Be INFORMED

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Bush's Troop ' Surge ' In Iraq Going Just Fine. NOT!

   According to the Associated Press the United States suffered almost twice as many military casualties as the Iraqi army did in March.

Associated Press count

U.S. military: 81 deaths

Iraqi military: 44 deaths

Iraqi figures: 165 Iraqi police deaths

AP count: 3,246 U.S. troops killed in Iraq since March 2003

Iraqi civilian deaths: 1,872 says the Iraqi ministry  

* * * *

   So if the Bush clan  says that the ' surge '  is working in Iraq, they must be referring to the deaths of the U.S. troops being higher than the Iraqis.

   If more troops are getting killed than are the Iraqis,then a few things are going on here.

  1 ) Our troops are showing up for work and the Iraqis aren't.

  2 ) Our troops are not quite as good as the Iraqi troops are

    We all know that the United States troops are showing up for work and that they are doing the majority of the fighting. That is a given no matter what those hoods in the White House and Fox News will tell you.

   We certainly know that the United States troops are much better than the Iraqi troops will ever be, so that leaves one other choice.

  The Iraqi troops aren't doing jack shit! Period! If the Iraqis were taking the lead in their own country then they would be pushing up daisies at a higher rate than U.S. troops are.

   We are slightly better armed and equipped ( ? ) than our host is yet we still get knocked off more than they do? There is something wrong with this picture.

   The word is that the United States is going after Iran very soon ( April 6 ), and if this is even close to right, which I doubt, then we will all get to watch the presidents ' surge ' in action.

    More ' surge ' in troops and more  ' surge ' in U.S. casualties.

   Thanks George!

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Sweating During Communion

   I could not resist this letter to the all mighty Mr. Donahue

   From PatriotBoy

 

Saturday, March 31, 2007
Why I sweat during communion

William Donahue
Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights
Dear Mr. Donahue,
While I'm glad you won your battle against the artist who created the naked chocolate Jesus, I don't totally agree with your reasons for taking him on. I'm not at all offended that the artist planned to shoot creamy nougat out of Our Saviours wounds or that he planned to serve Our Lord's fine chocolate flesh to the public--it's kind of what communion is all about, isn't it?
Nor am I particularly upset with the artist for sculpting the Redeemer's immaculate thingy, although the thought that the communion host transubstantiates into something with a penis is very discomforting, particularly because I get kind of excited when I think about it. Don't get me wrong. I'm sure the Pope has had similar thoughts many, many times, so I guess it's OK. I mean, it doesn't make me any more homosexual than the Pope. Right?
I'm more concerned about the size of his sacred member. It looks like it must be, what, five inches long? That's nearly three times longer than normal. You know the minute a guy's wife sees something like that, the jokes about not being made in God's image are going to start flying. It's bad enough we're always being called names like "Vienna Sausage Boy" and "Mr. Softy" as it is. Are we going to have to endure taunts about being a fallen angel or The Little Drummer Boy, too?
Anyway, I guess the point is now moot thanks to you.
Heterosexually yours (really, despite the thoughts I have during communion),
Gen. JC Christian, patriot

 

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Questions for Karl Rove-and President Bush

March 29, 2007   The San Diego Union- Tribune

By Elizabeth Holtzman and Cynthia L. Cooper

The stealth dismissal of U.S. attorneys by the Bush administration carries echoes of the Nixon administration firing special prosecutor Archibald Cox in 1973. Now, as then, we may be witnessing criminal acts of obstruction of justice at the highest levels of government. If left to fester, they will poison our system.

Cox was investigating White House misdeeds when Nixon told Attorney General Elliot Richardson to fire him. Richardson refused and resigned, as did Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus. Third-in-charge, Robert Bork, complied, and the “Saturday Night Massacre,” as it was called, came to epitomize an imperial administration, acting above the law and using its power to interfere with legitimate processes of justice.

Outrage among the American people triggered the impeachment inquiry against Nixon and his eventual resignation.

In the current U.S. attorney massacre, the public outrage and the line of inquiry invited by these events feel eerily familiar: Why were these eight U.S. attorneys ousted? Why did the Justice Department misrepresent the reasons for the firings? Why were political aide Karl Rove and other top administration advisers involved in the decisions of whom to fire? Why is Attorney General Alberto Gonzales' aide who helped coordinate the firings, Monica Goodling, invoking the Fifth Amendment to avoid testifying before Congress? And what did the president know and when did he know it?

So far the press and Congress have followed evidence of two patterns of firing – for refusing to smear enemies and refusing to protect friends. Fired prosecutors David Iglesias of New Mexico and John McKay of Washington would not pursue criminal voter fraud charges against political opponents in the way the administration wanted. Fired U.S. Attorney Carol Lam of San Diego had prosecuted and was investigating Republicans.

Removal of Frederick A. Black in Guam immediately after he began investigating lobbyist Jack Abramoff, a Bush friend, may be been a precursor to this.

A third firing pattern may exist: using firings to influence election outcomes.

E-mails suggest political strategist Rove's involvement. Rove's job is helping his wing of the GOP win future campaigns. What does that have to do with firing judicial appointees?

Consider the districts they served in: Arkansas, site of Hillary Clinton's first steps into politics as the state's first lady; San Francisco, Democratic House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi's district; Nevada, Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's state; New Mexico, presidential candidate Bill Richardson's state. North Carolina, home of former senator and presidential hopeful John Edwards, was considered but passed over by the Bush administration's ax.

Arizona, where U.S. Attorney Paul Charleton, with a particular reputation for excellence, was fired, is home to presidential candidate and sometime Bush critic John McCain. Michigan, where the prosecutor was inexplicably fired, is home to chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee and a staunch Iraq war opponent, Carl Levin (up for re-election in 2008). Arizona and Michigan are both important swing states, where vote suppression or trumped up charges could tip the balance in an election.

Let's get to the bottom of this. Congress has many tough questions for Rove and others that need asking and answering now. How were the ousted prosecutors selected? What do the reported 16 to 18 days of missing e-mails say?

President Nixon's office managed to erase audiotapes with key evidence, which became one of the grounds for his impeachment. The current missing e-mails may present the same obstruction of justice.

The president must be questioned, too, along the same precise lines as in Watergate: What did he know, and when did he know it?

Federal prosecutors have extensive powers and substantial budgets. We need them to investigate mob racketeering, terrorists (homegrown and international), human trafficking, market manipulations, government fraud, environmental crimes, violations of civil liberties and other criminal activities. Deploying them to conduct witch-hunts of politicians of opposing views or to suppress votes is a blatant misuse of their important power.

If Rove or President Bush tried to do this, it is they who need firing. A president must uphold the law, not to subvert it for political or partisan ends. As we learned in Watergate, our Constitution and our shared values are more important than any single officeholder.

* * * *

 Holtzman, former prosecutor and member of Congress who served on the House Judiciary Committee during the Nixon impeachment proceedings, and Cooper an attorney, are co-authors of “The Impeachment of George W. Bush” (Nation Books, 2006).

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Bud Cummins On The Department Of Justice

   Bud Cummins wrote a piece at Salon  pretty much making the case for what the Bush administration has done to the rule of law at the Department of Justice.

   Keep in mind that the downward spiral at the DoJ started when Bush put John Ashcroft at the helm to do his bidding. It just continued with Alberto Gonzales.

In recent weeks, I have been asked continually whether I think any number of specific prosecutions and other activities by the Department of Justice around the country reveal "politicization" of the department by the Bush administration. The answer is: I have no specific information about that. But the question goes to the most important issue highlighted by the controversy over the dismissal of myself and seven other United States attorneys: the credibility of the Department of Justice.

The president had an absolute right to fire us. We served at his pleasure, and that meant we could be dismissed for any reason or for no reason. And we all accepted that fact without complaint. When challenged by Congress, the leaders of the Department of Justice could have refused to explain. Or, they could have explained the truth. But apparently the truth behind some or all of the firings was embarrassing. So, instead, they said it was because of "performance." We didn't accept that, because it wasn't the truth.

In spite of statements and representations to the contrary, there was no credible performance review process prior to the firings -- at least, not using the definition of "performance" known to most people. There is not one document to evidence such a review. The department's leaders did not consult any of the reports or the people that could have provided information relevant to the performance of the U.S. attorneys they fired. In fact, in the case of my seven colleagues, they actually fired some pretty damn good U.S. attorneys -- and knowledgeable people in those attorneys' communities back home know that to be the truth. Nobody seems to believe the department's explanations....

Put simply, the Department of Justice lives on credibility. When a federal prosecutor sends FBI agents to your brother's house with an arrest warrant, demonstrating an intention to take away years of his liberty, separate him from his family, and take away his property, you and the public at large must have absolute confidence that the sole reason for those actions is that there was substantial evidence to suggest that your brother intentionally committed a federal crime. Everyone must have confidence that the prosecutor exercised his or her vast discretion in a neutral and nonpartisan pursuit of the facts and the law....

You only get one chance to hold on to your credibility. My team, which holds temporary custody of the Department of Justice, has blown it in this case. The Department of Justice will be paying for it for some time to come. Lots of sound investigations and convictions are now going to be questioned. That is a crying shame, because most of the 110,000 employees to whom the attorney general referred in a recent news conference, are neutral, nonpartisan public servants and do incredible work. A lot of President Bush's political appointees have done a lot of great work, too. Sadly, because of the damage done by this protracted scandal, which the administration has handled poorly at every turn, none of that good work is currently being recognized. And more ominously, the credibility of the Department of Justice may no longer be, either.

    So what we have now is another department of the United States government which has no credibility left to it as far as the top leaders are concerned.

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Terrorism Supporter David Hicks Gets Nine Month Prison Term

    Gitmo detainee David Hicks was sentenced to seven years in prison by a military judge after he plead guilty to supporting terrorism but he will do only nine months because the rest of the term was suspended.

   Mr. Hicks will be doing his time back in his native country of Australia to which the United States has until May 29 to move him there.  Source

   It could be done faster than that if the U.S. chooses to do so, but you know how our government is when it comes to getting anything done in a timely fashion.

Under a plea bargain deal with the prosecution, Hicks could only be sentenced to a maximum of seven years.

The plea deal also specifies that any term beyond nine months be suspended, the judge at the sentencing hearing on Friday evening revealed.

   Here's the strangest part of this plea bargain.

As part of his plea deal, Hicks has agreed not to speak to the media for a year, not to receive any money for his story and not to sue the US government.

   We have all heard of the allegations of Mr. Hicks having been beaten by United States forces when he was captured in Afghanistan and of being sedated ( tranquilized ) before he was told of the charges against him.

    He had to withdraw those claims as part of his plea bargain agreement.

    

 

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Friday, March 30, 2007

Pat Tillman's Death And The United States,Bush and Crime

   We all know that it took a month for the Pentagon to get straight with the American public and Tillman's family about his death.

   President ( ? ) Bush wanted to tell everyone that Cpl. Tillman was killed in an ambush, and this is according to a memo that the A.P. got their hands on. You will recall that Tillman was killed by his own people in Afghanistan.

   The Pentagon released their findings which looked into Tillman's death  and into the military on whether they tried to cover the death up.

The investigators recommended that nine Army officers, including McChrystal, be held accountable for errors in reporting the friendly fire death to their superiors and to Tillman's family. McChrystal was found "accountable for the inaccurate and misleading assertions" contained in papers recommending Tillman get the Silver Star.

Some of the officers involved said they wanted to wait until the investigations were complete before informing the Tillman family.

The latest document obtained by the AP suggests that officials at least as high as Abizaid knew the truth weeks before the family.     Source

   First off, I would say that it is a given that the military was attempting to cover death of Corporal Tillman up. What is really beneath contempt is the fact they waited weeks before telling the dead man's family and then lying about the circumstances to top it off!

   Is every one and everything that has anything to do with Bush/Cheney crooked and criminal? It would not surprise me if the White House cleaning lady has something corrupt going on!

    What kind of pieces of shit did the ignorant ( STUPID ) citizens of the United States put into the White House? A liar, business failure, failure at life, " C " grade student, thief, and pretty much a momma's boy. The man can't think for himself and I bet that the cleaning lady or either Cheney has to put his shoes on for him in the morning.

   George Bush/Dick Cheney have done nothing but continually drain the life out of the United States in everyway possible.

    Our Democratic controlled congress wants to now give Bush timelines on the United States troop withdrawal from Iraq.

  I cannot speak for you, but when I went and voted last November, I was voting for people who would get our friends and family out of Iraq NOW, not in twelve months, or eighteen months. Now means now!

       George Bush/Dick Cheney

              IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Six Muslim Men File Lawsuit Against Passengers and Airline

  The six Muslim men who were taken off of an airplane last fall have sued the passengers who complained about them and the airline also. As well they should! They were accused of suspicious behavior because they were praying and chanting in Arabic, while they were waiting to board the plane, among other things.

   Naturally, the argument against this lawsuit is that perhaps the passengers waiting in the airports will not speak up if they see something suspicious going on.

   That is a valid argument but there is also another side to this which few people have thought about.

   Suppose that you are a business traveler on your way to New York city from Miami, for example. Let's say that you accidentally bump into another passenger while boarding the plane and that person isn't happy with an " I'm sorry " so they go an tell the nearest airport security guard that you mumbled something about the United States, and that is sounded like you might be planning on doing something destructive on the plane. Or the passenger says that you looked as if you had a weapon under you coat or whatever.

   What happens? Your ass gets dragged off of the plane and you get detained in one of the airport cells until the police or and/or the feds arrive for questioning. Then you will more than likely be searched, as will your belongings. Do you think that the plane is going to wait for you?

  By the time all of this is over, you have been degraded, humiliated, missed your flight, and lost out on a very big contract that your company was counting on.

   All because you pissed some moron off or because somebody did not like the way that you looked or acted or spoke.

   Should that moron be allowed to cost you money and a job maybe and leave you no recourse? I think not.

    This civil rights lawsuit was filed earlier in March and many lawyers are concerned about this, so much so that many are offering to represent the unnamed passengers for free.

Omar Mohammedi, the New York City attorney representing the Muslim clerics, said that he would not be going after the passengers who had raised valid security concerns, but stated that he believes that a few passengers acted out of prejudice and bad faith.    Source

Mohammedi  "As an attorney, I have seen a lot of abuse by the general public when it comes to members of the community creating stories that do not exist."

Read More

 

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USA TODAY Poll Says Bush And Aides Should Answer Investigation Question

    USA TODAY released a USA Today/Gallup Poll on Thursday which covered quite a bit of ground on issues dealing with whether people felt that Bill Clinton was still the same now as he was back in his days at the White House, who would you vote for between Hillary Clinton and Obama, among other things.

   I am more concerned with this question and answer.

 

4. If Congress investigates the Justice Department’s dismissals of the eight U.S. attorneys, in your view, should President Bush and his aides invoke "executive privilege" to protect the White House decision making process, or should they drop the claim of executive privilege and answer all questions being investigated]?

BASED ON 526 ADULTS (Margin of error: ±5 percentage points)

2007 Mar 23-25

Invoke executive privilege   Answer all questions    No opinion

            26                                         68                           6

 

  This is one poll that the Bush crowd will certainly ignore as there isn't an honest bone in their bodies.

 

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Kyle Sampson Has " I Don't remember " Seizure 122 Times During Testimony

    Gotta love those criminal Republicans!

          

Kyle Sampson

"I could have and should have helped to prevent this," Sampson offered. "I let the attorney general and the department down. . . . I failed to organize a more effective response. . . . It was a failure on my part. . . . I will hold myself responsible. . . . I wish we could do it all over again."

   Since Sampson was under orders to do these things, I am sure that doing the right thing was the farthest thought from his mind.

   In case you haven't heard yet, the Republicans mistakenly ( ? ) sent word  to the Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy , saying,

"We've just received word that the Republicans have objected, under the Senate rules, to this meeting continuing."   Source

    The Republicans are saying that it was an accident, but how do you accidentally send out a notice such as this one? This action disrupted the entire hearings for quite some time in which the Democrats pretty much had a field day complaining about the GOP.

"The Republicans are the ones that don't want to have the hearing," Leahy inveighed. "What bothers me is if nobody has anything to hide, why not have these hearings, why not have them in the open?" In the senatorial equivalent of the "we shall fight on the beaches" speech, he continued: "We will have the hearings if we have to have them in the evenings or on weekends or during recess!"

      It is noted that Sampson had used the "I don't remember" phrase 122 times during over seven hours of questioning.

   Some of the questions and answers.

Leahy: "Since the 2004 election, did you speak with the president about replacing U.S. attorneys?"

Sampson: "I don't ever remember speaking to the president after the 2004 election."  ( He remembered later that he had )

Leahy: "Did you have further communications with the White House regarding the plan to regard and replace several U.S. attorneys?"

Sampson:"I don't remember specifically."

Leahy:"I wish you did remember.I would hope that you would search your memory as we go along."

After Schumer elicited three consecutive I-don't-remembers, John Cornyn (R-Tex.) objected to the questioning style.

Leahy overruled him. "We're trying to find what in heaven's name he does remember," the chairman said.

Schumer persisted, eventually asking the witness a question about Rove's role. "I don't remember," Sampson said. "I don't remember anything like that. I don't think so. I don't remember. I don't remember."     WaPo

   So what is the going rate for convenient memory these days? Bush and Cheney must be handing out the Richard Nixon staff control  " I don't remember " manual to all of their co-conspirators just in case they feel the need to slip up and tell the truth.

   In the real world, you and I could be arrested just for being suspected of doing something against that is against the law even if the police have very little evidence to support the arrest.

   Maybe the feds should start showing up in some of these politicians offices with some arrest warrants and leading these crooks out in handcuffs. Even with all of their lawyers in tow, I'll bet that the memories of quite a few of them would get better really fast, especially with an arrest on their record.

   It's just a though, mind you.

    

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Dana Perino On War Funds, Saudi Arabia and The U.S. Occupation Of Iraq

    Let us now take a peek at today's White House press briefing with Dana Perino.

   Perino is being questioned about the comments from Saudi King Abdullah who stated that the United States was wrong to be in Iraq.

   White House Press Briefing    March 29,2007

Helen.

Q I have two questions on the Middle East. Has the President been in touch with King Abdullah on his critical comments that we're wrong to be in Iraq?

MS. PERINO: Not that I'm -- no. The President only spoke to President Roh this morning, of South Korea. There have been no other calls that I know of.

Let me just remind you of something I said this morning, which is the United States and Saudi Arabia cooperate on a wide number of issues. It is not accurate to say that the United States is occupying Iraq. We are there under --

Q It is not right to say we're occupying Iraq --

MS. PERINO: That's right.

Q -- with 150,000 troops there?

MS. PERINO: Helen, we are there at the invitation of the sovereign government of Iraq that was democratically elected --

Q Did we invade that country?

MS. PERINO: We were there under the U.N. Security Council resolution, and we are there now at the -- I think one of the things to point out -- and I think somebody brought up the Talabani comments this morning -- is that he was talking about the initial when we -- initially when we went in, of establishing a coalition provisional authority, rather than an Iraqi provisional authority. And we were there --

Q Did we have a right to go in?

MS. PERINO: We were there under a U.N. mandate, yes.

Q I have another question then. Does the U.S. take any responsibility for the reign of terror in Tal Afar yesterday between the Sunnis and the Shiites, where the Sunnis were killed, execution style, about 70 or so?

MS. PERINO: It was a horrible and atrocious day. I think that the people --

Q Well, do we take any responsibility for that?

MS. PERINO: I think the people who committed those atrocities are the ones who are responsible. And I know that the United States forces, the coalition forces that are there, who are working alongside the Iraqi security forces, are working to bring security to the region.

This is exactly what we're talking about --

Q We had nothing to do with their killing each other?

MS. PERINO: The people who commit atrocities are the ones who are responsible for committing atrocities.

* * * *

 

Peter.

Q You said that the congressional war resolutions are inconsistent with the Iraq Study Group. Do you include the Senate plan, which, as I understand it, asks for a goal, but not a firm deadline, of removing them by March 2008? How is that different from the --

MS. PERINO: Well, the one thing I understand about the Senate bill is that it calls for troops to start withdrawing in 120 days, with the goal of being out March of 2008. And I think the President sees that as an arbitrary timetable.

Q But that's meant to be a goal as opposed to a firm --

MS. PERINO: The goal is to get American troops home as soon as possible, but to do it in a way that is one where they can complete the mission.

Q How is that different from what the Iraq Study Group said?

MS. PERINO: Well, the Iraq Study Group --

Q They also said that they would like a goal of removing combat troops by March 2008.

MS. PERINO: Well, I think that the piece that I would point to in the Senate bill is where they say that troops need to start leaving within 120 days.

Q Well, to get out by March 2008, you logistically have to, so that's not really all that --

MS. PERINO: Well, I think that that's just signaling -- I mean, that's like this is the bill for our defeat, this is the bill that mandates our failure. You start walking away in 120 days, and what does that do for the Iraqis that we promised we'll be there and we'll be able to help them secure their country?

Q That may or may not be. That's not my question. My question is, how is that inconsistent with the Iraq Study Group?

MS. PERINO: Regarding the Senate bill? I'll take a look and get back to you.* (see footnote)

* * * *

Q Dana, going back to the 2008 budget resolution, when you were talking about an increase of taxes, which I guess -- are meaning it doesn't extend the Bush tax cuts --

MS. PERINO: Correct. And so it will end up being the largest tax increase in American history.

Q If the GOP, when it was in control of Congress, couldn't extend them either, what could the President expect to get from a Democratically-controlled Congress?

MS. PERINO: Well, fair point. Obviously, our system of -- we would have liked to have seen a budget passed last year. That didn't happen. A continuing resolution had to be passed in February. And so we expect to see tax relief for the American people, because -- especially because it's not just tax relief for tax relief's sake, it's because it has results. We've had a strong and growing economy because of the President's tax cuts early on, and that's one of the things that the President wants to keep going throughout his administration. We've got 22 months left, or so.

Q Can he get that from a Democratically-controlled Congress?

MS. PERINO: We're going to work on it.

* * * *

 

* Footnote: The Senate bill calls for an arbitrary retreat beginning in 120 days after passage of its legislation. This is not a goal, it is a rigid and arbitrary deadline. The bill states: "The President shall commence the phased redeployment of U.S. forces from Iraq not later than 120 days after the date of the enactment of this Act." Baker Hamilton explicitly rejected this approach, saying: "The point is not for the U.S. to set timetables or deadlines for withdrawal, an approach that we oppose."

That the Senate bill also sets as a "goal" the completion of this withdrawal by March 31, 2008, does not change the mandatory requirement that withdrawal begin by a date certain -- regardless of facts on the ground or the views of U.S. military commanders in the field.

 

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Kyle Sampson Points Finger At Gonzales and Miers

   Oh yes, the plot thickens!

   Kyle Sampson told the Senate Judiciary Committee today that A. G. Alberto Gonzales and Harriet Miers both approved of the firings of eight federal prosecutors.   Source

    Kyle Sampson:  "I and others made staff recommendations but they were approved and signed off on by the principals.   The decision makers in this case were the attorney general and the counsel to the president."

    That would be Gonzales and Miers.

    Sampson also said that both of these characters were deeply involved over which prosecutors to fire for two years during the discussions.

"The distinction between 'political' and 'performance-related' reasons for removing a United States attorney is, in my view, largely artificial.      Some were asked to resign because they were not carrying out the president's and the attorney general's priorities. In some sense that may be described as political by some people."        Read More

   This band of Republicans may be the worst political crooks in some time but even they understand that lying for Mr.Bush and his top hoods isn't worth doing time for.  I'm sure that there will be a few who will attempt to stretch the truth or lie outright when they are subpoenaed to testify.

   Karl Rove is one member of the crime family who comes to mind as does Condi Rice.

   The investigating committees will just have to keep working their ways up the ladder until Bush can be brought to some sort of real justice.

   Maybe then, Bush will understand that it is still " We, the people ".

               IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!!

 

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Saudi Arabia Backing Away From Bushco

      The Saudis are returning to their true form it would seem.

New York Times

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, March 28 — King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia told Arab leaders on Wednesday that the American occupation of Iraq was illegal and warned that unless Arab governments settled their differences, foreign powers like the United States would continue to dictate the region’s politics.

The king’s speech, at the opening of the Arab League meeting here, underscored growing differences between Saudi Arabia and the Bush administration as the Saudis take on a greater leadership role in the Middle East, partly at American urging.

The Saudis seem to be emphasizing that they will not be beholden to the policies of their longtime ally.

* * * *

       Douglas Farah makes note that

Saudi Arabia has recently reasserted itself by brokering the Fatah-Hamas, hosting the Iranian president and threatening to arm the Sunni insurgents in Iraq.

This seems to me to be a reversion to true Saudi form, as their hearts have never been in the U.S.-led, sporadic efforts to encourage confrontation with jihadists and the wahhabi clergy. The governing system is simply too intertwined with the wahhabist stream of insular, aggressive and violent Islam to make a break and survive.

Saudi Arabia has also apparently moved to rehabilitate even the few terrorist financiers it agreed to designate, notably Wael Julaidan, an al Qaeda founder. He is apparently now under no restrictions at all, and is free to work, speak and write as he sees fit.

 

  

 

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What you Think About Homosexuals In The Military, Should Congress Use Power Of The Purse To Set Iraq Deadlines

  I'm one of those people who get emails from most of the political Websites and such who are always polling their members and readers on certain issues.

   I like to know how the Representatives and Senators in my state and district vote so I visit with congress.org quite a bit. Of course, I also receive their email updates and what have you, and this is where the following info comes from. I couldn't find the info at the website but I'm sure that it is there somewhere. 

 

SHOULD WASHINGTON, DC GET A VOTE IN CONGRESS?
A bill is under consideration in Congress to give voting rights to the Congressional delegate from Washington, DC.  The bill would also give the state of Utah another Congressional representative. Currently, the representative from Washington, DC may vote in committee and on amendments on the floor if their vote would not change the outcome.  Do you support a bill to give Democratic leaning Washington DC a voting member of Congress balanced by a new Congressional seat for GOP friendly Utah?

Yes, I support the bill to give Washington DC the right to vote in Congress

No, I oppose the bill to give Washington, DC the right to vote in Congress


UPDATE:  PRESIDENT BUSH SUPPORTS ATTORNEY GENERAL GONZALES
The President reiterated his support for his Attorney General after new information indicated that Gonzales may have been more involved than previously thought. Should the President fire him and advisor Karl Rove? Thus far you have told Congress and the President:

- 52% said Yes, the firings were political and make us question the process
- 48% said No, they have the right to fire employees without interference

UPDATE: HOUSE APPROVES RESOLUTION TO END THE WAR IN IRAQ BY SEPT. 2008
The House approved a budget for the Iraq war with conditions to end the war by the September 2008 deadline.  Do you support their vote to use spending bills to set deadlines for Iraq?  Tell Congress how you feel about their vote.
- 41% said Yes, Congress should use it's budgeting power to set deadlines
- 59% said No, managing the war should remain with the President
Gays in the Military - Immoral Practice or Antiquated Policy?
Do you agree with General Pace and the military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy on gays in the military? Congress is expected to vote on a resolution this year to end the policy. This is what Congress has heard thus far:
- 58% said Yes, homosexuality is immoral and incompatible with military service
- 42% said No, the policy is antiquated and the General's comments are demoralizing

 

 

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Rep. Dennis Kucinich: " Democrats were to quick to compromise "

Kucinich: Why couldn’t she have said: “This war must end”? Congress has the power to cut off funds. Congress has the power to limit the funds. Congress could have taken a new direction. Let’s face it, Democrats are expected to do that. ... We need to go in a new direction. And that direction is out. And the fact that we gave the president money today to keep the war going through the end of his term constitutes a sellout of the interests of the American people. And a continuation of the war for another year at least, possibly two, and this is just wrong. Just totally wrong.

   That was Rep. Dennis Kucinich in response to a statement from James Harris ( Truthdig ) who had said that Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats couldn't have gone in with a more tougher stance on Iraq and who is one that thinks Pelosi did a good job in getting this Iraq troop withdrawal bill passed.

   In the telephone interview between Harris and Dennis Kucinich ( D- OH ), Kucinich has a few valid points in being a little ill with the way that the House has passed a bill that still gives Bush money for a war that could last into 2008 and beyond. Kucinich's entire argument is that the American voters told the Congress and the Senate to get the troops out of Iraq now, not in stages or in the future. Mr. Kucinich is right.

   The transcript of the phone interview is located right HERE

 

 

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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

John Edwards On The Move As He Gains Support

   It looks like John Edwards is getting quite a bit more support since he and his wife ( Elizabeth ) made the announcement last week that Mrs. Edwards' cancer had come back.

    Contributions to the Edwards campaign ( via Internet )  have jumped up by 50 percent since last week and voters support Mr. Edwards decision to continue his campaign by 2 to 1 according to a CBS poll that was released on Wednesday.   Source

In an interview with People magazine posted online Wednesday, Elizabeth Edwards said the cancer does not appear to have spread beyond her bone to any organs. Her doctor estimates she has at least 10 years left to live, she said.

"I just need the medicine to catch up to me," Edwards told the magazine. "The medicine is going to catch up to this condition — it's just a question of when."

Ross Baker, a political science professor at Rutgers University, said Edwards' fundraising, in some ways, can be compared to a telethon.

"It's a very touching story, and the same kind of motivation that causes people to reach for their checkbooks," Baker said.

The Edwards campaign is pushing hard to raise as much as possible before the end of the fundraising period. Campaign manager David Bonior sent a message to supporters Wednesday urging voters to donate, saying, "this first test couldn't be more important."

* * * *

  Many of you know that I have supported John Edwards from almost the beginning. I will continue to do so as Mr. Edwards is the only contender for the presidential nomination who has shown and does continue to show any real morals.

   Maybe you should take a closer look at this individual when you have the time, as he is well worth the time.

 

    

With Iran, Could the Bush Clan Be Planning A New " Operation Northwoods " ?

   First off, Bush needs to get educated and so does the American public! I'm not talking about those of you who pay attention to what is really going on in the White house and the rest of the world. I'm speaking to those of you who sit around with your heads stuck up your asses thinking that everything is going fine and dandy with the Iraq war and that Mr. Bush can do no wrong.

  Wake the fuck up! Many of you still believe that lord Bush isn't going to attack Iran and that he would never declare Marshall law in the United States.

    Let me explain something to those of you who may be a little slow up in the attic.  Bush, Cheney, and the rest of the crooks in the White House have nothing to lose. They risk not one thing by attacking Iran.

  You can see the writing on the wall! It has already started with the little dispute between Iran and Great Britain over a ship that was supposedly boarded by the Iranians in international waters. The Iranians clam that the British ship was in its waters and they took the crew into custody.

   This is just what the White House and Mr. Blair could use as an excuse for invading Iran. I do think that there is more to come before the United States attacks Iran as this is just the start for an administration that has been trying to come up with a reason for war.

  Back to the Bush Crime Family.

  You have at this time Alberto Gonzales facing calls to step down from his post as the U.S. Attorney General after hooking up with the White House to fire prosecutors that the Bush clan did not like. that is only because the prosecutors wouldn't indulge in the criminal activities that where ordered of them.

    At the currant rate that this scandal is going, Gonzales will be either fired or he will be the first impeachment casualty of the Bush Crime Family. Once Gonzales does go down, someone else will be next in line and close behind.

   Bushco understands very well that their days are numbered no matter what kind of road blocks they try to throw up. Bushco understands very well that  the possibility is there that they could face war crime charges and a host of other charges.

  There is only one way out for these criminals, and they are criminals, and that is to start another war ( Iran ), and hope the United States has another version of 9/11.

    Most United States citizens don't realize that part of the Patriot Act gives Bush and company the power to declare Marshall law if the United States is attacked by terrorist again. This would be the Bush Crime Family's only way to survive, for awhile at least.

   Keep in mind that J.F.K.'s military people were looking at ways to draw Cuba into war with America and one of those ways was to attack our own U.S. citizens and claim that it was the Cuban's.  I should note that Kennedy did not know of this plan, called Operation Northwoods.

   Read more on Operation Northwoods HERE and HERE.

   We all know that Bush and the rest of the cabal are nothing but snakes who like crawling around on their bellies while scaring the shit out of everyone. We also know that Bush and friends have no morals of any good use, so it should not surprise you if another variation of Operation Northwoods has been drawn up by this clan.

   Marshal law and war are the only way for this group of hoods to stay in power and to stay out of impeachment and out of indictment and out of prison, or so they think.

     IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Bush: On Iraq,Public Opinion Is On My Side

TPM

By Greg Sargent | bio

For a guy with an approval rating in the low thirties, President Bush sounded awfully sure of himself today. In his remarks this morning, President Bush actually seemed to suggest that when it comes to the current standoff between the White House and Congress over Dem efforts to mandate a pullout from Iraq in the war spending bill, public opinion is on his side -- in defiance of all polls showing the contrary.

From his remarks today:

Members of Congress need to stop making political statements, and start providing vital funds for our troops. They need to get that bill to my desk so I can sign it into law.

Now, some of them believe that by delaying funding for our troops, they can force me to accept restrictions on our commanders that I believe would make withdrawal and defeat more likely. That's not going to happen. If Congress fails to pass a bill to fund our troops on the front lines, the American people will know who to hold responsible.

Actually, the American people support the measures that the Democratic Congress is trying to implement to end the war -- so, yes, they probably will have a fairly good idea who should be held responsible if Bush vetoes these efforts against their will.

Pew poll, March 26:

A solid majority of Americans say they want their congressional representative to support a bill calling for a withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq by August 2008. Nearly six-in-ten (59%) say they would like to see their representative vote for such legislation, compared with just 33% who want their representative to oppose it.

Gallup poll, March 26:

Would you favor or oppose Congress taking each of the following actions in regards to the war in Iraq?

Requiring U.S. troops to meet strict readiness criteria before being deployed to Iraq: Favor 80%, Oppose 15%

Setting a time-table for withdrawing all U.S. troops from Iraq no later than the fall of 2008: Favor 60%, Oppose 38%

Also note Bush's line about how members of Congress think "they can force me" to do what the public wants. That's what this has come down to now.

"Me."

Delusional.

 

Easter Surprise: Attack On Iran

    I read the following over at Common Dreams and I thought to share it with you as it all makes sense when dealing with this Bush administration. This leaves some chilling thoughts in the mind.

Easter Surprise: Attack on Iran, New 9/11… or Worse

by Heather Wokusch    Wednesday, March 28, 2007

“There’s an old saying in Tennessee — I know it’s in Texas, probably in Tennessee — that says, fool me once, shame on — shame on you. Fool me — you can’t get fooled again.” – George W. Bush, September 2002

“This notion that the United States is getting ready to attack Iran is simply ridiculous… Having said that, all options are on the table.” – George W. Bush, February 2005

The Bush administration continues moving closer to a nuclear attack on Iran, and we ignore the obvious buildup at our peril.

Russian media is sounding alarms. In February, ultra-nationalist leader Vladimir Shirinovsky warned that the US would launch a strike against Tehran at the end of this month. Then last week, the Russian News and Information Agency Novosti (RIA-Novosti) quoted military experts predicting the US will attack Iran on April 6th, Good Friday. According to RIA-Novosti, the imminent assault will target Iranian air and naval defense capabilities, armed forces headquarters as well as key economic assets and administration headquarters. Massive air strikes will be deployed, possibly tactical nuclear weapons as well, and the Bush administration will attempt to exploit the resulting chaos and political unrest by installing a pro-US government.

Sound familiar? It’s Iraq déjà vu all over again, and we know how well that war has gone.

Seymour Hersh has published numerous articles in The New Yorker detailing the Bush administration’s plans to invade Iran. His latest, “The Redirection,” discussesS participation in Iran-based clandestine operations, the kidnapping of hundreds of Iranians (including many “humanitarian and aid workers”) by US forces and the shocking revelation that an Iran-Contra-type scandal has been run out of Vice President Dick Cheney’s office with some of the illicit funds going to groups “sympathetic to al-Qaeda.”

“The Redirection” also reports that the Pentagon has been planning to bomb Iran for a year and that a recently-established group connected to the Joint Chiefs of Staff is formulating a assault strategy to be implemented “upon orders from the President, within twenty-four hours.” Hersh notes that current capabilities “allow for an attack order this spring,” possibly when four US aircraft-carrier battle groups are scheduled to be in the Persian Gulf simultaneously.

Meanwhile, the Democratic Congress busies itself with non-binding, timid resolutions on Iraq and recently altered a military-funding bill to make it easier for Bush to invade Iran. As Rep. Shelley Berkley (D-NV) explained, language demanding that Bush seek congressional approval before attacking Iran “would take away perhaps the most important negotiating tool that the U.S. has when it comes to Iran.”

Such sheer ignorance and blind denial would be laughable if it weren’t marching us into Armageddon.

But with this Administration (and this Congress, apparently) diplomacy be damned.

It’s now widely known that Iran had broached peace talks with the US in 2003 - Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice admitted as much in 2006 when she said, “what the Iranians wanted earlier was to be one-on-one with the United States.” Yet the White House rejected Tehran’s overture outright and Rice has since developed selective amnesia, later saying of the Iranian proposal, ” I don’t remember seeing any such thing.

For its part, the UN Security Council recently tightened sanctions aimed at pressuring Iran to cease uranium enrichment, and in response, Iran announced it would cooperate less with the International Atomic Energy Agency.

It’s worth noting that Iran is a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and says that its program falls under the legally permitted right to “peacefully use nuclear technology.” In contrast, Israel has neither signed nor ratified the NPT and the US would breach the Treaty by conducting a nuclear attack against Iran.

Besides, the Bush administration’s message to its enemies has been very clear: if you possess WMD you’re safe, and if you don’t, you’re fair game. Iraq had no nuclear weapons and was invaded, Iran doesn’t as well and risks attack, yet that other “Axis of Evil” country, North Korea, reportedly does have nuclear weapons and is left alone. When considering that India and Pakistan (and presumably Israel) developed secret nuclear weapons programs yet remain on good terms with Washington, the case for war becomes even more tenuous.

What consequences would arise from a US attack on Iran? Retaliation, for one. Tehran promised a “crushing response” to any US or Israeli assault, and while the country - ironically - doesn’t possess nuclear weapons to scare off attackers, it does have other options. Iran boasts a standing army estimated at 450,000 personnel, as well as long-range missiles that could hit Israel and possibly even Europe. In addition, much of the world’s oil supply is transported through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow stretch of water which Iran borders to the north. In 1997, Iran’s deputy foreign minister warned that the country might close off that shipping route if ever threatened, and it wouldn’t be difficult. Just a few missiles or gunboats could bring down vessels and block the Strait, thereby threatening the global oil supply and shooting the price of crude oil to over $100 a barrel,with untold negative consequences for the world economy.

An attack on Iran would also inflame tensions in the Middle East, and could tip the scales towards a new geopolitical balance, one in which the US finds itself shut out by Russia, China, Iran, Muslim countries and the many others Bush has managed to alienate during his period in office.

The most horrific impact of a US assault on Iran, of course, would be the potentially catastrophic number of casualties. The Oxford Research Group predicted that up to 10,000 people would die if the US bombed Iran’s nuclear sites, and that an attack on the Bushehr nuclear reactor could send a radioactive cloud over the Gulf. If the US uses nuclear weapons, such as earth-penetrating “bunker buster” bombs, radioactive fallout would become even more disastrous.

The devastating implications of a US strike on Iran are clear. And that begs the question: how could the US public be convinced to enter another potentially ugly and protracted war?

Former CIA Officer Philip Giraldi chillingly noted that the Pentagon’s plans to attack Iran were drawn up “to be employed in response to another 9/11-type terrorist attack on the United States.” Writing in The American Conservative in August 2005, Giraldi added, “The plan includes a large-scale air assault on Iran employing both conventional and tactical nuclear weapons. Within Iran there are more than 450 major strategic targets, including numerous suspected nuclear-weapons-program development sites … As in the case of Iraq, the response is not conditional on Iran actually being involved in the act of terrorism directed against the United States.”

Chew on that one a minute. The Pentagon’s plan would be in response to a terrorist attack on the US, but not contingent upon Iran actually having been responsible. How outlandish is this scenario: another 9/11 hits the US, the administration says it has secret information implicating Iran, the US population demands retribution and bombs start dropping on Tehran.

While even contemplating another 9/11 brings shudders, it’s worth noting that last year, Congress quietly approved provisions making it easier for the President to declare federal martial law after a domestic terrorist incident. And recall that in late 2003, General Tommy Franks openly speculated on how a new 9/11 could lead to a military form of government: “a terrorist, massive, casualty-producing event somewhere in the Western world – it may be in the United States of America – that causes our population to question our own Constitution and to begin to militarize our country in order to avoid a repeat of another mass, casualty-producing event. Which in fact, then begins to unravel the fabric of our Constitution.”

Meanwhile, Iran conducted wargames in the Persian Gulf last week and just yesterday, the US Navy began its largest maneuvers in the region since the 2003 Iraq invasion, complete with over 100 US warplanes and 10,000 personnel.

The clock is ticking, and there’s far too much at stake.

If you’re from the US, contact your Senators today and ask them to support the Webb amendment prohibiting the Administration from attacking Iran without congressional approval. Tell them to support the Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and Sen. Kit Bond (R-Mo.) bill making it harder for Bush to declare martial law and take over the National Guard, and while you’re at it, tell your Senators to only fund troop withdrawal and to bring the troops home. Thank those Congress members who voted against more war funding.

We could be looking at WWIII. The time for positive action is now.

Heather Wokusch is the author of The Progressives’ Handbook: Get the Facts and Make a Difference Now, Volumes I and II. She can be reached via www.heatherwokusch.com and seen at www.youtube.com/heatherwokusch

      

John McCain In The State Of Denial, Again

  Back in the news is the John McCain Straight talk tour.

    It would seem to appear that Mr. McCain cannot keep his facts lined up. I think that  old-timer's disease is really starting to get the best of Mr. Flip-Flop in his golden years.

   We get this note from Think Progress

Transcript:

CNN’S JOHN ROBERTS: I wanted to talk to you about the situation in Iraq. Yesterday in an interview with Wolf Blitzer on The Situation Room. I want to play this back for you. You had this to say about the situation there.

[McCAIN CLIP]: General Petraeus goes out there almost every day in an unarmed humvee. I think you oughta catch up. You are giving the old line of three months ago. I understand it. We certainly don’t get it through the filter of some of the media.

ROBERTS: Senator, did you mean to say that, that General Petraeus goes out every day in an unarmed humvee?

SEN. JOHN McCAIN (R-AZ): I mean that there are neighborhoods safe in Iraq and he does go out into Baghdad and the fact is there has been significant progress and people are stuck in a time warp of three months ago. Of course, it’s still dangerous. Of course it’s still very dangerous. We only have two of the five brigades there and we are already seeing significant progress.

ROBERTS: Because I checked with General Petraeus’s people overnight and they said he never goes out in anything less than an up-armored humvee. You also told Bill Bennett on his radio program on Monday. You said there are neighborhoods in Baghdad where you and I could walk through those neighborhood today yet retired General Barry McCaffrey said no Iraqi government official, coalition soldier, diplomat reporter could walk the streets of Baghdad without heavily armed protection. We’ve got two different stories here. Who’s right?

McCAIN: Well, I’m not saying they could go without protection. The President goes around America with protection. So, certainly I didn’t say that.

CNN’s Baghdad correspondent Michael Ware, who has lived in Iraq for four years, said military sources greeted McCain’s comments yesterday with “laughter down the line.”

 

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Bill Maher On Valerie Plame and Patriotism

   It is Wednesday, the middle of the week! Two more days to go and the weekend will be upon us!

   Right now though, we are going to delve into the world of one Mr. Bill Maher as he speaks on the patriotism of Valerie Plame.

MAHER: And, indeed, the party that flatters itself that they protect America better is the party that has exhausted the military, left the ports wide open and purposefully outed a CIA agent, Valerie Plame.
That's not treason anymore? Outing a spy? Did I mention it was one of our spies? And how despicable that Bush's lackeys attempted to diminish this crime by belittling her service, like she was just some chick who hung around the CIA. "An intern, really. Groupie, if you want to be mean about it."
No. Big lie. Valerie Plame was the CIA's operational officer in charge of counter-proliferation. Which means she tracked loose nukes. So, when Bush said, as he once did, that his absolute, number-one priority was preventing terrorists from getting loose nukes, okay, that's what she worked on. That's what she devoted her life to, staying undercover for 20 years, maintaining two identities every goddamn day. This is extraordinary service to your country.
Valerie Plame was the kind of real-life secret agent George Bush dreams of being when he's not too busy pretending to be a cowboy or a fighter pilot.

   You can read the rest HERE or you can watch it below.

 

 

 

 

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The Christian Right's Propaganda?

      Here's a look at more of the Christian Right's attempt at rewriting the past to make it conform to the Bible.

    This is of course, a secular view which this site does not necessarily endorse. You all know that I do have a major problem with Christianity in this day and age and with the Christian Right in particular. The following article is not that far off with its subject matter.

   This is crossposted from AlterNet

Creation "Science" Is the Christian Right's Trojan Horse Against Reason

By Chris Hedges, Truthdig. Posted March 28, 2007.

Before they seize power and establish a world according to their doctrines, totalitarian movements conjure up a lying world of consistency which is more adequate to the needs of the human mind than reality itself; in which, through sheer imagination, uprooted masses can feel at home and are spared the never-ending shocks which real life and real experiences deal to human beings and their expectations. The force possessed by totalitarian propaganda -- before the movements have the power to drop iron curtains to prevent anyone's disturbing, by the slightest reality, the gruesome quiet of an entirely imaginary world--lies in its ability to shut the masses off from the real world." -- Hannah Arendt, "The Origins of Totalitarianism"

In the middle of the lobby of the 50,000-square-foot Creation Museum in Petersburg, Ky., a 20-foot waterfall tumbles. Two life-size figures of children with long black hair and in buckskin clothes play in the stream a few feet from two towering Tyrannosaurus Rex models that can move and roar. The museum, which cost $25 million to build and has a sea of black asphalt parking lots for school buses, has a scale model of Noah's ark that shows how Noah solved the problem of fitting dinosaurs into the three levels of the vessel--he loaded only baby dinosaurs. And on the wooden model, infant dinosaurs cavort with horses, giraffes, hippopotamuses, penguins and bears. There is an elaborate display of the Garden of Eden, where Adam and Eve, naked but strategically positioned so as not to display breasts or genitals, swim in a river as giant dinosaurs and lizards roam the banks.

Before Adam and Eve were expelled from paradise, museum visitors are told, all of the dinosaurs were peaceable plant-eaters. The evidence is found in Genesis 1:30, where God gives "green herb" to every creature to eat. There were no predators. T-Rex had such big teeth, the museum explains, so it could open coconuts. Only after Adam and Eve sinned and were cast out of paradise did the dinosaurs start to eat flesh. And Adam's sin is a key component of the belief system, for in the eyes of many creationists, in order for Jesus' death to be meaningful it had to atone for Adam's first sin.

The museum has a theater equipped with seats that shake and gadgets that spray mist at the audience as the story of God's six-day creation of the world unfolds on the screen and the sound system rocks the auditorium. There are 30-foot-high walls that represent the cliffs of the Grand Canyon, floors that resemble rocks embedded with fossils, and rooms where a "Christian" paleontologist counters the claims of an "evolutionist" paleontologist. It has the appearance of a real science museum, complete with a planetarium, a gift shop and plaques on the wall with quotes from creationist "scientists" who have the title doctor conspicuously before their names. It has charts, timelines and graphs with facts and figures. It is meant to be interactive, to create, like Universal Studios, a contrived reality with an array of costly animatronic men and women as well as moving dinosaurs.

The danger of creationism is that, like the pseudo-science of Nazi eugenics, it allows facts to be accepted or discarded according to the dictates of a preordained ideology. Creationism removes the follower from the rational, reality-based world. Signs, miracles and wonders occur not only in the daily life of Christians but in history, science, medicine and logic. The belief system becomes the basis to understand the world. Random facts and data are collected and made to fit into this belief system or discarded. When facts are treated as if they were opinions, when there is no universal standard to determine truth, in law, in science, in scholarship, or in the reporting of the events of the day, the world becomes a place where people can believe what they want to believe, where there is no possibility of reaching any conclusion not predetermined by those who interpret the official, divinely inspired text. This is the goal of creationists.

Other creationist museums are going up in Arkansas, Texas, California, Tennessee and Florida. Museums are part of a massive push to teach creationism in schools, part of a vast Christian publishing and filmmaking industry that seeks to rewrite the past and make it conform to the Bible. The front lines of the culture wars are the classrooms. The battle is one we are slowly losing. Twenty states are considering changing the way evolution is taught in order to include creationism or intelligent design. Only 13 percent of Americans in a 2004 Gallup poll, when asked for their views on human origins, said life arose from the strictly natural process of evolution. More than 38 percent said they believed God guided evolution, and 45 percent said the Genesis account of creation was a true story.2 Courses on intelligent design have been taught at Minnesota, Georgia, New Mexico and Iowa State universities, along with Wake Forest and Carnegie Mellon, not to mention Christian universities that teach all science through the prism of the Bible.

The museum is an illustration of the movement's marriage of primitive and intolerant beliefs with the modern tools of technology, mass communication, sophisticated fundraising and political organization. Totalitarian systems usually start as propagandistic movements that ostensibly teach people to "believe what they want." This is a ruse. This primacy of personal opinion, regardless of facts, destabilizes and destroys the primacy of all facts. This process leads inevitably to the big lie. Facts are useful only if they bolster the message. The use of mass-marketing techniques to persuade and convince, rather than brainwash, has led tens of millions of followers to accept the toxic totalitarian line by tricking them into believing it's their own. Ironically, at the outset the movement seemingly encourages people to think "independently" or "courageously."

At first all have, in the totalitarian belief system, a right to an opinion, or, in short, a right to believe anything. Soon, under the iron control of an empowered totalitarian movement, facts become worthless, kept or discarded according to an ideological litmus test. And once these movements achieve power, facts are ruthlessly manipulated or kept hidden to support the lie. Creationism is not about offering an alternative. Its goal is the destruction of the core values of the open society--the ability to think for oneself, to draw independent conclusions, to express dissent when judgment and common sense tell you something is wrong, to be self-critical, to challenge authority, to advocate for change and to accept that there are other views, different ways of being, that are morally and socially acceptable. We are beginning to see the growing intolerance that comes with the empowerment of these ideologues. There is a bill in the Texas Legislature to strip all mention of evolution from Texas school textbooks and institute mandatory Bible classes for all students. This is just the start.

And yet, coming from the modern age, these Christo-fascists cannot discount science. They employ jargon, methods and data that appear to be science, to make an argument for creationism. They have created parallel research and scholarly institutions. They pump out articles in self-published journals to provide "evidence" that homosexuals can be cured, that global warming is a myth, that abortion can cause breast cancer, that something they call "post-abortion syndrome" leads to deep depression and suicide and that abstinence-only education is an effective form of birth control. This pseudo-science has seeped into the public debate. It is disseminated by nervous and timid media anxious to give both sides in every argument. Those who have contempt for facts and truth, for honest research and inquiry, are given the same platform by the press as those who deal in a world of reality, fact and rationality.

The movement desperately needs the imprint of science to legitimize itself. It achieves this imprint by discrediting real science and claiming creationist science as true science. All attempts to argue the creationists out of their mythical belief, to persuade them with logic, evidence, scientific inquiry and fact, will fail. They have created a "fundamentalist science." They know they cannot return to the pre-Darwinian innocence that let them believe the Bible alone was enough. They need, in the midst of their flight from reality, to reassure their followers that science, science not contaminated by secular humanists and nonbelievers, is on their side. In this they are a distinctly modern movement.

They seek the imprint of science and scholarship to legitimize myth. This is a characteristic they share with all modern totalitarian movements, which co-opt the disciplines of law, science, medicine and scholarship to give a modern veneer to their primitive and superstitious belief systems, systems that allow the rulers to dictate reality and truth. The "paraprofessional" organizations formed by the Christian right, organizations of teachers, journalists, doctors, lawyers and scientists, mimic the activities of real professional groups. They seek to challenge the legitimacy and the power of the traditional organizations. The duplication of the structures and methods employed by the non-totalitarian world, the use of pseudo-science to dress up fantasy, is slowly undermining our legitimate scientific and educational institutions. It is destroying the foundations of our open society. It is ushering us into a world where lies are true.

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Chris Hedges is the former Middle East bureau chief for The New York Times and the author of "War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning."

Iraqi Police and Shiite Militia Kill 60 In Revenge Attacks

   Officials in Iraq say that as many as 60 Sunni people were killed today by Shiite militants and police who were hostile after the truck bombings in the northwestern section of Tal Afar. These were revenge killings, incase you didn't  notice that.

   The Iraqi army has arrested 18 policemen who were involved in this shooting spree after Sunni residents identified them as some who were shooting at residents and at their homes. No Shiite militiamen have been arrested as of yet.

  Hospital officials said that the men shot were between the ages of 15 and 50 and were shot in the back of the head.    Source

   Things just keep getting better and better in Iraq. This is the democracy that Bush has been put in place for the Iraqi people to live by?

   The only good thing about Iraqi justice is that the policemen who did this thing will be swiftly executed after their trials are over.

 

 

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Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Withdrawal Language Makes It Through The Senate

  As you may know by now, the Senate passed the bill for the Iraq war funding with its withdrawal deadlines still intact, by a very close vote.

50-48-2 was the vote and the following is a record of how the Democrats and the Republicans voted. Go to the  U.S. Senate for the complete rundown.

   The Short version from Daily Kos  Tue Mar 27, 2007

Democrats voting for amendment (or the wrong way):

Mark Pryor (AR)

Independents voting for it:

Joe Lieberman (CT)

Republicans voting against it:

Chuck Hagel (NE)
Gordon Smith (OR)

Not voting:

Mike Enzi (R-WY)
Tim Johnson (D-SD)

This means that the following Republicans facing tough or potentially tough reelection battles in 2008 just voted to escalate Bush's war with no accountability. These guys just voted to attach themselves even closer to Bush's hip:

Norm Coleman (MN)
Susan Collins (ME)
John Cornyn (TX)
Liddy Dole (NC)
Pete Domenici (NM)
Mitch McConnel (KY)
Pete Sessions (AL)
John Sununu (NH)
John Warner (VA)

Reid did an incredible job of keeping Democrats together. I mean, he even brought Ben Nelson aboard! Pretty impressive.

 

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Donald Rumsfeld Cannot Be Sued By Former Iraq/Afghanistan Prisoners

  Here we go with what is going on in the United States this evening.

   First off, a federal judge today said that former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld can't be tried on torture allegations  that may have took place in overseas prisons run by the U.S. military.

   Are we really surprised that U.S. District Judge Thomas F. Hogan threw out the lawsuit brought against Rumsfeld ( by the ACLU ) on behalf of the former prisoners who were imprisoned in both Iraq and Afghanistan? Judge Hogan said that Rumsfeld could not be held responsible for his actions while taken in his government job capacity.    Source

 AP

No matter how appealing it might seem to use the courts to correct allegations of severe abuses of power, Hogan wrote, government officials are immune from such lawsuits. Additionally, foreigners held overseas are not normally afforded U.S. constitutional rights.

"Despite the horrifying torture allegations," Hogan said, he could find no case law supporting the lawsuit, which he previously had described as unprecedented.

Allowing the case to go forward, Hogan said in December, might subject government officials to all sorts of political lawsuits. Even Osama bin Laden could sue, Hogan said, claiming two American presidents threatened to have him murdered.

"There is no getting around the fact that authorizing monetary damages remedies against military officials engaged in an active war would invite enemies to use our own federal courts to obstruct the Armed Forces' ability to act decisively and without hesitation," Hogan wrote Tuesday.

   

 

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Tony Snow

   You know that I frequently make fun of the White House press briefings which are held daily by Tony Snow, and I will continue to do so.

  But, Tony Snow has my best regards in dealing with his recurrence of cancer. I wish him the best, as do many others!

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The White House Wants No Oversight

White House Briefing

On the Congressional oversight of the White House, we have this from the days press briefing
by Dana Perino. To listen to this group you would think that the White House was meant to be able
to lie and steal without having to account for their actions.
What is really sad with these clowns is that they actually believe the shit that they are saying!
The claim is that the Congress doesn't have oversight of the White house since this would
just be an interview. If they GOP wants to play that game, then the Congress should turn
things into a full fledged hearing which will take the excuse away from the GOP.

Office of the Press Secretary
March 26, 2007

Press Briefing by Dana Perino
White House Conference Center Briefing Room

12:38 P.M. EDT
Q Okay, last thing. Where does it stand right now, in terms of the negotiations with Capitol Hill
on moving forward with testimony for White House aides like Karl Rove? And where do you stand
on just the broad issue of executive privilege? Is that something you anticipate the White House
will cite here?

MS. PERINO: We have not cited any particular privilege. There are long-standing constitutional
separation of powers issues that go all the way back to the framers, who thought about this long
and hard and could maybe anticipate things that we were going to be going through as a nation as
three branches have natural tensions amongst each other. So, no, we have not asserted any type
of privilege.

What we have done is, if you step back, the Congress said that they were going to authorize subpoenas
to the Justice Department, and Justice Department said, you don't need to; we'll be willing to come up,
we'll be willing to turn over documents. That said, they went ahead and issued subpoenas.
The White House -- they said they were going to issue subpoenas. We said, there's no need to
authorize subpoenas, because we have -- even though we don't have any responsibility to you, and you
don't have any specific oversight over the White House, we are willing to have our four officials that you've
asked for to go up and have an interview with members of Congress -- all those details to be worked
out -- and that we would release documents from here, from the White House, to outside entities.

That was an extraordinary compromise on our part from the beginning, and so we do feel like we
have compromised. We have made a very reasonable offer. I do know of no ongoing negotiations with
the Hill in regard to the offer that we have. If the Congress wants to choose confrontation over resolution,
that is their choice. But we remain hopeful that they would see the wisdom in working this out with us,
with this offer.

Q When you say that the Congress has no oversight over the White House -- Republican Senator
Chuck Hagel is
saying in Esquire Magazine this month that the President --

MS. PERINO: Quoting Esquire Magazine.

Q Well, a Republican Senator is quoted in there saying that, in fact, the President does not believe that --
Chuck Hagel believes the President doesn't think he needs to be held accountable, and that he drops
the word "impeachment," that perhaps others -- he's not saying himself -- but Hagel says, others may
want to bring up the word, impeachment, but --

MS. PERINO: I'm not going to comment on something as ridiculous as that.

Q A couple things. Just for the record, are the people who are not negotiating with Congress aware that
it is unprecedented for somebody like Karl Rove, or somebody who's giving even an interview, to have no
transcript kept of their closed-door interview, except in national security instances?

MS. PERINO: I don't know all the issues of precedent that go all the way back. I do know that people have
meetings all the time and they have discussions all the time, and there aren't transcripts produced all the
time. But this isn't --

Q Not according to the committee --

MS. PERINO: Let me finish, Jessica, which is that the White House -- the Congress does not have
oversight
over the White House. We are not -- this is not a hearing, this is not an interrogation --

Q What do you mean, don't have oversight?

Q But there is checks and balances, and that's the way the system has worked --

MS. PERINO: There are checks and balances, but we could have said, we're not going to talk to you at all.
But that's not what we did.

Q But that's a form of -- you don't see this as a form of confrontation, refusing to follow practice?

MS. PERINO: No, the way I see it is that it is a form of accommodation.

Q And so the White House is being accommodating by saying, we won't negotiate, take our offer or leave it?

MS. PERINO: We are being accommodating because we could have said, we're not going to talk to you at all,
and instead we've been quite generous and extraordinarily open about what we're willing to provide.
Sheryl.

Q Dana, you have Republican senators now saying that they need a transcript for this meeting, interview,
as you call it. It seems to be an area where if the White House would give a little bit, you might find some
give at least in your own party on Capitol Hill. Is this the White House's position that the offer for these
interviews without a transcript is final and that there will be no negotiation over the issue of a transcript?

MS. PERINO: I know of no negotiations that are ongoing. I do know that in regards to the transcript, we -- this
is not a hearing or an interrogation, and in order to avoid the appearance of that, we offered the interview. I do
understand that there are some people who would disagree with our position.

Q But I'm asking you --

MS. PERINO: I understand that there are some Republicans who think that we should offer a transcript,
as well. That is just not where we are right now.
Q How concerned are you that the appearances, when you don't have testimony that's on a transcript, and
when you don't have people that are willing to be under oath, that the American people look at that and say,
what are they up to, maybe they're trying to hide something -- how concerned are you about that appearance?

MS. PERINO: Well, I think that it's incumbent upon us to continue to explain what our position is and why it is.
I think the people understand that it is good, not just for this President, but for the presidency as a whole, to
have White House internal deliberations continue to be held within the confidence of the President. And that
is good, not just for this President, but for future presidents, what he or she may do in the future. So it's incumbent
upon us to explain that.

Also, the other thing that we need to remind people is that the President expects every member of his
administration to be truthful when they're talking to anybody; that includes members of Congress. In fact, it's a crime
if you don't tell the truth to a member of Congress.

And so we could have said, we're not going to talk to you at all, and then what sort of a PR position would
we be in? But the President decided that he would allow his aides to go up and testify, that we would turn
over an unprecedented amount of documents from -- unprecedented from our standpoint, from our administration.
And so in terms of concern, I understand where you're coming from, but I think that we have continued to explain
what our position is, and that's what we have -- that's just what we have to do.

 

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