Fighting the War on Error

"You measure a democracy by the freedom it gives its dissidents, not the freedom it gives its assimilated conformists."
- Political & Social Activist Abbie Hoffman (1936-1989)

Monday, February 23, 2009

Philly's Inky & Daily News bankrupt

Well, I can't say I'm surprised.

Philadelphia Media Holdings, L.L.C., the company created by Brian Tierney (left) a few years ago that purchased both The Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

It's another sad chapter in a long list of them for the nation's daily newspapers, and it's pretty sad to see. It's also sad to see that the once great Inky, as it is sometimes known, continues its downward slide.

Even though I personally dislike him greatly for being the partisan GOP hack that he is, I was pulling for Tierney and Co. to turn around Philly's newspapers. I feel his failure to do so is mostly a sign of the times - the newspaper itself is turning into a relic of yesteryear - something that Baby Boomers and grandfathers read. Personally, I no longer buy them, but I do visit my favorite paper's Websites on a daily basis: the Inquirer's, as well as the LA Times, the Washington Post and of course The New York Times. I don't think that any but the most successful papers have figured out how to make money off of their Websites, yet, but I think it will happen.

But, I do fault Tierney for a few decisions he's made. When the announcement was made that he would be operating the city's newspapers, Tierney pledged that he would not meddle with the editorial content of the papers. I don't think that even his biggest cheerleaders, if they were being completely honest, believed that one. And it didn't take the skeptics long to be proven right.

I couldn't help but laugh when Tierney hired former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who lost his reelection bid in 2006 to Sen. Bob Casey, to be a columnist for the Inquirer's editorial page. Hmm, that was a smart move - it didn't take a genius to figure out that one of the country's most Democratic cities wasn't exactly crying out to hear from one of the most polarizing Republicans in recent memory. Maybe Tierney can, ahem, inquire if Sarah Palin is available to write about her pathetic qualifications for being vice president or president? Yea, I'm sure Philly would love that.

A more damning incident about Tierney's stewardship occurred prior to the '08 election, when the editorial board voted to endorse Barack Obama for president. An editorial meeting about the endorsement reportedly became quite heated when Tierney forcefully pushed for the endorsement of Sen. John McCain. So much for not interfering with editorial content.

And so much for a comeback for Philly's daily newspapers.

Here's hoping that Philly's newspapers survive this latest sad chapter in their respective histories. My prediction is that the Inquirer will survive, but the Daily News will not. It's been rumored for years that the Daily News will be shuttered, and I think within the next year or two, we'll sadly see that happen.

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Thursday, October 02, 2008

Tonight at 9 p.m.: Veep Debate Live Blog

I've been looking forward to tonight's debate for quite some time - Joe Biden vs. Sarah Palin. I don't know what I'm more eager to see - how bad Sarah Palin butchers her answers, or how badly the media will be in bed with her as it continues to endlessly, shamelessly pimp her candidacy. I have a whole lot to get to, and I'll get to a little bit of it before the debate, so stay tuned.

I know that all candidates rehearse, but it just kills me how God-awful Sarah Palin has been doing during her very rare interviews with the media, including another disastrous installment with Katie Couric, which CBS released yesterday. But, off to the McCain compound in Arizona she went to Debate School to no doubt memorize the thoroughly rehearsed talking points provided by McCain and his staff of hacks. Maybe I'll be proven wrong tonight, but I don't think so.

Of course, now, since the McCain campaign, led by the empty-headed Palin, is tanking, prominent GOP members of Congress and their many, many backers in the mainstream media are already launching attacks in and about the media, specifically about tonight's moderator, Gwen Ifill.

I can't say it any better than Nicole over at C&L:
The McCain campaign is on overdrive to manage the upcoming vice presidential debate between Sarah Palin and Joe Biden. Over the last week, they have demanded limiting the response time to 90 seconds (perfect for the wordy but meaningless “pageant” answers she’s prone to give), set up the framework that tough questions are “gotcha” questions and any of Biden’s responses may be sexist and patronizing. Now they are suggesting that moderator Gwen Ifill may not be nonpartisan enough to moderate the debate, since she authored a book on politics and race, even though the McCain camp approved of her selection (you’ll remember she moderated the 2004 VP debate between Cheney and Edwards).
It's the typical play out of the GOP playbook - they clearly are desperate campaigners.

Remember how Sarah Palin's e-mail got "hacked" last week? Whoops - that didn't turn out to be the scandal they had hoped for, so now it's time to attack the moderator of tonight's debate (a debate that McCain lamely tried to have cancelled last week when he was flying into Washington to "rescue" our economy and our way of life with a lame-assed Wall St. bail-out plan, but that's another post for later).

It's also interesting that 1. the McCain camp ok'd her many weeks ago to moderate the debate, and 2. McCain came out yesterday and actually defended Ifill in the face of GOP blowhards' attacks, and today, McCain said her selection was "a mistake."

Of course, the GOP stooge Matt Drudge is parroting the GOP talking point that Ifill is "biased" and "partisan" and not capable of doing a good job. The asinine Sen. Orrin Hatch is also joining in the chorus. So be it.

It's hardly a bold prediction that no matter how Palin answers the questions tonight, the minute she's asked the slightly toughest question (such as, "Name a Supreme Court decision you've disagreed with" - more on that in a minute) - the right will scream that Ifill was asking biased questions.

I can GUARANTEE that this will happen.

Bonus - disgraced former Pennsylvania Rick "Man on Dog" Santorum (above, conceding his Senate race on election night in '06 [any excuse to re-run this picture!]) is rumored to be a part of the post-debate coverage tonight. I'm sure he already has written out what he's going to say before one word has been uttered by either candidate.

Illustration at top by Victor Juhasz for Rolling Stone Magazine

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Here's why Santorum is an ex-Senator

Here's another post that almost slipped through the cracks last week that I couldn't let go without writing about. Former-U.S. Senator-turned-political-columnist Rick Santorum just can't let the gay marriage thing go. I mean, will this guy ever get it? As Attytood noted last week, it's little wonder that this guy is an ex-Senator (I've said it before, and it bears repeating - it never gets old running the picture of conceited Rick conceding on election night in 2006). Anyway, someone living in a cave can monitor the political winds better than this guy.

Last week, in his Philadelphia Inquirer column, this is what Santorum had to say about California's impending recognition of gay marriages:
Bigot! Hate-monger! Homophobe!

Those were just a few of the terms hurled my way in 2003 when I said that the Supreme Court's Texas sodomy decision opened the door to the redefinition of marriage.

When I wasn't ducking the epithets, I was being laughed at, mocked, and given the crazy-uncle-at-the-holidays treatment by the media. Or I was being told I should resign from my leadership post by some Senate colleagues.

Five years later, do I regret sounding the alarm about marriage? No.

I'm just saddened that time has proved right those of us who worried about the future of marriage as the union of husband and wife, deeply rooted not only in our traditions, our faiths, but in the facts of human nature: as Pope Benedict said, "The cradle of life and love," connecting mothers and fathers to their children.

(Cue epithets: Bigot! Hate-monger! Homophobe!)

The latest distressing news came last week in California. The state Supreme Court there ruled, 4-3, that same-sex couples can marry.

In doing so, four judges rejected a statute that passed in a referendum with 61 percent of the vote that defined marriage as a union of one man and one woman.

It's merely the latest in a string of court decisions that have overturned the overwhelming will of the people.

OK, if you're not inclined to hurl epithets, you might ask: Don't we have more to worry about than some court redefining marriage? After all, gas prices are soaring, health-care costs are rising, and our nation is at war. Why should we care what a few activist judges in California say?

Let's put aside the tired argument that the people should have a say in the laws of their government. That is so 18th-century white-male drivel. Thank goodness we have unaccountable judicial elites to make decisions for us bigots.
It's hard to know where to begin, here. First, I have to confess that it never gets old reading Ricky feeling sorry for himself. All sorts of epithets should have been thrown your way back in '03, Senator homophobe. Don't get me wrong - I'm not hateful like he is. He has a family and many young kids, and by all public accounts is a family man and a good father and husband. Good for him. (Really.) But, where I part company with Santorum in a hurry is when he feels the need to push his beliefs on everyone else, and as was the case in '03, on all Pennsylvanians and the Senate, too.

Next, Ricky talks about the "overwhelming will" of the people, and how they are opposed to civil unions. Well, let's talk about those numbers for a minute. As Kos points out, there are some pretty damning statistics that support gay marriage:
Do you approve or disapprove of California allowing homosexuals to marry members of their own sex and have regular marriage laws apply to them? (Same question asked every survey throughout the years.) See the chart at right for the results.
It seems like the trend toward favoring civil unions and/or gay marriage is on the march, and has been for decades now, despite the bleak forecast of gloom and doom by Santorum. What's more, age in California is directly proportional to approval of gay marriage - the older are less in favor, while younger respondents are much, much more in favor (see below). So again, it doesn't take George Gallup to predict which way the trend will likely continue in the foreseeable future.

Santorum also decries what the new California Supreme Court ruling will do to organizations that do business with the state:
The California court just declared that those of us who see marriage as the union of husband and wife are the legal equivalent of racists. And openly racist groups and individuals can be denied government benefits because of their views, including professional licenses (attorney, physicians, psychiatrists, marriage counselors), accredited schools, and tax-exempt status for charities.

In Massachusetts, the first same-sex-marriage state, Catholic Charities, one of the state's largest adoption agencies, was forced out of business because it refused to arrange adoptions for same-sex couples. In New Jersey, a Methodist group lost part of its state real estate tax exemption because it refused to permit civil-union ceremonies on church-owned property.
People discriminating against gays, or in his words, "the legal equivalent of racists"? GOOD. Because they are. In Massachusetts, Catholic Charities was forced out of business because it refused to arrange adoptions for same-sex couples? Boo Hoo.

I hope I live to see the day where gays are mandated by the federal government to be treated on par with race as it relates to getting tax breaks and preferential treatment, be it taxes or any other benefit, including federal contracts.

How sweet would it be for Halliburton to lose one of its no-bid contracts because it wouldn't hire Dick Cheney's daughter? Pass me a slice of irony with pepperoni, please.

Keep pumping out that propaganda, Ricky. Before long, I'm sure the Inquirer, a once-great newspaper, will be run further into the ground by GOP hack activist Brian Tierney for hiring the likes of you.

No wonder I don't subscribe anymore. Any paper that feels Santorum is worthy of a columnist slot isn't worth my 75 cents every day.

Plus, who an forget the senator's insanely asinine comment leading up the the 2006 election about Democrats who were trying to take over the U.S. Senate and House: that their election would be a "disaster for the future of the world."

A year and a half later, I'm still thankful that Pennsylvanians saw fit to bounce his ass out of the Senate.

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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Yet another reason why I don't buy the Inky

Like an old hemorrhoid, every once in a while former Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum flares back up to irritate most. (At right, a defeated Santorum concedes on election night in '06 after losing to Sen. Bob Casey. And NO, it never gets old running this picture.) What's worse, Santorum is now a columnist for The Philadelphia Inquirer, thanks to the brilliant Brian Tierney, the former GOP activist hack who now runs the paper. Tierney couldn't get Republicans elected, so now he lets GOP losers spew their garbage on the once proud editorial pages of the Inky. Tierney couldn't even come up with a winning strategy to beat former Philadelphia Mayor John F. Street in an election, one of the worst mayors this city has ever seen. So, that's the intellectual capacity we're dealing with here, but I digress.

Anyway, after first publicly stating that he couldn't possibly support John McCain - SURPRISE! - now Santorum has decided to support McCain, quite simply because he has no other choice. From yesterday's Philadelphia Inquirer:
I've disagreed with [McCain] on immigration, global warming and federal protection of marriage. I've taken strong exception to his view that the federal government should fund embryonic stem-cell research. But disagreement on such issues is one of the reasons we have presidential primaries - so each party's voters can sort out the issues and personalities and choose the candidate who best reflects their collective view. Republicans have done that. Now the question for conservatives is whether McCain fits the Reagan Axiom that someone you agree with on 80 percent of the issues is your friend, not your enemy.

Of all the issues confronting the United States today, none is more important than our nation's security. Although these issues don't dominate our news as they once did, we cannot forget that without a safe and secure country, all other issues don't matter.

McCain is clearly the candidate with the capacity, judgment, experience and will to confront America's enemies. He's served our country honorably - heroically - in war. I served eight years with him on the Senate Armed Services Committee, and I can assure you he knows our military. Importantly, he also knows our enemies. He understands their capabilities and their aims. He will not sugarcoat the human or financial commitment and cost needed to defeat this enemy.

[Snip]

Those conservatives who still question whether they can support McCain should remember this: The next president will make more than 2,700 political appointments, those who really set policy, across the bureaucracy of our government. I, for one, will sleep better at 3 a.m. if Republicans are in the cabinet and in White House positions that make so many critical decisions. The idea of "Attorney General John Edwards" and "Energy Secretary Al Gore" should cause some sleepless nights for Republicans or conservatives - and those in a U.S. manufacturing sector now struggling to stay afloat.

Here's my final argument for John McCain. He's not Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton.

Both Democrats have made their case in chief on why they should be president, and we have every reason to be concerned.

Both want to cut and run from Iraq, give the radical jihadists a victory from the jaws of defeat, and leave the Iraqi people vulnerable to chaos. Both would put in place dangerous economic policies that would make Uncle Sam look like an Orwellian Big Brother. Both would nominate liberal activist judges who would pass undemocratic laws from the bench. Both support one-size-fits-all health-care policies that have been a disaster for patients and medical industries in Canada. Good-bye, American capitalism; hello, European-style socialism.
Pretty impressive, actually - Santorum hit on all of the GOP clichés in a very short amount of time - uni health care being socialism, his concerns about stem cell research and (of course) gay marriage, but most of all, a pinch of fear mongering when it comes to terrorism and keeping us safe. Oh, and some brown nosing about McCain's military record never hurts, either. And, what prominent Republican can write any political column without mentioning Iraq, and how Democrats want to "cut and run"? Psst - hey Rick - that phrase is about as passé as your reputation as a "rising star" in the Republican Party.

However, my favorite line of Santorum's whole piece was this one:
The idea of "Attorney General John Edwards" and "Energy Secretary Al Gore" should cause some sleepless nights for Republicans or conservatives - and those in a U.S. manufacturing sector now struggling to stay afloat.
Two things: First, as if "Attorney General John Edwards" would be any worse than John Ashcroft, Alberto Gonzales or Michael Mukasey? Puleeze. What is understood, needn't be discussed. And the same goes for "Energy Secretary Al Gore"; as if he would be any worse than Spencer Abraham, Samuel Bodman, or worse yet, Dick Cheney, who, along with energy company and Big Oil execs, have all been writing this administration's energy "policy" for the last 7+ years. Clearly, Santorum must think that Inquirer readers are stupid. Perhaps that's why he's "former" Senator Santorum.

And secondly, I sense a little boot licking going on here as well. It certainly isn't hard to imagine Santorum getting a plum position in McCain's cabinet, especially the more slick Rick shills for McSame on the editorial page of Pennsylvania's most well-known newspaper. What's more, McBush must carry Pa. if he hopes to move to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, so any bones Santorum throws McCain's way won't go unnoticed, or unappreciated.

Am I suggesting that Santorum's change of "heart" (assuming he has one) is politically motivated?

Absolutely.

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Sunday, April 20, 2008

Hard to believe, but I agree with Fumo

Well, this must be a first. For the only time in memory, I find myself in agreement with outgoing Pennsylvania State Senator Vincent Fumo, whose recent message during a meeting at the 200 people at St. Andrew Lithuanian Church, was to not vote for John Dougherty, the business manager of Local 98 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.

I couldn't agree more - I've written many times recently how I firmly believe that "Johnny Doc" represents the backward, brutal, thuggery politics of Philadelphia's past, and it's my hope the city can move past that. The outgoing Fumo agrees, calling Dougherty "a bully, a thug and evil." Wow, how do you really feel, Senator?

From Philly.com:
"I am not endorsing any candidates, but do not elect John Dougherty," Fumo said at a meeting of the Spring Garden Civic Association. "I do not want that to be my legacy. He is a bully, a thug and evil. Please vote against him."

[Snip]

"I got 16 members of the Senate to endorse Farnese and raise money for him," Fumo said. "Any kind of logic would lead you to vote for Farnese."
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is reason #1 (and numbers two and three) why I hope and pray that Farnese does not prevail in Tuesday's three-way race for the Democratic nomination in the election to replace Fumo this fall. The last thing I want the First District's new state Senator to have is any owed favors to the ethically challenged Vincent Fumo.

The only logical choice is Progressive Anne Dicker (above right). I'm disappointed but not surprised that The Philadelphia Inquirer's editorial board has endorsed Farnese. Considering that former Republican activist and hack Brian Tierney is running the Inky, and that he considers Rick Santorum worthy of a regular column on the paper's editorial page, it's no shock the paper doesn't recognize a true Progressive when there's one right in front of our noses, and that's Dicker.

Dougherty is under federal investigation for a myriad of ethical lapses, so the last thing we need is another state Senator being investigated; we've got that in Fumo now. And since Fumo is endorsing Farnese, he gets painted with the "guilt by association" brush. Hey, if you sleep with dogs, you're gonna get fleas.

We have supported Dicker a little bit by attending one of her fund raisers, and I'm trying to find time to be a poll worker this Tuesday, but that sort of activism is not the approach the Dougherty campaign is taking, and I found out about this by accident. Get this - the Dougherty campaign is paying people $150 to turn a shift as a poll worker. Hey, nothing buys sincerity like $150, right?

Yesterday, a vehicle rolling down our street with a loudspeaker extolling the virtues of Dougherty, and I wish I would have been on street level when it rolled on by. What's more, I wish I had one of those electronic megaphones so I could drive after it and shout out the virtues of Dicker. Okay, I probably wouldn't, but I'd be tempted. I'm not above a good 'ole metaphorical political street fight.

Please visit Dicker's Website to donate time and/or money to try and help her get elected to the state Senate.

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Sunday, July 08, 2007

Happy 4th of July, Senator McConnell


Check out this protest in front of Senate Minority Leader - and senior Bush enabler -- Mitch McConnell's home in Louisville, Kentucky. Talk about wishing someone a happy July 4th. McConnell is up for reelection next year, and you can bet your hanging chad that he will be target #1 for Howard Dean and the Democrats. Think of him as the Rick Santorum of 2008.

If you want more information on showing McConnell the door next year, go to Ditch Mitch KY.

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Monday, April 30, 2007

Lewis Black on those #@!$%#$@!! queers


WARNING: This one is not for work, or for playing around the kids.

This clip is raw, but it makes such a good point that I had to share it.

Lewis Black is one of my favorite political comedians going. He's at the top of his game right now. I found a whole bunch of his clips on YouTube tonight, and they're great, but a friend of mine posted this on MySpace today, and I wanted to share it, because it's right on about gay marriage.

I too find it offensive that Republicans think that gay marriage is some sort of threat. It's a complete joke - the "sanctity of marriage." How about "the sanctimoniousness of the marriage issue."

This clip is just a bit older, because he mentions Rick Santorum, who I'm still elated no longer is in the Senate because of his Bush-rubber-stamp, insensitive, intolerant policies and political views.

Looking back now, it's patently absurd how the press, the electorate, and yes, Democrats let Repubes frame the debate and what issues were important in '04 and '06. I hope it never happens again.

I've said it before and I'll say it again - if gay marriage were on a ballot today, I wouldn't hesitate for a nanosecond to cast a "Yes" vote.

I read somewhere once that "there's nothing more powerful than an idea whose time has come."

If that doesn't describe the gay rights movement, I don't know what does.

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Saturday, November 18, 2006

Coming Soon: common sense in the Senate on global warming



Now that Rick Santorum is gone from the Senate (Rick who?), meet my new most despised senator - Republican James Inhofe from Oklahoma, who basically thinks that global warming is some fantasy. (See video above) Something tells me that Senator Barbara Boxer from California, who now chairs the Senate's environmental committee, is going to have plenty to say about that. She's already said that "time is running out," and that we need to urgently address the problem. That's a start, Barbara.

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Friday, November 10, 2006

Santorum gobbles humble pie



Again, I know, it's a bit of old news, but I had to include this in my post-election thoughts - Rick Santorum's concession speech. It was gracious, humble and civil, and I'm sure it hurt like hell for him to say it. But, defeat can do many things to you, including ratcheting down your rhetoric.

You won't be missed, Rick. Go sell homophobia elsewhere, buddy. We're all stocked up here with the Republicans who are left in Congress. Maybe you can get a job sitting on Bush's shoulder as a parrot - you've done that job well enough the last six years, so you might as well get paid for it.

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Monday, November 06, 2006

Rick's WMD fetish is soooo cute!



Our soon-to-be-ex-Senator from Pennsylvania, Rick Santorum, just can't help himself, convinced that Iraq had/has Weapons of Mass Destruction. Translation: "My re-election chances depend on it, so there just has got to be WMD somewhere."

Above is the press conference where a smug, happy Rick talks to reporters about the just-released documents that contained nuclear bomb secrets. Call me crazy, but should we be happy that Santorum is now vetting documents and judging whether they should be classified, all for political gain? The man's clearly lost it; that's assuming that he ever "had it" in the first place.

Tick tock, Rick - Do yourself a favor and head to Staples now to get your boxes, bubble wrap and shipping tape - it's going to be mighty crowded on Wednesday.

Below is a story about the released documents from the Nov. 3 issue of The New York Times - I've posted all of it here because after one week, you need to be a paid subscriber to read it.

Yet one more example of Republicans keeping us safe from the terrorists. Santorum's got a WMD of his own - his mouth. I love watching him squirm, knowing it's all going down the drain. In that respect, I'm sad the campaign's almost over.

I wonder if Senator Smackdass is considering digging up Terri Schiavo's remains so he can use her once again to try & score more cheap political points?

U.S. Web Archive Is Said to Reveal a Nuclear Primer

November 3, 2006
The New York Times

By William J. Broad

Last March, the federal government set up a Web site to make public a vast archive of Iraqi documents captured during the war. The Bush administration did so under pressure from Congressional Republicans who had said they hoped to “leverage the Internet” to find new evidence of the prewar dangers posed by Saddam Hussein.

But in recent weeks, the site has posted some documents that weapons experts say are a danger themselves: detailed accounts of Iraq’s secret nuclear research before the 1991 Persian Gulf war. The documents, the experts say, constitute a basic guide to building an atom bomb.

Last night, the government shut down the Web site after The New York Times asked about complaints from weapons experts and arms-control officials. A spokesman for the director of national intelligence said access to the site had been suspended “pending a review to ensure its content is appropriate for public viewing.”

Officials of the International Atomic Energy Agency, fearing that the information could help states like Iran develop nuclear arms, had privately protested last week to the American ambassador to the agency, according to European diplomats who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the issue’s sensitivity. One diplomat said the agency’s technical experts “were shocked” at the public disclosures.

Early this morning, a spokesman for Gregory L. Schulte, the American ambassador, denied that anyone from the agency had approached Mr. Schulte about the Web site.

The documents, roughly a dozen in number, contain charts, diagrams, equations and lengthy narratives about bomb building that nuclear experts who have viewed them say go beyond what is available elsewhere on the Internet and in other public forums. For instance, the papers give detailed information on how to build nuclear firing circuits and triggering explosives, as well as the radioactive cores of atom bombs.

“For the U.S. to toss a match into this flammable area is very irresponsible,” said A. Bryan Siebert, a former director of classification at the federal Department of Energy, which runs the nation’s nuclear arms program. “There’s a lot of things about nuclear weapons that are secret and should remain so.”

The government had received earlier warnings about the contents of the Web site. Last spring, after the site began posting old Iraqi documents about chemical weapons, United Nations arms-control officials in New York won the withdrawal of a report that gave information on how to make tabun and sarin, nerve agents that kill by causing respiratory failure.

The campaign for the online archive was mounted by conservative publications and politicians, who said that the nation’s spy agencies had failed adequately to analyze the 48,000 boxes of documents seized since the March 2003 invasion. With the public increasingly skeptical about the rationale and conduct of the war, the chairmen of the House and Senate intelligence committees argued that wide analysis and translation of the documents — most of them in Arabic — would reinvigorate the search for clues that Mr. Hussein had resumed his unconventional arms programs in the years before the invasion. American search teams never found such evidence.

The director of national intelligence, John D. Negroponte, had resisted setting up the Web site, which some intelligence officials felt implicitly raised questions about the competence and judgment of government analysts. But President Bush approved the site’s creation after Congressional Republicans proposed legislation to force the documents’ release.

In his statement last night, Mr. Negroponte’s spokesman, Chad Kolton, said, “While strict criteria had already been established to govern posted documents, the material currently on the Web site, as well as the procedures used to post new documents, will be carefully reviewed before the site becomes available again.”

A spokesman for the National Security Council, Gordon D. Johndroe, said, “We’re confident the D.N.I. is taking the appropriate steps to maintain the balance between public information and national security.”

The Web site, “Operation Iraqi Freedom Document Portal,” was a constantly expanding portrait of prewar Iraq. Its many thousands of documents included everything from a collection of religious and nationalistic poetry to instructions for the repair of parachutes to handwritten notes from Mr. Hussein’s intelligence service. It became a popular quarry for a legion of bloggers, translators and amateur historians.

Among the dozens of documents in English were Iraqi reports written in the 1990s and in 2002 for United Nations inspectors in charge of making sure Iraq had abandoned its unconventional arms programs after the Persian Gulf war. Experts say that at the time, Mr. Hussein’s scientists were on the verge of building an atom bomb, as little as a year away.

European diplomats said this week that some of those nuclear documents on the Web site were identical to the ones presented to the United Nations Security Council in late 2002, as America got ready to invade Iraq. But unlike those on the Web site, the papers given to the Security Council had been extensively edited, to remove sensitive information on unconventional arms.

The deletions, the diplomats said, had been done in consultation with the United States and other nuclear-weapons nations. Mohamed ElBaradei, the director of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which ran the nuclear part of the inspections, told the Security Council in late 2002 that the deletions were “consistent with the principle that proliferation-sensitive information should not be released.”

In Europe, a senior diplomat said atomic experts there had studied the nuclear documents on the Web site and judged their public release as potentially dangerous. “It’s a cookbook,” said the diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of his agency’s rules. “If you had this, it would short-circuit a lot of things.”

The New York Times had examined dozens of the documents and asked a half dozen nuclear experts to evaluate some of them.

Peter D. Zimmerman, a physicist and former United States government arms scientist now at the war studies department of King’s College, London, called the posted material “very sensitive, much of it undoubtedly secret restricted data.”

Ray E. Kidder, a senior nuclear physicist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, an arms design center, said “some things in these documents would be helpful” to nations aspiring to develop nuclear weapons and should have remained secret.

A senior American intelligence official who deals routinely with atomic issues said the documents showed “where the Iraqis failed and how to get around the failures.” The documents, he added, could perhaps help Iran or other nations making a serious effort to develop nuclear arms, but probably not terrorists or poorly equipped states. The official, who requested anonymity because of his agency’s rules against public comment, called the papers “a road map that helps you get from point A to point B, but only if you already have a car.”

Thomas S. Blanton, director of the National Security Archive, a private group at George Washington University that tracks federal secrecy decisions, said the impetus for the Web site’s creation came from an array of sources — private conservative groups, Congressional Republicans and some figures in the Bush administration — who clung to the belief that close examination of the captured documents would show that Mr. Hussein’s government had clandestinely reconstituted an unconventional arms programs.

“There were hundreds of people who said, ‘There’s got to be gold in them thar hills,’ ” Mr. Blanton said.

The campaign for the Web site was led by the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, Representative Peter Hoekstra of Michigan. Last November, he and his Senate counterpart, Pat Roberts of Kansas, wrote to Mr. Negroponte, asking him to post the Iraqi material. The sheer volume of the documents, they argued, had overwhelmed the intelligence community.

Some intelligence officials feared that individual documents, translated and interpreted by amateurs, would be used out of context to second-guess the intelligence agencies’ view that Mr. Hussein did not have unconventional weapons or substantive ties to Al Qaeda. Reviewing the documents for release would add an unnecessary burden on busy intelligence analysts, they argued.

On March 16, after the documents’ release was approved, Mr. Negroponte’s office issued a terse public announcement including a disclaimer that remained on the Web site: “The U.S. government has made no determination regarding the authenticity of the documents, validity or factual accuracy of the information contained therein, or the quality of any translations, when available.”

On April 18, about a month after the first documents were made public, Mr. Hoekstra issued a news release acknowledging “minimal risks,” but saying the site “will enable us to better understand information such as Saddam’s links to terrorism, weapons of mass destruction and violence against the Iraqi people.” He added: “It will allow us to leverage the Internet to enable a mass examination as opposed to limiting it to a few exclusive elites.”

Yesterday, before the site was shut down, Jamal Ware, a spokesman for Mr. Hoekstra, said the government had “developed a sound process to review the documents to ensure sensitive or dangerous information is not posted.” Later, he said the complaints about the site “didn’t sound like a big deal,” adding, “We were a little surprised when they pulled the plug.”

The precise review process that led to the posting of the nuclear and chemical-weapons documents is unclear. But in testimony before Congress last spring, a senior official from Mr. Negroponte’s office, Daniel Butler, described a “triage” system used to sort out material that should remain classified. Even so, he said, the policy was to “be biased towards release if at all possible.” Government officials say all the documents in Arabic have received at least a quick review by Arabic linguists.

Some of the first posted documents dealt with Iraq’s program to make germ weapons, followed by a wave of papers on chemical arms.

At the United Nations in New York, the chemical papers raised alarms at the Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, which had been in charge of searching Iraq for all unconventional arms, save the nuclear ones.

In April, diplomats said, the commission’s acting chief weapons inspector, Demetrius Perricos, lodged an objection with the United States mission to the United Nations over the document that dealt with the nerve agents tabun and sarin.

Soon, the document vanished from the Web site. On June 8, diplomats said, Mr. Perricos told the Security Council of how risky arms information had shown up on a public Web site and how his agency appreciated the American cooperation in resolving the matter.

In September, the Web site began posting the nuclear documents, and some soon raised concerns. On Sept. 12, it posted a document it called “Progress of Iraqi nuclear program circa 1995.” That description is potentially misleading since the research occurred years earlier.

The Iraqi document is marked “Draft FFCD Version 3 (20.12.95),” meaning it was preparatory for the “Full, Final, Complete Disclosure” that Iraq made to United Nations inspectors in March 1996. The document carries three diagrams showing cross sections of bomb cores, and their diameters.

On Sept. 20, the site posted a much larger document, “Summary of technical achievements of Iraq’s former nuclear program.” It runs to 51 pages, 18 focusing on the development of Iraq’s bomb design. Topics included physical theory, the atomic core and high-explosive experiments. By early October, diplomats and officials said, United Nations arms inspectors in New York and their counterparts in Vienna were alarmed and discussing what to do.

Last week in Vienna, Olli J. Heinonen, head of safeguards at the international atomic agency, expressed concern about the documents to Mr. Schulte, diplomats said.

Scott Shane contributed reporting.

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Thursday, November 02, 2006

Rush's hypocrisy abounds on MJ Fox

I got a bit thrown off my schedule about writing on this, thanks to John Kerry and the media, the latter of which is rife with talking heads, endlessly analyzing what Kerry meant, what will it mean next Tuesday, have the Democrats handed the Republicans a November gift, blah, blah, blah.

Raise your hand (or read on) if you're sick to death of hearing about this crap, especially as North Korea tests nuclear weapons, Iran tries to acquire them, an American soldier is missing in Iraq, we're told to leave a part of Baghdad (Sadr City), 105 Americans were killed in Iraq in October, and I haven't even touched on numerous domestic issues that face us all.

Anyway, my point is that Kerry's gaffe was a momentary slip of the tongue at best, and a dumb attempt at humor at worst, not an attack on our troops or military by a decorated Vietnam Veteran, as some have suggested. My point is, Kerry's comment was a mistake - his didn't come out right. Ever happen to you? Yea, me too.

This in contrast to my favorite Republican blowhard of all, Rush Limbaugh, who last week took off on a slander and burn campaign directed at Michael J. Fox, who supports Claire McCaskill in the Missouri Senatorial Race against Republican incumbent Jim Talent. McCaskill supports stem cell research, and Talent does not.

Uh oh, a speaker with credibility on stem cell research? Well, the GOP talking heads weren't going to stand for that. And, Republicans, before you come at me with the "Limbaugh doesn't represent Bush's opinions" defense, President Bush was on his program yesterday, well after Rush's sickening comments about Fox.



It's not news that Rush is totally gutless and soulless - he's been lying, distorting and slandering for years, so I'm not surprised by these comments.

What really irked me about Rush's Fox commentary was his comment that Democrats always using "victims" to make their political points. Oh, and I have to mention his mocking Fox's movements, too. I wonder if he would do this if the tables were turned and Republicans supported stem cell research and Democrats did not? Puleeze. I also wonder if a one-legged war veteran came home and cut a political ad for a Democrat, would Limbaugh hop up and down, mocking him, too?

What's really pathetic is that there are people, millions of them, in fact, who listen to Rush religiously. Saddest of all, many of these people can't think for themselves. Hey, they aren't called "Dittoheads" for nothing.

And, you may not believe me, but this isn't about politics, when someone like Rush gets this hateful. This is about a dreaded disease, Parkinson's, and this is about improving the lives of those who suffer from it. I'm so sick of Pro-Lifers clouding the issue, too.

What most sensible people who are pro-stem cell believe and advocate is the use of frozen embryos for research that would otherwise be destroyed anyway - most are not adopted and the facilities that store the embroyos will not keep them. I support this important research, with strict oversight. I can understand and appreciate the many important, ethical considerations involved in stem cell research, but that shouldn't prevent this important work from moving forward to hopefully lead to cures or treatments not only for Parkinson's, but for many other diseases as well.

Oh, and for those of you who think Rush might have a point when he says that Democrats always trot out victims or people as props largely immune to criticism to make political points, you may want to take a look at the video below. And, Action! ...



This is President Bush with Snowflake Families at a press conference in July '06 announcing his first presidential veto - a bill passed in the Senate, 63-37, authorizing research on discarded embryos. Snowflake children is a term used by organizations that promote the adoption of embryos left over from in vitro fertilization to describe children that result, where the children's parents were not the original cell donors. So, Bush appears with these families at a press conference, but that's not grandstanding or using people as props?



Another example of Republicans using people as props - video from the Boot Murtha campaign. I get a kick out of this one in particular - notice the people who speak at the pro-Murtha rally, then the people at the Boot Murtha rally. And notice the attendance, too; the Boot Murtha rally uses tight camera shots, but you can still see the rows upon rows of empty seats in the background of the speakers.

I get pretty roiled when I hear people say that "we are winning this war (in Iraq)." We aren't winning, and we aren't going to win. What exactly would victory be, anyway? If this isn't echoes of Vietnam, I honestly don't know what is. Another thing that makes me angry is when I hear people say that comments critical of an administration in war time "embolden the enemy." I don't think our enemies are watching TV to get motivated to fight us - their beliefs and moral values, however misguided (and of course I think they are just that) are what motivates them, not politicians disagreeing on TV.

Oh, and the clip immediately above has comments from a father of a lost son in Iraq, a WTC survivor, and also the father of Todd Beamer. It looks an awful lot like using people and victims as props to me.



MJ Fox responds to Limbaugh's comments on CBS News with Katie Couric. Notice how Fox takes the high road, resisting the temptation to slam Limbaugh for his drug use/addiction or the dozens of other things he could have said to make Limbaugh look bad. You're a bigger man than me, Michael.

Couric also talks about how Limbaugh gets angry because Democrats use victims to make political points because they believe they are infallible and immune from criticism. But, Republicans do, too. Just because someone is a victim, survivor or family of a survivor of something tragic or a celebrity, he or she doesn't lose his right to express his or her political opinion.

I don't care which party does it, one or both or none - I'm merely pointing out the hypocrisy of Limbaugh for criticizing Democrats for using Fox, to say nothing of his comments about Fox's physical condition.

The only thing that does surprise me about the whole Fox fiasco is that Bill Frist hasn't diagnosed Fox by watching the video, Terri Schiavo style, or that Santorum hasn't rushed to his side to try to score cheap political points. Oh wait, Fox is campaigning for a Democrat. Sorry, Santorum.

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Monday, October 30, 2006

Desperate Santorum bashes Bush



At least YouTube is still good for one thing - political ads & commentary.

Take a look at the above interview of Rick Santorum on Fox News.

Now, President BUSH is soft on crime? This is a president that Santorum has voted with 97% of the time (depending on where you get your info., but even conservative estimates have him in the 90s) since Bush has been in office. Now, less than two weeks before his reelection bid, he's distancing himself from the president?

It just keeps getting better and better. Hell, I wish the election were another month away - God only knows what tricky Ricky would resort to.

All signs point to a defeat, but I'm counting no chickens.

However, more good news arrived for challenger Bob Casey over the weekend - endorsements from nine major newspapers. That's never bad news, but I wonder aloud how much newspaper endorsements even matter any more. Sure, they still matter, but I don't think nearly as much as they used to.

But, it's good news, & you can never have enough of that in a hard-fought campaign.

I'm sure Casey agrees.

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Friday, October 27, 2006

A hilarious ad from a desperate Santorum



If you can't laugh at this ad, you can't laugh at anything. I dare you to watch this and not at least crack a smile.

An increasingly desperate Rick "Man-on-Dog" Santorum is now riding the coattails of... of... DEMOCRATS to try and get reelected to the U.S. Senate.

The ad above pretty much speaks for itself - Boxer, Clinton and Lieberman have been the enemy since Santorum was elected to the Senate, and now he's championing legislation he's worked on WITH this trio? This one's a knee slapper.

What's more, it will probably anger as many conservatives as it courts - the name Clinton drives some conservatives to go out and sacrifice animals.

Pack your bags, Rick.

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Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Rick Santorum - butter in a microwave



Above, a desperate Senator Rick Santorum flashes hot last week in a debate with frontrunner Bob Casey, who's still leading Rick in the polls. It's been a nasty campaign, and it will only get uglier as election day draws neigh. I love watching this fucking weasel squirm. I will be shocked if somehow Rick pulls this one out. Honestly, his father should have pulled out. I flat out despise him; he's third on my list only to Bush and Cheney.

Your 15 minutes are just about up, Rick. Thanks for being a Bush parrot for six years - it took real courage and conviction.

Now go obsess about gays on your own time.

Ahh, before I end this one, a few more short, priceless Santorum clips. Just like W, I'll miss him when he's gone because we won't have the great footage. Okay, I won't really miss him, but I will miss the lunacy that makes me laugh on just about a daily basis.



Rick - Iraq had chemical weapons. W - no, it didn't. They're both idiots, but it's pretty sweet seeing Rick contradicted by a president who has about as much credibility as a North Korean press release.



I hate political ads on both sides of the aisle, but I think this one is pretty good.

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Monday, October 09, 2006

Jim Talent - why you W hatin'?



This isn't a total political blog - I promise - it's just that I'm behind and there's so much going on - scandals, liars, and legislators up for reelection who are trying to cover their asses to protect their gravy train.

There's no better example of this than Senator Jim Talent, R-MO, who's now running for cover because President Bush has become political Kryptonite.

Kudos to Tim Russert, who moderated a mini-debate between Missouri's Senatorial candidates yesterday. Russert pressed Talent for his non-answer answer about being identified with Bush. Gee, if Bush has visited your state four times for fundraisers and you've voted with the president 94% of the time, something tells me your fate is tied to the Republican Party, as much as you're trying to distance himself from the president, Mr. Talent.

Here comes a shock - I'm not a fan of Talent. (Yea, I live in Pa., so what difference does it make? Very little, I guess.)

Talent's against stem cell research, and he's a co-sponsor of the flag desecration amendment to the Constitution. His office has said that "We should never support restricting anyone's right to say or write anything they want about the flag of America. But burning the flag is not speech; it is an act with expressive overtones, and that distinction is crucial for constitutional purposes."

Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the GOP traditionally against government interference in our lives? This moron doesn't understand America, Democracy or freedom if he's trying to amend the Constitution so Americans can't burn a flag as a form of protest.

I'd never burn a flag, but who in the hell are these people to tell me I can't? It's just naked pandering through patriotism for votes.

The flag burning debate is so last century, Talent, so why don't you act like you have some of your namesake?

There are about 1,000 issues that are more important than flag burning. We need to kick the tone-deaf morons out of Congress like Jim Talent and Rick Santorum, who don't understand the concept of doing the people's work.

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Santorum steps up the lie campaign

I've been meaning to blog about Pennsylvania's junior Senator, Rick Santorum, for some time, but I haven't had the time to get to it. Recently, while on one of my favorite Websites, YouTube, I came across a number of interesting video clips that I will share with you in a minute.

I watch with glee how Santorum is becoming increasingly desperate in the race, a race in which he's never gained traction vs. Bob Casey Jr. The only troubling thing I see about this race is the fact that Casey doesn't seem to want to debate Santorum. I'm no political strategist, but I wonder if that's smart. And, maybe it is - I remember the '04 campaign when Bush refused to debate Kerry; he was ahead in the polls, so why risk it? Besides, Bush is such a bumbling idiot, any debate is reason for concern.

Yes, Casey is sitting on a lead, but I sure as hell hope he doesn't get too complacent. He shouldn't be missing any opportunity to get on TV to blast the shit out of Santorum with both barrels.

Santorum is now clinging to one issue he thinks he can get a little traction with - immigration. You're dreaming, senator. You've voted with Bush 98% of the time, and you can't run from your record now.

Here's a quick roundup of vid clips about the Senatorial race:



The one big advantage that Santorum has over Casey is money. Slick Rick's got a lot of it, and that means a lot of money to distort, slander and lie. The investigation above is probably the best example. Wow, and I thought local TV journalism was dead. This is pretty impressive in its damning of Santorum for this blatantly deceptive piece of shit that ran on local TV a great deal last month. Again, it's another age-old political trick - put the lie out there, and even when it's discovered, the damage will have been done and it will be worth the heat. Some of us are smarter than you, Rick, and your buddy Karl Rove.



I'm no big fan of Don Imus, but I love how he takes it to Santorum in this clip. The lying Senator was asked to comment on Woodward's new book, State of Denial, and he starts babbling about some book he wrote. Imus didn't take to it too kindly, and Rick backpeddles quicker than Joe Montana. I love it.



In an older clip from the Imus show, Santorum is busted and call out by Imus' wife for asking her to write a favorable op-ed piece for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Then, Rick digresses and resorts to the hackneyed witticism of complaining about the media coverage in Pennsylvania. He's got so much more money than Casey, so hearing him complain about the media is a riot. Backfire!



This short clip is of former President George H.W. Bush, talking about how scary it will be if the Democrats regain control of part or all of Congress. Again, pretty ballsy, Mr. President. Just a quick question, though. Have you ever heard of something called Checks and Balances (or Separation of Powers)? It's a principle that this country was founded upon. Yea, it would be just horrible and ghastly if this administration were investigated - after all, that hasn't taken place since W the rube took office. Oh, and contrary to belief in some GOP circles, 9-11 never has been rightfully investigated, either. Hey Bush 41 - take your war profiteering, Saudi-loving ass, along with your prune of a wife, back to Kennebunkport and wither away. Your one-term, Iran-Contra ass ceased being relevant long ago.

Those are tough words to write, because I've always respected Bush Sr., but he impugns his integrity with short-sighted comments like these.

Go Casey, go, and hit back at this asshole. You must win this race, and readers, if you live in Pa., you must go and vote. And don't let your Pro-Life stance sway you to Rick either, GOPers. Casey has Pro Life credentials that not only match but exceed Santorum's.

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Saturday, August 05, 2006

Rick Santorum, distort? Noo! Really?



I found this on one of my new favorite Web sites the other day, YouTube. It's Keith Olberman (one of my new TV favorites), uncovering a Rick Santorum lie. I really loved Olberman when he used to team with Dan Patrick for "The Big Show," the 11 p.m. SportsCenter. But I love him more now. His show is quickly reaching "can't miss" status on my TiVo, right along with The Daily Show.

Olberman is unapologetic, dogged, honest and real. And he doesn't have on softball guests to ask dickhead questions. No host of any show is totally without an agenda or bias, but Olberman just seems interested in exposing hypocrisy, most notably that of Bill O'Lielly. And what could be better than that?

It's pretty entertaining to watch an increasingly desperate Santorum resort to lies and innuendo to try to get reelected. He's sided with Bush well over 90% of the time on just about every issue. He thorough embarrassed himself during the Terry Schiavo fiasco. He was on Hannity & Pussy a few weeks ago, insisting that WMDs have been found in Iraq.
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So, it's obvious Santorum will do or say just about anything - moves right out of Karl Rove's playbook. As I've said, it's entertaining, but a bit frightening, too, because some people will actually believe his bullshit, and Santorum's got a pretty big war chest.

Go Casey, and thanks, Keith O., for all that you report on. Keep up the good work, and if you haven't checked out his show, do it - he's on MSNBC weeknights at 8. Oh, and check out Tucker, too, a conservative I can actually listen to.

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Friday, July 21, 2006

Your never forget your first, eh, W?

As the saying goes, you never forget your first, and I know I'll never forget President Bush's first veto, when the president denied federal funding for stem cell research. My feelings upon reading the news ranged from outrage, disgust, sadness, confusion and back to outrage again.

This religious-driven decision is just another signpost on the road to religious extremism ruling and ruining this country. Not only does the president veto the bill, but he has a ceremony (above) with snowflake families, that is, families who have had a child born from a transplanted embryo. So, not only does he stick his finger in the eyes of people who could really be helped (and maybe in some cases, even saved) by signing a stem cell bill into law, but he gives the radical religious right another tongue bath by having these families appear with him at the announcement.

President Nixon, a man who truly knew what it was like to be hated, once said, "Always remember, others may hate you. Those who hate you don't win unless you hate them. And then you destroy yourself."

I bring that quote up, because I hate the president and Karl Rove for what they are doing to this country, most of it in the name of religion. It sickens me every day. And I don't give a shit about people saying, "Hate's a pretty strong word," or "Wow, you shouldn't hate anybody." No, you shouldn't hate anyone, and I try not to, but for these two deserve that dishonor. I don't care about being politically correct in most instances, and this blog is the very embodiment of that belief.

All that's left for the religious zealots to accomplish in this country is to outlaw abortion, and that day isn't too far off, I'm afraid. I used to often tell people, prior to the 2000 and 2004 elections - "If Bush wins, he will reshape the Supreme Court for decades." Well, he has, and now these red states are reaping what they have sown. To digress for a quick second, I wonder if Louisana, post-Katrina, would still buy into all of Bush's bullshit during the '04 campaign and help him to the presidency? (Bush carried Louisana by a wide margin.) I think not.

"Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job!"

Anyway, the encouraging thing about the stem cell vote in Congress is that many Republicans joined ranks with Democrats to have it passed so the president could veto it in the first place. The public wants this passed, but the radicals on the right don't.

For once, the Democrats may even have a backbone on this one. Said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi after the president's veto:

By using the first veto of his presidency to strike down this vital legislation, President Bush has shown us once again, that the extremists in his party come before progress...The public is fed up with the agenda of the Republican leadership and its clear lack of concern about the challenges facing ordinary Americans...Democrats in the House and Senate voted overwhelmingly in favor of this bill. Ninety-eight percent in the Senate and ninety-three percent in the House; if only we had more Democrats in Congress to vote for the override. Our resolve is absolute. We have fought this battle for years and we will continue to fight. We will not give up, even in the face of extremist, anti-progress opposition...Republicans in Congress will have two choices: vote with the 72% of Americans who want to see this bill pass, or rubber stamp President Bush's out-of-touch agenda yet again.

The rubber stamp happened - the veto override vote fell short by four votes. Hopefully, come November, some prominent Republicans will be out of Congress...



...like Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA). It's going to be an uphill battle for Bob Casey Jr. though here in Pennsylvania - Dick's got a lot of money for attack ads and lies, nearly twice what Casey has.

These religious hypocrites all talk about the sanctity of life, until the War in Iraq or capital punishment comes up. Then, it's a different story.

Thousands are dead in Iraq, and for what? A giant fucking lie.

And capital punishment? That's humans merely playing God. One one hand, you have Bill Frist embarrassing himself by misdiagnosing Terri Schiavo on national television , saying nature should take its course and that her brain was still functioning (the autopsy proved Frist absolutely false). I'll never forget political opportunists like President Bush, his brother Jeb, Frist, and Santorum trying to use the whole unfortunate Schiavo incident for political gain.

However, most of these Republicans have no moral conscience about bombing and killing thousands of innocent Iraqis, OR advocating capital punishment, which, in some cases kills innocent people. The first thing I hear from advocates of capital punishment when I bring this up is "What about all of my tax dollars to keep these people in prison for years?" That's just morality with a price tag. But, I digress.

I hope and pray (yes, pray! God is not a Republican) that the time will soon come when Democrats can take back control of at least one body in Congress to stem the tide of Republican shit that we are awash in.

And I hope the first thing they do is approve federal funding for stem cell research, by a veto-proof margin.

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Monday, May 15, 2006

Get out and vote!




Tuesday, May 16, 2006 is primary day for voters in Pa. It's time to get out and support candidates of change. Those candidates are Ed Rendell for governor and Bob Casey Jr. for U.S. Senate. Take a look at the pictures and you'll soon see why I feel that way. Their respective opponets, Republicans Lynn Swann and incumbent Senator Rick Santorum, align themselves with the failed policies of the Bush administration. And it's time to soundly and roundly reject this administration, and the best way to do that is the voting booth.

I don't support Rendell and Casey strictly because they are Democrats, but that has a large part to do with it. I support them because they can and I hope they will be effective agents of change here in Pennsylvania and in Congress. Rendell can help Democrats capture the White House in 2008 and hopefully part of Congress in '06 and '08; and Casey can help overthrow the out-of-touch Republican Congress. I'm confident they both will.

Both candidates are not without warts. Rendell hasn't done much in the way of property tax relief, and that's being charitable. He can, should and must do more. The fact that the legislature is ruled by Republicans doesn't help, but an effective governor much reach across the aisle and compromise and help his constituents. If anything, it's again the lesser of two evils. Sure, Swann was and is a likable guy going back to his football days with the Pittsburgh Steelers. But, for starters, here's a guy who hasn't even bothered to vote in elections. Get more on that story Here, and it's from the Philadelphia Inquirer, not some campaign Website. And his campaign manager's explaination of it was even worse than Swann not voting. To make matters worse, Swann could have just about the best positions on just about everything, but seeing the picture above of him with the president completely turns me off. (It also underscores the fact that if he's foolish enough to align himself with this immensely unpopular president, his candidacy probably is and should be doomed.)

Casey is a pro-lifer, and that's the biggest thing that turns me off about him. But, Santorum is even more of an ardent pro-lifer, so that subject's a wash. Moving on to other topics - Casey is the clear winner. Again, just look at the picture of Slick Rick with Bush above, and you see all you need to see. From his homophobic comments, to his brown nosing the president's decision to slap tarriffs on imported steel to his criticism of Clinton's decision to intervene in Kosovo and his taking part in blocking most Clinton's judicial nominees in the Senate long before Democrats did it to Bush, Santorum's been on the wrong side of many issues, and it's time for him and his fellow Republicans to be relieved of their control in the Senate.

Okay, I'm off my soap box. Whatever your opinion, get out there and vote - it's the right thing to do, and the single biggest thing you can do to bring about change in our country and in your respective state.

Registered but don't know where to go to vote? No matter where you're livin', click Here to find out where to go to click that lever.

-For Pennsylvanians- Not registered to vote? Make sure you register for the hyper-critical fall elections by clicking Here.

By voting, getting informed and even becoming involved in your local, state and national campaigns, you can make a difference and help all of us take back our country, no matter your political persuasion.

Go Big Blue.

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Friday, May 05, 2006

Debunking the "Support The Troops" sheep mentality

I had an interesting conversation with a guest in the restaurant the other day. She noticed the "Count Me Blue" bracelet that I've been wearing since the disastrous 2004 elections. I wear it with pride, but I'm not obnoxiously political (in person at least - this blog notwithstanding!), and I certainly won't discuss politics at work unless pressed. Anyway, she asked me what the bracelet meant, and I told her.

"Dumb Democrats," she teased, and we had a good laugh about it. Hey, I can take a ribbing, even about my political affiliations.

Then she said something that pissed me off. "I just don't like it when people don't support the troops," she whined. "People shouldn't criticize the troops while they are in the field."

I just smiled and walked off. Hey, I was at work, and alienating tables is never a good idea, especially when I'm working for a tip... and guests' hoped-for generosity. Anyway, the more I thought about it, the more angry I became.

On the drive home, I couldn't help but think of the trite but apropos quote often attributed to Oscar Wilde: "Patriotism is the virtue of the vicious." In the case of the war in Iraq, I have a hard time disagreeing.

I'm about had my fill of people, Republicans mostly, using the whole "Support the Troops" mantra to attempt to silence critics of the president's ill-conceived war in the Middle East. I often hear this from supporters of the president's policy in Iraq, and this includes Republican leaders who decry criticism of the use of our troops in Iraq: "People should not criticize the use of troops once they are in the field. The president made the decision, and they are there, so let's get behind them."


People who parrot the above quote without analyzing our troops use and deployment don't understand America, Democracy and freedom, and I'd also like to point out that these people have a very short memory span.

During the War in Kosovo, when President Clinton was in the Oval Office, it certainly was a different story. Let's travel back in time, shall we?

From Texas Governor George W. Bush...

"Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is."

Do I need to comment on the irony there?

From Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum (R)...

"President Clinton is once again releasing American military might on a foreign country with an ill-defined objective and no exit strategy. He has yet to tell the Congress how much this operation will cost. And he has not informed our nation's armed forces about how long they will be away from home. These strikes do not make for a sound foreign policy."

Don't worry, Rick. Your time is just about up, and come November, you will hopefully be home, unemployed, where you can ponder your hypocrisy and obsess over new ways on how to exclude homosexuals.

From Karen Hughes, speaking on behalf of candidate George W. Bush...

"If we are going to commit American troops, we must be certain they have a clear mission, an achievable goal and an exit strategy."

From Tom Delay (Remember him?!?)...

"American foreign policy is now one huge big mystery. Simply put, the administration is trying to lead the world with a feel-good foreign policy."

AND...

"I cannot support a failed foreign policy. History teaches us that it is often easier to make war than peace. This administration is just learning that lesson right now. The President began this mission with very vague objectives and lots of unanswered questions. A month later, these questions are still unanswered. There are no clarified rules of engagement. There is no timetable. There is no legitimate definition of victory. There is no contingency plan for mission creep. There is no clear funding program. There is no agenda to bolster our overextended military. There is no explanation defining what vital national interests are at stake. There was no strategic plan for war when the President started this thing, and there still is no plan today."

Was this about Kosovo in 1999, or Iraq in 2006? Can Tom DeLay see into the future? That would be the one quality that would be admirable in him.

AND...

"Bombing a sovereign nation for ill-defined reasons with vague objectives undermines the American stature in the world. The international respect and trust for America has diminished every time we casually let the bombs fly."

Okay, enough on DeLay. The irony here is thicker than his corruption file.

From Tony Snow (yes, THAT Tony Snow, the new White House Press Secretary)...

"You think Vietnam was bad? Vietnam is nothing next to Kosovo." (Fox News, 3/23/99)

Lastly, from Sean Hannity of Republican News Channel fame...

"Explain to the mothers and fathers of American servicemen that may come home in body bags why their son or daughter have to give up their life?" (Fox News, 4/6/99)

AND...

"No goal, no objective, not until we have those things and a compelling case is made, then I say, back out of it, because innocent people are going to die for nothing. That's why I'm against it." (Fox News, 4/5/99)

Sure, Sean - we distort, you decide. The stench of hypocrisy is overwhelming.

The bottom line here is that Americans have every right to not only criticize why the troops were put into harm's way in Iraq in the first place, but whey they are still there. There is clear evidence that not enough troops were sent to do the job, and they are walking targets right now. I'm reminded of a John Kerry quote from Vietnam, and I'm paraphrasing to fit the war in Iraq: "Do you want to die in a hot, miserable land where the people mostly don't want us, all for a lie?" Oh, wait - Kerry was a coward - he went to Vietnam and won three purple hearts. Beetle Bailey has more combat experience than Dick and Bush. I'm always amazed when men who don't know the price of war are quick to rush into one. This was the argument that Republicans used against Clinton the "draft dodger" in '92, but it was inconvenient for them when Bush became president.

Another thing that annoys me is when I hear people who get annoyed with criticism of Bush or the way the country is headed. "If you don't like the US, leave!" they obnoxiously suggest. I always laugh when I hear this one. My first thought on that is, if you don't like the criticism, you leave. This is how a democracy works - people, events and policies get criticized, debated and analyzed - so deal with it.

Republicans continue to point out that many Democrats, including Kerry, voted for the war. Yep, they did, at first, when the "intelligence" was presented to them. When it was later revealed by Richard Clarke, Paul O'Neill and others who were in the administration when these decisions were made that the intelligence was cooked, many Democrats said, "Wait a minute here." Then Republicans, hoping that people really weren't paying attention, simply said that the Democrats were flip floppers. Yea, right.

Democrats have the right to change their minds when new evidence comes to light, just as all Americans do, whether troops are in the field or not. Opinions evolve as events unfold. I'm still amazed that people continue to use the whole "We should support the troops while they are in the field" mantra. It's just a thinly disguised attempt to tell me to shut up. Well, I won't shut up, and I don't think any American should, as long as our troops continue to get cut down in the prime of their lives over lies about WMDs and the "threat" that Saddam posed.

If bin Laden wore a blue dress, the Republican-controlled Congress would have found him by now. Let's rename him Osama bin Lewinsky and send that scumbag Ken Starr after him. I'd give it about five days and we'd have Osama's head on a stick.

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