29.7.05

Conservative Comix

The Most Publicized Comic Book in over 10 years?

Expect to hear about this incredibly divisive comic book on talk-radio shows...

The worlds first Conservative Comic Book?


Keenly merging real-life heroes of the Conservative Right with an Orwellian future of Leftist oppression...
Yes, kids, we're talking about: Liberality For ALL!
It is 2021, tomorrow is the 20th anniversary of 9/11 It is up to an underground group of bio-mechanically enhanced conservatives led by Sean Hannity, G. Gordon Liddy and Oliver North to thwart Ambassador Usama Bin Laden's plans to nuke New York City ...And wake the world from an Orwellian nightmare of United Nations- dominated ultra-liberalism.

Series concept: What if today's anti-war Liberals were in charge of the American government and had been since 9/11? What would that society look like in the year 2021? What would be the results of fighting “a more sensitive war on terror” and looking to the corrupt United Nations to solve all of America 's problems? In Liberality For All , the reader sees a vision of that future where there is only one justified type of war…the war against Conservatives and their ideals.

LIBERALITY FOR ALL #1 is getting major publicity in the talk-radio world, with much more to come. To our knowledge, no book in over 10 years will be made known to so many people, outside the comic community.
But don't worry, all the proceeds go to one of Libby's conservative pet projects, the Freedom Alliance Scholarship Fund, which is also "heavily supported by Sean Hannity." A nice little ego-tripping fantasy for the ultra-cons.

It should be noted that, while this is all fun and games, it appears that they've taken this project very seriously in many ways. It is part childhood propaganda, tool to build connections with younger generations to foster their growth toward conservativism in later years; and part world-perception/fantasy. In many ways, this is how the conservatives really feel the world is shaped up: They are the heros and everyone else is alligned in mutual hatred and villany of them. They must, heroically, stand up to defeat it.

Order your copy TODAY!

Recess and Resist

The Administration is hunched over and assuming the stance of a embattled but powerful jungle cat ready to pounce in desperation. The attack of choice: that old-hat trick of the off-session "recess appointment" of downtrodden, excessively controversial UN Ambassador John Bolton:
The White House gave its strongest signal yet on Friday that President Bush will soon bypass the Senate and appoint John Bolton to become the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

Senate Democrats have stalled the nomination of Bolton, a favorite of conservatives, over accusations he tried to manipulate intelligence and intimidated intelligence analysts to support his hawkish views while the top U.S. diplomat for arms control.

Bush can bypass the Senate and give Bolton a "recess appointment" when the Senate begins its August recess this weekend. Bolton would be able to serve until January 2007, when a new Congress is sworn in.

Asked about the possibility of a recess appointment for Bolton, White House spokesman Scott McClellan gave a strong hint.

"We do need a permanent representative at the United Nations. This is a critical time and it's important to continue moving forward on comprehensive reform," McClellan said.
"Clearly John Bolton is someone who has enjoyed majority support from the United States Senate, but unfortunately Senate Democrats have taken the path of playing politics," he said.
Now, it is no secret that we at the AntiCentenarian have no palate for Bolton, and has staunchly opposed his nomination, as have many leftists and centrists.

In fact, it was not "Senate Democrats" that stalled out the nomination of Bolton. The fact is that Senate Republican George Voinivich (OH), in a deep surprise, took the mantle of opposing Bolton's nomination under increased information during the committee hearings of Bolton's manipulation of evidence and staff; highly-charged personality and anger issues; and more. Voinivich stunned the Senate in his last minute denial of support for Bolton, and pushed Bolton to a Senate vote without having an endorsement from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. This enabled Democrats to adequately stop Bolton's nomination from getting voted upon without full disclosure from The Administration.
At the time, The Administration was clear that they might pursue a recess nomination; effectively installing anti-UN advocate Bolton through 2007, when the next legislative session could vote on him. This has escalated, and looks to occur.

What The Administration wasn't counting on was the Plame Affair taking flight as much as it has. Along with Karl Rove's extreme ethical impasse and potential criminal choices; John Bolton has been caught in the cloud of penetrating nuclear dust surrounding The Administration's fraudulent claims of African Yellowcake uranium. Bolton, as Undersecretary of the State, was questioned in a legal preceeding: the yellowcake intelligence. Bolton during his Nomination proceedings perjured himself by claiming he had not been involved in any legal investigations in the previous 5 years; in fact, he was answering questions about Rove's CIA leak within the previous 1.5 years. Sen. Joe Biden exposed this fact, locking Bolton into one of the most dangerous and tangled scandals of our time.

DAMAGED GOODS.
That's what John Bolton is, Mr. President. Your inital choice of Bolton may have been made out of good faith. Your continued support and insistence upon him shows your intention to further damage the status of the US in the UN; as well as to further your own damage in the tangled net of the Plame Affair.

Rove lied to America; played dangerous, vicious politics. Bush supports Rove.
Bolton manipulates America. Bush supports Bolton.
Why does Bush hate America?

28.7.05

Intelligent Design: The Alternatives

Earlier this year, of course, Kansas began hearings considering whether their school system should adopt a theory of Intelligent Design to either accompany the theory of Evolution in their teachings, or potentially to replace it entirely. It was a Scopes Monkey Trial Redux, and it was glorious violence in the name of institutional protestant creationism against scientific evolutionary education.

But what did it leave out? The Kansas board heard only arguments supporting "intelligent design" by a religious creator, with close parallels to God. In fact, many argue that it was God they were talking about. The relied heavily on the persuasions that Evolution was just a theory, and there are other theories which seek to explain the genesis of mankind; except, they forgot to include all of those other theories.

No turtles riding on the backs of giant elephants. No devouring and reguritation of the Olympians by the Titans.

And certainly, shamefully, sadly:

No Flying Spaghetti Monster and His Noodly Appendages; no empirical graphs indexing the temperature to pirate ratio. No comprehensive, alternative theory.

Fortunately, Concerned Citizen and Pastarian Provacateur Bobby Henderson seeks to remind the Kansas School Board that if you seek alternative theories, you must be inclusive.

Otherwise, you're just playing politics.

Let's help the cause.

Beyond Kyoto II: Complementary

The US insists that their secret, alternative plan that sidesteps Kyoto principles and guidelines of reducing greenhouse gas emissions in developed countries onto the laps of developing countries, really, goes hand in hand with the Kyoto treaties. That it complements Kyoto.

Anybody else fail to see how The Administration can at the same time completley discount the Kyoto treaties, then undermine them with an alternative, self-interested secret version, then claim that it's complementary?

Complementary would be if The Administration decided to propose a set of amendments to the Kyoto treaty which would raise responsibilities of developing nations to keep their emissions to a minimum; but then The Administration would have to adopt the treaty. That's a complement.

This is an undermine.

Memory Blockers

Researchers have uncovered a dramatic side-effect to beta-blocking blood pressure drugs: they could be used to selectively block out memories, even traumatic memories:
Cornell University psychiatrists are carrying out tests using beta-blockers, the journal Nature reports. The drug has been shown to interfere with the way the brain stores memories.

Post-traumatic stress disorder affects around one in three of people caught up in such events, and memories can be triggered just by a sound or smell. People with PTSD are given counselling, but because it is not always effective, researchers have been looking for alternative therapies.

However there are concerns that a drug which can alter memories could be misused, perhaps by the military who may want soldiers to become desensitised to violence.

...
Dr Paul McHugh, a psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland and member of the US President's Council on Bioethics expressed concern over the possible uses of the drug.

"If soldiers did something that ended up with children getting killed, do you want to give them beta blockers so that they can do it again?"

He added: "Psychiatrists are once again marching in where angels fear to tread."
Phew... spooky story. The idea that anything and everything must be treated through some kind of chemical drug is spooky, although certainly in many cases chemical therapy is the best solution to the problems [unlike what Tom Cruise would suggest].

But memory is, at lest somewhat, what makes an individual- their experiences, their framework for understanding them. And, pulled further out, collective memories are what begin to make a society. It is part of history- the chronicle of existence. The loss of memory will be the single most manipulable context for the rewriting of history. That's the scary part.

There is no way any American would wish that we did not collectively remember 9/11. It would be foolish. We've barely learned lessons from it as is, and it is constantly invoked for political purposes. An individual may have become so traumatized that they want to pull memories out of their minds [through an event like this, or any other...] but, it just doesn't seem like a good idea.

Spooky.

"The Most Insidious of Traitors"

From Think Progress:
[Do click the link and see the video of HW]
GEORGE H.W. BUSH: “I have nothing but contempt and anger for those who betray the trust by exposing the name of our sources. They are, in my view, the most insidious of traitors.” [Speech at CIA, 4/26/99]
Of course we shouldn't condemn The Administration for not heeding Daddy's advice. He also refused to invade Baghdad in the first Gulf war for reasons, among others, that it would lead to a vacuum of power that the US could not defend against, leading to a cesspool, and, possibly, civil war.

Actually, the more I think about it, the more it appears that Bush Jr just does everything his father tells him not to do. Everything. [classic Freudian rebellion due to feeling of abandonment?]

So somebody convince 41 to tell 43 to camp out and stay in office forever...

Untranslated

The FBI has a huge, growing backlog of material related to terrorism investigations that remains untranslated.
None of the backlogged material came in what the bureau considered its highest-priority investigations, Glenn A. Fine, the inspector general at the Justice Department, told the Senate Judiciary Committee, in releasing the findings of a new report by his office.

Still, Mr. Fine said the F.B.I. "has no assurance" that some 8,300 hours of untranslated material does not include information that could be critical to terrorism investigations.

In addition, the bureau told the committee that its long-delayed effort to overhaul its computer system and allow agents to search terrorism files more easily would not be completed until 2009 at the earliest.

Leading senators and national security experts said they were frustrated to learn that two of the F.B.I.'s most pressing problems - its computer capabilities and its ability to translate terrorism material - have continued to languish, and in some respects have worsened.
Our FBI agents have, certainly, been working like fiends to bring their infrastructure up to snuff since their failings pre-9/11, right? Apparently not enough. Anybody know a super double secret Babelfish site to direct our Agency Friends toward?

27.7.05

Wilson's Cinema

Field Maloney breaks through the cask of the mysterious relationship between Owen Wilson and Wes Anderson; once the golden pair of American Art Cinema. Currently, the speculation is that, with The Life Aquatic, Anderson has stepped further into a form of cinematic solipsism, and that Wilson was the actual language that broke or structured that solipsistic trance.

I disagree somewhat: Life Aquatic, the first Anderson/Baumbach fell below the Wilson/Anderson films in terms of immediate aquaintence, but it does grow on a viewer in much the same way as a piece of dada performance art does. To me, it becomes more emotionally true after having watched it; as though the dream world of Zissou's descent from greatness, and his ultimate search for validation, becomes meaningful as an artefact, a memory in me.

However, Maloney analyses places in the Wilson/Anderson ouvre where the structured language and concepts eluded Anderson as abstractions, were Wilson could play with them as character-driven plot devices pulled from film history:
Unlike Anderson, whose film vocabulary is impressive but top-heavy with auteurs—Jean Renoir, Truffaut, Michael Powell—Owen Wilson draws on the rich mine of the American middlebrow. When Max, facing expulsion from Rushmore Academy, asks his headmaster: "Can you get me off the hook? You know, for old times sake?" Wilson points out that it's a Godfather reference. When Max, alone in a classroom with his love object, the beautiful young teacher Ms. Cross, gets up, mid-conversation, to stick a pencil into an electric sharpener, Wilson recalls a moment in Terms of Endearment when Jack Nicholson, driving in a convertible across the beach, runs his fingers through Shirley MacLaine's hair and shouts, (according to Wilson): "Wind is in the hair, lead is in the pencil!"

But the most telling moment in the Rushmore commentary comes later, during a long, panning group montage shot—a Wes Anderson trademark—that segues into a scene of an angry and frustrated Max finally confronting a just as angry and frustrated Ms. Cross, who finally tells Max off:

Ms. Cross: "Do you think we're going to have sex?"

Max: "That's kinda a cheap way to put it."

Ms. Cross: "Not if you ever fucked before, it isn't."

The first voice, commenting on the group montage, belongs to Anderson:

"There's a storybook feeling, something about trying to create these insular worlds in these movies. I don't know exactly why we're doing this, but …"

Then, cut to the classroom scene, where we hear Owen Wilson in the background. "In Bottle Rocket and Rushmore there's an innocence to the characters," Wilson says. "This scene feels very real in a movie that in a lot of places seems sort of dreamy. This scene has a cringe factor to it because the movie has an innocent feel and this sort of breaks through that. It makes you uncomfortable, which is appropriate because it has to puncture Max's make-believe world."

Telling lines, and, one can't help suspect, somehow indicative of the larger system of checks and balances in the Anderson/Wilson partnership.
Presumably, Wilson left the partnership for the immediate future to indulge in his growing success as a comedic performer, with generally pleasureable results. But what is uncertain is whether, even if he could return to the partnership, Wilson's reigns of "Reason" would affect Anderson's ambitions toward Abstraction. In Life Aquatic, easily the weakest character and performance was Wilson's- his performace seemed stilted, dulled, stripped of its luster and language.

And yet, in Wedding Crashers, he doesn't shine, either. Vaughn, the first string quarterback in Junior High, the man who can brilliantly "make it rain out here," held his ground. And Wilson delivered wonderful lines again.

But ultimately, had Wilson infused Wedding Crashers with the compatriotic, energetic spirit of Dignan in Bottle Rocket or himself in the New Yorker, he would have worked his character out of the self-obsessed, melodramatic faction of the same solipsism accused upon Wes Anderson. This is a strange argument, to be sure, to say that Wilson's character in the film Crashers fell into Anderson's trap of making the film Aquatic. But rather it is about the awareness of the structure of Story and Character. And how, seemingly, both men, having lost the enigmatic spark in their writing relationship, seem to have faltered in detecting those elements wholly once again.

And yet, this is all loathesome speculation. Wilson's performances continue to offer at least a chuckling thrill [and more often a chortle!]; and Anderson's films delight with mysterious spectral fear and analysis. Neither is out of the game. Perhaps their broken symbiosis will allow them enough room to really approach new capabilities and arts.

Beyond Kyoto

The Administration is poised to present a new greenhouse gas reduction tactic that they're saying goes "beyond Kyoto."
The United States, the world's top polluter, is set to unveil a five-nation pact to combat global warming by developing energy technology to cut greenhouse gas emissions, officials said on Wednesday.

China and India, whose burgeoning economies comprise a third of humanity, as well as Australia and South Korea are part of the agreement to tackle climate change beyond the U.N.'s Kyoto protocol.

The United States and Australia are the only developed nations outside Kyoto, which demands cuts in greenhouse emissions by 5.2 percent below 1990 levels by 2008-12. Both say Kyoto is flawed because it omits developing states.
You see? This is the most important element of the Bush Greenhouse Doctrine: Despite the fact that the US is by far the greatest polluter; despite the fact that the per-capita ecological impact of the American Individual is only outdone by the UAE; The Administration wants to put all the pressure for environemental protections on growth-nations.

Of Course rapidly developing, industrializing nations need to have curbs to their output of greenhouse gases. Absolutely. China and India represent the largest areas of concern as their populations move toward higher energy needs.

But it is foolish and arrogant to ignore the need for those countries that are responsible for the current state of the environment to make amends too it. Right now, guys, the biggest user and abuser, banger and blamer, of the environment is America.

Once again: foolhardy policy.

Convicted for Terror

In the first, and thus far only, conviction under the banner of the War on Terror, thwarted Millenium Bomber Ahmed Ressam has been convicted to 22 years for conspriacy and terrorism charges.

Ressam was stopped at the Canadian border in late 1999 trying to cross into the States with a trunk full of explosives. His intention was to detonate them at a Los Angeles airport on New Year's Eve.

26.7.05

Hesitant Hillary: A Tale of Woe, and Rove

Ahh yes, that ever-reliable NewsMax exposes their anti-Hillary flair once again, this time with an actually interesting discussion-topic: one of Clinton's last-minute presidential pardons.

Before this post continues, I'm reminded of liberal talk radio host Ed Schultz' key rules of the Conservative political wing of the Republican party, aka: "those guys who are in power"{these are from memory, please correct them!}-
  • Rule 1: These Guys are Vicious; They'll Do Anything to Win {The Plame Affair!}
  • Rule 2: It's All Clinton's Fault {See below!}
Anyway. NewsMax exposes what they consider to be an important and meaningful connection between Hillary Clinton's relative silence in the Plame Affair. She has, notably, let other Democrats do the "dirty work" of condemning Libby and Rove's part in the ordeal and the President's waffling attitude. However, it should be noted firstly that all Democrats save a handful have been too quiet in the Affair, and we should question why they all are hesitant to continue to raise their voices against this ethical travesty.

NewsMax's explanation for Hillary's quietude:
No wonder 2008 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton [Well researched, NewsMax. Anybody document when the Conservatives became clairvoyant...? - GS] has been silent as a churchmouse about Karl Rove while her Democratic colleagues call for his prosecution for leaking classified information about CIA employee Valerie Plame.

Turns out - in the only case in U.S. history of a person successfully prosecuted for leaking classified information to the press - Hillary's husband pardoned the guilty party.

On January 20, 2001, President Clinton pardoned Samuel Loring Morison, a civilian analyst with the Office of Naval Intelligence. In 1984, Morison had been convicted of providing classified satellite photos of an under-construction Soviet nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to Britain's Jane's Defence Weekly.

He received a two-year jail sentence.

In pardoning Morison, Clinton dismissed the advice of the CIA.

"We said we were obviously opposed - it was a vigorous 'Hell, no,'" one senior intelligence official told the Washington Post at the time. "We think ... giving pardons to people who are convicted of doing that sends the wrong signal to people who are currently entrusted with classified information."

Morison is the only person ever successfully prosecuted under the 1917 Espionage Act, the law invoked by Democrats who want to nail Rove after it became clear that he didn't violate the 1982 Intelligence Identities Protection Act.
Of course Hillary is going to be relatively quiet about this, and for this very reason. She knows that the Right is too vicious and slanderous to let her condemn Rove and not drag this asinine horsecrap argument out. She also knows that the Right can inflame furor about her for moronic reasons, and has little interest in purposely feeding those when she can avoid them.

This, Mr NewsMax Man, is called "political wisdom." She knows how the game is played and knows her hand has the perception of weakness. More power to her not to play it.

Now, on to the Argument itself.

This is an argument primarily about Clintonian Hipocracy. But there are some crucial places that, in this case, it falls apart. It should be noted that Clinton's last minute pardons, like all last minute Presidential pardons, were very controversial; and inherently political.

But the difference isn't whether Clinton appropriately pardoned a criminal under the code which Democrats are now trying to invoke upon Bush cronies. The difference is in Who Morison was and Why he did what he did, compared to Who Rove and Libby are, and Why they did what they did.

Morison was a naval intelligence contractor specializing in Soviet vessels; but also was a paid employee of British magazine Jane's, a defense magazine. In 1984, he had some difficulties with his administrators, and pursued a job at Jane's, taking some classified arial photography with him. This served two purposes: it gave him a better chance at a job at Jane's, and it strengthened his argument that America needed to beef up its military force against the Soviets.

[NewsMax should be reminded that Morison's job persual is an activity highly regarded among current Administration Cronyists; and that Morison's desire to beef up military forces, potentially for first-strike deterrant of what he saw as the Soviet capacity to deliver aircraft delivered WMDs and Nukes to American soil as a decent fit in The Administration's War on Terrrerrr.]

Clinton's Legal team for advise on Pardons had this to say:
As President Kennedy has said, "the ship of state leaks from the top." An evenhanded prosecution of leakers could imperil an entire administration. If ever there were to be widespread action taken, it would significantly hamper the ability of the press to function.

The desire for press censorship arises periodically in our republic. It was there in 1917, when Woodrow Wilson asked the Congress to take up what would become the Espionage Act. In his April 2, 1917 address to a joint session of Congress in which he asked for a declaration of war against Germany, Wilson cited spying as an example of the hostile intent of the "Prussian autocracy." On the same day an espionage bill, based on a draft by Assistant Attorney General Charles Warren, was introduced in the House. A companion bill was introduced in the Senate the following day.

...
Press censorship has been proposed since then, but never adopted. Ironically, we now have in Samuel Loring Morison a man who has been convicted for leaking information, while so many real spies are discovered but never prosecuted. Begin with the VENONA messages, Soviet spy cables intercepted during World War II and decrypted by the U.S. Army beginning in December 1946. VENONA exposed a network of Soviet agents operating in the United States, including at Los Alamos. Spies, such as Theodore Alvin Hall, who gave away our most sensitive atomic secrets to the Soviet Union, were discovered, yet never prosecuted.

What a different experience from that of Samuel Loring Morison. I have been told, though I do not know it to be true, that his rank - - not too high, not too low - - was a consideration in the decision to seek prosecution. I would hope that in your review of Mr. Morison's application for a pardon you reflect not simply on the relevant law, but the erratic application of that law and the anomaly of this singular conviction in eighty-one years.
Not too low, not too high; the ship of state leaks from the top; the erratic application; the anomaly of this singular conviction.

Why did Morison break the law? For a job and for a political perspective.

Now: on to Rove and Libby. Why did Rove break the law? and Why must the be held politically and personally responsible? Because the physically endangered American citizens [Plame and every covert agent that worked with her] and international sources; they injured the capability of America to collect and analyze vital information relating to national security, injuring the State; and they endangered non-nationals, such as informants.

Why did they do it? to slander one man, Joe Wilson, to protect their bullshit justifications for going to a War of their Choice.

Look, NewsMax, We at the AntiCentenarian are fond of something called "googling." It's not even really research. Try it out sometime. And then think about what the fuck you're writing.

blogs talking about this:
here, here, and OUR SIDE here.

A War Democrat

Literally.

Paul Hackett remembers being in Kuwait, waiting to be shipped home after a seven-month tour of duty in Ramadi and Fallujah, watching CNN America with his fellow Marines. What he saw enraged him. "All I saw on TV was Terri Schiavo," he says. "The federal government and the Florida state government came screeching to a halt to intervene into the private lives of this family during this tragic time ... Like that scene out of 'Network,' I felt like the guy who stood in the spotlight and said, 'I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore.'" Not long after he returned to Ohio, he decided to run for Congress.

Hackett, a 43-year-old personal injury lawyer and Marine Reserve major who volunteered for service in the Iraq war, has little prior political experience, only having served as a city councilman in a small town. But he's a contender in a special congressional election taking place in Ohio on Aug. 2 to fill the 2nd District seat vacated by Republican Rob Portman, who's now serving as the U.S. trade representative.

Hackett, a Democrat, is surely the underdog. The 2nd District, which includes Cincinnati, has been solidly conservative in a state that's thoroughly dominated by the GOP and that decided the 2004 election for President Bush. His better-funded opponent, Jean Schmidt, is well-connected and, as a former state representative, has a more extensive political résumé. But Hackett hopes his credentials -- Iraq war vet and plain-spoken self-described moderate -- will give him a much-needed edge.

Hackett hopes he's part of a seismic political shift happening in Ohio -- a shift driven in part by recent outrage against Ohio Republicans over a high-profile, multimillion-dollar accounting scandal that has cast a cloud over the state party and may find its first political fallout victim in Schmidt, the first major Republican candidate to face the voters since the scandal broke.

A victory for Schmidt would mean continued Republican dominance in this district that voted 65 percent in favor of Bush last November. If Hackett wins, however, it would make him the first Iraq war veteran in Congress -- and would also give Democrats hope that Ohio has not gone completely and irreversibly to the GOP.

...
He doesn't hesitate to criticize Schmidt's support of the war: "All the chicken hawks back here who said, 'Oh, Iraq is talking bad about us. They're going to threaten us' -- look, if you really believe that, you leave your wife and three kids and go sign up for the Army or Marines and go over there and fight. Otherwise, shut your mouth."

More at Salon. It is well worth clicking through the internet ad to get the free Salon Day pass to read about Hackett. This guy could help change the perception of the moderate Democrat into an experienced, valuable intelligent representative.

Let's Be Fair

Cenk Uyger points out that the firestorm that's been raised around Karl Rove and Scooter Libby is not an entirely fair condemnation, and that we really should consider treading with a lighter foot:
I think the press has been really tough on Karl Rove and the administration over this Valerie Plame scandal, so I wanted to come to their defense a little bit. First of all, Plame might have been a covert CIA operative, but she once sat in a desk and shuffled papers around. If you’re not shooting people in the field every day, then how do you go around with a straight face calling yourself a secret agent?

Secondly, Karl Rove was just trying to prevent the press from making yet another error by reporting on Ambassador Wilson’s claims. Joe Wilson was lying about his trip to Niger. The Iraqis were, in fact, trying to buy uranium to build nuclear weapons. That’s why we found all those nuclear bombs in Iraq labeled “Made in Niger.”

Sure, there was a memo circulating in the administration identifying Valerie Plame as a CIA agent. And it was marked with an “S.” “S” normally stands for “Secret,” but to be fair to Rove, he might have thought in this case, “S” stood for “Send to Reporter.”

...
Come to think of it, I don’t know why they gave all those priests accused of sexual molestation such a hard time. They might have been “involved” in those crimes but most of them weren’t convicted. In fact, a great number of the priests weren’t even charged. Under the Bush standard, the Catholic Church should have refused to comment about an “ongoing investigation” and stuck by the priests who were “involved” but not convicted.

Actually, there’s someone else that appears to be perfectly qualified to work at the White House under the new Bush standard – OJ. If they don’t convict, Bush won’t evict.

Here’s a question that reporters might ask the administration: Given the new Bush standard, is there anything someone working at the White House could do – outside of a criminal act that leads to conviction -- that would get them fired?

If starting a war with the wrong country, underestimating the costs of that war by hundreds of billions of dollars, getting thousands of American soldiers killed with abysmal post-war planning and jeopardizing the lives of CIA agents and their contacts for political purposes doesn’t get you fired, what on God’s green earth would get you fired by the Bush administration?

But to be fair to the President, he probably would fire Rove if he did something truly worthy of a giant national scandal … like sleeping with an intern.

Food Crisis

The food crisis in Nigeria continues, and threatens to spread. At a minimum, 2.5 million people are at severe risk through this famine.

Please consider donations-
Unicef
World Vision

Shocking! Amazing! Truly Incredible!

US forces in Afghanistan have discovered the true deterrant to terrorism there.

Hint: it's not bombs, missiles, night-raids, firefights, bigger occupying armies...

Answer: Poverty reduction tactics!

With escalating violence threatening Afghanistan's future, the U.S. military has a new focus: employ as many of the poor as possible to rebuild schools and medical clinics so they don't join the Taliban or al-Qaida.

The U.S. military operational commander in Afghanistan, Maj. Gen. Jason Kamiya, believes that the more Afghans being put to work helps take away some of the enemies' ability to recruit.

"I'd rather have an Afghan national working on a road or helping build a clinic than getting three to five bucks or whatever the Taliban or al-Qaida-associated movement pays him to plant an IED (improvised explosive device)," he told The Associated Press on Saturday.
"We are hiring as many Afghans as we can."

As part of the strategy, an ambitious string of reconstruction projects are on the drawing board for fall and winter, when militants here are normally quiet, in an attempt to prevent an insurgent offensive next spring, when snows melt on high mountain passes used by the rebels.
Invest Afghanis in their future! [Isn't that the perfect American sloganeering?]

The model that will work here is not, however, simply Americans employing the deeply impoverished. This task is globally impossible. But the technique to reducing terrorism goes hand in hand with reducing poverty. Remove the threat of poverty, remove the desire to join manipulating forces that use the impoverished for their ends.

Bono trying to convince Bush in 2002:
As you can see, I’m traveling in some pretty good company today – Bono,” said Bush, as he gestured to the singer. [NYT, March 15, 2002] The Washington Post noted that “the White House clearly craved” Bono’s support. [March 15, 2002]

The modest new promise for a few billion dollars sometime beyond the current budget cycles also may soften international criticism of Bush’s emphasis on a military response to world terrorism and a previous disinterest in the root causes of violence.

World Bank President James Wolfensohn and other world leaders have argued that to combat terrorism, global poverty and other international problems must be addressed. “We will not create a safer world with bombs or brigades alone,” Wolfensohn said in a speech at the Woodrow Wilson International Center. Poverty “can provide a breeding ground for the ideas and actions of those who promote conflict and terror.”

Therefore, the World Bank president said, “If we want to build long-term peace, if we want stability for our economies, if we want growth opportunities in the years ahead, if we want to build that better and safer world, fighting poverty must be part of national and international security.”

...
In his March 14 speech to the Inter-American Development Bank, Bush acted as if this was his new discovery. "Poverty doesn't cause terrorism," Bush said, as Bono listened on stage. "Yet persistent poverty and oppression can lead to hopelessness and despair. And when governments fail to meet the most basic needs of their people, these failed states can become havens for terrorism."

For Bush, this recognition of the link between terrorism and political desperation might have seemed like a burst of enlightenment compared to his previous rhetoric about mounting a "crusade" to root out "evil-doers." But it is still not clear whether Bush's actions will match his words – or whether his new-found commitment to fighting world poverty was mostly a political show for Bono.
Of course, the "political show for Bono" has consistently been attacked under the grounds that Bono, as a rock act, can have little expertise or effect on poverty, while he can draw great attention to it. I think that the global effect of Live 8, 3 years after this article, can show that these guys who have international appeal also have a platform to build justice.

Does poverty = terrorism? No.

But even Bush is aware that the impoverished, when given the choice between starvation and terrorism, might easily turn.

Alternative Aid

Mugabe has turned his back on western aid, but that doesn't mean he doesn't need it.

Next stop? Chinese restaurants on every freshly swept street corner of Harare.

25.7.05

The Britney Option

While citizen participation in American government may not be in its most impressive state, there are numerous advocacy groups trying to change that through the medium of technology. Political, community oriented websites are on the rise, and groups such as Moveon.org have had great successes at mobilizing politically oriented, tech-tapped people into new kinds of digital activism.

Coming soon: The Britney Option. A strange look at how technology funded and designed for commerce has been shifted in purpose to advocacy and political activism.

mir is the creation of Jed Alpert, a wireless-entertainment entrepreneur, who originally developed the application, in 2001, for a cross-promotional marketing campaign by the electronics company Samsung and the pop star Britney Spears. At a cost of $19.95 for three months, tens of thousands of the singer’s fans (many of them, it turned out, men no longer in their teens) signed up to receive several text messages a week, supposedly from Britney. By selecting a link embedded in each message, subscribers would be led to a recorded message, either from Spears herself (“Hey, it’s Britney Spears. Can I just tell you, I had a blast at your party— seriously, your friends are really cool. Next time I have a party, you’re totally invited”) or from one of the members of her entourage, among them her personal assistant, Alicia, and her bodyguard, Big Rob.

The novel aspect of the technology is its ability to deliver customized messages to registered cell-phone users, based on such criteria as the user’s address, date of birth, and, in some cases, musical tastes. For participants in the Britney Spears promotion, this meant getting to hear Spears read their horoscopes every month. The horoscopes, Alpert explained the other day, were drawn up by “experienced, highly respected astrologers, based in Chicago—and half of that statement is true.” They were also short and simple, and they often included an injunction to go for it. Spears recorded only twelve different horoscopes, but, Alpert said, “a complex algorithm” allowed them to be circulated among the different signs of the zodiac for a year.

...
Last week, on the morning after the Roberts nomination, People for the American Way was ready with its first mir campaign. Several thousand text messages went out to the cell phones of the group’s participating members, urging them to call their senators (by clicking an embedded link) and tell them to “hold judgment until facts are in!”

It is unlikely that Spears will be involved in P.F.A.W.’s campaign in any capacity. “I’m not sure how closely Britney has been following this issue,” Alpert said. Some armchair strategists think that this could be a mistake. Astrological forecasts and breathy pep talks may not shed any light on the High Court nominee’s judicial philosophy, but they could provide signposts for the months ahead.

For instance, Spears seems to predict that Roberts will move smoothly through the confirmation process. “That thing that has you so worried will work out, so don’t worry too much,” she counsels the Judge—and everyone else born under the sign of Aquarius—in her W.F.X. horoscope for the month of October, when the next Supreme Court session begins. And she offers Roberts a word of advice about the new job. “It looks like the flowers might be blooming for you, but the garden needs some T.L.C.,” she says. “Don’t be afraid to get your hands dirty. That’s what works.”

Peace Tax

Over the Pond, a group of seven war protesters has lost their bid to have their taxes stopped from supporting a war effort that they object to.

It's an interesting concept of taxation, where you have a moral choice in at least some of your tax money's usage. Of course, it has been shot down.
The "peace tax seven", backed by more than 50 supporters, asked Mr Justice Collins, sitting in London, for permission to seek a judicial review of a continuing government refusal to allow them to opt out.

But the judge dismissed their application and ruled their case was "bound to fail" in the domestic courts.

He said the case would have to be heard by the European court of human rights in Strasbourg.
The seven wanted to seek court orders forcing the Treasury to establish a special fund or account so that their money could be spent only on peaceful purposes.

Michael Fordham, appearing for the seven, argued that the Treasury's continuing refusal to set up such an account violated their rights under article 9 of the European convention on human rights, which protects the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion.

Rejecting the argument, the judge agreed with Treasury lawyers, who said the European commission of human rights in Strasbourg had already decided the issue against conscientious objectors in cases heard in the 1980s.

The judge said: "I am persuaded that if this matter is to be reconsidered it must be reconsidered by Strasbourg."

But first the legal process had to be exhausted in the domestic courts, and the speediest way to achieve this was for him to refuse the seven leave to seek judicial review.

He added: "I am sure that if I granted leave, in the end this case would be bound to fail."

Danger, Will Robinson!

Fresh of the heels of scandal A [Rove's deep involvement and potentially perjurous contradictory statements in the Plame Affair] and distraction tactic B [The Administration's nomination of a dark and mysterious, though "all Amurican boy," candidate for the Supreme Court], the White House switches gears and regresses, back into a previous seedy nomination: that of John Bolton ["Moustache McGee"] for US Ambassador to the UN.

"Sources" say that we might be prepared to expect The Administration to install Bolton in the Ambassador's chair by side-stepping the non-vote in the Senate and implant him on a "temporary basis."

This is the strange game of The Administration at this moment: Distract the opposition with one controversy after another. The goal will be to split attention; but the result will be the same cesspool and downward spiral toward collapse as has occured with The Administration's war in Iraq.

Failures of Recollection

From the "I Can't Remember if its Butter or Not" file:
Supreme Court nominee John Roberts declined Monday to say why he was listed in a leadership directory of the Federalist Society and the White House said he has no recollection of belonging to the conservative group.

The question of Roberts' membership in the society — an influential organization of conservative lawyers and judges formed in the early 1980s to combat what its members said was growing liberalism on the bench — emerged as a vexing issue at the start of another week of meetings for President Bush's nominee on Capitol Hill.
What? You don't remember whether you were enrolled in one of the most prominent, lucritive, conservative judicially activist organizations in the country?
Although no Democrats have publicly threatened to filibuster his nomination, they have said they're concerned that not enough is known about Roberts' personal and legal views. Questions about where he stands on a range of issues, including abortion, likely will be front-line matters at his confirmation hearings later this summer.
Good luck, guys. Whatever you ask this guy, he might have no recollection of it.

Do you believe in abortion?
- I have no recollection of any beliefs.

What is your stance on Plessy v Ferguson?
- I don't recall what my viewpoints are.

This is framing itself as, potentially, the strangest nomination yet.

Ask Ricky!

Rick Santorum, that is. Who is online answering questions of his endeared audience as we speak. He's releasing a book called It Takes a Family: Conservatism and the Common Good, where he explains that the familial structure needs to be the bedrock of American society and culture. But don't ask me what he means... Ask Him!

Some question ideas: Here, here, here.

Taken from Atrios.

Take Action Against Torture

Amnesty International has an Action Item against the torture and mistreatment of detainees. Call and email your senators today and urge them to support amendments to the 2006 Fiscal Year Defense Authorization bill. The amendments written by McCain / Graham would extend, in legal writing, the protocols of the application of the Army Field Manual Regulations on Interrogations to all detainees in Department of Defense custody, and would reinforce U.S. prohibitions on cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment.

The other set of amendments, proposed by Levin / Kennedy / Rockefeller / Reed amendment would establish an independent commission to investigate all allegations of torture and ill treatment of detainees in US custody and determine which officials, policies, and practices were responsible for such abuses and to prevent further abuses.

Urgent action: call and email the offices of your Senators TODAY and urge them to deal with the problem of US forces mistreating detainees in the War on Terror.

Find your Senators HERE

Note: Jigga has previously, bravely dealt with this issue before, and offers some insights into how you can write a curteous message urging action.

24.7.05

The Administration and the Fury

Sam Apple's brilliant Faulkner-alike winning piece "The Administration and the Fury," a blend of political satire and Sound and the Fury stylistics, has been put up once at Slate, and once on the Hemispheres In Flight Magazine page, and has been republished on Yahoo.com here. Brilliant.
Down the hall, under the chandelier, I could see them talking. They were walking toward me and Dick's face was white, and he stopped and gave a piece of paper to Rummy, and Rummy looked at the piece of paper and shook his head. He gave the paper back to Dick and Dick shook his head. They disappeared and then they were standing right next to me.

"Georgie's going to walk down to the Oval Office with me," Dick said.

"I just hope you got him all good and ready this time," Rummy said.

"Hush now," Dick said. "This aint no laughing matter. He know lot more than folks think."

Dick patted me on the back good and hard. "Come on now, Georgie," Dick said. "Never mind you, Rummy."

A History of Non-Disclosure

The Administration sealed up a consistent history of non-disclosure by announcing that it does not intend to release many of the memos and documents written by presidential SC nominee John Roberts. Nothing to see here, please move on...

Democrats should view every non-released document as incriminating and dangerous evidence, in my opinion, and should form a consistent front to have full-disclosure on this SC nominee. The country needs to know who determines the meaning of the law in its highest form. All of these documents exist as official governmental documents; and while privacy concerns and confidentiality should apply, so too should The Administration be willing to be transparent with their choices.

Of course, coming from the most secretive White House in American history, that's not much of a likely happening.

Vive le Tour

Our largest congratulations to Lance Armstrong and his Discovery team for completing the stunning feat of 7 consecutive Tour de France wins. Armstrong, strongwilled and determined, also a humanist advocate for cancer research, is certainly worthy of the greatness of his achievements. Congrats, Lance.

Greater Sins

Rep. Tom "Wild Stallion" Tancredo (R-CO) has written a guest commentary in the Denver Post expressing his belief, in fact, that an escalation of the war on terror is precisely what is needed in order to flush out extremism. Thus he defends his comments that America should be prepared to consider nuking Muslim holy sites such as Mecca and Medina as a deterrant in the war on terror.

Now, simply because I want to, I'm breaking down his commentary.
Bigger sins than offending
By Rep. Tom Tancredo
R-Colo.

By now, many people in America - and likely around the world - are familiar with my statements regarding a possible response to a nuclear attack on U.S. cities by fundamentalist Islamic terrorists.

[No doubt they are, Mr. Tancredo. Nothing better than a little bit of the controversial ultraviolence to propel your name recognition into the political stratosphere. PR stunt...?]

Without question, my comments have prompted strong reactions from many quarters, but they have also served to start a national dialogue about what options we have to deter al-Qaeda and other would-be Islamic terrorists.

Many critics of my statements have characterized them as "offensive," and indeed they may have offended some. But in this battle against fundamentalist Islam, I am hardly preoccupied with political correctness, or who may or may not be offended. Indeed, al-Qaeda cares little if the Western world is "offended" by televised images of hostages beheaded in Iraq, subway bombings in London, train attacks in Madrid, or Americans jumping to their death from the Twin Towers as they collapsed.

It seems that this logic is duplicitous, or at least simply misunderstood. Tancredo either ignores the fact or is not aware of the fact that the sensationalism of al Queda's abhorrant beheadings and the make-a-man-a-martyr tactic of using a suicide bomber.

Which we've learned this week historically has been used primarily for the purpose of political terrorism rather than religious extremism, making Tancredo's invocation even more complex. As a politically radical terroristic group uses religion as a motivator, such as al Queda had begun with their suicide bombings, the religious aspects of the act become more and more hollowed out and manipulative, and based more on religious fanaticism among those manipulable populations of potential bombers. Thus making Tancredo's call to flatten holy-sites more inflammatory- at this point, Tancredo has participated in the formation of the War on Terror into a Holy War as much as Osama bin Laden, rather than grasping the political intentions and desires of the enemy and working to defuse them.

Indeed, al Queda thrives on the sensationalism of their violence- the need America and the west to be inflamed against them through their disgusting acts, because this is the easiest recruitment and justification tool they have. The Offensiveness of the West is their quickest, cheapest, dirtiest, easiest tool with which draw attention to their causes.

Thus, as Tacredo attempts to discount being "offensive," he too seems to participate in this political game.
Few can argue that our current approach to this war has deterred fundamentalists from killing Westerners - nor has it prompted "moderate" Muslims and leaders of Muslim countries to do what is necessary to crack down on the extremists in their midst who perpetuate these grisly crimes.

That being the case, perhaps the civilized world must intensify its approach.

Does that mean the United States should be re-targeting its entire missile arsenal on Mecca today? Does it mean we ought to be sending Stealth bombers on runs over Medina? Clearly not.

But should we take any option or target off the table, regardless of the circumstances? Absolutely not, particularly if the mere discussion of an option or target may dissuade a fundamentalist Muslim extremist from strapping on a bomb-filled backpack, or if it might encourage "moderate" Muslims to do a better job cracking down on extremism in their ranks.

People have accused me of creating more terrorism by making these statements. Indeed, we often hear that Western governments bring these attacks on themselves. Just days after the London subway attacks two weeks ago, for example, Tariq Ali, a prominent British Muslim activist, was quick to suggest that London residents "paid the price" for British support in the Iraq campaign.

The argument is not that you simply "create more terrorism," Mr. Tancredo, but rather you overzealously participate in the manipulative game of the terrorists. The war in Iraq, I've heard today on NPR, does create extremism. Instead, it is a breeding ground for extremists.

How does it do that? It fits perfectly into the arguments that certain Islamofascists have made: that America and the west would invade an oil-rich Arab country unrelated otherwise to the War. Thus, in invading Iraq without just cause, the US fell into this prophecy with foolish ease. In being unable to make a determinate, democratic Iraqi state and leave the region to its own devices, and in being unable to quell the swelling tide of Insurgency, the war both fits into bin Laden's scheme of a small, loose faction holding off a superpower [such as the Mujahadeen in Afghanistan against the Soviets] and allows ripe, on the job experience training for extremists. It is an al Queda propagandist's dream machine.

Likewise, this argument you're forming works similarly. Nobody believes your language is directly responsible for the formation of terroristic minds. No. In fact, what we're aware of, and you apparently are not, is that those terroristic minds have already been reached, or they will be soon. Our actions and the mixed successes of terrorism against the west has already built a sustained perception among terrorists that they can do this thing they've set out to [Of course, we know that these attempts will fail in the end, barring huge, catastrophic circumstances, like a nuclear attack; it will crumble because some of the necessary aspects will never be attained. Al Queda will not likely take over any country, as is one of their projected needs. To be discussed later...].

What you're being accused of is this: By making the argument that these options are available to you, and to the US government, which you represent, you participate once again in this game. You give them fuel for their purposes. Here's how it works:
  1. They know that the US knows that the worst possible situation in the War on Terror would be for a ready, willing, and able group of terrorists to access and be prepared to use a nuclear warhead anywhere in the world, but particularly on western targets.
  2. You tell them that if they have a nuclear warhead and are prepared to use it, the US will use a nuclear warhead on their most vital religious targets first [Preemptive strike, what a great policy. Thanks SO MUCH, Bush n Co, you really helped us out].
  3. This gives them official soundbites that they then can use as a very real, urgent reason to escalate their attacks and, indeed, push for access to a nuclear warhead. All it takes is the fear that "The US says they're going to nuke Mecca!" and the perfect propaganda slogan for the Islamofascist cause is born.
Now, my favorite section of Tancredo's bizarre argument:
A professor in Lebanon, Dr. George Hajjar, went even further, proclaiming, "I hope that every patriotic and Islamic Arab will participate in this war, and will shift the war not only to America, but to ... wherever America may be." Hajjar went on to say that "there are no innocent people," and referred to the victims of the attack as "collateral casualties."

These are fairly "offensive" statements, to be sure, but the sentiments expressed by Ali and Hajjar are sadly commonplace in the "mainstream" Muslim world, where justification for terrorist attacks like the ones that rocked London, New York and Washington is never in short supply.

Fundamentalist Muslims have advocated the destruction of the West since long before the attacks of Sept. 11, long before the Madrid, London and Bali attacks, long before the embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, long before the attack on the USS Cole and the 1993 WTC bombing.

In many respects, the decision of "moderate" Muslims to acquiesce to these actions and even provide tacit justification for them is just as damaging to global safety and security as the attacks themselves.

Until "mainstream" Islam can bring itself to stop rationalizing terrorist attacks and start repudiating and purging people like Ali and Hajjar from its ranks who do, this war will continue. As long as this war goes on, being "offended" should be the least of anyone's worries.

Republican Tom Tancredo represents Colorado's 6th Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Tancredo bases the entirity of his argument on pulled quotes from ultraextremist voices in the Islamic world. These people have an extremist agenda for their quotes. What is interesting is that Tancredo, as well, once again, seemingly naively, fits into this exact struggle. While he is quoting from extremist voices of Islam, he becomes a voice of Western Extremism that is then regurgitated by these same voices in Islam.

So while Tancredo quotes extremists and their extreme agendas of hate, those same guys quote him.

Tancredo talks about enabling the moderate voices of Islam to stand up while refusing to quote the moderates. He also, instead of enabling the moderates by building an argument of support for them, simply discounts them entirely. This is part of Tancredo's anti-immagrant stance, his ethnic xenophobia at play. Because, you see, Tancredo doesn't really want to be part of helping Muslims help themselves on the world stage.

In Denver, CO, one Islam Center has just raised banners proclaiming, among other messages of love, that they strongly condemn these terrorist attacks and that the message of Islam is one of love and respect; that these attacks don't speak to the Islam they know and preach. This has been ignored by Tancredo.

Former Ambassador Gail Schoettler published a companion piece in today's Post alongside Tancredo's bizarre, cesspool logic. In her piece, titled "Misstep, then hubris are double offenses," she talks about Tancredo's escalating presidential hopes:
Congressman Tom Tancredo has plenty of political experience, but not much political savvy. He wants to strut on a big stage, but he talks like a novice, seeming not to understand that national politics is a vastly different platform from a backyard political fundraiser. Since the congressman has the hubris to think he's a credible presidential candidate, he'd be smart to figure that out, fast.

One hard-learned political lesson is taking personal responsibility for your mistakes, especially one as dim-witted as Tancredo's suggestion that the United States consider a retaliatory bombing of holy sites of a religion that isn't his and a country that is an ally (and, not incidentally, a major supplier of oil to the United States). But Tancredo hasn't reached that level of astuteness. He refuses to admit he said something remarkably foolish or to apologize for insulting 20 percent of humanity.

One thing we Americans hope for in our president is common sense. We don't expect a candidate to know everything required for the most important job in the world. But we do expect that person to meet a reasonable standard of knowledge and restraint. We don't want someone who, in a fit of arrogance and anger, pulls the wrong trigger and kills countless innocent people - and puts us at greater risk than necessary.

Rash commentary has no place in the Oval Office, nor in the remarks of a potential presidential candidate.

Just because there are fanatical Muslims willing to blow themselves up for some pathetic and demonic cause doesn't mean that all Muslims and their religion are evil. The suicide bombers no more represent Islam and Muslims than Eric Rudolph, a heartless killer, characterizes all Christians or all Americans. They simply show us that religious fanaticism is dangerous no matter what the religion.

Imagine how Christians would respond to a threat to "nuke" Bethlehem or Rome because some Christian fanatic somewhere committed a terrorist act. There would be widespread outrage, and we certainly would be no closer to a safer world.
She hits it on the head, in my opinion. Hubris and PR, with a foolish disregard for understanding what's really going on.

Some more interesting articles from various sources - done through a simple Google search:

Iranian Qaran News Agency • Bella Ciao Al Bawaba Boston Globe Denver Post Detroit Free Press Arizona Republic Seattle Times The Ledger Online

23.7.05

Tancredo '08 - Inflaming Passions for Democracy!

Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) has begun his long, firm march.

He wants to inherit the cesspool that is current White House politics in 2008. He is a natural fit. He wants to deal with the problem of immigration; he wants a creative approach to win the war on terror.

The problem, of course, that his ideas are completely out of line with even The Administrations', and yet have a certain resonsance among certain factions of hard-line Americans.
Tom Tancredo has been called a one-trick pony of a politician, a man out of step with his party, a bigot. The Republican congressman vehemently opposes illegal immigration, and he created an uproar last week when he talked about nuking Muslim holy sites.

No matter, Tancredo is pressing on and even hinting at a long-shot presidential bid in 2008.

Tancredo has already visited New Hampshire and Iowa this year, and says he found a welcome audience among voters who are fed up with the nation's immigration policies, including proposals by President Bush.

"Unless I misread the political tea leaves, there is a great deal of support for what I say," Tancredo said.

Tancredo raised eyebrows last week by telling a radio talk show host that "you could take out" Islamic holy sites should terrorists ever launch a nuclear attack against the United States.

"You're talking about bombing Mecca," asked the host.

"Yeah," Tancredo responded, saying he was "just throwing out some ideas." He later said his comments were taken out of context and refused to apologize.

Few consider Tancredo a serious challenger for the GOP presidential nomination, but his stance resonates with some in a post-Sept. 11 era when volunteer groups like the Minutemen have been patrolling the border for illegal immigrants.
Tancredo is a political part of what Orchinus calls a resurgent culture of eliminationism. It is, as has historically been proven, not a particularly good idea to engage in eliminationist tactics, but it has become a stalwart part of ultra-conservativism that has been pulled back closer to the mainstream of the right.

Some have argued that Tancredo's arguments concerning immigration and the war on terror are foolish, arrogant, shortsighted, and ridiculous, but there are those who point out that it is also, simply, extremely dangerous.
"American mentality imagines that a religion is attacking another religion, and here lies the danger," said Syrian political analyst Ahmed al-Haj Ali. He called it "frightening" to "retaliate against the birthplace of Islam for individual criminal acts or acts committed by groups that are condemned by Islam."
But this is how he wants to win the war on Terror: by fueling the war on terror.

In basically any other war-time situation, we must understand Tancredo's desires are not of winning, but of escalation. All those who think that's a good idea, say aye...

All opposed...?

Turd Blossom and Scooter 2: Electric Bugaloo

The Dems used their weekly radio address to hammer home on Bush's non-action on the anti-ethical actions of his trusted Brain, Karl Rove, and partner in crime [Literally! haHA! Get it??], Scooter Libby.

Notably, Larry Johnson, a retired CIA agent who worked with Plame, addressed directly the waffling problem The Administration faces, and the single most-important threat to the President's perception as an admirable, honorable, honest man. Why is this important? Because it's the one that's sticking to the Prez:
Speaking on behalf of Democrats in the party's weekly radio address Saturday, Larry Johnson said, "The president has flip-flopped on his promise to fire anyone in the White House implicated in a leak."

Johnson, a registered Republican who voted for Bush in 2000, said he and Plame have been friends since they began their training at the CIA in 1985.
Johnson points out that Bush has changed his language from those being "involved" with the leak to those who are convicted of commiting a crime in relation to the leak.

Interesting you should say that, Mr. Bush, and kind of a shame. You might have wished you stuck with your previous language games, because the story is breaking that both Rove and Libby had mislead FBI investigators in their inquiries.

Knowing what we know through Matt Cooper's documents and emails shared between Rove and Libby prior to any published articles, Rove and Libby were deeply involved with this issue, and had already attained knowledge of Wilson's wife Plame and her condition as a covert operative in the CIA. Thus, misleading the FBI with all of this knowledge could constitute some considerable crimes, no?

Have they purjered themselves? Is Obstruction of Justice a crime...?

Yes.

Bush, listen. You had the right idea initially- purge your Administration of those slimebags that did this. However, you seem more and more intent to accept that the more you embrace those guys, the more you yourself come coated in slime as well.

22.7.05

Old School

I have to say that I admire the courage of these women. Not only is this group of US Grandmothers vocalizing their desire to bring their family members home, but they're expressing the choice of going to take their place in the war. These women are testaments to the strong-willed, old-school protest faction which really has changed the world in extraordinary ways, and which also, right now, is under threat. It is an astonishing statement: if a 74-year old woman is willing to go to war in Iraq because she hates the war, and wants her friends and family to have a future; then we might consider listening.
Five members of the group -- which is associated with the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom -- are due in court Monday to face trespassing charges after trying to enlist at a military recruitment center last week.

The group has protested every week for the last three years outside the recruitment center.

"We went in asking to be sent to Iraq so our kids and grandchildren can be sent home, but rather than listening to us, they called the police," said 74-year-old Betty Schroeder. "It was their place to tell us the qualifications, but they wouldn't even speak to us. They should've said, `You're too old."'

These women have also stood in a bold position, protesting the war with great consistency and awareness, since the war began in Iraq.

The history of the Women's League for Peace and Freedom has never been properly appreciated, though they have contributed the direction of American thought and perception. The US branch was founded in 1915 and has worked as an anti-fascist organization, suffrage advocacy group, and political struggles for universal equality and recognition of human rights.
It was the wisdom of our founding foremothers in 1915 that peace is not rooted only in treaties between great powers or a turning away of weapons alone, but can only flourish when it is also planted in the soil of justice, freedom, non-violence, opportunity and equality for all. They understood, and WILPF still organizes in the understanding, that all the problems that lead countries to domestic and international violence are all connected and all need to be solved in order to achieve sustainable peace.

This remarkable vision still guides us today as we face the challenges of the twenty-first century.
[Learn more about founder Jane Addams and the history of WILPF at the Swarthmore College Peace Collection archives.]

We've talked about the Crisis of American Masculinity before on this Internets Magazine [the ACQJREDC for short], and, let's be honest- a lot of this psychological damage to the American Male comes from highly intelligent, highly capable, effective, dynamic, wonderful women like these.

We, for one, support these women; we heel to those who have more understanding on the trials, difficulties, and experiences of Great War and the Great Costs of war, and why it's not worth it; and why it hasn't worked.

Terror, Iraq, and You

A growing number of Americans fear the war in Iraq is undermining the fight against terrorism and raising the risk of terrorist attacks in this country, a poll found.

Almost half, 47 percent, say the war in Iraq has hurt the fight against terrorism — the highest number to say that since the war began in March 2003, according to the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.

And about the same number, 45 percent, said soon after the first round of subway bombings in London that the war in Iraq was raising the risk of terrorism in this country. That's up from 36 percent last fall.
Of course. What has it done successfully to help win the war on terrorism?

Slums

"It Doesn't Matter, It's Africa" File #3

The UN has finished the primary reports on Mugabe's aggressively shocking strategy to "clean up" the slums. In what was the most unbelievable and horrendous story thus far this year of anybody in power over-exerting that power in terrible ways, and then justifying it by the simple and single act of perverting the language used to describe it, Robert Mugabe bulldozed Zimbabwe's massive slums and called it "urban renewal." It is like something out of a cheap, kindergarten doublespeak dictionary.

Several people were killed in the bulldozings, literally trapped in their homes and bulldozed to death because they had nowhere else to go.
The toddler, a four-year-old boy, was killed by a police truck when Operation Restore Order reached the Porta Farm settlement west of the capital.

"He panicked when he saw police destroying houses and tried to run away," a witness said. "He didn't see the oncoming truck, which struck him and killed him."

A bedridden pregnant woman and a one-year-old baby died in separate incidents in the same settlement.

Another witness said the woman's mother tried to pull her clear but the shack collapsed on her, killing her. The baby was killed when a police bulldozer razed a home before his mother could save him.
But the tragedies do not stop with those killed. Over 700,000 have been permanently displaced, made homeless, left to rot.

But really, Mugabe just wants the best for his people. He wants to solve the crime wave in the slums. He wants to solve the food crisis for his citizens. He wants to rope in Zimbabwe's AIDS epidemic.

Mugabe has rejected western aid to his country; and he has likewise been rejected from aid such as laid out by the G8 summit this year. Zimbabwe stands, today, as the leading example of why Live 8 is meaningful and why the Live 8 Model will work. It gives meaningful incentives for the people of African countries to be accountable, and discourages corrupt regimes. It helps Africa to take responsibility and act reasonably if they want western assistance to get out of the dark fog of poverty that they have been locked in for so long. Mugabe shows the world how much he despises that desire to help. He also demonstrates not his intolerance for poverty in his country, but his anti-humane intolerance for the impoverished.

Deeper and Deeper

The question of Who Leaked The Plame Name? has become something of a labrynthine unmystery, with so many threads to follow. In fact, as I've tried to state earlier, the simple question of Plame's name leak is a vital one, but it is also not the core purpose of the American interest in seeing this investigation through. We need to know: A) who did it, B) of what political end did the leak become a part, C) to what social end does the Plame leak lead.

The first question has been artfully dodged- it's become more and more clear that despite Rove and Libby's claims that they learned the information from the media, they likely had access to clearly demarked secret information which puts Plame's name in their possession prior to their conversations with the media. We also have Matt Cooper's statements claiming that he learned Plame's identity and role, though not by name specifically, from Rove himself. This puts the question of who leaked the information, though certainly not definitively, in the court of Rove and Libby or their close co-workers.

The second question is one of political motivation, and really the most dubious. The first question is the "Who," this question is the "Why." It's become more clear that there was a political motivation in discrediting Wilson's claims. Remember, the Yellowcake argument was a key feature in Bush's justification of going to war in Iraq in his State of the Union address. The only other physical evidence proposed to the country as evidence of Iraq's reconstituted weapons program was Powell's assertion that mobile lab units were in existence.

All of that information has been contested and disproven, and the uranium that Wilson chimed in on was a key piece of it.

And today, we find out that both Rove and Libby had been hard at work on ALL of that evidence, and specifically on the Wilson affair and the reconstitution of Iraq's nuclear program. Rove and Libby, firing off emails during the entire event, trying to build the best strategy to maintain this false evidence for war. This gives considerable credence to the speculation above: that Rove and Libby were deeply involved in the leak of Plame's name and role in the CIA.

The third point, the social end, is a difficult one to project. It is part of the culture war- Rove and Libby's self-interested preservation of power through divisive political endangerment. Where does it lead us? Well, American society is due justice in this affair, we ought to have the right to know what has occurred and why. But, as the call of the right always leans on, we want it not to be through partisan, divisive politics, but rather, the politics of truth.

Those that Walk Among Us

More sobering news from London. British police have released haunting photography of four suspected bombers from yesterday's failed attack. Today, they shot and killed another man on a train who refused to follow their directions and resisted. Unfortunately, it appears that the attacks earlier this month have, indeed, had a more dramatic effect- an inspired series of attacks in waves with more disrupitve force than had been anticipated. It has, of course, brought international attention and disruption as well.

21.7.05

By the Way, Karl...

That State Dept memo that contained Plame's name [rhymy!], and that you had seen before you spoke with Novak and Cooper, indeed, labeled the information contained within:

SECRET.

Which means that you violated your own Administration's confidentiality processes, and potentially the law, by discussing it.

Tancredo's Anger

Atrios kicks up more dust that Howard Dean raises in response to Tom Tancredo's idiotic "raising of possibilities" that the US should be able to nuke Mecca and other Islamic holy sites if threatened with nuclear terror. Dean:
"Tancredo's statements go against the very message America is trying to send to the world, that the war against terrorism is not a war on Islam. Remarks threatening the destruction of holy sites akin to the Vatican or Jerusalem do nothing to win the hearts and minds of Muslims in the United States and abroad.

Congressman Tancredo certainly owes Muslims around the globe an immediate apology for his offensive remarks. At the same time, he also owes Americans an apology for projecting a message that goes against our values. With these remarks, Tancredo has been utterly careless with his responsibility for shaping our foreign policy. Tancredo's continued refusal to apologize poses a very real danger to our troops. President Bush should strongly condemn Tancredo's statement."
Atrios:
All the Republicans who went after Dick Durbin care nothing for our soldiers or even national security. They only care about preserving the power of the Republican party.

Nor will our press put the Republicans through the disassociation gauntlet as they did Democrats. Collective punishment based on religious association using the ultimate weapons of mass destruction is certainly a-ok for our media.

Note, of course, that Tancredo is advocating terrorism against civilian populations. His reasoning is exactly that of those who bomb targets in London and Madrid, only he potentially has a bigger arsenal available to him.
GS:
This is exactly right. Tancredo is advocating terrorism against civilian targets in the case of a threat that does not particularly, in any credible form, exist. Of course, since the Clinton years, when the Soviet nuclear facilities fall apart, a nuke in the hands of determined terrorists or foolish rogue nations has, and should be, the primary concern of anti-terror efforts. There is little worse for all of humanity than the experience of a nuclear bomb, as the US has demonstrated exclusively upon the Japanese.

And, as Atrios points out, Tancredo's idea is one of ridiculous parallel to the exact thing that They want to do to Us.

What I want to add to all of this:

While certainly the great majority of Muslims who read or hear Tancredo's remarks will simply dismiss him as a "Typical, Rich, White, American Christian Extremist." There won't be much thought that goes through their minds beyond that. There is, however, a serious risk in what Tancredo says and does. He, in effect, walks a line of threat escalation. He believes that what he's doing is proposing alternatives, actions, responses. But what American's should consider him to be doing is coming dangerously close to TRIGGERING those very threats he proposes against. The more we talk about nuking Mecca, the more ideological Islamofascists take offense to American ideas; and the more they pursue nukes to inflict upon Americans.

I don't know that this is the case at all, but look at how inflamed Americans were at a Chinese general who "propsed" the same scenerio as Tancredo. Many Americans took it as a threat. What's to stop the terrrrists from having the same reaction?

Good work, Tommy. I want to come over to your house and plant chrysanthemums in your garden. Check out ProgressNow.Org for some regional Colorado talk about Tancredo. [Also, check out their excellent podcast interview with CO Supreme Court Justice Jean Dubofsky and her... interesting... interactions with Antonin Scalia]

Musharraf's Jihad

Taking a very direct pointer from Blair and British Muslim leaders following the subway bombings earlier this month, President Perves Musharraf of Pakistan has issued an appeal for a jihad against the extreme factions of Islam. Sort of:
In a televised address to the nation, Musharraf said it was unfortunate that Pakistan was either directly or indirectly dragged into all terror attacks and Islam was being denigrated.

Referring to the London terror strikes, he said three of the four accused had Pakistani parentage. But they were British nationals, born, educated and bred in England.

The General said one of the extremist organisations in Britain had passed an edict on his life but continued to operate freely. While a lot needs to be done internally in Pakistan, “a lot needs to be done in the UK” too, he said.

Musharraf argued that if three of the four accused in the London blasts had been indoctrinated as alleged, what about the fourth accused, a Jamaican? Observing that Pakistan was passing through trying times, Musharraf said instead of blaming and accusing each other, the correct strategy would be to support one another in the joint fight against terrorism.
He's right, of course, to an extent. That the problem is not necessarily Pakistan's, and not the mainstream in Pakistan [Though Pakistan has some pretty outstanding extremist issues they must contend with]. But that the problem of extremism has become so decentralized, and so multi-ethnic and multi-cultural, that it is something, in every form, that can only be dealt with organically, with reasonable actions and reactions by all the cultures in the conflicts.

Hmm...

Repeat Performance

Earlier today London was again targeted, two weeks on, in the same fashion of attack as occured on the 7th of July. Three subway trains and a bus were targeted by explosives. This round, the explosives were exceedingly minor- early reports indicated very few injuries and, apart from the inconvenience of the station closures and a ramp-up of security forces on the streets, only minor interruptions of daily life.

It has been, in a way, a shadow attack- the same circumstances, the same concept. The bombs were so small that the impression they made is one of a haunting, a ghostly reminder of the capability to strike rather than the actual, brutal, violent strike that could have been. It was baring of teeth. Are you affected? The British are strongwilled and determined, and they have stelled themselves against this physical attack.

But we must realize that this attack doesn't appear to have been aimed at physicality- it is all about resolve and emotional impact. It is a reminder of fear, it, in itself, is not particularly fearful.

Sad. But determination will prevail in these instances.

20.7.05

Starving Niger

Fresh from the "it doesn't matter, it's Africa" file, the UN has issued an emergency response need in Niger, where 150,000 immediately face the threat of starvation, and the international community has been slow to respond. Many of us are caught unaware. With G8 we may feel good about doubling aid to Africa, it still remains as the most neglected continent, with the most need.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization
The Disasters Emergency Committee
World Vision Food Aid
Doctors Without Borders
c