Be INFORMED

Wednesday, February 07, 2007

Military Lacks Equipment For Escalation and Reconstruction Official Flown to Baghdad To Avoid Hearings

  From American Progress

MILITARY -- PACE ADMITS MILITARY LACKS EQUIPMENT TO SUPPORT BUSH'S ESCALATION: In testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee yesterday, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Peter Pace admitted that finding enough equipment to support President Bush's escalation plan to send an addition 21,500 combat troops to Iraq would be a "problem." He said further that the "41,000 armored vehicles in Iraq" would be "fewer than will be needed to cover all the the troops that are deploying." One senior Army official suggested to the Washington Post last week that five brigades of Humveess would have to "fall out of the sky" to meet the shortfalls. Last year, the chief of the Pentagon's National Guard Bureau expressed similar sentiments, telling Congress that "at least two-thirds of his units in the United States are not combat-ready." Such shortages are not new. Indeed, the Post reported last week that Guard units have "on average, 40 percent of their required equipment," and according to Army data, "the Guard as a whole is not expected to return to minimum equipment levels until 2013." Reports of cascading supply failures are not likely to end soon. Last week the Pentagon's Inspector General told Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-NY) that two ongoing audits of the procurement of armored vehicles and body armor for American soldiers would be forthcoming in July and October 2007.

IRAQ -- TOP RECONSTRUCTION OFFICIAL FLOWN TO BAGHDAD TO AVOID OVERSIGHT HEARING: For the first time since the war began, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-CA) is holding aggressive oversight hearings into the billions in waste, fraud, and abuse of U.S. funds in Iraq. On Jan. 10, when President Bush first made his plans for escalation public, he also announced plans to "appoint a reconstruction coordinator in Baghdad to ensure better results for economic assistance being spent in Iraq." The next day, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice named career diplomat Timothy Carney to the position. During yesterday's hearings, Waxman revealed that the State Department has blocked Carney from appearing at the hearing, despite the fact that Carney personally told Waxman he "was willing to come." Moreover, the Bush administration has apparently rushed him to Baghdad despite claiming that the reason he could not appear at the hearing was because he "did not yet know what he was going to do in Iraq." Waxman added that the State Department has "now told us that they may make him available to Congress in six months."

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Feds Investigate Dems More Than GOP

  What a surprise!

   TPMmuckraker

A study of reported federal investigations of elected officials and candidates shows that the Bush administration’s Justice Department pursues Democrats far more than Republicans. 79 percent of elected officials and candidates who’ve faced a federal investigation (a total of 379) between 2001 and 2006 were Democrats, the study found – only 18 percent were Republicans. During that period, Democrats made up 50 percent of elected officeholders and office seekers during the time period, and 41 percent were Republicans during that period, according to the study.

"The chance of such a heavy Democratic-Republican imbalance occurring at random is 1 in 10,000," according to the study's authors.

The study, based on press reports of federal investigations, was conducted by two retired professors, Dr. Donald C. Shields, Professor Emeritus from the Department of Communication, University of Missouri-St. Louis, and Dr. John F. Cragan, Professor Emeritus from the Department of Communication, Illinois State University, who have been collecting the data over the past several years. An earlier version of the study was presented to the National Communication Association in 2005. The latest summary of their data (through the end of 2006) was provided to us by Dr. Shields.

 

Technorati tags: , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Entitlement Mentality According To Jonathan Hoenig

Created by evan_at_rockridge (Rockridge Institute staff member) on Tuesday, February 6, 2007 01:06 PM

In his essay "The Entitlement Mentality Doesn't Fly in Investing," Jonathan Hoenig writes to his audience of investors, "Aren't we all looking to get in on the next Microsoft (MSFT) or Google (GOOG)?" He then proceeds to write that investors who profit from such investments "rightfully feel pride in our accomplishments" because "we earned it." He laments that people "resent" successful CEO's because of their wealth.

After bemoaning the plight of the millionaire and billionaire CEOs, who apparently are very sensitive to criticism, Hoenig prescribes tough love for "manufacturing workers" who need the blunt message that "they need to learn new skills." "Families [that] have trouble making ends meet" need to be told to be "responsible for choosing where to put their money."           The Article

   First off. Most of the wealthy CEO's are resented not just because of their wealth, but because they seem to make more and more money each year even if they are at a company that has lost money for the year.

   I wish that someone could explain to me how you can reap a multi-million dollar productivity bonus when the company you work at has lost money. Unless the productivity goal was to lose money, then this doesn't make any sense!

    As far as families not making ends meet, many do not have many choices on where they should put their money. In some cases it comes down to either food for the table, power, rent or mortgage or other things that you must have. Who has much money left after expenses and the other unexpected things which pop up from time to time?

    I've worked manufacturing in the past that paid darn good wages but if your insurance premiums and co-pays are going up faster than your wages are, you are stuck in a bind. We have a workforce that is flooded with workers who have added " new skills " that are still stuck in the same rut because companies have a hard time moving anyone up the ladder any more unless they are related to the supervisor or someone else higher up.

   Mr. Jonathan Hoenig, three words for you, sir. Go Fuck yourself!

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Catholic Group Irate At John Edwards

   From The Charlotte Observer comes a report that a Catholic group has a problem with two bloggers hired by John Edwards over some comments that the two had posted elsewhere.

   President of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, Bill Donohue, has demanded that Edwards fire both Amanda Marcotte and Melissa McEwan.

   Donohue is pissed at some comments that the women made about the pope and the church for its opposing homosexuality, abortion and contraception.

In an excerpt cited by Donohue, Marcotte wrote, "The Catholic church is not about to let something like compassion for girls get in the way of using the state as an instrument to force women to bear more tithing Catholics."

Among the McEwan posts Donohue listed was one in which she questioned what religious conservatives don't understand about "keeping your noses out of our britches, our beds and our families?" -- Associated Press

     So what's the problem here? Is opinion no longer allowed in this country against the Catholic church or any others for that matter? Last that I heard, President Bush hadn't taken that away from us yet. Not all of it.

    Amanda Marcotte is right telling the church to stay the hell out of family and bedroom business and John Edwards would do well to keep these two women on staff.

 

Technorati tags: ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Taliban Preparing For NATO Attack

    It looks like the Afghanistan citizens in some villages are hauling ass while the Taliban is digging in and preparing for a fight with NATO forces.

    Reuters )  

Helmand provincial governor Haji Assadullah Wafa told Reuters by phone a military operation would soon be launched to recapture Musa Qala, which the Taliban over-ran last week.

British-led NATO forces had struck a deal with tribal elders after months of heavy fighting to withdraw from the town if the Taliban were also kept out.

 

Technorati tags: ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

The GOP Welfare State

Believe it or not, I am actually an independent when it comes to politics. However, since this Bush character and his class of idiots have been in the White House, I have found no reason to support anything that they have done or that they try to do.


Now we have the Republicans trying to cut $4.9 billion from education, training, employment and other services (Reuters)



... the White House’s five-year plan foresees $66 billion in cuts to Medicare, a program for the elderly, and $12 billion in cuts for Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor.


Reuters: Spratt said Bush’s plan projects a $61 billion budget surplus in 2012 while assuming only $50 billion in war costs in 2009 and none after that. This year, fighting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan could total around $170 billion.


Bush’s budget also does not factor in permanently fixing a quirk in the U.S. tax code so that middle-class taxpayers do not get hit with tax bills designed for the wealthy. The fix could cost around $1 trillion.


Let’s look at where some of the cash for the Iraq war reconstruction has gone to, or not.




Seattle Times: Waxman wanted to know how the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) could have shipped $12 billion in cash from the Federal Reserve in New York to Baghdad and handed it over to Iraqi ministries with only the sketchiest accounting controls. The cash, all 363 tons of it, was shrink-wrapped into $400,000 bricks and carried on C-130 cargo planes.


"Who in their right mind would send 363 tons of cash into a war zone?" Waxman asked. And with limited oversight, he said, "we have no way of knowing whether the cash shipped into the Green Zone ended up in enemy hands."


The special inspector general for Iraqi reconstruction, Stuart Bowen, said in a January 2005 report that $8.8 billion was unaccounted for after being given to the Iraqi ministries.


If they’d have dropped me just one of those bricks I could have spent it better than the Republicans have and I would have had positive results!


Bush seems to forget that he doesn’t work for the Iraqis or the oil companies (?) or Israel or anyone else but the American people. At least he does, for now!


Technorati Tags:



The Alternative Minimum Tax

       Remember the AMT? That would be the alternative minimum tax which the government has taken to living off of, somewhat.

From the Tax Policy Center , we get some recent TPC analyses of the AMT, which examine the expanding reach of the tax and consider options for reform.

   An example for you.

News & Events

The Individual Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT): 11 Key Facts and Projections

Len Burman, Julianna Koch, and Greg Leiserson
December 1, 2006
Available in PDF

The individual alternative minimum tax (AMT) was originally enacted in 1969 to guarantee that high-income individuals paid at least a minimal amount of tax. Middle- and upper-income taxpayers must add a number of so-called "preference items" to their taxable income, subtract a special AMT exemption, and calculate their tax according to the AMT tax schedule. If the tax under that schedule is higher than the regular income tax, taxpayers pay the difference as AMT.

Projected number of AMT taxpayers with and without effect of 2001-2006 tax cuts

1. AMT is exploding. In 2007, unless Congress acts, 23.4 million taxpayers will be affected by the AMT. In 2006, only 3.5 million taxpayers will owe the tax because of a temporarily higher exemption, which expires at the end of the year. By comparison, back in 1970, just 20,000 taxpayers were affected. If the 2001-2006 tax cuts expire as scheduled at the end of 2010, 39 million taxpayers (more than one-third) will be hit by the AMT in 2017. If the tax cuts are extended, the number jumps to 53 million taxpayers (49 percent). (Tables T06-0266 and T06-0267)     Complete Analysis

   This example all by itself makes Bush's tax cuts a tax increase over time, except for the really wealthy.

 

Technorati tags: , ,

Contacting your Senators and Representatives

   You may have noticed that as of late I have been pushing for the citizens of the United States to either write, call, or email your respective House Representative or Senator to let them know that you do not approve of the way that this resolution bullshit has been handled, or other things for that matter.

    Many of you may not know how to do this, so I am posting the correct way to contact and to speak to your elected officials. Yes, there are right ways and wrongs ways of doing this and we want the right way.

    Daily Kos  by edgery

Mon Feb 05, 2007 at 11:27:11 PM PST

    Signing onto internet petitions and letters does not send as powerful a message as picking up the phone and calling the offices of these Senators. There are a number of ways the electorate can contact Members of Congress. Here is a list of some common ways with some information about how the communication is often handled in a Congressional office:
*  Sign on to on-line petition or "blast" emails or "blast" faxes -- fact of that petition exists is noted. Exception might be based on who organized the petition and the organization's past effectiveness in politics AND the number of participants. If the numbers are high enough (for Senators, this needs to be at least in the tens of thousands), can be effective particularly if very high percentage of participants are constituents.
*  Filling out contact/comment form on Congressional website -- since most Congressional offices now limit these to use by constituents only, greater attention is paid. Some Congressional offices (usually on the House side) will even respond, though you shouldn't expect it. Note however that if a pattern of same language is found, the attention drops off very quickly since it is presumed that this is another "blast" communication even if the constituents have to copy and paste the language individually. If the office is taking a count such as before a vote, whether it's a cut-&-paste or original message, these are likely to get counted.
*  Sending a fax -- same as the contact form: if it's a copy of something off the web or the same as dozens of other faxes, AND it's from a constituent, it might get counted. If it's an original message (in your own words), it will get counted. You are also more likely to get a written response from one of the constituent correspondence aides -- canned language sent to everyone who has communicated on the issue.
*  Handwritten letter (doesn't have to be literally handwritten but does need to be original) -- guaranteed to get a response though it may come weeks later, guaranteed to be counted if -- and this is a HUGE IF -- it arrives in time to be relevant. Ever since the anthrax scares in Washington, all mail going to a Congressional office is first isolated by the Postal Service and delivered to a special facility on the Hill. There it is irradiated, xrayed, inspected, and generally scrutinized to an extreme degree. Once all this is done, it is put into the Congressional mail sorting services and eventually delivered to the addressee. If it took 2-3 days to get a letter to a Congressional office before anthrax, it now can take as long as 2 or even 3 weeks. So, the mail is not the best approach if you want to have a mass or immediate impact.

There is a feature at Congress.org to have a letter hand-delivered. It costs $8.95 and is wonderful. The recipient knows you've not only spent the time to write the letter yourself but paid extra to get it into his/her hands immediately. For written communications, this or any other hand-delivery method is the most effective.
*  Phone call to the District office -- this can be very effective if you know that the Senator (or Representative) is going to be there. On the other hand, staff at district offices are primarily constituent services staff -- handling many types of problems including dealing with the Veterans Administration or Social Security or other government agencies. They are helpful and friendly, but in many cases, the reason you're calling is not what they focus on or possibly know much about. Call the District office to schedule a meeting with your Member of Congress or his/her Chief of Staff during District work weeks. For issue specific contact, call the Washington office.
*  Phone call to the Washington office -- now we're getting to the nitty-gritty. Now, unless you donated big big bucks to the campaign or are a close personal friend, be realistic and don't expect to get the Senator or Representative on the line. You still have two choices though --
leave a message with whomever answers the phone, or
get to the staffer who works the issue.

The first is fine, particularly if your purpose in calling is to voice an opinion or make a specific request on a particular bill (vote for S.000 or great job on your health care proposal). The second is for relationship-building, to provide relevant information that you think the Senator or Representative doesn't but should have, to offer help, to engage.   More Here

 

Technorati tags: , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Reconstruction Official on Iraq Billions:"What Difference Does It Make?"

TPMmuckraker

By Paul Kiel - February 6, 2007, 2:06 PM

What happened to billions in Iraqi funds that were overseen by the Coalition Provisional Authority? That's not "important," according to David Oliver, the former Director of Management and Budget of the agency.

A recording of the unfortunately candid remarks, previously made by Oliver to the BBC, were played during this morning's oversight hearing by Rep. Diane Watson (D-CA). The hearing has focused on the CPA's administration of nearly $9 billion in Iraqi funds in 2003 and 2004 -- money that Stuart Bowen, Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, has said was inadequately accounted for.

"I have no idea, I can't tell you whether or not the money went to the right things or didn't - nor do I actually think it is important," Oliver says on the tape . "Billions of dollars of their money disappeared, yes I understand, I'm saying what difference does it make?"

    This is the shit that has permeated the Bush Crime Family from day one! We lost $9 billion, so what?

    Here is what Oliver had to say at the oversight hearing headed by Rep. Diane Watson (D-CA)., this morning. 

That was a clip, as I recall, after a thirty or forty minute conversation, and it comes back to the essence of I hope what Stuart [Bowen] has pointed out several times, is a question of transparency. He believes that the CPA should have ordered the information, we decided the best way to make sure we could withdraw as quickly as possible and for the safety of the troops was to rely upon the Iraqi system to distribute that money. Therefore, we made sure that it was transparent what we were doing with the money to the ministries and then relied upon the ministries system, the entire financial system they had, to do that. We had about, I had four to ten people, the country’s population is about the same size as California, which I think has 800 people in the same office. We thought this was the best way to make sure that the country’s safety was performed.

  Right!

 

Technorati tags: , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Will A House Resolution Pass?

    It may have gotten stuck in quicksand in the Senate, but the resolution on Bush's war escalation plan may be resurrected from death's grip over in the House.

YahooNews

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives will take up a resolution next week disapproving of President George W. Bush's decision to add 21,500 American troops in Iraq, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said on Tuesday.

Although the House had intended to follow the Senate's lead on the issue, Hoyer, a Maryland Democrat, said the House had decided not to wait any longer on the Senate to act after Senate Republicans blocked debate on a similar resolution in that chamber on Monday.

"The reason we're going ahead is not because we don't think the Senate will ever act, but we're not sure when the Senate is going to act," Hoyer told reporters.

"I think the resolution will clearly say we do not believe that the president's proposal of an escalation of 21,000 troops is the proper policy to be pursuing," Hoyer said. It was being drafted now, he said, and he expected a three day debate.

   Maybe it would have been a better idea if all of this had started in the House right from the start, where the Democrats have more than enough votes to get some kind of statement on this mess passed.

    I would go so far as to even dare any of the Democrats in the House to go for some watered down crap like they attempted to do in the Senate version of a resolution.

    We are watching you like hawks!

 

Technorati tags: , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Henry Waxman ( Elliott Ness ) Comes To Washington With Guns Blazing

   Representative Henry A. Waxman, the new chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, promises some real oversight of the kind that this Bush Crime Family has never seen.

   Waxman is known for being a hard-assed investigator and for also being very competent in his job, contrary to what some of the administration officials have said.

    NYTimes

    "There has been no cop on the beat,” said Mr. Waxman, who accuses Congressional Republicans of having abdicated their responsibility for oversight in recent years. “And when there is no cop on the beat, criminals are more willing to engage in crimes. Without constant policing by Congress, he said, “the bad actors feel they can get away with anything.”

    He has already held hearings dealing with the administrations alleged intimidation and harassment of scientist who spoke on the coming ills caused by global warming.

    Up now are the reports of the massive fraud in the Iraqi billion dollar reconstruction projects which have had such things as something like $9 billion disappear without a trace.

   Mr. Waxman has been called the Elliott Ness of the Democrats so things should be getting a little steamy for the war profiteers and the Bush administration. Oh. I forgot. They are both one and the same. What was I thinking?

   Mr. Waxman has investigated all of the good qualities of the Bush administration (Halliburton, Enron, the flu vaccine crisis, conflicts of interest at Homeland Security) and the bad. Wait a minute. Those were the bad qualities and there are no good qualities about this administration!

    Go get them, Henry Waxman!

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Iraq War De-Escalation Act of 2007

From Eschaton

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

At a press conference in the U.S. Capitol, Senator Obama and Reps. Thompson and Murphy discussed the Iraq War De-Escalation Act of 2007

Senator Barack Obama (D-IL):"Our troops have preformed brilliantly in Iraq, but no amount of American soldiers can solve the political differences at the heart of somebody else's civil war. That's why our plan not only stops the escalation of this war, but begins a phased redeployment that can pressure the Iraqis to finally reach a political settlement and brings all U.S. combat troops home by March of next year."

Congressman Mike Thompson (D-CA): "Our troops have done an amazing job, but success in Iraq will only be achieved by the Iraqis themselves. Sending more troops into the heart of Iraq's civil war will only put more American lives at risk. This legislation provides a practical plan for ending the war as safely and quickly as possible."

Congressman Patrick Murphy (D-PA): "As someone who served in Baghdad with the 82nd Airborne, I can tell you that what's needed in Iraq is a surge in diplomacy, not an escalation of force. This legislation seeks a much-needed political solution and puts forward a tough and sensible plan to end the war. We shouldn't be sending American men and women to referee a civil war. Our troops have done their job, now it's time to start bringing them home and to force more Iraqis to come off the sidelines and fight for their country."

The binding legislation ends President Bush's escalation by capping the number of troops at January 10, 2007 levels, puts forward specific benchmarks for success in Iraq and establishes a timeline to redeploy our troops. Redeployment, according to the bill, would begin no later than May 1, 2007, with the goal of all combat brigades redeployed by March 31, 2008 - a date consistent with the recommendations of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group.  Entire Article

   A binding resolution! That would be wonderful since the Democrats haven't grown the balls to stop the war funding, yet. Bush isn't going to listen to any resolution whether it's binding or not so the boys in the House may as well get ready to pull the cash cow into a safer place.

    Bush is in to deep and has to much money riding on this war and in the upcoming Iran fiasco to pull out of it. I do not think that the war profiteering corporations would let him off the hook that easy.

                                IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Employee Free Choice Act Gets Into The House

The Employee Free Choice Act made it to the House last evening.

AFL-CIO Blog

If passed, the Employee Free Choice Act would make the process of choosing a union more fair by:

    • Establishing stronger penalties for violation of employee rights when workers seek to form a union and during first-contract negotiations.
    • Providing mediation and arbitration for first-contract disputes.
    • Allowing employees to form unions by signing cards authorizing union representation.

Some 60 million U.S. workers say they would join a union if they could, based on research conducted by Peter D. Hart Research Associates in December 2006. But when workers try to gain a voice on the job by forming a union, employers routinely respond with intimidation, harassment and retaliation.A poll conducted in December by Hart Research showed a strong majority of the public—65 percent—approves of unions, up from 55 percent in 1981. But that same poll, taken for us at the AFL-CIO, also showed that nearly one-third of the public does not realize how hard management fights workers who seek to form unions.In fact:

    It is about time that someone began putting these low-paying companies in their place! This bill has 230 co-sponsors so check out the list to see if your rep. is on it. If not, tell them that they should be. It would be in their best interest.

 

Technorati tags: ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

David Broder Using The GOP Smear Campaign On Democrats

Oliver Willis

February 06, 2007

David Broder Libels Democrats

 

David Broder, the most insider of Washington insiders, perpetuates a lie and smears the Democratic party in "reporting" on this past weekend's meeting of the DNC.

One of the losers in the weekend oratorical marathon was retired Gen. Wesley Clark, who repeatedly invoked the West Point motto of "Duty, Honor, Country," forgetting that few in this particular audience have much experience with, or sympathy for, the military.

David Broder is a filthy liar, and the Washington Post ought to correct the slander he's published in their pages. For too long the Republican party and the conservative movement has smeared Democrats and liberals as not supportive of the troops, when time and time again it is the right who does not look out for their interests as Democrats and liberals time and time again fight for good foreign policy, veterans benefits, and the basics of body armor for our troops.

   The campaign of smear is all that the Republicans and their hawks have left. They have a lousy war record that is, in fact, the only thing that they have to stand on. Throw in the fact that very few of the Republicans take a stand on anything unless " the decider " tells them that it is okay do so .

 

Technorati tags: , , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

Iraq, Iran, Bush Budget

    Due to technical problems, posting at this sight will more than likely be minimal. I'm having to upgrade my operating system and since it is a Microsoft product, I am sure that there will be problems.

   However, problems or not, I should be back to normal within a few hours. I will be posting from a different computer but since it doesn't have the software that I work with, this will be time consuming.

   Those of you who have dealt with this kind of crap, know how annoying it can be!

   Here's a short version of the news today, without my usual comments added.

Associated Press:

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Gunmen wearing Iraqi army uniforms seized an Iranian diplomat as he drove through central Baghdad, officials said Tuesday.
Iran said it held the United States responsible for the diplomat's "safety and life."

One Iraqi government official said the Iranian diplomat was detained Sunday by an Iraqi army unit that reports directly to the U.S. military. A military spokesman denied any U.S. troops or Iraqis that report to them were involved.

WaPo:

Tuesday, February 6, 2007; 8:08 AM

LONDON, Feb. 6 -- Dramatic cockpit video leaked to a British newspaper shows a distraught American pilot in Iraq saying he fears he'll be imprisoned after mistakenly firing on and killing a British soldier.

"We're in jail, dude," the pilot can be heard saying to his co-pilot after the "friendly-fire" incident on March 28, 2003. Neither pilot, however, has been court-martialed, an Air Force spokesman told the Associated Press.

McClatchy:

Posted on Mon, Feb. 05, 2007

WASHINGTON - Highlights of President Bush's proposed fiscal 2008 budget:

-$2.9 trillion total, a 4.2 percent increase over this year.

-$93.4 billion more for war costs in Iraq and Afghanistan in fiscal 2007; another $141.7 billion for war costs in fiscal 2008. To date Congress has enacted $426.8 billion for war costs. This request would drive the total to $661.9 billion through fiscal 2008. Another $50 billion is marked as a placeholder for fiscal 2009.

-$624.6 billion for defense.

-$36.6 billion for medical care for U.S. veterans, up 83 percent since 2001. Includes $3 billion for improved mental health services.

-Making his first-term tax reductions permanent, costing the Treasury $1.6 trillion over 10 years.

-Cutting $66 billion from projected Medicare costs over five years by slowing the growth of payments to health-care providers and charging wealthy beneficiaries higher premiums. Medicare spending still would grow at a 6.7 percent annual rate rather than a now-projected 7.4 percent annual rate.

-Cutting projected Medicaid spending by $25 billion over five years.

-Eliminating or sharply reducing funding for 141 other programs to save $12 billion over five years.

-Deficits of $239 billion in fiscal 2008, down from $244 billion this year and $248 billion in 2006.

-Balancing the budget by fiscal 2012.

 

Technorati tags: , ,

Soldiers In Iraq: Troop Surge Is A Lost Cause

Original Article

    Army 1st Lt. Antonio Hardy: "To be honest, it's going to be like this for a long time to come, no matter what we do. I think some people in America don't want to know about all this violence, about all the killings. The people back home are shielded from it; they get it sugar-coated."

    Sgt. 1st Class Herbert Gill: "What is victory supposed to look like? Every time we turn around and go in a new area there's somebody new waiting to kill us. Sunnis and Shiites have been fighting for thousands of years, and we're not going to change that overnight."

"Once more raids start happening, they'll (insurgents) melt away. And then two or three months later, when we leave and say it was a success, they'll come back."

The problem, many soldiers say, is that as long as the majority of Iraqis oppose the presence of American troops, a trend that's only accelerated since the 2003 invasion, no amount of bullets or bodies will solve the problem.

   Pvt. 1st Class Zach Clouser:"We can go get into a firefight and empty out ammo, but it doesn't accomplish much. This isn't our war - we're just in the middle."    Common Dreams 

Technorati tags: , ,

Hearings Mark Tougher Oversight of War Contracts

Original
By Stephanie Kirchgaessner
The Financial Times    Monday 05 February 2007

  Executives from government contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan, including KBR and Compass of the UK, face a rocky ride in Washington this week as Henry Waxman, new chairman of the House of Representative's chief investigative committee, begins hearings on allegations of "waste, fraud and abuse."

  The hearings, which open tomorrow, are expected to mark the beginning of a new phase in which contracting practices are subject to tougher oversight.

  Mr. Waxman has been a dogged critic of the Bush administration's handling of billions of dollars of US taxpayers' money in Iraq reconstruction contracts.

  The committee has called on the chief executives of Blackwater, a security contractor, KBR, a subsidiary of Halliburton, and Compass, food services group, among others, to answer questions.

  The hearing will feature the testimony of family members of four Blackwater employees who were killed in Falluja in 2004, and whose bodies were burned and dragged through the streets. The families are suing Blackwater for wrongful death.

  Mr. Waxman is likely to focus his line of inquiry on allegations that Halliburton wrongly entered into a subcontracting arrangement with ESS, a division of Compass that ran a dining facility in Iraq, which in turn used Blackwater to provide it with security services.

  Halliburton controls a $16 billion (£8 billion) contract in Iraq, known as Logcap, which provides logistical support to US troops.

  Under the provisions of the contract, Halliburton can use only the US military - not private security companies such as Blackwater - to provide armed protection to its contractors.

  In response to questions from Congress, the Department of Defense in July said that KBR had "no knowledge" of Blackwater having been hired by any of its subcontractors.

  But in a memo Mr. Waxman subsequently received from Compass, the company admitted that ESS had used Blackwater and the US security group had been deployed by other subcontractors.

  Mr. Waxman in December said, in a letter to Donald Rumsfeld, former defence secretary, that the security subcontract raised "serious questions" about the oversight exercised by Halliburton and the Pentagon regarding the tiering of subcontractors, and whether it was "proper" for Halliburton to bill the government for the services. The pervasive use of multiple tiers of sub-contractors has, according to Mr. Waxman, contributed to "exorbitant overhead fees" on government contracts.

  Compass said Steve Murray, the director of contracting at ESS, would testify at the hearing, scheduled for Wednesday, in spite of the fact that the committee had invited Richard Cousins, chief executive. Blackwater and KBR declined to answer questions about whether the chief executives of the groups would appear.

Paul Bremer, the former chief of the Coalition Provisional Authority, is set to make his first appearance before Mr. Waxman's committee tomorrow.

 

Technorati tags: , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

On the GOP Blocking Senate Debate On Iraq

   We all have heard that the Dems got fucked by the Republicans and that there will be no open debate on Iraq and the resolutions that would have sprung from it. Not only did the Democrats in office get screwed, but the American public did also, as did our U.S. troops in Iraq!

   You can bet your ass that those Republican pieces of crap that are up for re-election in '08 will not be in office come '09! Some of the Democrats that went for this will also be selling shoes come '09!

   What the general public needs to be is to email your respective Senators and Congress people to tell them that the Iraq war funding needs to stop. This is the only way that we are going to get our people home and if this isn't done very quickly, the Bush Crime Family will have our people in Iran also. You can bet your ass that Iran isn't about nuclear weapons or necessarily about controlling the oil flow. It is more about power! Bush's to be exact.

    If we allow this punk to continue his escapades, I see him declaring martial law in the United States and I see the 2008 elections being postponed because of all of the shit that will be hitting the fan between the U.S., Iran, Iraq, and the majority of the middle east.

   If you haven't read this , please do. It might explain alot to you.

   Back to the Senate.

    NYT:

The deadlock came after Democrats refused a proposal by Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, that would have cleared the way for a floor fight on the Warner resolution in return for votes on two competing Republican alternatives that were more supportive of the president.

One of those alternatives, by Senator Judd Gregg, Republican of New Hampshire, would declare that Congress should not cut off any funds for forces in the field. That vote was seen as problematic for Democrats because many of them opposed any move to curtail spending, raising the prospect that it could have attracted the broadest support in the Senate.

 Forty-seven Democrats and two Republicans voted to open debate on the resolution; 45 Republicans and one independent were opposed.

But Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, said that “time was tenuous” and that he would not guarantee that Democrats would try again to bring up the resolution. He did promise that there would be more clashes over Iraq policy as the Senate turned to measures like the president’s request for $100 billion in emergency Iraq spending.

“You can run but you can’t hide,” Mr. Reid told his Republican colleagues on the floor. “We are going to debate Iraq.”

                               IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

Technorati tags: , , , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Monday, February 05, 2007

Republicans Who Voted Against The Iraqi Escalation Debate

Republicans up for re-election in 2008 that voted against debating the Iraq surge:

Lamar Alexander (R-TN)
Saxby Chambliss (R-GA)
Thad Cochran (R-MS)
John Cornyn (R-TX)
Larry Craig (R-ID)
Elizabeth Dole (R-NC)
Pete Domenici (R-NM)
Mike Enzi (R-WY)
Lindsey Graham (R-SC)
Chuck Hagel (R-NE)
Jim Inhofe (R-OK)
Mitch McConnell (R-KY)
Pat Roberts (R-KS)
Jeff Sessions (R-AL)
Gordon Smith (R-OR)
Ted Stevens (R-AK)
John Sununu (R-NH)
John Warner (R-VA)

  Two weeks ago, Chuck Hagel said , “If you wanted a safe job, go sell shoes.We owe it to those men and women that we continue to send in that grinder,” speaking to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

  This can be stated in no simpler terms. Everyone who voted for this debate to be shut down, "voted to support President Bush's escalation in Iraq."

   There were also a few Democrats who went along with this crap.

   From the DesMoinesregister.com

Presidential candidate Gov. Tom Vilsack:

"Those who voted for the war, those who voted to continue to support the war, those who voted to continue funding the war, can surely vote to stop the war.As an insider, it's difficult to effect change. ... As an outsider, we can change things. ... We win as outsiders."

"Congress has the constitutional responsibility and a moral obligation to do it now," Vilsack said, to cheers, in a clear shot at opponents such as Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York, who said Friday that there aren't the votes in Congress for a speedy pullout.

   It is surely time for the Democrat's to seriously consider a stop in the Iraq war funding. Do it now while you still can and while you still have the countries support.

 

1ST Lt. Ehren Watada's Court-Martial Begins Today

This article is originally from the San Francisco Bay Guardian:

    It is a sad day in American jurisprudence when a soldier of conscience is court-martialed -- not for lying, but for telling the truth; not for breaking a covenant with the military, but for upholding the rule of law in wartime.

    The court-martial of First Lt. Ehren Watada is set for today in Fort Lewis, Wash. The 28-year-old soldier from Hawaii is the first commissioned officer to refuse deployment to Iraq. He is charged with "missing movement" and "conduct unbecoming an officer" including the "use of contemptuous words for the President."

    The story has received a fair amount of media attention, in part because the Pentagon is trying to force three journalists to testify against Watada.

    But the soldier's story is significant on its own.

A year ago, when Watada was on leave and out of uniform, he delivered a moving address to a Veterans for Peace convention. Watada is not a conscientious objector. He even offered to serve in Afghanistan.

But he questioned the legality of the war in Iraq, and he denounced the known lies of the George W. Bush administration. He said nothing more than what the world already knows, and he did not encourage any other soldiers to follow his example.

All the major issues of the Iraq fiasco -- the fraudulent basis for the war, the absence of a formal declaration from Congress (which has no constitutional authority to transfer its war-declaring power to another branch), the war crimes, the flagrant violations of international treaties such as the United Nations Charter -- are coming to a head in this historic battle between a junior officer and an army whose Abu Ghraib torture scandals shocked the world.

Ordinarily, the truth of a claim is a strong defense against any charge of defamation. Not in the Army, however. Army prosecutors do not intend to allow Watada any opportunity to prove in court that everything he said about the president is true. Prosecutors told the presiding judge, Lt. Col. John Head, that the truthfulness of Watada's speech is irrelevant to the case.

The War of Choice

On the charge of refusing deployment, Watada's case may seem weak -- he is, after all, an officer in the military, and he has failed to obey a direct order to go to Iraq. But his defense actually has legal merit: his actions are based on hard evidence about military conduct in Iraq and a clear understanding of the law.

Watada is raising matters of principle that concern the right of all soldiers to full protection of the law. Under the Constitution and the standard enlistment contract, every soldier has a right, even a duty, to disobey illegal orders. The legality of Watada's orders pursuant to a "war of choice" is the central issue of the trial.

"The war in Iraq is in fact illegal," Watada told TruthOut.org. "It is my obligation and my duty to refuse any orders to participate in this war. An order to take part in an illegal war is unlawful in itself. So my obligation is not to follow the order to go to Iraq."

No American soldier has any obligation to participate in military aggression, "crimes against peace," or any operation that violates the Geneva Conventions. Under constitutional government, the authority of military command derives not from one person alone but from the rule of law itself.

There are only two conditions in which a war is legal under international law: when force is authorized by the United Nations Security Council or when the use of force is an act of national self-defense and survival. The UN Charter, based on the Nuremberg Principles, prohibits war "as an instrument of policy." And the war in Iraq is just that -- a war of choice.

There is a common tendency among lawyers and military commanders to sneer at international law. But the Constitution is unambiguous: Article VI states, "All Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby."

In a celebrated case in 1900 (United States v. Paquete Habana), the Supreme Court ruled, "International law is part of the law of the United States and must be ascertained and administered by the courts of justice of appropriate jurisdiction as often as questions of right depending upon it are duly presented for determination."

There is no exception for the military, no wall between domestic and international law.

In his speech to the veterans Watada noted that the U.S. Army Field Manual states, "Treaties relating to the law of war have a force equal to that of laws enacted by Congress. Their provisions must be observed by both military and civilian personnel with the same strict regard for both the letter and spirit of the law which is required with respect to the Constitution and statutes...."

In the end, though, none of that may matter.

The strength of Watada's legal case will make little difference if Army prosecutors succeed in preventing him from presenting evidence in his own defense in court, especially if judges adhere to the Machiavellian view that "in war, the laws are silent."

The American judiciary has a long, sorry record of ignoring the right of American soldiers to due process and the treaty clause and war-power clause in the Constitution. Too often, judges and prosecutors, both military and civilian, claim war is a political question, a foreign policy matter, something beyond judicial review. Hence, commanders can do as they please, and those who disagree can be imprisoned.

The political question doctrine, as it is known among lawyers, is the primary way by which judges circumvent international law. It is a way by which prowar judges and commanders foreclose any substantive discussion of the legalities of a war.

Few Americans remember the dark days of wartime jurisprudence four decades ago, when U.S. courts refused to hear GI challenges to the Vietnam War. The full implications of the Watada trial can be understood in that context.

In the mid-1960s and early 1970s, American soldiers and marines were imprisoned for refusing to commit war crimes. For example, Dr. Howard Levy, a Green Beret dermatologist, spent two years in prison after he refused to train special forces in dermatology. He argued that to do so would violate the Hippocratic Oath; the Green Berets, he insisted, used medicine as a political tactic in Vietnam, and for him to assist them would cause increased suffering.

In 1965, David Henry Mitchell II, who was eventually convicted of willful failure to report for induction, challenged the legality of Lyndon Johnson's war. He raised basic constitutional issues: the absence of a formal declaration, broken treaties, a pattern of war crimes on the battlefield. No soldier, Mitchell argued, should be forced to participate in criminal policies, to choose between near-sedition and the commission of war crimes.

Federal Judge William Timbers refused to hear the evidence. When Mitchell's attorneys argued that under the Nuremberg Principles soldiers have a duty to disassociate themselves from war crimes, the judge freaked out. It is, he said, "a sickening spectacle for a 22-year-old citizen to assert such tommyrot."

The judge argued that treaties and conventions are "utterly irrelevant as a defense on the charge of willful refusal to report for induction." The message was clear, and a deadly precedent was set: even if war is manifestly illegal, soldiers are still expected to participate. United States v. Mitchell was the first in a series of infamous cases through which courts placed presidential war beyond the arm of the law.

In a 1966 ruling against Army Private Robert Luftig, Federal Judge Alexander Holtzoff ruled that the war "is obviously a political question that is outside the judicial function." With "no discussion or citation to authority," the Federal Appeals Court concurred. In the most celebrated trial of the period, that of the Fort Hood Three -- soldiers who demanded the protection of the Constitution and international law -- District Judge Edward Curran refused to hear any evidence of systematic war crimes. He called the war a political issue beyond judicial cognizance.

Taken together, the Vietnam War rulings contradict the landmark precedent Marbury v. Madison. In 1803, Chief Justice John Marshall captured the essence of judicial abdication: "It cannot be presumed that any clause in the Constitution is intended to be without effect ... To what purpose are powers limited, and to what purpose is that limitation committed to writing, if these limits may, at any time, be passed by those intended to be restrained? ... It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is."

In this case the argument is particularly clear: Watada is not taking a political position as part of his defense. The United States may be overextended; the invasion may create blowback; unilateral actions may alienate allies; war debts may boomerang on the economy; anarchy in Iraq may be unavoidable. These are political questions, but they aren't what the first lieutenant is talking about. Watada is challenging the legality, not the political wisdom, of the war.

The president, he argues, is the final arbiter of foreign policy -- but only so long as policies are carried out in accordance with the rule of law.

Same Old Story

History has long since vindicated the soldiers of conscience who spoke out against the Vietnam War -- soldiers who tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to uphold the Constitution and international law; soldiers who warned their beloved nation long before the My Lai massacre of America's impending descent into barbarism. How many Vietnamese lives could have been saved? How many American soldiers might be home today with their grandchildren had American judges as well as presiding military commanders confronted the legal monstrosities of the war against Vietnam?

The cost of judicial abdication in the Vietnam War years, when American judges averted their eyes from the emerging holocaust in Indochina, is incalculable. Without judicial immunity, many of the horrendous deeds of the Johnson-Nixon years might never have occurred.

There were more than a dozen opportunities for American judges to confront the constitutional issues evoked by that undeclared war. When Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas, who publicly acknowledged the illegality of US invasions in Indochina, offered to hear a war-challenge appeal, his colleagues on the court overruled him.

So today we ask: How many more Iraqis and Americans will die before American judges fulfill their current obligation to uphold and enforce the rule of law? How long will it be before the infamous Vietnam War rulings are reversed, before the blood-drenched political question doctrine is buried for good?

Lt. Col. Head, presiding at Watada's court-martial, is already preparing to repeat the follies of the past. At a pretrial hearing Jan. 17, he denied all defense motions to present hard evidence of systematic war crimes in Iraq. He rejected the Nuremberg defense. He also upheld a pivotal government motion "to prevent the defense from presenting any evidence on the illegality of the war." Like past accomplices, he claimed that Watada's case is a "political issue" beyond the jurisdiction of the court.

Capt. Daniel Kuecker, the prosecutor in the pretrial hearings, could not be reached for comment, but Watada's civilian attorney, Eric Seitz, expressed outrage at Head's judicial abdication. These rulings, he told the press after the hearing, "are extraordinarily broad and subjective, which I find reprehensible. They are essentially saying there is no right to criticize, which we all know is not true." He added, "These rulings are about as horrible and inept as I could have imagined."

The question can no longer be avoided. Do American soldiers have any rights that their commanders and judges are bound to respect? As civilians, do we not have an obligation to provide our troops full protection of the laws for which they risk their lives?

                                             * * * *

   This entire court-martial is a joke and a sham on justice and you need to let your Representatives and  Senators know that this bullshit will not stand! This trial is nothing more than politics at play and "we,the people" should not take this lying down!

 

Technorati tags: ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Republicans Block Senate Iraq Debate

"We must heed the results of the November elections and the wishes of the American people," said Majority Leader Harry Reid ( bio, voting record).

   Reid said this just before the Republicans blocked a Senate debate  over Iraq. the Democrats have said that they will find a way to make President Bush alter his course with Iraq.

From Associated Press

Majority Leader Reid:"The American people do not support escalation. Last November, voters made it clear they want a change of course, not more of the same. The president must hear from Congress, so he knows he stands in the wrong place, alone."

Sen. Durbin of Illinois, the second-ranking Democrat:"If the Republicans want to stand by their president and his policy, they shouldn't run from this debate. If they believe we should send thousands of our young soldiers into the maws of this wretched civil war, they should at least have the courage to stand and defend their position."

   This whole load of crap is due to the fact that the Republicans want the language added that says that troop funding will not be cut off, which the Democrats agreed to in the Warner resolution. But, the Warner resolution also says the Senate:                                                    "disagrees with the `plan' to augment our forces by 21,500 and urges the president instead to consider all options and alternatives." AP

   It becomes apparent that the GOP does not wish anything, counter to Bush's bullshit, to be heard on the record.

                        IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

 

Technorati tags: , , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

What Is It Like to Be A Bush?

   Original Article

by Troutfishing

Sat Feb 03, 2007 at 09:20:29 PM PST

In a famous essay of modern philosophy Thomas Nagel asked  "What is it like to be a bat ?". His conclusion : we can never know. The experiential realms of humans and bats are too far apart.

Can we imagine what it is like to be George W. Bush ?

Imagine that you felt you had the means, the ability, the right, to play with and use the fates of average humans, Americans or the citizens of almost any country in the world, to advance your personal agenda and your needs, and those of your chosen friends and allies.

Imagine that you could instigate war, almost as a game, to suit your political needs and psychological fancy but that you didn’t see it in those terms at all and, instead, rationalized such power by calling it responsibility.

Imagine, also, you felt touched by divine providence, called by God to lead.

Imagine this felt quite sensible, because you had learned, as a part of your familial cultural inheritance, a whole range of subtle techniques by which the lives and fates of millions and the course of entire nations could be altered.

Imagine you’re George W. Bush.

    Imagine that you’d thought - or, more likely, discussed with similar, like minded individuals - about the political and personal utility of a war against Iraq.

    Imagine that you’d pondered the utility of such a war, that it would be useful for a range of reasons, not the least of which for the ability of war to magnify presidential power and - beyond even that - the opportunities such a war would afford for gradually polarizing and infuriating the sensibilities of people in a major religious tradition encompassing a substantial portion of the world’s population, Islam, so that by setting the stage for conditions that would so stress, brutalize, deprive and degrade American soldiers fighting in your manufactured war that you could be assured a predictable level of human rights abuses and atrocities, because the means by which average humans can be conditioned to commit mass killing and atrocities had been well researched.

    Imagine you had the means of engineering and provoking repeated human rights abuses, wholesale slaughter, and symbolic affronts maximally offensive to the Islamic religious tradition, and that you could more or less assume at some point the incessant goading and outrages would in the end provoke terrorist strikes against the United States and US interests that would, in turn, enable you to consolidate your presidential authority and your base of domestic political support, crush political dissent, and initiate yet another war that would have all the same political benefits and allow you, of course, to repeat the same process all over again.

Would you be George W. Bush ?

Prior to the European Enlightenment and the subsequent, widespread belief that individual humans posses certain inherent and inalienable rights, a belief that laid the foundation for the rise of the democratic political tradition, kings, queens, and potentates were commonly assumed to have the right to steal from or torture, rape or impale, incinerate or enslave, imprison or butcher their subjects, singly or en masse - by the millions even, if desired, at will.                                                                                      That is the manner in which many kings and tyrants once thought. Occasional benevolent rulers would, as exceptions, emerge from time to time but the rule was this : common subjects of monarch were as ants.

   Imagine yourself, as George W. Bush, able to initiate events that could lead to the deaths or hundreds of thousands, millions even. Imagine that you felt no special empathy for the fate of your victims, that it was nothing personal really, just business. Or, maybe, that you could do such things because you felt God approved.  

The notion that political leaders have the right to order mass killing or initiate events likely to lead to mass death, is still retained in the modern American democratic tradition but it is closely circumscribed. US presidents can typically only make such awful decisions during wartime, and for clear reason. Such powers are sometimes abused but in principle, at least, there remain checks on the ability of US presidents to order, with impunity, mass killing or mass violations of the rights of American or international citizens.

In principle.

 

But, such checks on the abuse of presidential authority assume that presidents actually care for the common good, and with the Bush Administration push to expand the slaughterhouse that the US occupation of Iraq has become, so that the killing mushrooms out to engulf Iran and perhaps continues to spread from there, that assumption is now in question.

To begin with, as a backdrop, a great deal of evidence point towards the fact that United States government has been commandeered by interests, by agendas, that go beyond the realm of common imagination on what the motives of the political elites driving US policy could be.

Endless words have been written, endless debates fought, about the real, underlying intent of the Bush Administration’s invasion and occupation of Iraq, and in the years since US troops rolled into Bhagdad a lot has been made clear - so that what was once seen as an amorphous, sinister conspiracy of a neoconservative cabal has resolved into a profile of convergent interest. There were in fact so many in the Washington DC power structure with strategically dubious, cynical, and self interested motivations for the US invasion and occupation of Iraq it’s surprising the venture wasn’t tried years ago.

Many reasonably straightforward underlying motivations of the cheerleaders who rooted for the Iraq war, many of whom are now clamoring for the Iran war, are now generally agreed on : Machiavellian geopolitical considerations revolving around oil, desires for personal profit, US defense industry financial interests, and the objective of increasing US military involvement in the Mideast for the benefit of Israel. Some even, no doubt, clamored for war out of misplaced patriotism.

In the background, too, seismic shifts in American economic class structure surely underlie, in part, the Iraq debacle :

Income disparities in the United States have long been widening, and the interests of a tiny economic elite -  who control an inordinate proportion of the national wealth - has been decoupling from that of the common masses ; political commenters, such as William Greider, have for over a decade and a half now been writing about the extent to which American government no longer represents the interests of average Americans but, more and more, advances elite economic and business interests. Indeed, with genetic engineering and advances in science and medicine that are beginning to enable those who can pay to buy supernatural levels of health, beauty, and intelligence even, we can even see the long term specter of the human race decoupling, as in H.G. Wells "The Time Machine", into two or more separate species.

 

These are factors that arguably fed the push for war in some way - all, even if ugly, are comprehensible.

But, the second level of explanation leads more clearly to the motivations and psychology of George W. Bush :

George W. Bush grew up in a family that began it’s march towards wealth and political power with the arms industry that sprung up to supply the US war effort in World War One. Prior to World War Two, George Bush’s grandfather, Prescott Bush, helped to channel financial investment that rebuilt German as an industrial power and built up an advanced German arms industry. Prescott Bush narrowly escaped prosecution, after the US declaration of war against the Axis, for "trading with the enemy", moving financial  assets around ( hiding actually ) for the German industrial magnate Fritz Thyssen whose empire accounted for a considerable fraction of German industrial production. Prescott Bush’s activities seem, however, to have more than anything, less to do with Nazi ideology and more to do with business, sans moral or nationalist considerations.                                                                                     George Herbert Walker Bush was in turn director of the CIA, and much could be said about his activities and alleged involvement, but key to the Bush family cultural legacy, more than anything, may be the apparent belief of the Bushes that they live outside of, and probably above, the normal strictures of law and nationalist loyalty, and the political and social methods - both sophisticated and brutal but usually quiet, deployed and practiced in the shadows, by which they have acquired and maintained the power and wealth of the dynasty. They are a family bent, with a single-minded fixation, on power.

 

What is it like to be a Bush ?

Imagine having the ability to determine and mold the fates of millions.

Imagine that this power is your birthright, and imagine humans, those outside your social and political circles, as ants.

Imagine that you really do not care about public opinion because you neither care for, nor empathize with, average Americans.

Imagine you don’t think about outcomes insofar as they effect Americans in general, Iraqis, Iranians, or the world at large but simply in terms of how your actions help you and your allies extend and consolidate power and gain profit.

Imagine you’re bent on attacking Iran because you think it is useful, at least in part, for expected terrorist blowback - attacks in the United States and elsewhere, for creating pretext for further extension of your presidential powers.

Imagine you hear of mass death you probably have caused, feel little to nothing, and simply shrug it off.

<center>Now, imagine that’s all true</center>

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Bush's Tale Of The Middle East

New York Times-Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates called the term “civil war” a “bumper-sticker answer” that oversimplified the reality of overlapping conflicts. “I believe that there are essentially four wars going on in Iraq,” he said at a Pentagon briefing today, citing Shia-on-Shia strife, principally in the South; sectarian violence, largely in Baghdad; the Sunni insurgency, and attacks by Al Qaeda.

   Bumper sticker, is it?

"When I think of a civil war I think of thousands of people out in the streets,” he said. Instead, in Iraq, he said he sees "gangs of killers going after specific neighborhoods or specific targets,” or attacks on marketplaces meant to cause random suffering.

   I would suggest that Mr. Gates clean his glasses one in a while and then he could see those " thousands of people" in the streets who have no income or homes to go to thanks to the United States under the Bush Crime Family. He should also try to remember the hundreds of thousands that have been displaced and are now in other countries because of our occupation.

   It has been pointed out once before that the Iraqi army has a massive amount of absenteeism because many have to travel to their own home towns to get their pay to their families because the banking system in Iraq is pretty much non-existent.

Most of this info comes from the new NIE Report, which I posted yesterday.

 

Technorati tags: , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com