discovery Channel and a book deal in this guy's future.
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While Rome Burned....
Posted by Jill | 4:24 PM

If George W. Bush is C-Plus Caligula, then Bill Frist is undoubtedly Cat Killer Nero. For while the religious kooks are frothing at the mouth about gay marriage, contraceptives, and judges who don't do as they're told, and Bill Frist is preparing to do over a hundred years of Senate precedent simply so the mindless, grinning cultists of the Christian Right will vote for him for President in the 2008 primary, the U.S. economy is on the verge of collapse:

The timing could not have been more apt. On the eve of a titanic partisan clash in the Senate, eggheads of the left and right got together yesterday to warn both parties that they are ignoring the country's most pressing problem: that the United States is turning into Argentina.

While Washington plunged into a procedural fight over a pair of judicial nominees, Stuart Butler, head of domestic policy at the conservative Heritage Foundation, and Isabel Sawhill, director of the left-leaning Brookings Institution's economic studies program, sat down with Comptroller General David M. Walker to bemoan what they jointly called the budget "nightmare."

There were no cameras, not a single microphone, and no evidence of a lawmaker or Bush administration official in the room -- just some hungry congressional staffers and boxes of sandwiches from Corner Bakery. But what the three spoke about will have greater consequences than the current fuss over filibusters and Tom DeLay's travel.

With startling unanimity, they agreed that without some combination of big tax increases and major cuts in Medicare, Social Security and most other spending, the country will fall victim to the huge debt and soaring interest rates that collapsed Argentina's economy and caused riots in its streets a few years ago.

"The only thing the United States is able to do a little after 2040 is pay interest on massive and growing federal debt," Walker said. "The model blows up in the mid-2040s. What does that mean? Argentina."

"All true," Sawhill, a budget official in the Clinton administration, concurred.

"To do nothing," Butler added, "would lead to deficits of the scale we've never seen in this country or any major in industrialized country. We've seen them in Argentina. That's a chilling thought, but it would mean that."

Each of the three had a separate slide show, but the numbers and forecasts were interchangeable.

Walker put U.S. debt and obligations at $45 trillion in current dollars -- almost as much as the total net worth of all Americans, or $150,000 per person. Balancing the budget in 2040, he said, could require cutting total federal spending as much as 60 percent or raising taxes to 2 1/2 times today's levels.

Butler pointed out that without changes to Social Security and Medicare, in 25 years either a quarter of discretionary spending would need to be cut or U.S. tax rates would have to approach European levels. Putting it slightly differently, Sawhill posed a choice of 10 percent cuts in spending and much larger cuts in Social Security and Medicare, or a 40 percent increase in government spending relative to the size of the economy, and equivalent tax increases.

The unity of the bespectacled presenters was impressive -- and it made their conclusion all the more depressing. As Ron Haskins, a former Bush White House official and current Brookings scholar, said when introducing the thinkers: "If Heritage and Brookings agree on something, there must be something to it."


Of course, this is all part of the Bush plan, isn't it? Eliminate Social Security and Medicare, eliminate protected pensions, eliminate the entire safety net, eliminate the burden of health care coverage from employers without doing anything to take its place other than perhaps issuing $1000 "vouchers" that people can use to pay for the $10,000 policies most of with employer-paid health care would pay to duplicate what we have. Then outsource all the good jobs, turn the entire middle class into a 1905-style rabble, and concentrate what little wealth is left into the hands of maybe 100 of the Bush family's closest friends.

Both my grandmothers lived to be 92. So that may mean I'll be around to see it happen. Oy vey.
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And just who are these federally-subsidized studs supposed to be fucking?
Posted by Jill | 10:43 AM

At the same time as the Republican base is trying to reduce on the way to eliminating all access to contraceptives for women, Medicare is going to spend $2 billion in the next decade on anti-impotence drugs for men. (source: The Moonie Times)

I guess JimmyJeff GannonGuckert and Elsie the Neal Horsley Mule (who contrary to press reports, has NOT been seen dallying with Skippy the Bush Kangaroo) are going to have their dance cards full.

And speaking of which, what's with all the Google referrals from the query "sex with animals"? WTF do you people spend your time thinking about, anyway???
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More of this, please
Posted by Jill | 6:44 AM

From the Moonie Times, of all places (emphases mine):

One-third of the professors at an evangelical Christian college in Grand Rapids, Mich., are taking out a large ad in a local newspaper Saturday to protest President Bush's commencement speech.

"As Christians, we are called to be peacemakers and to initiate war only as a last resort," the ad will say. "We believe your administration has launched an unjust and unjustified war in Iraq."

The 130 signatories, which include 20 staff members, work at Calvin College. Founded in 1876 as a school for pastors of the Christian Reformed Church, it now is one of the nation's flagship schools for a Christian liberal-arts education.

"No single political position should be identified with God's will," says the ad, which also chastises the president for "actions that favor the wealthy of our society and burden the poor."

Christians are to be characterized by love and gentleness, it adds, but "we believe that your administration has fostered intolerance and divisiveness and has often failed to listen to those with whom it disagrees."

Moreover, says the letter, set to run in the Grand Rapids Press, the Bush administration's environmental policies "have harmed creation," and it asks the president "to re-examine your policies in light of our God-given duty to pursue justice with mercy."

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Beating the press into submission
Posted by Jill | 6:25 AM

Now we see what the Bush Administration's agenda regarding the press is: beat those who do not report what it wants into submission or death, until the New York Post and Fox News spread the Word of Bush Throughout this Mighty Land (emphases and snarky comments mine):

The Bush administration kept up the pressure today on Newsweek magazine to do something beyond retracting an article asserting that investigators had confirmed the desecration of a Koran by American interrogators trying to unsettle Muslim detainees.

[B@B note: Perhaps ritual suicide is the only thing that will appease the Great God Bush]

"There is lasting damage to our image because of this report," the chief White House spokesman, Scott McClellan, said at a news briefing. "And we would encourage Newsweek to do all that they can to help repair the damage that has been done, particularly in the region."

[B@B note: And bombing the shit out of a country after going to war on a pack of lies doesn't do lasting damage to our image? Torturing prisoners at Abu Ghraib doesn't do lasting damage to our image? Telling the entire rest of the world to go fuck itself doesn't do lasting damage to our image? People this delusional used to be locked up and treated.]

The Bush administration was also making its own effort at damage control, sending cables to embassies, beginning last week, that instruct them to spread the word that the United States is respectful of the Koran and not hostile to the Muslim faith.

[B@B note: Bullshit. As long as the Bush Administration doesn't speak out against the Fred Phelpses and the James Dobsons in this country, its words about the Muslim faith are just that and no more.]

"There is a need to inform people, inform people what the facts are, inform people what our policy is," the State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said today. "Yesterday, we sent out another cable to our embassies giving the text of the Newsweek retraction, explaining further that our inquiries had shown nothing like this, and reiterating once more that there are policies in place, detailed policies in place, among the military for the guards in terms of the handling of the Koran, in terms of showing respect for the religious rights and practices of the detainees."

[B@B note: Well, perhaps if they informed people of the facts instead of Administration spin that is obviously bullshit, the rest of the world wouldn't react the way it does. Or maybe it would. The facts of Bush Administration policy are that ugly.]

Mr. McClellan, who called Newsweek's retraction "a good first step" shortly after the magazine issued it on Monday, said today that journalists at the magazine could do even more "by talking about the way they got this wrong and pointing out what the policies and practices of the United States military are when it comes to the handling of the holy Koran."

[B@B note: It's pretty clear from other documented sources NOT used in the Newsweek story what the military's practices are.]

When asked if he was trying to pressure the magazine, Mr. McClellan asserted that he was not. "It's not my position to get into telling people what they can and cannot report," Mr. McClellan said.


Look, I have no great love for this kind of sloppy journalism coming from the MSM for just this reason: Because the Administration will jump on it like a cat on a toy mouse. But let this be a lesson to the toadies of the press who thought that kowtowing to the party would buy them access to this White House; and to people like Michael Isikoff, who thought his Whitewater credentials would somehow insulate him from the wrath of this Administration. These guys play ugly, and they play for keeps. And the press has two choices: continue to live in fear of these guys, or expose them. So far they've chosen to live in fear. We saw some brief hints during McClellan's recent news conferences that they're getting tired of being afraid. Let's see if this continues, or if they crawl back into their craven caves after their careers are threatened by a White House that thinks the press is there to serve it instead of the American people.

[And by the way, do you think that all this righteous indignation about Newsweek has anything to do with the fact that the Downing Street memo is starting to hit the large metropolitan newspapers?]
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Tuesday, May 17, 2005

Why I Adore Anthony Lane
Posted by Jill | 6:42 PM

Anthony Lane is the film critic people love to hate. I'm not sure why; whether it's the fey, Wildean pretentions coming from a straight man; or the fact this his filmic references come more from pop culture than from Film Comment, making him more akin to the snarkier onliners than the spawn of Pauline Kael that I suppose he's meant to be.

But when Lane is on, he gives the OTHER funniest print reviewer, Paul Rudnick's alter-ego, "Libby Gelman-Waxner" in the pages of Premiere, a run for hir (sic) money.

This week, he reviews the new Star Wars film. Just go read it. But make sure you're not drinking anything, and don't eat a big meal before reading.
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George Galloway Bitchslaps the U.S. Senate
Posted by Jill | 5:28 PM

George Galloway, a member of the British Parliament, is accused by wingnuts in the Senate of taking bribes from Iraq in the oil-for-food scandal. These fucklewits like Committee Chairman Norm Coleman (R-Not Good Enough Even To Clean Paul Wellstone's Toilet, Let Alone Fill His Shoes) think that by shlepping this guy over here and making a spectacle of him, they can distract from the fact that the Texas-based (yes, it's always Texas, isn't it?) Bayoil Company, was indicted last month in the very same investigation of the oil-for-food scandal. A report by Senate Democrats contends that Bayoil "facilitated" about $37 million in illegal surcharges to Saddam Hussein from 2000-2002 and then lobbied to influence the price of Iraqi oil and to oppose American efforts to stop the surcharges. (Cue our mindless, grinning wingnut trolls to say "But it started when Clinton was President!" See? I just did it, so you don't have to.)

Now, I don't know whether Galloway took bribes or not. If he did, I would guess he's no different from many politicians and oil executives all over the world, the oil business being pretty damn dirty and corrupt everywhere you go.

But he's 100% right in his scathing critique before the Senate Subcommittee for Investigations today (emphases mine), and the absence of outrage in this country over the lies of the Bush Administration is just appalling:

"Senator, I am not now, nor have I ever been, an oil trader. and neither has anyone on my behalf. I have never seen a barrel of oil, owned one, bought one, sold one - and neither has anyone on my behalf.

"Now I know that standards have slipped in the last few years in Washington, but for a lawyer you are remarkably cavalier with any idea of justice. I am here today but last week you already found me guilty. You traduced my name around the world without ever having asked me a single question, without ever having contacted me, without ever written to me or telephoned me, without any attempt to contact me whatsoever. And you call that justice.

I told the world that Iraq, contrary to your claims did not have weapons of mass destruction.

I told the world, contrary to your claims, that Iraq had no connection to al-Qaeda.

I told the world, contrary to your claims, that Iraq had no connection to the atrocity on 9/11 2001.

I told the world, contrary to your claims, that the Iraqi people would resist a British and American invasion of their country and that the fall of Baghdad would not be the beginning of the end, but merely the end of the beginning.

Senator, in everything I said about Iraq, I turned out to be right and you turned out to be wrong and 100,000 people paid with their lives; 1600 of them American soldiers sent to their deaths on a pack of lies; 15,000 of them wounded, many of them disabled forever on a pack of lies.

"Now I want to deal with the pages that relate to me in this dossier and I want to point out areas where there are - let's be charitable and say errors. Then I want to put this in the context where I believe it ought to be. On the very first page of your document about me you assert that I have had 'many meetings' with Saddam Hussein. This is false.

"I have had two meetings with Saddam Hussein, once in 1994 and once in August of 2002. By no stretch of the English language can that be described as "many meetings" with Saddam Hussein.

"As a matter of fact, I have met Saddam Hussein exactly the same number of times as Donald Rumsfeld met him. The difference is Donald Rumsfeld met him to sell him guns and to give him maps the better to target those guns. I met him to try and bring about an end to sanctions, suffering and war, and on the second of the two occasions, I met him to try and persuade him to let Dr Hans Blix and the United Nations weapons inspectors back into the country - a rather better use of two meetings with Saddam Hussein than your own Secretary of State for Defense made of his.

"I was an opponent of Saddam Hussein when British and Americans governments and businessmen were selling him guns and gas. I used to demonstrate outside the Iraqi embassy when British and American officials were going in and doing commerce.

"You will see from the official parliamentary record, Hansard, from the 15th March 1990 onwards, voluminous evidence that I have a rather better record of opposition to Saddam Hussein than you do and than any other member of the British or American governments do.

"Now you say in this document, you quote a source, you have the gall to quote a source, without ever having asked me whether the allegation from the source is true, that I am 'the owner of a company which has made substantial profits from trading in Iraqi oil'.

"Senator, I do not own any companies, beyond a small company whose entire purpose, whose sole purpose, is to receive the income from my journalistic earnings from my employer, Associated Newspapers, in London. I do not own a company that's been trading in Iraqi oil. And you have no business to carry a quotation, utterly unsubstantiated and false, implying otherwise.

"Now you have nothing on me, Senator, except my name on lists of names from Iraq, many of which have been drawn up after the installation of your puppet government in Baghdad. If you had any of the letters against me that you had against Zhirinovsky, and even Pasqua, they would have been up there in your slideshow for the members of your committee today.

"You have my name on lists provided to you by the Duelfer inquiry, provided to him by the convicted bank robber, and fraudster and conman Ahmed Chalabi who many people to their credit in your country now realize played a decisive role in leading your country into the disaster in Iraq.

"There were 270 names on that list originally. That's somehow been filleted down to the names you chose to deal with in this committee. Some of the names on that committee included the former secretary to his Holiness Pope John Paul II, the former head of the African National Congress Presidential office and many others who had one defining characteristic in common: they all stood against the policy of sanctions and war which you vociferously prosecuted and which has led us to this disaster.

"You quote Mr Dahar Yassein Ramadan. Well, you have something on me, I've never met Mr Dahar Yassein Ramadan. Your sub-committee apparently has. But I do know that he's your prisoner, I believe he's in Abu Ghraib prison. I believe he is facing war crimes charges, punishable by death. In these circumstances, knowing what the world knows about how you treat prisoners in Abu Ghraib prison, in Bagram Airbase, in Guantanamo Bay, including I may say, British citizens being held in those places.

"I'm not sure how much credibility anyone would put on anything you manage to get from a prisoner in those circumstances. But you quote 13 words from Dahar Yassein Ramadan whom I have never met. If he said what he said, then he is wrong.

"And if you had any evidence that I had ever engaged in any actual oil transaction, if you had any evidence that anybody ever gave me any money, it would be before the public and before this committee today because I agreed with your Mr Greenblatt [Mark Greenblatt, legal counsel on the committee].

"Your Mr Greenblatt was absolutely correct. What counts is not the names on the paper, what counts is where's the money. Senator? Who paid me hundreds of thousands of dollars of money? The answer to that is nobody. And if you had anybody who ever paid me a penny, you would have produced them today.

"Now you refer at length to a company names in these documents as Aredio Petroleum. I say to you under oath here today: I have never heard of this company, I have never met anyone from this company. This company has never paid a penny to me and I'll tell you something else: I can assure you that Aredio Petroleum has never paid a single penny to the Mariam Appeal Campaign. Not a thin dime. I don't know who Aredio Petroleum are, but I daresay if you were to ask them they would confirm that they have never met me or ever paid me a penny.

"Whilst I'm on that subject, who is this senior former regime official that you spoke to yesterday? Don't you think I have a right to know? Don't you think the Committee and the public have a right to know who this senior former regime official you were quoting against me interviewed yesterday actually is?

"Now, one of the most serious of the mistakes you have made in this set of documents is, to be frank, such a schoolboy howler as to make a fool of the efforts that you have made. You assert on page 19, not once but twice, that the documents that you are referring to cover a different period in time from the documents covered by The Daily Telegraph which were a subject of a libel action won by me in the High Court in England late last year.

"You state that The Daily Telegraph article cited documents from 1992 and 1993 whilst you are dealing with documents dating from 2001. Senator, The Daily Telegraph's documents date identically to the documents that you were dealing with in your report here. None of The Daily Telegraph's documents dealt with a period of 1992, 1993. I had never set foot in Iraq until late in 1993 - never in my life. There could possibly be no documents relating to Oil-for-Food matters in 1992, 1993, for the Oil-for-Food scheme did not exist at that time.

"And yet you've allocated a full section of this document to claiming that your documents are from a different era to the Daily Telegraph documents when the opposite is true. Your documents and the Daily Telegraph documents deal with exactly the same period.

"But perhaps you were confusing the Daily Telegraph action with the Christian Science Monitor. The Christian Science Monitor did indeed publish on its front pages a set of allegations against me very similar to the ones that your committee have made. They did indeed rely on documents which started in 1992, 1993. These documents were unmasked by the Christian Science Monitor themselves as forgeries.

"Now, the neo-con websites and newspapers in which you're such a hero, senator, were all absolutely cock-a-hoop at the publication of the Christian Science Monitor documents, they were all absolutely convinced of their authenticity. They were all absolutely convinced that these documents showed me receiving $10 million from the Saddam regime. And they were all lies.

"In the same week as the Daily Telegraph published their documents against me, the Christian Science Monitor published theirs which turned out to be forgeries and the British newspaper, Mail on Sunday, purchased a third set of documents which also upon forensic examination turned out to be forgeries. So there's nothing fanciful about this. Nothing at all fanciful about it.

"The existence of forged documents implicating me in commercial activities with the Iraqi regime is a proven fact. It's a proven fact that these forged documents existed and were being circulated amongst right-wing newspapers in Baghdad and around the world in the immediate aftermath of the fall of the Iraqi regime.

"Now, Senator, I gave my heart and soul to oppose the policy that you promoted. I gave my political life's blood to try to stop the mass killing of Iraqis by the sanctions on Iraq which killed one million Iraqis, most of them children, most of them died before they even knew that they were Iraqis, but they died for no other reason other than that they were Iraqis with the misfortune to born at that time. I gave my heart and soul to stop you committing the disaster that you did commit in invading Iraq. And I told the world that your case for the war was a pack of lies.

"I told the world that Iraq, contrary to your claims did not have weapons of mass destruction. I told the world, contrary to your claims, that Iraq had no connection to al-Qaeda. I told the world, contrary to your claims, that Iraq had no connection to the atrocity on 9/11 2001. I told the world, contrary to your claims, that the Iraqi people would resist a British and American invasion of their country and that the fall of Baghdad would not be the beginning of the end, but merely the end of the beginning.

"Senator, in everything I said about Iraq, I turned out to be right and you turned out to be wrong and 100,000 people paid with their lives; 1600 of them American soldiers sent to their deaths on a pack of lies; 15,000 of them wounded, many of them disabled forever on a pack of lies.

If the world had listened to Kofi Annan, whose dismissal you demanded, if the world had listened to President Chirac who you want to paint as some kind of corrupt traitor, if the world had listened to me and the anti-war movement in Britain, we would not be in the disaster that we are in today. Senator, this is the mother of all smokescreens. You are trying to divert attention from the crimes that you supported, from the theft of billions of dollars of Iraq's wealth.

"Have a look at the real Oil-for-Food scandal. Have a look at the 14 months you were in charge of Baghdad, the first 14 months when $8.8 billion of Iraq's wealth went missing on your watch. Have a look at Halliburton and other American corporations that stole not only Iraq's money, but the money of the American taxpayer.

"Have a look at the oil that you didn't even meter, that you were shipping out of the country and selling, the proceeds of which went who knows where? Have a look at the $800 million you gave to American military commanders to hand out around the country without even counting it or weighing it.

"Have a look at the real scandal breaking in the newspapers today, revealed in the earlier testimony in this committee. That the biggest sanctions busters were not me or Russian politicians or French politicians. The real sanctions busters were your own companies with the connivance of your own Government."



Yeah. What he said.
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It could be worse: You could be from Missouri
Posted by Jill | 4:36 PM

Ah, Missouri. The red state di tutti red states. I mean, here's a state full of people of modest income who vote Republican because they can't stand the fact that two guys who have been together for 25 years might want to get married -- and instead elect some of the most mean-spirited wingnuts ever to walk down the pike. Missouri is the home of one of the worst attorneys general ever (Ashcroft), the most incomprehensible "entertainment center" ever (Branson), and one of the richest snake oil salesmen in the world (Benny Hinn). And that's before we even get to the Blunts père et fils, Rep. Roy and Gov. Matt.

Yet there are still some voices of sanity to be found in the Show-Me state. We blogrolled Waveflux a long time ago, but now it's time to blogroll the rockingest guys ever to come out of the Ozarks, shimes and jimmyo, who bring you the straight poop from what the Bush Administration regards as the "real" America, Aggravated Jackass. Hey, they named it, not me. So go complain to them.
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I wish John Conyers was my Congressman
Posted by Jill | 12:30 PM
Here's a letter he sent to Scotty "Absolutely Shameless" McClellan (via Raw Story; emphases mine):

Dear Mr. McClellan:

I write to express my profound disappointment and outrage about comments you made about a matter involving Newsweek magazine, which smacks of political exploitation of the deaths of innocent and a shameless attempt to intimidate reporters from critically investigating your Administration's actions. Your comments are contradicted by the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and stand in stark contrast with your actions involving the "Downing Street Memo." I urge you and your counterpart at the Pentagon to immediately retract the comments made yesterday, and - at long last - provide a full accounting of the Administration's actions in the lead up to the Iraq war.

As you are aware, a May 9th Newsweek report indicated that interrogators at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba flushed the Koran down a toilet as part of an interrogation. Newsweek has since retracted the story. However, as the magazine was reevaluating information received from its sources, it appears you opted to exploit the situation for partisan political gain by falsely laying blame on Newsweek for recent deaths in Afghanistan.

Specifically, at 11:23am yesterday, you declared in a public statement: "his report has had serious consequences. It has caused damage to the image of the United States abroad. It has -- people have lost their lives. It has certainly caused damage to the credibility of the media, as well, and Newsweek, itself." The Pentagon spokesman, Larry DiRita, made similar comments. Referring to Newsweek's source, he said "People are dead because of what this son of a bitch said." The clear implication of these statements is that the Newsweek report had caused a loss of life in Muslim nations, presumably referring to the recent riots in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

First, this attempt to tie riots to the Newsweek article stands in stark contrast to the assessment of your own senior military officials. On May 12th, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Of Staff had reported on his consultations with the Senior Commander in Afghanistan about whether there was a causal relationship between the Newsweek story and the riots thusly: "[h]e thought it was not at all tied to the article in the magazine." The only conclusion that can be reasonably drawn is that, in contrast to career military officers, political operatives sought to score cheap political points by spreading falsehoods about Newsweek. The appropriate course of action is clear: you and Mr. DiRita should immediately retract your exploitative comments.

Second, there is - of course - a sad irony in this White House claiming that someone else's errors or misjudgments led to the loss of innocent lives. Over 1,600 Americans and tens of thousands of Iraqis have lost their lives in the Iraq war, a war which your Administration justified by falsely claiming that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. To date, your Administration has consistently blocked Congressional inquiries into whether such claims were the result of intentional manipulation of intelligence or, as you assert, a mere "failure."

Moreover, your loquacious response to this matter stands in stark contrast to your response to a recently released classified memo comprising the minutes of a July 22 meeting of British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his cabinet which calls into question the credibility of assertions made by your Administration in its drive to war. Among other things the memo indicates that Administration officials were working to ensure that "the intelligence and facts were fixed around the policy," implying that intelligence was deliberately manipulated to prop up the case for war. The memo also indicates, contrary to contemporaneous statements to the American people and the Congress that the President had already "made up his mind to take military action." When asked about this memo, you claimed that you "don't know about the specific memo" - two and one half weeks after its release and ten days after receiving a letter detailing its contents from 89 Members of Congress (which has still not been answered).

Third, the public deserves to know what precisely the White House is asserting with respect to the mistreatment of the Koran by interrogators: are such reports categorically false or are they, in the words of one publication, "manifold?" For example, a May 1st New York Times report indicated that a Koran was thrown into a pile and stepped on at the Guantanamo detention facility and "[a] former interrogator at Guantanamo, in an interview with the Times, confirmed the accounts of the hunger strikes, including the public expression of regret over the treatment of the Korans." The incident where a Koran was allegedly thrown in a toilet was also recounted by a former detainee in a March 26, 2003 article in the Washington Post, and corroborated by another detainee in a August 4, 2003 report by the Center for Constitutional Rights. The question is: are you categorically denying that the mistreatment of the Koran occurred, or are you simply denying the Newsweek report is accurate on hyper technical grounds?

Mr. McClellan, the American people have grown tired of the venomous partisanship and lack of candor on the part of this Administration. When taken to task for wrongdoing, a pattern has emerged of this Administration viciously attacking its accusers. The cornerstone of our democracy is an open and accountable government, and the American people deserve answers - not distractions -- today.

Sincerely,

John Conyers, Jr.
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The Mighty Wurlitzer and its terrible swift sword
Posted by Jill | 8:27 AM

While the right-wing shriek squad is venting its seemingly endless spleen (considering their idols run everything) about how Newsweek is the source of ALL the recent rioting in Afghanistan and Pakistan (and presumably everything else, including the crucifixion of Christ, except oh, wait, we still need to blame that on the Jews), the State Department itself says, "Not so fast...":

The chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff says a report from Afghanistan suggests that rioting in Jalalabad on May 11 was not necessarily connected to press reports that the Quran might have been desecrated in the presence of Muslim prisoners held in U.S. custody at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Air Force General Richard Myers told reporters at the Pentagon May 12 that he has been told that the Jalalabad, Afghanistan, rioting was related more to the ongoing political reconciliation process in Afghanistan than anything else.

According to initial reports, the situation in Jalalabad began on May 10 with peaceful student protests reacting to a report in Newsweek magazine that U.S. military interrogators questioning Muslim detainees at the Guantanamo detention center “had placed Quran s on toilets, and in at least one case flushed a holy book.” By the following day the protests in the city had turned violent with reports of several individuals killed, dozens wounded, and widespread looting of government, diplomatic and nongovernmental assets.

However, Myers said an after-action report provided by U.S. Army Lieutenant General Karl Eikenberry, commander of the Combined Forces in Afghanistan, indicated that the political violence was not, in fact, connected to the magazine report.

Meanwhile, Myers said the U.S. military has assigned Army General Bantz Craddock to investigate allegations about the handling of the Quran at Guantanamo. Craddock brings the full weight of his responsibility as commander of the U.S. Southern Command to this effort.


So here's my question to the wingnuts (including our own B@B designated wingnut trolls): If there's nothing there, why is the U.S. military investigating the allegations?

I have no great love for ANY of the mainstream media, who have almost universally ignored the Downing Street memo and its damning evidence that yes, Virginia, George W. Bush wanted a war and lied to the American people to get it -- and over 1700 American kids and tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians are dead because he had to prove how big his penis is compared to his daddy's. But right now, I expect better of mainstream journalists than to rely on single-sourced stories. Of course, for that matter, I don't see the right wing all up in arms about Judith Miller of the New York Times, who relied on a single source (Ahmad Chalabi) for her reams of articles about Iraq's nonexistent weapons of mass destruction. So their outrage is pretty selective.

And I certainly have no great love for Michael Isikoff, and will shed no tears if he's finished as a result of this. Isikoff was at the forefront of the whole Whitewater/Lewinsky foofarah, relying far too much on right-wing sources and half-truths. So it isn't as if Isikoff has a history of stellar journalism up to this point. But if the MSM wants to continue to bombast about blogs, they might want to think about this just a bit.

Of course, you won't even get this much of a disclaimer from our friends on the right, for in their minds, Jesus H. Bush is a kind of combination Messiah/Pope, who can do no wrong and must never be questioned. We used to call people like this "cultists."
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Is Keith Olbermann going to be the last to speak truth to power?
Posted by Jill | 7:09 AM

Anyone see Jon Stewart interview Zell Miller on The Daily Show? I missed it, alas, but I'm told that he had his nose so far up Zell's ass that it was coming out of Zell's ear.

Can anyone confirm this? Is Jon Stewart beginning to sell out to his own power?

Keith Olbermann, at least so far, doesn't have a big enough audience for that, though he probably should. Case in point:

...you’d have to be pretty dumb to think that making a threat at Gitmo akin to ‘Spill the beans or we’ll kill this Qu’ran’ would have any effect on the prisoners, other than to eventually leak out and inflame anti-American feelings somewhere. Of course, everybody in the prosecution of the so-called ‘war on terror’ has done something dumb, dating back to the President’s worst-possible-word-selection (“crusade”) on September 16, 2001. So why wouldn’t some mid-level interrogator stuck in Cuba think it would be a good idea to desecrate a holy book? Jack Rice, the former CIA special agent and now radio host, said on Countdown that it would be a “knuckleheaded” thing to do, but “plausible.”

One of the most under-publicized analyses of 9/11 concludes that Osama Bin Laden assumed that the attacks on the U.S. would galvanize Islamic anger towards this country, and they'd overthrow their secular governments and woo-hoo we've got an international religious war. Obviously it didn't happen. It didn't even happen when the West went into Iraq. But if stuff like the Newsweek version of a now two-year old tale about toilets and Qu’rans is enough to set off rioting in the streets of countries whose nationals were not even the supposed recipients of the ‘abuse’, then weren’t those members of the military or the government with whom Newsweek vetted the plausibility of its item, honor-bound to say “you can’t print this”?

Or would somebody rather play politics with this? The way Craig Crawford reconstructed it, this one went similarly to the way the Killian Memos story evolved at the White House. The news organization turns to the administration for a denial. The administration says nothing. The news organization runs the story. The administration jumps on the necks of the news organization with both feet - or has its proxies do it for them.

That’s beyond shameful. It’s treasonous.
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Monday, May 16, 2005

Quote of the Day
Posted by Jill | 4:34 PM

Scott "How Can I Say This Crap With A Straight Face" McClellan, in regard to the not-quite-retracted, not-necessarily inaccurate Newsweek story:

The report has had serious consequences...People have lost their lives. The image of the United States abroad has been damaged.


May I remind Mr. McClellan, and anyone who stopped by here who still thinks this Administration is honest:

Exhibit A. The Downing Street Memo.

Exhibit B. The reported (as opposed to the unreported) civilian death toll in Iraq since the start of the U.S. invastion: Minimum 21,684; Maximum 24,603 (via Iraq Body Count)

Exhibit C. The corpses of 1622 American soldiers.

So what are those people, Mr. McClellan? Chopped Liver? Or just the paving on George W. Bush's road to glory?
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Why the "nuclear option" is NOT conservative
Posted by Jill | 3:51 PM

And it sure as hell has nothing to do with the Founding Fathers or the Constitution, either. Lambert at Corrente points out The Federalist 78 (June 14, 1788) by Alexander Hamilton:

Whoever attentively considers the different departments of power must perceive, that, in a government in which they are separated from each other, the judiciary, from the nature of its functions, will always be the least dangerous to the political rights of the Constitution; because it will be least in a capacity to annoy or injure them. The Executive not only dispenses the honors, but holds the sword of the community. The legislature not only commands the purse, but prescribes the rules by which the duties and rights of every citizen are to be regulated. The judiciary, on the contrary, has no influence over either the sword or the purse; no direction either of the strength or of the wealth of the society; and can take no active resolution whatever. It may truly be said to have neither FORCE nor WILL, but merely judgment; and must ultimately depend upon the aid of the executive arm even for the efficacy of its judgments.

This simple view of the matter suggests several important consequences. It proves incontestably, that the judiciary is beyond comparison the weakest of the three departments of power; that it can never attack with success either of the other two; and that all possible care is requisite to enable it to defend itself against their attacks. It equally proves, that though individual oppression may now and then proceed from the courts of justice, the general liberty of the people can never be endangered from that quarter; I mean so long as the judiciary remains truly distinct from both the legislature and the Executive. For I agree, that "there is no liberty, if the power of judging be not separated from the legislative and executive powers."2 And it proves, in the last place, that as liberty can have nothing to fear from the judiciary alone, but would have every thing to fear from its union with either of the other departments; that as all the effects of such a union must ensue from a dependence of the former on the latter, notwithstanding a nominal and apparent separation; that as, from the natural feebleness of the judiciary, it is in continual jeopardy of being overpowered, awed, or influenced by its co-ordinate branches; and that as nothing can contribute so much to its firmness and independence as permanency in office, this quality may therefore be justly regarded as an indispensable ingredient in its constitution, and, in a great measure, as the citadel of the public justice and the public security.

[snip]

If it be said that the legislative body are themselves the constitutional judges of their own powers, and that the construction they put upon them is conclusive upon the other departments, it may be answered, that this cannot be the natural presumption, where it is not to be collected from any particular provisions in the Constitution. It is not otherwise to be supposed, that the Constitution could intend to enable the representatives of the people to substitute their will to that of their constituents. It is far more rational to suppose, that the courts were designed to be an intermediate body between the people and the legislature, in order, among other things, to keep the latter within the limits assigned to their authority. The interpretation of the laws is the proper and peculiar province of the courts. A constitution is, in fact, and must be regarded by the judges, as a fundamental law. It therefore belongs to them to ascertain its meaning, as well as the meaning of any particular act proceeding from the legislative body. If there should happen to be an irreconcilable variance between the two, that which has the superior obligation and validity ought, of course, to be preferred; or, in other words, the Constitution ought to be preferred to the statute, the intention of the people to the intention of their agents.


This is some pretty dense stuff, but worth reading, especially since Alexander Hamilton is always set forth as the patron saint of the Federalist Society.

The fact of the matter is that what Bill Frist and the Republicans want to do is nothing less than the destruction of Constitutional law in this country. It is a first step in the creation of the fundamentalist Christian Dominionist theocracy that Frist's base wants, and because he wants their votes in 2008, he Will Do Their Bidding.

But then, who cares about the Constitution? Everyone knows that REAL patriotism is all about worshiping the Codpiece of C-Plus Caligula, right? [/bitter, bitter sarcasm]
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Well it's about damn time
Posted by Jill | 2:28 PM

I have been quite frankly appalled at the way mainstream Christian denominations have allowed the judgmental, hate-filled Christian wingnuts to define what Christianity is in America. I've only been able to assume that their silence has meant agreement in principle.

But now, finally, a few voices in the wilderness are being heard. Via the Green Knight, we hear about the Christian Alliance for Progress, a movement to "reclaim Christianity and Transform American Politics."

Now, I'm not crazy about that subtitle, because it sounds too much like what the right is trying to do. But the intentions are good:

The success of the Religious Right in appropriating the language of Christianity has led many people to become generally wary of religion in the public sphere and of Christianity in particular. The Religious Right has used the language of Christianity to promote an extreme and divisive political agenda that has helped polarize our nation. But foundational Christian values like compassion, justice and peace are largely absent from our political discussion. And there are millions of Christian Americans who share progressive views, or, at a minimum, are increasingly turned off by the extreme rhetoric and political agenda of the Religious Right.

The Christian Alliance for Progress is a national movement that started in Jacksonville, Florida among ordinary Americans who want to reclaim Christianity and change this current political picture. Members in the movement want to restore core values of Christianity while honoring diverse views about religion and Christian life. Many Americans, especially people of faith, are ready to hear from Christians who are tolerant, and who understand the many ways that our faiths impact our views of public life. The Christian Alliance advances a renewed, progressive vision of Gospel values and seeks to help Americans express this moral vision in our lives and in our politics.

Mission Statement

The mission of the Christian Alliance for Progress to reclaim Christianity and transform American politics. We advance a renewed, progressive vision of Gospel values and help Americans express this moral vision in how we think, work, and vote.

Purpose
The members of the Christian Alliance for Progress believe we have an obligation to reclaim the vocabulary of Christianity from extremists and to restore the morals and values of Christianity. We bring together progressive Christians and other Americans who share our passion and convictions. We will use the collective power of our individual members to help shape the political realities in our country and to strive to build a more just and compassionate nation.


If you're a Christian, I hope you'll support these folks. The rest of us, you know, the ones that the Dominionists are going to round up for mass detentions and executions first, are counting on you.
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Bill Moyers: Just what the doctor ordered
Posted by Jill | 10:58 AM

I was just blown away by Bill Moyers' speech yesterday at the National Conference on Media Reform in St. Louis, Missouri, which Laura Flanders played on her Air America Radio program last night. At last, I've found a transcript. If you think that we're not headed for an all-state-sponsored media, all praise for George Bush, all the time, you'd better read it.
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Cue the wingnut calls for a boycott
Posted by Jill | 10:06 AM

Oh, brother. Here we go.

This morning, the Bush Whore Today show had a segment on the alleged jab at the Bush Administration taken by George Lucas in Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith -- delivered with the kind of righteous indignation one would expect from a network owned by a defense contractor.

This story from AP is making the rounds of some fairly large newspapers; this excerpt is from the Chicago Tribune:

Without Michael Moore and "Fahrenheit 9/11" at the Cannes Film Festival this time, it was left to George Lucas and "Star Wars" to pique European ire over the state of world relations and the United States' role in it.

Lucas' themes of democracy on the skids and a ruler preaching war to preserve the peace predate "Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith" by almost 30 years. Yet viewers Sunday -- and Lucas himself -- noted similarities between the final chapter of his sci-fi saga and our own troubled times.

Cannes audiences made blunt comparisons between "Revenge of the Sith" -- the story of Anakin Skywalker's fall to the dark side and the rise of an emperor through warmongering -- to President Bush's war on terrorism and the invasion of Iraq.

Two lines from the movie especially resonated:

"This is how liberty dies. With thunderous applause," bemoans Padme Amidala (Natalie Portman) as the galactic Senate cheers dictator-in-waiting Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) while he announces a crusade against the Jedi.

"If you're not with me, then you're my enemy," Hayden Christensen's Anakin -- soon to become villain Darth Vader -- tells former mentor Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor). The line echoes Bush's international ultimatum after the Sept. 11 attacks, "Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists."

"That quote is almost a perfect citation of Bush," said Liam Engle, a 23-year-old French-American aspiring filmmaker. "Plus, you've got a politician trying to increase his power to wage a phony war."

Though the plot was written years ago, "the anti-Bush diatribe is clearly there," Engle said.


I find the reference to Liam Engle as a "French-American aspiring filmmaker" to be especially amusing.

I propose we start taking names and political affiliations of everyone waiting in line at midnight tomorrow, and all Republican geeks waiting on line will be reported to Party Headquarters and rounded up for re-programming.
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Rove's fingerprints???
Posted by Jill | 6:49 AM

Atrios reports that the right is having a field day over Newsweek's so-called retraction of its story about an FBI report describing the flushing of a copy of the Qu'ran down a toilet at Guantanamo Bay. However, The Sideshow looks a bit more closely at this so-called "retraction":

In the wake of the riots in Afghanistan, there have been a flurry of accusations that Newsweek is responsible for the violence, and now, suddenly, fitting a curious pattern, the sources - and the reporter - are being questions.

Last Friday, a top Pentagon spokesman told us that a review of the probe cited in our story showed that it was never meant to look into charges of Qur'an desecration. The spokesman also said the Pentagon had investigated other desecration charges by detainees and found them "not credible." Our original source later said he couldn't be certain about reading of the alleged Qur'an incident in the report we cited, and said it might have been in other investigative documents or drafts. Top administration officials have promised to continue looking into the charges, and so will we.

Note that nowhere does Newsweek actually retract the story, and none of their sources are actually denying it.


The similarities to the infamous CBS memos are remarkable: documents containing inflammatory material, fed to a journalist who's been critical of the Administration, that later turn out to be questionable.

Now, there's no proof that Karl Rove was behind the CBS memos. But when you consider that the so-called "blogger" who supposedly debunked them as forgeries was not a blogger at all, but a poster at the Free Republic messageboard who is a Republican operative with ties to Rove, combined with the documented incident years ago of Rove bugging his own office and claiming the campaign of the opponent of the candidate for whom he was working did it, it's consistent with the Rove modus operandi.

It would be ironic indeed if Isikoff's career were ruined, à la Dan Rather's, because he fell for reports that were fed him by Rove operatives, because it was Isikoff who was at the forefront of the mainstream media's participation in the Clinton witch hunt in the 1990's. Perhaps Isikoff felt he was immune because he's now been tough on both a Democratic and a Republican president. If this is the case, then he's a fool, because if I know that these people not only play to win, they play to crush their opposition into smithereens, how come he doesn't?

But the more important issue is whether the reports are, in fact true. I think this is still an open question. As much as the Administration is trying to paint Lynndie England and Charles Graner as loose cannons who committed the Abu Ghraib atrocities on their own, with absolutely no authorozation from higher-ups, that "theory" defies logic. Torture techniques that involve offense to detainees' faith are well-known to be an important part of the so-called "interrogations" of detainees. Why would they stop at desecration of the detainees' holy book?

If the reports are NOT true, and if the Administration fed erroneous information deliberately to Newsweek solely for the purpose of embarrassing or destroying the credibility of a reporter they perceive to have been too tough on the president, then the reprehensible conduct is on the part of the Administration, not of Newsweek for simply reporting information from a source. Of course, this Administration always finds political benefit in everything they do, and perhaps inflaming riots in Afghanistan and Pakistan helps draw media and the public's attention away from the now known fact that the entire Iraq war was based on Administration lies.

UPDATE: The Light of Reason notes (in a post that's worth reading in its entirety) that allegations of desecration of the Qu'ran at Guantanamo have been around since as early as July 2004. Here's a relevant passage from a Human Rights Watch report from last October:

Detainees also complained about the interference with their ability to pray and the lack of respect given to their religion. For example, the British detainees state that they were never given prayer mats and initially were not provided Korans. They also complained that when the Korans were provided, the guards “would kick the Koran, throw it into the toilet and generally disrespect it.”


Meanwhile, while the right is salivating over the opportunity to polish up the "Bush-hating liberal media" meme, please note that this, which should qualify as "high crimes and misdemeanors" by anyone with a brain, is still going largely uncovered in the mainstream press.
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