Be INFORMED

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Warner/Levin Resolution a Mistake

    I noted in a previous post that this non-binding resolution was a waste of time and effort on the part of the Democrat Party.

   You all know that Senator Russ Feingold does not care for this piece of crap and apparently a few other Democrats do not either. They would rather see a binding resolution with some bite in it.

   Senator Feingold posted on Daily Kos on Thursday with his views on this subject and i am posting the entire letter on this site.

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Warner/Levin Resolution a Mistake

by Senator Russ Feingold
Thu Feb 01, 2007 at 01:25:46 PM PST

When the Senate Foreign Relations Committee took up the Biden-Hagel resolution opposing the President’s troop escalation proposal last week, I supported it as a first step toward ending our involvement in this war.  That resolution didn’t go nearly far enough – it was nonbinding and just focused on the escalation – but putting the Senate on record against the "surge" was a small step in the right direction.  

Unfortunately, the new Warner-Levin resolution that many Democrats are pushing is flawed and unacceptable.  It rejects the surge, but it also misunderstands the situation in Iraq and endorses the President’s underlying approach.  It’s basically a back-door authorization of the President’s misguided policies, and passing it would be a big mistake.  Under the guise of constructive criticism, the Warner-Levin resolution signs off on  the President continuing indefinite military operations in Iraq that will not address the fundamental political challenges in Iraq, and that continue to distract us from developing a comprehensive and global approach to the threats that face our nation.  

Here’s a link to the resolution so everyone knows what we’re talking about.  I’m going to pass over the first finding, which salutes the President as "Commander in Chief."  And I’m not going to focus on finding (16), which salutes the muddled and wishy-washy report of the Iraq Study Group as "valuable."  Instead, I’m going to focus on section 22 of the findings, which is nothing short of an endorsement of the status quo in Iraq and that is simply unacceptable.  It rejects exactly what is most needed in Iraq – an "immediate reduction in, or withdrawal of, the present level of forces."  If you vote for this resolution, you are voting against redeploying troops from Iraq.  This resolution doesn’t fix the administration’s failed Iraq policy – it just takes us back to where we were before the escalation.  It’s not enough to reject the "surge" if you aren’t willing to support a plan for redeploying our troops.    

It’s all downhill from there in (b)2.  The resolution goes on to support "continuing[ing] vigorous operations in Anbar province, specifically for the purpose of combating an insurgency."  Apparently, some people think that our troops should be involved in putting down the Sunni insurgency in western Iraq.  Actually, the President’s policy of maintaining a massive, open-ended military presence in Iraq has been inflaming the insurgency in that country from the start.  I support the idea of targeted counter-terrorism missions to take out terrorist elements in Iraq, but we shouldn’t ask our brave troops to remain there to put down an Iraqi insurgency any more than we can expect them to end Shi’ite-Sunni sectarian conflict in Baghdad.  

That’s why I introduced legislation this week to use Congress’s power of the purse to end our military involvement in Iraq.  I was greeted with a tremendous response from this community.  I’m extremely grateful for it because it was evidence of how badly change is both wanted and needed.  But how does the Warner/Levin resolution change anything?  We owe it to ourselves to demand action that will bring about change in Iraq, not take us back to a failed status quo.  

Democrats in Congress have seemingly forgotten that we were in power when Congress authorized the President to go to war in Iraq.  Supporting a de facto reauthorization puts us in serious jeopardy of repeating that mistake.  We also have to remember that in November, Americans sent over 30 new Democratic Representatives and eight new Democratic Senators plus a very progressive Independent to fix a failed Iraq policy.  The public is craving change in Iraq and a resolution like this one will not cut it.  Now is the time for strong action.  

Some have argued that any legislative vehicle that could be spun as a rejection of the President’s policies would be worth supporting.  I understand that strategy, and it may sound good to some.  But when all the spinning is done, what we are left with is the actual text of the legislation, which is an endorsement of the open-ended commitment of the U.S. military in Iraq.

It’s time for Congress to end our military involvement in this war.  We must redeploy our troops from Iraq so that we can focus on the global threats that face us.

**UPDATE** - 5:58 pm

Thanks to everyone who has responded so far.  I tell my colleagues in the Senate all the time about the hunger I see in this community, in my listening sessions in Wisconsin, and around the country, for real change.  All of this is happening today amidst reports that the CBO is predicting the President will need significantly more troops for his escalation than what the White House is publicly saying.  I understand how important it is to send a clear message to the White House.  But we shouldn’t make the compromises made in this resolution just to beat a filibuster.  Instead of trying to pass something that everyone can get behind, we should be taking a strong stand.  If others want to block it, go right ahead.  We have the support of a majority of Americans behind us.  We should recognize that and act on it.  Thank you again.  I really appreciate the encouragement.

 

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Resistance to War Cannot be Jailed

Published on Thursday, February 1, 2007 by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Washington)    Crossposted from Common Dreams

by Amy Goodman

You can jail the resisters, but you can't jail the resistance. George W. Bush, take notice as U.S. Army Lt. Ehren Watada is court-martialed next week. Congress, take heed. Young people in harm's way are leading the way out of Iraq. It is time you followed.

Watada was the first commissioned officer to refuse deployment to Iraq. He joined the military in March 2003. He believed President Bush's claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, connections to 9/11 and al-Qaida, and that Iraq was an imminent threat to the United States.

After signing on, he studied intensively to be well prepared to lead troops in Iraq. His studies, and the daily news coming out of Iraq of civilian deaths and no WMD, led him to the conclusion that the war was not only immoral, but also illegal.

On June 6, 2006, Watada said: "My moral and legal obligation is to the Constitution and not to those who would issue unlawful orders. ... As the order to take part in an illegal act is ultimately unlawful as well, I must, as an officer of honor and integrity, refuse that order."

He refused to deploy. The Army charged Watada with missing the troop movement, contempt toward officials and conduct unbecoming an officer. Watada hoped that his court-martial would be a hearing on the legality of the war. He was not claiming conscientious objection; rather, he says, he simply refused an illegal order. He offered to resign his commission. He offered to serve in Afghanistan. The Army refused his offers. A military judge ruled Watada cannot present evidence challenging the war's legality or explain what motivated him to resist his deployment order.      Read More Here

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Lt.Watada did the right thing even by legal standards and now he risk doing time for not following illegal orders given to him by his superiors.

That trail leads all the way up to our President. Don't allow the punishment of Lt.Watada to go on like this. If anyone should be punished, it would be the individuals who have started this illegal war in the first place.

                         IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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Former R.I. Sen. John Celona Sentenced for Payoffs

John Celona(D), former Senator from Rhode Island was sentenced on Wednesday to 2½ years in federal prison for taking payoffs.

    From the Associated Press:

By Eric Tucker
Associated Press Writer
February 1, 2007

John Celona admitted he abused his position as chairman of a key legislative committee to benefit the drugstore chain CVS Corp., Roger Williams Medical Center and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Rhode Island.                                       

Prosecutors said the former state senator was paid nearly $320,000 for the favorable treatment.                           

Celona, 53, pleaded guilty in 2005 to three counts of federal mail fraud and cooperated with investigators. He testified as the star witness last fall in a trial that produced convictions of two former hospital executives.                                 

Assistant U.S. Attorney Gerard Sullivan told the judge that Celona's extensive cooperation has led the investigation to seven politicians and seven corporations. Sullivan did not identify anyone being investigated but said FBI agents from other cities have been transferred to Rhode Island to help with the probe.   The Article

  

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Bush:Nation Depends on 'Almighty God'

CBN News
February 1, 2007

CBNNews.com -- President Bush today recognized the nation's dependence on "almighty God."

He made that comment at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington.

Guest speaker, Dr. Francis Collins, the mapper of the human genetic code, said he dares to believe in God.

The chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, General Peter Pace, also spoke.

He said it's his experience that few leave battle with any doubt that God exists.

President Bush called the nation to pray for the safety of America's troops.

   With two more years before our Idiot in Chief is out of the White House, this country needs all of the help from 'Almighty God' that it can get, as do our troops over in Iraq.

   It scares me when Bush mentions God in any speech or any other statement that he makes.

 

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Senate Passes Minimum Wage Increase To $7.25

    On Thursday, the Senate voted to up the federal minimum wage rate to $7.25 per hour over a two year period. the bill was loaded with some controversial tax cuts for small businesses and some higher taxes for $1 million-plus executives.

   The first wage increase in 10 years was approved by a 94-3 vote.

     From Associated Press;

"Passing this wage hike represents a small but necessary step to help lift America's working poor out of the ditches of poverty and onto the road toward economic prosperity," said Sen. Edward Kennedy ( bio, voting record), D-Mass.

The bill must now be reconciled with the House version passed Jan. 10 that contained no tax provisions. House Democrats have insisted they want a minimum wage bill with no strings attached, though some have conceded the difficulty of passing the legislation in the Senate without tax breaks.

"Of course, Democrats would prefer to pass a clean increase in the minimum wage," said the spokesman, Jim Manley. "The fact is that Republicans have made it very clear that the only way we will pass a modest increase in the minimum wage is with tax breaks for small business."

   It is worth noting that the GOP did not get all the tax breaks that they have wanted in earlier wage increase bills.

    It still seems stupid that small business should get a tax break just for paying a better living wage to their employees, which is still not enough to live on in the first place. If you want less people living on the government system, pay them enough to stay out of the system in the first place. $7.25 an hour 2 years from now doesn't cut it!

 

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Senate Passes Minimum Wage Increase To $7.25

    On Thursday, the Senate voted to up the federal minimum wage rate to $7.25 per hour over a two year period. the bill was loaded with some controversial tax cuts for small businesses and some higher taxes for $1 million-plus executives.

   The first wage increase in 10 years was approved by a 94-3 vote.

     From Associated Press;

"Passing this wage hike represents a small but necessary step to help lift America's working poor out of the ditches of poverty and onto the road toward economic prosperity," said Sen. Edward Kennedy ( bio, voting record), D-Mass.

The bill must now be reconciled with the House version passed Jan. 10 that contained no tax provisions. House Democrats have insisted they want a minimum wage bill with no strings attached, though some have conceded the difficulty of passing the legislation in the Senate without tax breaks.

"Of course, Democrats would prefer to pass a clean increase in the minimum wage," said the spokesman, Jim Manley. "The fact is that Republicans have made it very clear that the only way we will pass a modest increase in the minimum wage is with tax breaks for small business."

   It is worth noting that the GOP did not get all the tax breaks that they have wanted in earlier wage increase bills.

    It still seems stupid that small business should get a tax break just for paying a better living wage to their employees, which is still not enough to live on in the first place. If you want less people living on the government system, pay them enough to stay out of the system in the first place. $7.25 an hour 2 years from now doesn't cut it!

 

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Alan Mollohan Should Resign His Chair

   Let us meet  congressman Alan Mollohan (D-W.VA.)

    This man has been under investigation  by the F.B.I. for some real estate deals and a few other things dealing with non-profits which look to have made quite a bit of cash for alot of people.

   He also chairs the House panel which controls the Justice Department budget (including the FBI).  TPM

   The Democratic Party does not need this man chairing any kind of panel until this legal mess of his is cleared up. The party does not need to begin its term with shit like this popping up right from the start. Let's not go GOP on this and just let it slide and hope that it goes away. Mollohan needs to go away for the time being.

 

 

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Bush Signing Statements To Be Investigated

   Bush and his massive amount of signing statements are finally being looked into by the House as the new chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, John Conyers Jr. said that he is launching an investigation into whether the Bush Crime Family (my words) has violated any laws that it has ignored by using the signing statements to get around those laws.

    The Bush Crime Family has worked around more than 1,100 laws since he took office.

Crossposted from CommonDreams

Published on Thursday, February 1, 2007 by the Boston Globe

House Panel Probing Bush's Record on Signing Statements

by Charlie Savage

WASHINGTON - The new chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, John Conyers Jr. of Michigan, said yesterday that he is launching an aggressive investigation into whether the Bush administration has violated any of the laws it claimed a right to ignore in presidential "signing statements."

Bush has claimed that his executive powers allow him to bypass more than 1,100 laws enacted since he took office. But administration officials insist that Bush's signing statements merely question the laws' constitutionality, and do not necessarily mean that the president also authorized his subordinates to violate them.

Conyers said the president has no power " to ignore duly enacted laws he has negotiated with Congress and signed." And he vowed to find out whether the administration has followed each law it challenged -- including laws touching on classified national security matters, such as the tactics used to interrogate suspected terrorists and the FBI's use of the Patriot Act.

"This is a constitutional issue that no self-respecting federal legislature should tolerate," Conyers said, and he added that the committee was determined to "get to the bottom of this matter, and to be blunt, we are not going to take no for an answer."     Entire Article

 

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Iran,Iraq And the Rest Of The Bullshit

     The following is a brief tour of what's up with the White house and the middle east.

From Dailykos

How To Start A War

by Devilstower
Thu Feb 01, 2007

Suppose you wanted to start a war.  Forget for a second about why you might want to do this.  Maybe you're trying to distract the public from the disastrous way in which you handled your last conflict.  Maybe you are still intent on fulfilling your messianic vision of yourself as reshaper of the Middle East and bringer of the Apocalypse.  Maybe you're just an ass.  Who can say?  But if you wanted to start this war, can you name some steps you might take?  

How about blaming your opponent for all your troubles, even when you know they're not responsible for all, or even most, of what you're seeing?     Entire Article

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Entire Article

Kirkuk: The Next Civil War?

by BarbinMD
Thu Feb 01, 2007

Buried near the bottom of Iraq's Constitution, it says that:

...the Transitional Administrative Law shall extend and continue to the executive authority elected in accordance with this constitution, provided that it completes (normalization and census and concludes with a referendum in Kirkuk and other disputed territories to determine the will of their citizens), in a period not to exceed (the thirty first of December two thousand and seven). 

 

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S.D. Legislator Fondled An 18 Year Old Page?

   It's beginning to look as if the second coming of Foley is upon us once again, only in a motel room this time!

Original Article

S.D. legislator censured for misconduct

By CHET BROKAW, Associated Press Writer
Wed Jan 31,2007

PIERRE, S.D. - The South Dakota Senate on Wednesday refused to expel a lawmaker accused of fondling an 18-year-old legislative page in a motel bed, but voted to censure him instead.

Democratic Sen. Dan Sutton had admitted sharing a bed with the page last winter but denied groping him.

 

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Federal Judge Puts 16 Guantanamo Cases On Hold

    Crossposted from The Huffington Post

Associated Press | Posted January 31, 2007

Sixteen lawsuits by Guantanamo Bay detainees were put on hold Wednesday by a federal judge who said he may no longer have jurisdiction to hear their cases.

U.S. District Court Judge Reggie B. Walton in Washington said the Military Commissions Act, signed into law in October, has left him unable to consider whether the detainees can challenge being held at the Navy facility in Cuba         Original Story

   So it took this judge 3 months to come to this conclusion? I'd bet that the White house pressured him into this finding by threatening with an early retirement or disappearance.

 

 

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Senate Reaches Compromise On Bush troop Plan

    So the Democrat and Republican Senators reached a compromise on Wednesday on the non-binding resolution against Bush's Iraq war plans.

Senators Unite On Challenge to Bush's Troop Plan

Washington Post
Thursday, February 1, 2007

Democratic and Republican opponents of President Bush's troop-buildup plan joined forces last night behind the nonbinding resolution with the broadest bipartisan backing: a Republican measure from Sen. John W. Warner of Virginia.

He added language specifically opposing a cutoff of funding for U.S. troops in a targeted appeal to Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), who had offered an identical separate measure.

But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) went further, publicly hinting she will push binding legislation that would begin bringing U.S. troops home from Iraq. "I believe that you'll see initiatives on the floor to this effect: that we have this year in which we should be able to drastically reduce the number of troops," she said in an interview broadcast on National Public Radio yesterday.     Entire Article

     Let us examine this 'compromise' shall we?

    The new, revised resolution states the senates opposition to the Bush troop increase but at the same time it protects the troop funding. Left out of the resolution was the language that the Democrats had originally wanted inserted saying that Bush's plan is against the national interest.

The score is : GOP 2, Dems 0 in the compromise tally. Okay, we'll give the Dems 1 because Warner left out language for Senate support for more additional troops. GOP 2, Dems 1.

   I would have no problem with this resolution if not for the language opposing the cutoff of funding for our troops. This works to the GOP advantage in case the war takes an ugly turn for the worst and the Democrats then grow a spine and start hollering for a funding cutoff.

   The constitution gives the Congress the power to stop this insanity and to bring our people home and it should be done now!

    I did not vote for my candidates to make it into office and to then turn into jellyfish and to go cower in a corner. Myself and the American people put you to work to bring our men and women home! NOW! What part of that do you not understand?

    You Democrats will have a short career if you keep this shit up!

 

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Common Dreams

   I would like to point you over to my links section for a moment as I have added a new one that I feel is an important one.

   Common Dreams has some very well thought-out views and comments on our government and the world that it has created. The writers at this site are top notched and they will leave you thinking about the world around you before you are finished reading the materials.

   Check this site out and get educated while you are there.

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Empire Or Democracy

   I have stated before that most of the 9/11 attacks were due to the foreign policy of the United states and that we really should not have been surprised when it happened.

    From Rockridge Nation

Choosing Between Empire and Democracy

Created by evan_at_rockridge (Rockridge Institute staff member) on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 10:52 AM

In an article published today, Chalmers Johnson, a former professor of Asian Studies and one-time consultant to the CIA, makes a persuasive argument that, "We are on the brink of losing our democracy for the sake of keeping our empire." The language and concepts that Johnson uses reveal much that is left out of mainstream political debate and conventional news coverage. It is vital for progressives to bring these ideas before the broader public and to speak out for the values that are at risk.

Johnson's article, Empire v. Democracy: Why Nemesis Is at Our Door, outlines why the military commitments of the United States threaten our democracy and why this threat is difficult to avert. The article highlights the themes of a trilogy of Johnson's books related to this subject, which Johnson has just completed.

The first frame that Johnson introduces to make his argument is "blowback," which he referenced in the title of the first of the three books, published in 2000. The concept of blowback, which Johnson defines as "retaliation for illegal operations carried out abroad that were kept totally secret from the American public," is not new, but awareness of blowback became much more widespread after September 11, 2001. What is compelling about Johnson's discussion of blowback is that he provides a narrative showing that blowback defines a cycle. After listing a litany of covert operations, from coups and assassinations to the rigging of elections, Johnson illustrates that blowback is part of a descent into empire:

"The fact that these actions were, at least originally, secret meant that when retaliation does come -- as it did so spectacularly on September 11, 2001 -- the American public is incapable of putting the events in context. Not surprisingly, then, Americans tend to support speedy acts of revenge intended to punish the actual, or alleged, perpetrators. These moments of lashing out, of course, only prepare the ground for yet another cycle of blowback."

Entire Article

 

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Morning News, Thursday

Iraq Restricts Air, Land Passages to Syria, Iran

From News Services and Staff Reports
Thursday, February 1, 2007

BAGHDAD, Jan. 31 -- Iraq indefinitely halted all flights to and from Syria and closed a border crossing with Iran as the government prepares for a security crackdown, a parliament member and an airport official said Wednesday, the Associated Press reported.

The airport official said that flights to and from Syria would be canceled for at least two weeks and that service had been interrupted on Tuesday, the AP said.       Entire Article

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Economy Gained Strength In 2006

Growth Dispels Recession Fears

By Nell Henderson

Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 1, 2007

The U.S. economy turned in a surprisingly strong performance last year, new data show, growing 3.4 percent despite higher interest rates, high oil prices and the sharpest housing downturn in 15 years.

The report from the Commerce Department, showing that economic growth picked up in 2006 from the 3.2 percent growth of 2005, dispelled any lingering doubts about the momentum of the economy going into this year. Many economists predict growth will slow this year, but gone are the recession worries of last summer.  Entire Article

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USNEWS.COM

Bush CentCom Nominee Pleads Ignorance

Admiral William Fallon, selected by President Bush to lead the US Central Command, which has responsibility for the war in the Iraq, yesterday testified before a Senate committee considering his nomination. NBC Nightly News reported Fallon "declined to take a position on the President's plan for a troop increase." Under the headline "I Don't Know The Details," the Washington Times says Fallon, "picked by President Bush to oversee his new strategy for Iraq testified yesterday that he does not know much about the plan that the administration says will determine whether the US wins the war." The Times also notes the nominee "specifically declined to endorse Mr. Bush's plan." USA Today, AP, Los Angeles Times and Financial Times also report the story.

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USNEWS.COM

Cheney's Guy

He's barely known outside Washington's corridors of power, but David Addington is the most powerful man you've never heard of. Here's why:

By Chitra Ragavan

5/29/06

One week after the September 11 terrorist attacks, President George W. Bush briefly turned his gaze away from the unfolding crisis to an important but far less pressing moment in the nation's history. The president signed legislation creating a commission to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark Supreme Court ruling desegregating public schools. In a brief statement, Bush invited the various educational groups listed in the legislation to suggest the names of potential commissioners and also urged members of Congress to weigh in, as a "matter of comity." But in a little-noted aside, Bush said that any such suggestions would be just that--because under the appointments clause of the Constitution, it was his job, and his alone, to make those kinds of decisions.

This was what is known, in the cloistered world of constitutional lawyers and scholars, as a "signing statement." Such statements, in the years before President Bush and his aides moved into the White House, were rare. A signing statement is a legal memorandum in which the president and his lawyers take legislation sent over by Congress and put their stamp on it by saying what they believe the measure does and doesn't allow. Consumed by the 9/11 attacks, Americans for the most part didn't realize that the signing statement accompanying the announcement of the Brown v. Board commission would signal one of the most controversial hallmarks of the Bush presidency: a historic shift in the balance of power away from the legislative branch of government to the executive. The shift began soon after Bush took office and reached its apogee after 9/11, with Bush's authorization of military tribunals for terrorism suspects, secret detentions and aggressive interrogations of "unlawful enemy combatants," and warrantless electronic surveillance of terrorism suspects on U.S. soil, including American citizens.  The Article

 

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Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Iraq War Waste

Original Article

Dems decry report of wasted Iraq aid

By HOPE YEN, Associated Press Writer  January 31,2007

WASHINGTON - Congressional Democrats on Wednesday decried tens of millions dollars of waste in Iraq reconstruction aid, as a new government report underscored a need for closer scrutiny of how the costly war is being handled.
Lawmakers in both the House and Senate said they planned hearings or legislation to address what they say is a growing problem of abuse as the Bush administration struggles to get a handle on both a spiraling war and the contractors who help run it.

"Our troops are going without even as government funds go to pay for such boondoggles as an Olympic-size swimming pool in an unused training camp," said a statement issued by the Senate Democratic Communications Center directed by Majority Leader Harry Reid ( bio, voting record), D-Nev.

"As the president is planning to send 21,500 more American service members into Iraq and asking for $1.2 billion in new reconstruction aid, Americans have every reason to question his spending priorities," it said.

The quarterly audit released Wednesday by Stuart Bowen Jr., the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, found the $300 billion U.S. war and reconstruction effort continues to be plagued with waste, spiraling violence and corruption.

   $300 billion? Yet that shithead in the White House wants more and more, for what? More swimming pools? What's with the reconstruction aid? The way that I see it, we build something and it gets destroyed again.

    Send our president over there with a shovel and a wheel burrow and let him do some real reconstructing!

                              IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

   More Info:

 1)  Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction                               SIGIR 

2) Quarterly Report:SIGIR Quarterly Report

3) Dyncorp Audit: SIGIR AUDIT

 

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House Passes $463.5 Billion Spending Bill

    The House passed a $463.5 billion spending bill Wednesday while the GOP cried over the Democrats muscling it through.

   The Associated Press

By ANDREW TAYLOR, Associated Press Writer
January 31,2007

WASHINGTON - The House passed a $463.5 billion spending bill Wednesday that covers about one-sixth of the federal budget as Democrats cleared away the financial mess they inherited from Republicans.

Before the 286-140 vote, Republicans made modest objections to Democrats' spending decisions but protested greatly over how the new majority muscled the measure through the House.

    There are a few problems with this bill since it still contains some spending that should have been discarded, such as $45 million for indoor rainforest research in central Iowa.

   We will deal with that at some other time.

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The War With Iran Rapidly Approaches

    Many months ago I posted on the future war that the Bush Crime Family would start with Iran. I'll have to look up the post from that earlier time.

    Anyway, the stooges at the White House are now saying that the Iranian involvement with the Iraqi militias and Tehran's nuclear ambitions, could set off a war.

   Now, that would be a surprise! Not!

   This is what the Bush Crime Family has been hoping for in the first place and it looks as if the time is rapidly approaching!

    From The Associated Press:

By JIM KRANE and ROBERT H. REID, Associated Press Writers

January 31,2007

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Citing Iranian involvement with Iraqi militias and Tehran's nuclear ambitions, the Bush administration has shifted to offense in its confrontation with Iran — building up the U.S. military in the Persian Gulf and promising more aggressive moves against Iranian operatives in Iraq and Lebanon.
The behind-the-scenes struggle between the two nations could explode into open warfare over a single misstep, analysts and U.S. military officials warn.   Entire Article

   Iran and the United States are already sparring on the ground.

On Jan. 20, militants kidnapped and killed four American soldiers in a raid in Karbala, and a fifth was killed in the firefight. A U.S. defense official said one possibility under study is that Iranian agents either executed or masterminded the attack, a suspicion based on the sophisticated and unusual methods used in the attack, including weapons and uniforms that may have been American.

I'm just wondering where all of these troops of ours are going to come from unless Bush is going to use the Navy and Air Force to just bomb Iran into oblivion. That would not be a smart thing to do but this administration is not known for its intelligence.

    You can also count on more incidents pointing to the Iranians as the days go by. Bush and company will no doubt bring out all kinds of stories involving Iran whether they are verified or not. Iran will eventually be blamed for Bush's lifetime of stupidity before this is over with!

 

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Iraq's Poor Record On Meeting Benchmarks

Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice sent a letter to Sen. Carl Levin responding to a request to disclose the details of an agreement that had reportedly been made between the Bush administration and the Iraqi government last fall    TPM

   From The Associated Press:

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Rice: Iraq missed political deadlines

By ANNE GEARAN
AP DIPLOMATIC WRITER

Iraq has passed target dates to make laws establishing provincial elections, regulating distribution of the country's oil wealth and reversing measures that have excluded many Sunnis from jobs and government positions because of Baath party membership, according to the list Rice provided.

    You can read Miss Rice's letter HERE.

   With the vote forthcoming on the non-binding resolutions over Bush's troop escalation, Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham  are working on a plan of their own aimed at blocking the two resolutions which are highly critical of the White house by proposing a resolution that would set benchmarks for the Iraqi government and describe the troop increase as a final chance for the United States to restore security in Baghdad. NYTimes

   Is that not just what the Iraqis need? More benchmarks that they will never meet on top of the ones that they haven't met yet? This sounds like a winning plan to me!

Senator Russell Feingold, Democrat who acted as chairman for the hearing, said he would soon introduce a resolution that would go much further. It would end all financing for the deployment of American military forces in Iraq after six months, other than a limited number working on counterterrorism operations or training the Iraqi Army and police force. In effect, it would call for all other American forces to be withdrawn by the six-month deadline.   NYTimes

 

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Congress Can Stop War

   From Daily Kos:

  Entire Article

The U.S. Congress has the power to end the war in Iraq, a former Bush administration attorney and other high-powered legal experts told a Senate hearing on Tuesday.

Facing mounting opposition over his Iraq troop increase plan, President George W. Bush insisted it would be "too extreme" if lawmakers pass a resolution condemning his Iraq policy.

Four out of five experts called before the Senate Judiciary Committee said Congress could go even further and restrict or stop U.S. involvement in Iraq if it chose.

"I think the constitutional scheme does give Congress broad authority to terminate a war," said Bradford Berenson, a Washington lawyer who was a White House associate counsel under Bush from 2001 to 2003.

"It is ultimately Congress that decides the size, scope and duration of the use of military force," said Walter Dellinger, former acting solicitor general, the government's chief advocate before the Supreme Court, in 1996-97 [...]

The other experts at the hearing said that while the Constitution makes the president commander-in-chief of U.S. forces, Congress' constitutional power to declare war and fund the military gave it power to stop what it had set in motion.

Republican Sen. Arlen Specter (news, bio, voting record) of Pennsylvania said: "I would respectfully suggest to the president that he is not the sole 'decider' ... The decider is a shared and joint responsibility."

 

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Bush's "State of the Economy" Speech

    Bush gave this speech at Wall Street on Wednesday and he targeted the pay of the nations CEO's.

   Original Article

 Bush:"Government should not decide the compensation for America's corporate executives.But the salaries and bonuses of CEO's should be based on their success at improving their companies and bringing value to their shareholders."

"America's corporate boardrooms must step up to their responsibilities.You need to pay attention to the executive compensation packages that you approve. You need to show the world that America's businesses are a model of transparency and good corporate governance."

   On the economy, Bush said,"The state of our economy is strong."

Since Bush took office in 2001, the country has seen one in five manufacturing jobs disappear, a total of 2.96 million lost jobs. The U.S. trade deficit is expected to climb to a fifth consecutive record when final 2006 figures are totaled next month.

 

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Gonzales to release spy program details

    From Yahoo News

LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer

January 31,2007

WASHINGTON - Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said Wednesday he will turn over secret documents detailing the government's domestic spying program, ending a two-week standoff with the Senate Judiciary Committee over surveillance targeting terror suspects.

"It's never been the case where we said we would never provide the access," Gonzales told reporters.

"We'd obviously be concerned about (how) the public disclosure may jeopardize the national security of our country," he said. "But we're working with the Congress to provide the information that it needs."

   So congress will finally get the requested records, with alot of long black lines throughout most of it. They will not be released to the public but you can bet your ass that we will see some of it one way or another!

 

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An Unsafe America

   I touched on this topic a bit yesterday, but here is an article from American Progress with even more on the White House's power grab and the consequences for America's citizens.

by Faiz Shakir, Nico Pitney,
Amanda Terkel, and Payson Schwin

ADMINISTRATION
An Unsafe America

Since day one, the Bush White House has attempted to tighten its grip on executive agencies in an effort to assert business interests over the public welfare. The consequences for American workers have often been tragic, with unsafe workplaces and an unclean environment. On Jan. 18, President Bush took another giant step away from the best interests of the American public by quietly issuing amendments to Executive Order 12866. These directives will "give the White House much greater control over the rules and policy statements that the government develops to protect public health, safety, the environment, civil rights and privacy." Columbia Law School professor Peter L. Strauss said the executive order "achieves a major increase in White House control over domestic government. ... Having lost control of Congress, the president is doing what he can to increase his control of the executive branch."
CENTRALIZING EXECUTIVE POWER: President Bush's Jan. 18 directive attempts to further increase the power of OMB over federal agencies. Agencies develop rules -- regulating everything from clean water to hazardous workplaces -- "under authority granted to them in laws enacted by Congress. In many cases, the statute does not say precisely what agencies should do, giving them considerable latitude in interpreting the law and developing regulations." The new rules take power from expert civil servants and put it in the hands of political appointees. Each agency is now required to have a presidentially-appointed Regulatory Policy Officer responsible for supervising and approving new agency rules, as well as making "sure the agencies carry out the president's priorities." Additionally, in the past, each agency developed rules after identifying threats to public health and safety. The new Bush administration rules will require each agency to identify a "market failure" before issuing regulations, which OMB Watch notes "decidedly favors the regulated community and places yet another hurdle for agencies to issue regulations in pursuit of protecting the public."
ATTACKING AMERICANS' HEALTH AND SAFETY: While Bush's directives will apply to all federal agencies, "business executives and consumer advocates said the administration was particularly concerned about rules and guidance issued by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration." Wesley P. Warren of the Natural Resources Defense Council said, "The executive order is a backdoor attempt to prevent E.P.A. from being able to enforce environmental safeguards that keep cancer-causing chemicals and other pollutants out of the air and water." Throughout its administration, the Bush administration has meddled into the work of the EPA and OSHA, preventing them from protecting public safety. Last year, a federal judge sharply criticized EPA "for pursuing industry-friendly regulations at the same time it missed statutory deadlines to control toxic air pollution from small industrial plants." The Washington Post noted that in the first three and a half years of the Bush administration, OSHA -- "the branch of the Labor Department in charge of workers' well-being" -- eliminated "nearly five times as many pending standards" as it completed. In his first year in office, Bush tried "to eliminate nearly 100 of the agency's 2,400 jobs. ... Lawmakers restored the money and the positions. The next year, the administration succeeded in eliminating 10 jobs out of 95 in the standards area." The Center for American Progress has more on Bush's record here.
DOWNHILL ON DAY ONE: The Bush administration made weakening public safety a priority from day one. On the day Bush was sworn in, then Chief of Staff Andrew Card "issued a memo that, in an unprecedented move, put a two-month freeze on final rules across the government that had not yet gone into effect." A few months later, John Graham, then the White House's top regulatory official, "was alerting agencies that they would face closer scrutiny from the OMB when they proposed new rules. The day after he was confirmed by the Senate, he sent the first of 14 letters to agencies saying they had failed to prove the need for regulations they had proposed. That was more than had been sent during Clinton's eight years." Sally Katzen, who oversaw federal regulation for five years under President Clinton, said "new regulations were, in those days, embraced as a means to improve the quality of water, of air -- in short, of people's lives." In contrast, Graham called regulations "a form of unfunded mandate that the federal government imposes on the private sector or on state or local governments."
DEADLY CONSEQUENCES: Bush's executive order is more than just an insider bureaucratic maneuver. It has real -- and potentially deadly -- consequences for all Americans. Regulations protect Americans' everyday lives. In 2001, Bush put the interests of businesses over the interests of American workers and repealed "Clinton administration regulations that set new workplace ergonomic rules to combat repetitive stress injuries." Bush justified his move by stating that the benefits of the ergonomic rules had "uncertain benefits," but would have "cost both large and small employers billions of dollars and presented employers with overwhelming compliance challenges." OSHA estimated that the overturned rules would "would have generated benefits of $9.1 billion a year for each of its first 10 years, and would have prevented 460,000 musculoskelatal disorders a year." Last year, the Sago mine explosion, which killed 12 men, shook the nation. Mining deaths reached a 10-year high in 2006, calling attention to the Bush administration's neglect of safety regulations. A report by the AFL-CIO noted that the administration cut 170 positions from the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration and had not proposed a single new mine-safety standard or rule during its tenure. For his 2000 presidential bid, Bush received $275,000 from West Virginia coal firms.
AN ANTI-REGULATORY ZEALOT: Bush's newest executive order bears the fingerprints of Susan Dudley, senior advisor to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA). The OIRA is an obscure, but "super-powerful office that oversees many business regulations." The conservative 109th Congress blocked her nomination. Bush appointed Dudley as senior advisor one day after he renominated her, which OMB Watch notes is "a slap in the face to bipartisanship" because it allows her to serve in a position similar to the post for which she was nominated, but without congressional approval. In a primer on regulation written in 2005, "while she was at the Mercatus Center of George Mason University in Northern Virginia, Ms. Dudley said that government regulation was generally not warranted 'in the absence of a significant market failure.'" Also, while she was at the industry-backed Mercatus, Dudley opposed regulating airbags in cars (preferring to leave public safety decisions "to the marketplace"), arsenic in drinking water (claming that there "is a wide range of uncertainty in the science surrounding the health effects of arsenic in U.S. drinking water supplies"), and health standards for protecting the public from smog. Write to your lawmakers and tell them to oppose Dudley's nomination.

                                     IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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An Unsafe America

   I touched on this topic a bit yesterday, but here is an article from American Progress with even more on the White House's power grab and the consequences for America's citizens.

by Faiz Shakir, Nico Pitney,
Amanda Terkel, and Payson Schwin

ADMINISTRATION
An Unsafe America

Since day one, the Bush White House has attempted to tighten its grip on executive agencies in an effort to assert business interests over the public welfare. The consequences for American workers have often been tragic, with unsafe workplaces and an unclean environment. On Jan. 18, President Bush took another giant step away from the best interests of the American public by quietly issuing amendments to Executive Order 12866. These directives will "give the White House much greater control over the rules and policy statements that the government develops to protect public health, safety, the environment, civil rights and privacy." Columbia Law School professor Peter L. Strauss said the executive order "achieves a major increase in White House control over domestic government. ... Having lost control of Congress, the president is doing what he can to increase his control of the executive branch."
CENTRALIZING EXECUTIVE POWER: President Bush's Jan. 18 directive attempts to further increase the power of OMB over federal agencies. Agencies develop rules -- regulating everything from clean water to hazardous workplaces -- "under authority granted to them in laws enacted by Congress. In many cases, the statute does not say precisely what agencies should do, giving them considerable latitude in interpreting the law and developing regulations." The new rules take power from expert civil servants and put it in the hands of political appointees. Each agency is now required to have a presidentially-appointed Regulatory Policy Officer responsible for supervising and approving new agency rules, as well as making "sure the agencies carry out the president's priorities." Additionally, in the past, each agency developed rules after identifying threats to public health and safety. The new Bush administration rules will require each agency to identify a "market failure" before issuing regulations, which OMB Watch notes "decidedly favors the regulated community and places yet another hurdle for agencies to issue regulations in pursuit of protecting the public."
ATTACKING AMERICANS' HEALTH AND SAFETY: While Bush's directives will apply to all federal agencies, "business executives and consumer advocates said the administration was particularly concerned about rules and guidance issued by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration." Wesley P. Warren of the Natural Resources Defense Council said, "The executive order is a backdoor attempt to prevent E.P.A. from being able to enforce environmental safeguards that keep cancer-causing chemicals and other pollutants out of the air and water." Throughout its administration, the Bush administration has meddled into the work of the EPA and OSHA, preventing them from protecting public safety. Last year, a federal judge sharply criticized EPA "for pursuing industry-friendly regulations at the same time it missed statutory deadlines to control toxic air pollution from small industrial plants." The Washington Post noted that in the first three and a half years of the Bush administration, OSHA -- "the branch of the Labor Department in charge of workers' well-being" -- eliminated "nearly five times as many pending standards" as it completed. In his first year in office, Bush tried "to eliminate nearly 100 of the agency's 2,400 jobs. ... Lawmakers restored the money and the positions. The next year, the administration succeeded in eliminating 10 jobs out of 95 in the standards area." The Center for American Progress has more on Bush's record here.
DOWNHILL ON DAY ONE: The Bush administration made weakening public safety a priority from day one. On the day Bush was sworn in, then Chief of Staff Andrew Card "issued a memo that, in an unprecedented move, put a two-month freeze on final rules across the government that had not yet gone into effect." A few months later, John Graham, then the White House's top regulatory official, "was alerting agencies that they would face closer scrutiny from the OMB when they proposed new rules. The day after he was confirmed by the Senate, he sent the first of 14 letters to agencies saying they had failed to prove the need for regulations they had proposed. That was more than had been sent during Clinton's eight years." Sally Katzen, who oversaw federal regulation for five years under President Clinton, said "new regulations were, in those days, embraced as a means to improve the quality of water, of air -- in short, of people's lives." In contrast, Graham called regulations "a form of unfunded mandate that the federal government imposes on the private sector or on state or local governments."
DEADLY CONSEQUENCES: Bush's executive order is more than just an insider bureaucratic maneuver. It has real -- and potentially deadly -- consequences for all Americans. Regulations protect Americans' everyday lives. In 2001, Bush put the interests of businesses over the interests of American workers and repealed "Clinton administration regulations that set new workplace ergonomic rules to combat repetitive stress injuries." Bush justified his move by stating that the benefits of the ergonomic rules had "uncertain benefits," but would have "cost both large and small employers billions of dollars and presented employers with overwhelming compliance challenges." OSHA estimated that the overturned rules would "would have generated benefits of $9.1 billion a year for each of its first 10 years, and would have prevented 460,000 musculoskelatal disorders a year." Last year, the Sago mine explosion, which killed 12 men, shook the nation. Mining deaths reached a 10-year high in 2006, calling attention to the Bush administration's neglect of safety regulations. A report by the AFL-CIO noted that the administration cut 170 positions from the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration and had not proposed a single new mine-safety standard or rule during its tenure. For his 2000 presidential bid, Bush received $275,000 from West Virginia coal firms.
AN ANTI-REGULATORY ZEALOT: Bush's newest executive order bears the fingerprints of Susan Dudley, senior advisor to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA). The OIRA is an obscure, but "super-powerful office that oversees many business regulations." The conservative 109th Congress blocked her nomination. Bush appointed Dudley as senior advisor one day after he renominated her, which OMB Watch notes is "a slap in the face to bipartisanship" because it allows her to serve in a position similar to the post for which she was nominated, but without congressional approval. In a primer on regulation written in 2005, "while she was at the Mercatus Center of George Mason University in Northern Virginia, Ms. Dudley said that government regulation was generally not warranted 'in the absence of a significant market failure.'" Also, while she was at the industry-backed Mercatus, Dudley opposed regulating airbags in cars (preferring to leave public safety decisions "to the marketplace"), arsenic in drinking water (claming that there "is a wide range of uncertainty in the science surrounding the health effects of arsenic in U.S. drinking water supplies"), and health standards for protecting the public from smog. Write to your lawmakers and tell them to oppose Dudley's nomination.

                                     IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

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On The Internet Today

ExxonMobil's War on Science

By Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., HuffingtonPost.com. Posted January 31, 2007.

With an elaborate network of phony think tanks and slick public relations firms, ExxonMobil has become today's Big Tobacco, defrauding the public and waging a war on science.   Alternet Article

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From Ms. Magazine

This Is What a Speaker Looks Like
Nancy Pelosi has finally cracked the marble ceiling of the Capitol. Now what will she do with the unprecedented power she has earned?

Ms. is proud to be the first magazine to feature on its cover Nancy Pelosi, the first woman and first self-identified feminist Speaker of the House.   This 2002 Ms. Woman of the Year gives Ms. an exclusive interview in our cover story, “This Is What A Speaker Looks Like,” by Marie Cocco, in which we focus on her substance, rather than her clothes and jewelry.    Entire Article

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From Buzzflash

Melanie Sloan's Team of Watch Dogs Is Taking the Crooks To Court

We filed suit against the Justice Department... The Justice Department has documents that were stolen from the computers of Democrats, but didn't call Democratic Senators to inform them that, hey, somebody's obviously been accessing your documents, because we have them. And the question is, why didn't the Justice Department return them? I think the Justice Department is going to have a hell of a time in court with that argument.        Article & Interview

 

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Christianist on the March

Original Article

Christianists on the March
By Chris Hedges
Truthdig 

Sunday 28 January 2007

Dr. James Luther Adams, my ethics professor at Harvard Divinity School, told his students that when we were his age - he was then close to 80 - we would all be fighting the "Christian fascists."

The warning, given 25 years ago, came at the moment Pat Robertson and other radio and television evangelists began speaking about a new political religion that would direct its efforts toward taking control of all institutions, including mainstream denominations and the government. Its stated goal was to use the United States to create a global Christian empire. This call for fundamentalists and evangelicals to take political power was a radical and ominous mutation of traditional Christianity. It was hard, at the time, to take such fantastic rhetoric seriously, especially given the buffoonish quality of those who expounded it. But Adams warned us against the blindness caused by intellectual snobbery. The Nazis, he said, were not going to return with swastikas and brown shirts. Their ideological inheritors had found a mask for fascism in the pages of the Bible.   More HERE

   I should note that I do not agree with all of the views of this article above.

      For the record, I am a Christian. Let us get that out of the way before the conservatives start claiming that this is another Liberal anti-Christian piece.

    I do believe that this country needs a new direction but one that is not lead by Christian Fundamentalist taking control of government or anything else. These heretics will never have a global Christian empire as our western Christian ' religion ' is not even close to being anything near what God intended. We may end up as a one world religion someday, but, it will not be western in any form.

 

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Iraqi Training Botched By U.S.

    In remarks made ready for his talk Wednesday with the Senate Judiciary Committee, former Rep. Lee Hamilton :

"The police training system has not gone well."  This is in regards to the training of the Iraqi police and their army.

    The training has been screwed up by the United States because the job was given to the wrong agencies to complete the task.

By LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press Writer

January 31,2007

The U.S. erred by first assigning the task of shaping the judicial system in a largely lawless country to the State Department and private contractors who "did not have the expertise or the manpower to get the job done," Hamilton and Meese said in testimony obtained by The Associated Press.

Justice Department officials, they said, should lead the work of transforming the system. Police executives and supervisors should replace the military police personnel now assigned.

The recommendations about the Iraqi judicial system were included in the Iraq Study Group's report last year, but got little attention. Hamilton and Meese said Wednesday that unless the U.S. helps create a capable, trained professional police force and functioning criminal justice system, "ordinary Iraqis will not live in peace and will not have confidence in their new government."

"Long-term security depends as much on the Iraqi police and judicial system as the Iraqi Army," they testified. Entire Article.

   I would like to know who the idiot was that did all of this bad assigning in the first place.

 

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