Be INFORMED

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Edwards Voted For War Authorization On Advice Of advisor's?

    In a new book which is to be published in June by Simon & Schuster, Democratic strategist Bob Shrum writes that presidential hopeful John Edwards was pushed into voting for the Iraq war resolution by his advisors who were looking out for Edwards political future.

   Shrum says that he regrets telling Edwards to vote yes on the authority giving Bush the war authority and that if he would have listened to his instincts instead of the professionals, he would have been a stronger candidate back in 2004.     Source

Edwards said he had "no idea" what meeting Shrum was talking about. He said he hasn't read the book, so he could not address specific details.

"It was not a political calculation," Edwards told reporters after an appearance at Bennett College in Greensboro, N.C. "It was a mistake."

But Shrum said the consensus among the advisers was that Edwards, just four years in office, did not have the credibility to vote against the resolution and had to support it to be taken seriously on national security. Shrum said Edwards' facial expressions showed he did not like where he was being pushed to go.

   It would seem as if John Edwards has learned alot since 2004 as he has become much more outspoken since then and he has grown some attitude. Good for you, Mr. Edwards!

 

Technorati tags: , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

NYT Poll Doesn't State The Obvious On Bill Clinton

  The New York Times did a few more outtakes on their recent polls in today's newspaper and they stated the obvious facts. But they did forget something.

One other place where there was a notable, though not exactly shocking divergence, in the views of Republicans and the electorate at large: Former President Bill Clinton. Mr. Clinton’s unfavorable rating among the general public was at 38 percent; but 76 percent of Republicans said they had an unfavorable view of him.

   This is all well and good but I guess that it slipped past the NYT people that if 38 percent of the general public had an unfavorable rating on Bill Clinton, then 62 percent had a good view of him give or take a few points.

   As far as the Republicans are concerned, they have an unfavorable view of anyone who isn't a Republican so their opinions should not count in a poll such as this.

 

Technorati tags: , , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

John Edwards Says Gonzales Should Resign

   I am starting to like Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards more and more each day. Yes, I know that I said this just a few days ago, but I am getting more impressed with this man as time passes!

   While Senator Clinton and Obama have remained quite once again on a very real national problem, Mr. Edwards has spoken first on the Gonzales-Attorney purge saying that, " If White House officials ordered this purge, he should have refused them. If they insisted, he should have resigned in protest. Attorney General Gonzales should certainly resign now."

    Now we'll just have to wait and see how long it takes the rest of the presidential candidates, from both parties, to say anything on the Gonzales ordeal. I do not expect to much from the GOP side.

John Edwards

Mar 13, 2007

Chapel Hill, North Carolina - Senator John Edwards released the following statement calling for the resignation of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales following today's report of White House involvement in the recent firings of federal prosecutors.

"Today's news is only the latest and most disturbing sign of the politicization of justice under President Bush. From the abuse of investigative authority under the Patriot Act to the unconstitutional imprisonment of the Guantanamo Bay detainees and illegal torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib and Bagram Air Force Base, this president has consistently shown contempt for the rule of law.

"Attorney General Alberto Gonzales betrayed his public trust by playing politics when his job is to enforce and uphold the law. By violating that trust, he's done a great disservice to his office. If White House officials ordered this purge, he should have refused them. If they insisted, he should have resigned in protest. Attorney General Gonzales should certainly resign now."

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Schumer/Feinstein Press Conference

Here is the full press conference hosted by Schumer/Feinstein to discuss the US Attorney purge. This is a lengthy conference so grab a beer or a real drink.

Blue Dogs Win, America and the Troops Lose

    The original is posted at Daily Kos

by BarbinMD    Tue Mar 13, 2007 at 10:25:07 AM PDT

    It's all over, save the congratulations and backslapping for a job well done.  With the wrangling over language for the supplemental spending bill hammered out, with the add-ons for unrelated, yet vital projects tacked on to gain more votes, and of course, with appeasing concessions dutifully slapped on, Congress will soon present their own new way forward for Iraq.  But through all of their compromises and political gamesmanship, they forgot one thing; the troops.

Buried on page 71 of this bill is the following:

Sec. 1901. (a) Congress finds that it is Defense Department policy that units should not be deployed for combat unless they are rated "fully mission capable".

(b) None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available in this or any other Act may be used to deploy any unit of the Armed Forces to Iraq unless the chief of the military department concerned has certified in writing to the Committees on Appropriations and the Committees on Armed Services at least 15 days in advance of the deployment that the unit is fully mission capable.

On the face of it, finally, after nearly four years, common sense legislation that says unless a unit is certified as fully rested, trained and equipped, they cannot be sent to Iraq.  Who could object to such a simple concept?  Besides the administration and the Republican Party, there is one group that found this to be "tieing the hands" of George Bush; the Blue Dog Dems.  Almost to a man, they refused to back this unambiguous statement of support for the safety of the troops unless this language was added:

(d) The President, by certifying in writing to the Committees on Appropriations and the Committees on Armed Services that the deployment to Iraq of a unit that is not assessed fully mission capable is required for reasons of national security and by submitting along with the certification a report in classified and unclassified form detailing the particular reason or reasons why the unit's deployment is necessary despite the chief of the military department's assessment that the unit is not fully mission capable, may waive the limitation prescribed in subsection (b) on a unit-by-unit basis.

Yes, they are willing to allow George Bush to set aside their legislation and send ill-equipped, untrained soldiers to fight in Iraq's civil war under the guise of protecting our national security.  But was our national security at risk when two combat brigades were sent to Iraq without proper training?  Desert training that Tony Snow blithely suggested they would get in Iraq?  Was our national security at risk when it was decided to deploy:

...troops with serious injuries and other medical problems, including GIs who doctors have said are medically unfit for battle. Some are too injured to wear their body armor, according to medical records.

Is there any doubt that national security has nothing to do with this administration's willingness to send ill-prepared troops into battle?  That the overextending of the military for nearly four years has brought us to the point where there simply aren't enough "fully mission capable" troops to sustain this war?  But setting aside that question and the question of how sending our military to be targets in a civil war could ever conceivably have any bearing on our national interests, yesterday I called all 43 of the Blue Dog Dems and asked:

Does the Congressman support requiring that all troops are properly rested, trained and equipped before being sent to Iraq?

A simple yes or no question.  And some of the answers I received?

  • I'll have to get back to you on that.
  • Well I'm sure she does in principle...let me get back to you.  
  •  I'm pretty sure he does...let me get back to you.
  • Ummm, that's a sensitive issue. I'll get back to you
  • I'd like to run that by him.  I haven't heard that question before.
  • I don't know.  This is all so confusing with that supplemental.  I'll try to find out.

But it is not in the least bit confusing.  It's a simple question.  Yet out of the 43 Blue Dog Dems, only 4 were willing to answer it in the affirmative.  The rest?  They were either unavailable for comment or failed to follow up on their promises to find out.  And it's a question that deserves an answer.  It moves the concept of supporting the troops from mouthing a useful slogan to taking a moral stand. And that terrifies Republican Congressmen, and now it seems, some Democratic Congressmen as well. But as it stands, buried near the end of a 90+ page supplemental bill, made toothless by the inclusion of an ambiguous waiver option for George Bush, it's not going to be answered unless we force the issue.  

The question of whether we as Americans believe that our servicemen and women should not be sent into harm's way without Pentagon-mandated rest, training and equipment, shouldn't be an afterthought in Chapter 9, section 1901, of a massive spending bill.  It deserves it's own, separate amendment that forces Congress to vote publicly and in the clear light of day.  It's time to ask your Congressman to go on the record and answer the question, who do you support, the troops or the administration?  

* * * *

    I'm on my Congressman's ass at this very moment and I would think that maybe you should be on your Congressman about this also.

Technorati tags: , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Gonzales Top Aide Resigns. So What?

   So the story continues with Alberto Gonzales and the firings of eight U.S. Attorneys who were dismissed because of " poor performance " which it is turning out to be not the case. We already know this part so let's get to the other stuff.

   You already know that Sen. Charles E. Schumer has suggested that Gonzales should step down from his position. It wasn't enough for Sen. Schumer to say it once as he did it a second time I guess to let Gonzales know that he was serious. Even Howard Dean said that Mr. Gonzales, "ought to be shown the door — he ought not to be in this administration. We have got to end corruption in our government. It is not OK to be corrupt."

    Gonzales is supposed to have something to say about all of the criticism that has been aimed at him later today.    Source

    Next up should be the Justice Department officials who weren't exactly truthful when questioned about these things by the Congress while they were under oath. Isn't that a form of lying?

Rep. James Sensenbrenner, the senior Republican on the House Judiciary Committee said, "They're going to have to come up with some answers. If they don't, they're going to lose everyone's confidence."

   He also said that if the various reasons for the firings isn't corrected, "then the Justice Department and the attorney general himself are going to die by a thousand cuts."     Source

 

Gonzales also accepted the resignation of his top aide, Kyle Sampson

   By the way, Gonzales took time out of his busy schedule to accept the resignation of his number one aide, Klye Sampson, who neglected to tell some of the other Justice Department officials about his chat with Harriet Miers concerning the firings.

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Iran Delegate's Words Make U.S. And Israel Walk Of Speech

    The United States and Israeli delegations walked out of a speech by Iran's foreign minister ( Manouchehr Mottaki ) after he said that the United States and Israel were the biggest threats to peace in the middle east.    Source

Yahoo News

Mottaki told the world's top disarmament forum that Israel was the only country in the region that refuses to accede to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and said Prime Minister Ehud Olmert last year acknowledged that his country had nuclear weapons — which Olmert denies doing.

   Mottaki said that nuclear Israel posed  "a uniquely grave threat to regional and international peace and security and requires to be seriously dealt with by the international community taking practical measures."

Referring to the " the Zionist regime," which he called Israel, he said  that Israel had "a long and dark record of crimes and atrocities such as occupation, aggression, militarism, state terrorism, crimes against humanity and apartheid."   Source

   It is said the Israel delegation made a little noise on the way out of the speech to show their displeasure with the remarks.

  I think that I will send them some Kleenex when I am done today!

  The U.S. and Israel left because they couldn't stand to hear the truth, which is no surprise to me.

 

Technorati tags: , , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Viacom Sues YouTube For$1 Billion

Eat The Press

Melissa Lafsky |  Posted Tuesday March 13, 2007

It's been brewing for months, and now Reuters reports that the kettle has officially blown: Yesterday, media juggernaut Viacom filed a $1 billion lawsuit against Google Inc. and its recently-acquired YouTube over unauthorized use of Viacom's copyrighted materials. According to Reuters, the suit accuses both defendants of "'massive intentional copyright infringement' of Viacom's entertainment assets" and seeks an injunction against further violations, claiming that nearly 160,000 unauthorized clips of its programming have been uploaded onto YouTube and viewed more than 1.5 billion times.

  I guess that Google/YouTube have been warned more than once so it is off to the courts now unless Google decides to settle before the proceedings begin. Google needs to be taken down a notch or two anyway so let the games begin!

 

Technorati tags: , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Prosecutor Purge Related To "Voter Fraud"?

   Due to the fact that I am still re-arranging this site, I am going to be posting news and opinions from various other places for most of the day.

   Here's a piece on the US Attorney firings on how high up the ladder this went, from Daily Kos.

"Voter Fraud" Takes Center Stage in Prosecutor Purge

by MissLaura   Tue Mar 13, 2007 at 02:20:52 AM PDT

There'll be enough in the new Washington Post and New York Times articles on the prosecutor purge to keep us busy for a while - there's the resignation of Gonzales' chief of staff, the involvement of Harriet Miers, and of course the obvious, that they wanted to fire all the U.S. Attorneys, just for a start, and more seems likely to emerge.  Mcjoan already got the ball rolling; I'm going to pick out a few pieces related to David Iglesias in particular.

Sampson sent an e-mail to Miers in March 2005 that ranked all 93 U.S. attorneys. Strong performers "exhibited loyalty" to the administration; low performers were "weak U.S. attorneys who have been ineffectual managers and prosecutors, chafed against Administration initiatives, etc." A third group merited no opinion.

...

Only three of those eventually fired were given low rankings: Margaret Chiara in Grand Rapids, Mich.; Bud Cummins in Little Rock; and Carol S. Lam in San Diego. Two were given strong evaluations: David C. Iglesias in Albuquerque, who has alleged political interference from GOP lawmakers, and Kevin V. Ryan in San Francisco, whose firing has generated few complaints because of widespread management and morale problems in his office. - Washington Post

It's profoundly unsurprising that loyalty vs. chafing was used as an evaluation standard, but it's still always good to have in writing.  What stands out most, though, is that final sentence.  The two prosecutors who got strong evaluations were on the one hand the one whose firing has generated the most controversy as inappropriately politicized and on the other hand the apparently-incompetent one.  That there is like the Bush administration in a nutshell.  The only surprising thing is that the incompetent guy did end up getting fired.

Iglesias remained safe from the purge lists as late as September 2006, according to the WaPo.

Justice officials said Sampson added him in October, based in part on complaints from Sen. Pete V. Domenici and other New Mexico Republicans that he was not prosecuting enough voter-fraud cases.

The New York Times account adds that Bush was involved in the chain of complaint about Iglesias.

Last October, President Bush spoke with Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales to pass along concerns by Republicans that some prosecutors were not aggressively addressing voter fraud, the White House said Monday. Senator Pete V. Domenici, Republican of New Mexico, was among the politicians who complained directly to the president, according to an administration official.

In other words, Iglesias' firing was absolutely, unequivocally a political matter - as the WaPo suggests, "voter fraud" is a partisan concern of Republicans.  What it doesn't say directly, of course, is that these "voter fraud" allegations have been used to disenfranchise eligible voters, as in Florida in 2000, and to suppress voting in minority populations all over the country.  "We're concerned about voter fraud" is Republican for "we're worried we'll lose - can you keep these people from voting?"  Iglesias apparently didn't show sufficient partisan zeal in disenfranchising probable Democrats.

An interesting piece here, though, is the increasing dominance of voter fraud as an issue in the Iglesias firing.  On March 3, the Washington Post reported that the firings had been approved by the White House and had been policy-related, but cited immigration and firearms as the policies in question.  The Iglesias case stood out precisely because there was evidence that it was a more partisan issue: Rep. Heather Wilson and Sen. Pete Domenici had called to pressure Iglesias to indict Democrats in a construction kickbacks case.  

Then, on Saturday, McLatchy reported that

Presidential advisor Karl Rove and at least one other member of the White House political team were urged by the New Mexico Republican party chairman to fire the state's U.S. attorney because of dissatisfaction in part with his failure to indict Democrats in a voter fraud investigation in the battleground election state.

Now voting issues - which Kagro X addressed in some detail on Saturday - continue to move to the center of the story.  Where the corruption case that Domenici and Wilson pressured Iglesias over now fits in the story is an interesting question.  Did Domenici call Iglesias about one case and complain to Bush about another issue?  Did he complain about both?  Clearly voting issues are of broader importance - pressuring one prosecutor on one case to affect an election is unethical, reprehensible behavior, but of limited scope.  An administration-wide effort to push a type of prosecution used by Republicans against Democrats, and against disadvantaged populations that tend to vote Democratic, is an attempt to reshape the electoral terrain.  So which was it, or was it both?

What cases the prosecutors were fired for not pursuing in a partisan enough manner is therefore a hugely important aspect of this story, with the Iglesias case providing a possible window in.  One thing's clear, though.  Whether he was more concerned with construction kickbacks or voter fraud, Pajamas Pete was thrilled to have Iglesias fired.

On the day of the Dec. 7 firings, Miers's deputy, William Kelley, wrote that Domenici's chief of staff "is happy as a clam" about Iglesias.

A week later, Sampson wrote: "Domenici is going to send over names tomorrow (not even waiting for Iglesias's body to cool)."

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Gay Rights Group Calls For General Pace Apology

   Marine Gen. Peter Pace said compared homosexuality to adultery in a newspaper interview yesterday and he also said that the military shouldn't condone it by letting the gays serve openly in the military.

   So, as is usual, a gay advocacy groups spoke up about it and said that General Pace should say " sorry " for calling homosexuality immoral.

   The gay advocacy group, Servicemembers Legal Defense Network, said on it's website that, “General Pace’s comments are outrageous, insensitive and disrespectful to the 65,000 lesbian and gay troops now serving in our armed forces."

   In his interview with The Chicago Tribune,General Pace said,  "I believe homosexual acts between two individuals are immoral and that we should not condone immoral acts.I do not believe the United States is well served by a policy that says it is OK to be immoral in any way.” Source

  I have a suggestion for this gay rights group. Why don't you just get over it and go find something worthwhile to cry about, okay? General Pace was doing an interview and he was asked about the "don't ask, don't tell" policy so he answered the question. I do not think that you can make a comment on the policy without having a personal opinion in the first place so should he have just said something like " no comment "?

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Limited Posts

   Good morning to you all!

   Those of you who visit here on a regular basis will notice that the look if the site has changed a bit. I am moving things around a bit so the look and placement of certain things at this site will more than likely change alot through out the day.

  Posting will be limited until at least 10 am (EST)

Monday, March 12, 2007

Army General Kevin C. Kiley Resigns, so, Who's Left?

   I don't know how your Monday went but mine was a typical Monday and then some. It started out great but as soon as " Murphy's Law " discovered that it was getting behind with me, it caught up! Anyway.

   Army General Kevin C. Kiley  resigned after being under pressure from the military over his watchful eye over at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

   Kiley submitted his retirement over the weekend and it is reported that Acting Army Secretary Pete Geren ask Kiley to retire. Source

   Kiley's head should have been the first one on the platter at the beginning of this investigation followed by his higher ups and then maybe those further on down the line.

   I'm hoping that Congress can still call Kiley in to testify about who knew what and for how long instead of being able to keep his mouth shut about the whole thing. That would be a grave diss-service to the veterans and to the American people. But, since when has anyone in this administration ever shown any concern for the troops or for the citizens?

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

A Citizen Pissed Off With A Congress That Is Full Of It!!

   So what the fuck is up with our United States Congress?  Have those fucking wimps no backbone what so ever?

   Now those assholes have gone and stripped the requirement in their military spending bill which would have put Mr. Bush in the position of having to get congressional approval before he could attack Iran. Source

   Are our Congressmen and women ( Pelosi in particular ) already in the Bush Crime Family's pockets? This is by far the dumbest thing that this inept congress has done since the people of the United States installed them.

   The last that I had heard, it was congress that has the authority to declare war and I think that they just flat out handed that authority to Bush.

   The reigning excuse is that there was widespread fear in Israel about Iran maybe planning an attack against the Jewish state. Bullshit!  Israel has nukes and the latest US military weapons of war that they could possibly possess and they are concerned with Iran?  That is as lame as the " my dog ate it " excuse.

   Someone once stated that Bush was the best friend that Israel could ever have and it looks as if our congress is also.

    So when " the decider " invades Iran for no reason other than the fact that Israel cried " wolf ", remember that this congress were " the deciders " that helped Bush to do it. This congress will let more of our troops get killed!

  At this point in time, THIS CONGRESS STINKS!!

 

  

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Halliburton Move To Dubai Has A Stink All Over It

   Hillary Clinton has denounced the Halliburton relocation to Dubai as disgraceful  and saying "I think it raises a lot of very big concerns and we're going to be looking into it in Washington. I think it's disgraceful that American companies are more than happy to try to get no-bid contracts like Halliburton has, and then turn around and say, 'You know, we're not going to stay.'"    Source

    Dubai, in the Untied Arab Emirates has lax tax and residency laws which are almost custom made for a crooked firm such as Halliburton and, even though the company says that it will abide by oversight from the United States, it cannot be forced to do it.

Last month, federal investigators alleged Halliburton was responsible for $2.7 billion of the $10 billion in contractor waste and overcharging in Iraq.

In 2006, Halliburton earned profits of $2.3 billion on revenues of $22.6 billion.

"We have a lot of evidence about their misuse of government contracts and how they have cheated the American soldier, cheated the American taxpayer, they have taken money and not provided the services," said Clinton, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee. "So, does moving overseas mean that we won't be able to pursue these investigations?"     AP

   Contrary to denials, this is exactly what it means. The government should now cancel all of the no-bid contracts which Cheney managed to get placed into Halliburton's hands and bar the company from any future government business. If course, this will never happen with Cheney and Bush at the helm.

   I wonder where Cheney will go when he retires?

 

Republican Governance? Not!

   Daily Kos

by kos

Mon Mar 12, 2007

Lieberman and Collins:

For future hearings, Democrats and Republicans won’t sit on opposite sides of the dais but rather, next to each other — alternating Democrat, Republican, Democrat, Republican etc.

In a joint statement , Chairman Lieberman, an independent, and ranking Republican Collins, said “In the last election, the voters said they were sick of the partisanship that produces gridlock… So, as a start, instead of sitting on opposite sides of the room like a house divided, we want the American people to see us sitting side by side as our committee members work together make our nation more secure and our government more efficient.”

"Partisanship that produces gridlock"? Um, Joe and Susan -- the GOP had complete control of the US government until this year.

THAT'S what people voted against -- Republican governance. They hated it. It's been a mess. They wanted Democrats to put an end to it.

In other words, they voted for gridlock.

And in 2008, we'll find out if they want more gridlock, or if they'd rather give Democrats a shot at governing.

   Go away Lieberman, no one wants to hear from you anymore.

 

Cheney Talks His Crap Again About U.S. Troop Support

    Vice President Dick Cheney " When members of Congress pursue an anti-war strategy that's been called 'slow bleeding,' they are not supporting the troops, they are undermining them. Anyone can say they support the troops and we should take them at their word, but the proof will come when it's time to provide the money.

     We expect the House and Senate to meet the needs of our military and the generals leading the troops in battle on time and in full  measure.     When members speak not of victory but of time limits, deadlines and other arbitrary measures, they are telling the enemy simply to watch the clock and wait us out.

  Very soon, both houses will have to vote on a piece of legislation that is binding, a bill to provide emergency funding to the troops, and I sincerely hope that this time, the discussion this time will be about winning in Iraq."     Yahoo News

      This dork must have this speech on a tape recorder, I-Pod, or MP3 disk some where as it is the same shit we here from him every time that he opens his mouth about supporting the troops.

     Where was the troops' support at Walter Reed and elsewhere or at the VA when they came home from Iraq? They come home to paperwork and more paperwork only to then get passed from one agency to another and then they get sent back to Iraq even though many troops have medical conditions which doctors say they cannot overcome.

    This is Cheney's version of support the troops and his little puppet Bush's also. You need to shut the fuck up you asshole and go back home into your swamp and let the real American's in this country fix you and George's mess that you both have created.

    You sir, are the worst excuse for a human being that has ever walked this planet of ours.

    This is the American Citizens country, not yours, and we will take it back!  I've got a prison suit with your name on it, Cheney.

 

Iraq Fallback Plans For US Military?

    The L.A. Times  has reported today that the United states military planners are working on a backup plan in case the currant troop buildup in Iraq doesn't work as planned. This new plan would include a gradual pullout of the forces and would then place more priority on better training the Iraqi forces.

It is a fallback if the Bush administration's plan to send about 26,000 more U.S. troops fails to stabilize Iraq, or if the Democratic-led Congress limits that move, it said.

The newspaper quoted a Pentagon official as saying "This part of the world has an allergy against foreign presence. You have a window of opportunity that is relatively short. Your ability to influence this with a large U.S. force eventually gets to a point that is self-defeating."

   I think that that part of the world has more of an illness to our presence instead of just an allergy. Actually, it would be more of an illness to the policies of the United States particularly under this administration which seems to hate everyone.

   I'll tell you something. The only way that any of this will come into being is if our spineless Congress grows some nuts and takes action to stop this mess instead of bickering over sit that shouldn't even be an issue in the first place.

 

IceRocket tags: , , ,

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Touchy Issues Arise In L.A. Crackdown Of Gangs

    Did you know that Los Angeles police are not allowed to ask suspects what their immigration status is during questioning? Only in America!   That may be about to change after federal agents found 59 illegal's in Southern California jails after doing spot check. All of the illegal's were gang members who could have been deported if anyone had been allowed to ask the right questions in the first place.      Source

The review will continue, and officials expect during the first year to identify 700 to 800 gang members who are illegal immigrants, according to Jim Hayes, director of the Los Angeles field office for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The results so far have some officials convinced that border enforcement needs to be a big part of combating the gang problem.

The focus on immigration status comes as the city of Los Angeles is calling on federal agencies to help it crack down in response to last year’s 15.7% increase in gang crime.   

  The Washington, D.C.-based group has sued the LAPD to overturn Special Order 40, the rule that prohibits officers from asking about immigration status, arguing that the department is required to enforce all laws.

  The policy has been loosened slightly, allowing gang officers to ask about the immigration status of suspects only when they recognize them as having been previously deported. MORE

    Border enforcement? Do we have that in this country? It is hard to tell at times. If the government would put a quarter of the money into border enforcement that they have spent on Iraq and other silly little hobbies, we would not have much of a border problem patrol problem and all of these gang members who are here illegally would not be here. 

    Who in the hell came up with Special Order 40 in the first place? Oh, that's right, that would have been that idiot Daryl Gates, a former chief of police.

   The text of Special Order 40 can be read here. This " order " has been in effect since 1979 so naturally the current L.A. Mayor, Antonio Villaraigosa, wants the rule to stay in place.  He say's that relaxing the rule would not help with the battle against the gangs.

   There are other cities with similar orders on the books but I have not checked on their track records yet.

   This is one rule, order, law, whatever you want to call it that has to go.

   Does this rule apply to only Hispanics or to all immigrants or those who may look like immigrants? We can all probably answer that ourselves.

 

Monday Morning News

Al Jazeera    SUNDAY, MARCH 11, 2007

Hamas rejects al-Zawahiri's claims

Fresh violence erupted in Gaza before the talks between Abbas and Olmert in Jerusalem  [Reuters]

Hamas has rejected accusations by Ayman al-Zawahiri, al-Qaeda's deputy leader, of "surrender" for agreeing to form a Palestinian national unity government.

Al-Zawahiri said Hamas had "fallen into the swamp of surrender" by accepting a Saudi-brokered deal with the US-backed Fatah in Mecca, in an audio recording broadcast by Al Jazeera on Sunday.

* * * *

Jacques Chirac, France's president, has announced that he will not seek re-election next month, effectively ending his 45-year political career.

Chirac has served as president since 1995 and his widely expected decision to stand aside marks the end of an era for France, clearing the way for a new generation of politicians.

* * * *

NYTimes   by  ROBERT PEAR Published: March 12, 2007

A new federal rule intended to keep illegal immigrants from receiving Medicaid has instead shut out tens of thousands of United States citizens who have had difficulty complying with requirements to show birth certificates and other documents proving their citizenship, state officials say.

Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Ohio and Virginia have all reported declines in enrollment and traced them to the new federal requirement, which comes just as state officials around the country are striving to expand coverage through Medicaid and other means.

   I'd like to know how many of you actually have an original or copy of your birth certificate? the only reason that I have mine is because I intend to go overseas in the near future. Let me tell you something. It was a royal pain to get a copy when I requested it and I hope that I never need another one!

 

Dyncorp Making Cash In Somalia With Security Program

African Union peacekeepers are taking up positions in Mogadishu, which has exploded into chaos after a few months of calm. The only problem with this is that they are being protected by security contractors who have been hired by the United States, the main prize winner being DynCorp International.  This would be one of Bush's favorite companies to use in this kind of activity even though Dyncorp has been involved in massive government waste and a few not quite right overseas activities.

   For instance:

WaPo

In its review of work under DynCorp's $1.8 billion State Department contract, the special inspector general found that the department's lax oversight led it to pay $43.8 million for a residential camp for DynCorp trainers that has never been used.

Some of the work on the camp, including the pool and VIP trailers, was requested by the Iraqi Interior Ministry but was never authorized by U.S. officials.

   That is only the beginning of this company raping the American taxpayer and engaging in criminal acts at the same time. Another member of the exclusive Bush Crime Family.

Daily Kos 

by Mash   Sun Mar 11, 2007

 

DynCorp has also spread good cheer in Afghanistan in a blow to Karen Hughes' ill-fated public diplomacy mission. DynCorp's heavy-handed mercenaries that protect Afghan president Hamid Karzai have managed to upset not only the Afghans but also America's NATO allies. DynCorp's behavior in Afghanistan earned a rebuke from the State Department:

The US State Department has rebuked a private security firm over the "aggressive behaviour" of guards hired to protect Afghan leader Hamid Karzai.

US State Department's Richard Boucher said the issue was raised with DynCorp, the company that supplied the guards.

There have been several reported cases of apparently over-zealous and insensitive conduct on the part of Mr Karzai's private security contractors.

A BBC correspondent recently saw one of the guards slap an Afghan minister.

Crispin Thorold reported seeing the Afghan transport minister receive a slap from one of Mr Karzai's security guards on a visit to the northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif.

 To complete the waste and public diplomacy picture, DynCorp adds child prostitution:

DynCorp is the same company whose employees hired child prostitutes while working in Bosnia a few years ago, until some people started complaining. Rather than face local justice or courts-martial, the perpetrators were simply sent home.

One of the whistleblowers, a DynCorp employee named Ben Johnston, lost his job for speaking out. He later told Congress, ''DynCorp is the worst diplomat our country could ever want overseas.''

Texas-based DynCorp's parent, CSC, declined to comment on any of these incidents, saying that it is ''constrained'' from doing so by its contracts with the State Department.

With a resume as illustrious as this, DynCorp appears poised to carry on the tradition of lawlessness into the already lawless Horn of Africa.

As the United States turns more and more to private contractors to support post-conflict operations, it must also extend the realm of accountability to include these contractors. As the story of DynCorp demonstrates, that much needed accountability is lacking. What exists today is government (tax payer) financed lawlessness that only serves to undermine any goodwill America hopes to engender in conflict regions such as Iraq, Afghanistan and Somalia. The fact that firms like DynCorp are constantly rewarded with new contracts, in the face of their bad behavior, fits a pattern of behavior for the Bush Administration - where bad behavior is rewarded and calls for accountability are often punished harshly. It is up to the long comatose Congress to protect the funds we, the tax payers, have entrusted with the government - they must ensure accountability by punishing bad behavior. It is also up to the Congress to ensure that if the United States is going to outsource war fighting and post-conflict operations to mercenaries, these mercenaries must follow the same code of conduct that we expect of our soldiers.

However, a quick look at DynCorp's donor list suggests that the bad behavior will continue, with government sanction. The hearts and minds will have to be won after the money runs out and the feeding trough is empty.  Entire Article

 

IceRocket tags: , , ,

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Bush Version Of Supporting Our Troops

The White house    March 7, 2007

THE PRESIDENT: I am concerned that our soldiers and their families are not getting the treatment that they deserve, having volunteered to defend our country. Any report of medical neglect will be taken seriously by this administration, I'm confident by the Congress, and we will address problems quickly.

   It would seem that we now know why Bush is so concerned with our troops. He needs them in Iraq even if they are not ready to go because of some serious injuries.

"This is not right," said Master Sgt. Ronald Jenkins, who has been ordered to Iraq even though he has a spine problem that doctors say would be damaged further by heavy Army protective gear. "This whole thing is about taking care of soldiers," he said angrily. "If you are fit to fight you are fit to fight. If you are not fit to fight, then you are not fit to fight."

As the military scrambles to pour more soldiers into Iraq, a unit of the Army's 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Benning, Ga., is deploying troops with serious injuries and other medical problems, including GIs who doctors have said are medically unfit for battle. Some are too injured to wear their body armor, according to medical records.

  The Bush clan has already been sending untrained troops to Iraq for their on the job training and if that is not bad enough:

But in the Army — in the midst of a war — the number of soldiers approved for permanent disability retirement has plunged by more than two-thirds, from 642 in 2001 to 209 in 2005, according to a Government Accountability Office report last year. That decline has come even as the war in Iraq has intensified and the total number of soldiers wounded or injured there has soared above 15,000.

“There is absolutely no attempt on the part of the Army or this agency to deny soldiers any disability benefits or to push them off on the VA,” said Col. Andy Buchanan, the agency’s deputy commander.

Adjudicators “are committed to ensuring all disability decisions are made fairly and accurately and based on the evidence in the soldier’s medical record,” he said. “We have never received any guidance, official or otherwise, from anywhere within DoD to limit findings for budgetary or other reasons.”

In 2005, Ellen Embrey, deputy assistant secretary of defense for force health protection and readiness, told House lawmakers the reason for the comparatively large numbers of troops placed on temporary disability was actually to keep end strength up. A premature medical evaluation board decision, she said, “may negatively impact the individual’s ability to continue serving.”

      This is the party who has allways claimed to support our troops and who, along woth their neo-cons, bash the Democrats and their liberal friends for not supporting our troops because they want the Iraq mess to end and our troops brought home.

 

IceRocket tags: , , , , ,

Sunshine Laws and Open Government, N.C. Poll

     Elon University in North Carolina, has done a new poll in the state about open government and sunshine laws that had no surprises with the results except for one.

   The Sunshine Center of the North Carolina Open Government Coalition will present the poll results to the public on March 15 during the Sunshine Day activities which is at the Elon's School of Communications.

   There is no link to the poll data as of yet so I am using the data from a news release.

1) 86%  felt that democracy works best when government operates openly

2)   9%  felt that closed government operates best

3)   5%  didn't know

    I have a hard time believing that 9% could think that a closed ( secretive ) government works best especially after the past six years on the national level with the Bush administration acting more like a communist government than as a  Democratic, American government.

   I'd bet that those nine percent are also die hard FoxNews viewers also.

News & Record

Thursday, March 8, 2007   by John Robinson

When asked the importance of citizens having access to public documents, records, information, and meetings, 57 percent felt it was very important and 35 percent felt it was somewhat important.

Seventy-two percent of those surveyed believe citizen access to public documents, records, information, and meetings does influence government operations, while 19 percent said it does not. Eighty percent said open records and meetings keep government operations honest.

Eighty-six percent of individuals polled felt that democracy works best when government operates openly.

Fifteen percent of those polled said their state and local government was always available and accessible to them, while 7 percent felt that the federal government was always available and accessible.

Fifty-three percent of those polled agree or strongly agree that government needs to be able to keep records and meeting secret if necessary; 40 percent disagree or strongly disagree. Seventy-nine percent agree or strongly agree that some public records and meetings should be kept secret if it helps the war on terrorism, while 17 percent disagree or strongly disagree.

Forty-four percent of citizens said they have a lot of interest in the activities of state and local governments, while 43 percent said they have some interest. Twelve percent said they have little or no interest in the activities of state and local governments.

 

 

Ads by AdGenta.com

Habeas-Corpse? Part 2

  Lucky me!

   I have to go take care of a few things which have just come up so there will be nothing new here until 6 this evening.

   Earlier in the week I posted a piece from Daily Kos called " Restoring Our Constitution " and now I am leaving you with another piece of this great series.

Restoring Our Constitution: Habeas - Corpse? Part 2 -- Executive War Powers

by Major Danby
Fri Mar 02, 2007 at 01:46:34 PM PST

This is the second in planned four part series of diaries on the Military Commissions Act.  Part 1, which appeared yesterday, is here.  Part 3, analyzing the the Military Commissions Act of 2006 in detail as the proposals to amend it, will appear on Saturday.  Part 4, analyzing the benign-looking Manual for Military Commissions, which will actually be used to govern such commissions, will appear Sunday, along with my analysis of why people get suckered into to this sort of enterprise.

All of this is part of the broader series organized by Jay Elias called Restoring Our Constitution, which as noted in the linked diary now has its own dedicated DKosopedia page.

Today's diary deals with the vexing question of the scope of Presidential military power in wartime.

As noted in yesterday's diary, one secret of happiness, longevity, and success -- for a person, a relationship, an organization, and a nation -- is not pushing things too far.  There will inevitably be tensions present in any system over who what laws and what individuals rule in a given instance and how one can ensure that the checks and balances in such a system are respected.  The wise ruler does not push on these pressure points until damage is done.  In the first three chapters of this analysis, yesterday's diary noted that Bush and Cheney are the opposite of wise: they revel in pushing such principles to the breaking point, such as the question of when and to what extent Congress can insulate actions taken with respect to some given legislation from judicial review, a notion known as "jurisdiction stripping."

Today's companion diary addresses a similar question: how much does Executive power expand -- at the expense of checks and balances, civil rights, and civil liberties -- in times of national emergency?  As noted below, we know that it expands to some extent -- but we are not clear on the manner and degree of that expansion.  For the sake of the nation, a wise ruler would never try to expand executive authority to the point where its limits must be established.  But we are not now ruled by wise men.

4. He Who Must Not Be Named

Our Founders truly did a good job of drafting the Constitution.  Really, truly, amazingly well.  But as one soon discovers in practicing law, any written instrument will show its seams if you poke at it enough, places where one term overlaps a little with another until you can't quite tell what rule governs.  From pulling at what may be a tiny loose thread of ambiguity, lawyers will work to unravel a whole sweater of a legal instrument, whether it is a will, a contract, a statute -- or the Constitution.

Under the Constitution, Congress passes the laws.  Congress appropriates funds.  It is empowered to

raise and support armies; provide and maintain a navy; make rules for the government and regulation of the land and naval forces; provide for calling forth the militia to execute the laws of the union, suppress insurrections and repel invasions; provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the militia, and for governing such part of them as may be employed in the service of the United States, reserving to the states respectively, the appointment of the officers, and the authority of training the militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress.

Sounds good.  What does the President do?

The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States, when called into the actual Service of the United States

What does that mean?  How does that fit with all of those Congressional powers mentioned?  Are they in some tension?

Aha.

With the possible exception of Jimmy Carter, modern Presidents of both parties have unwaveringly supported the idea of a strong executive prerogative to make as well as execute foreign policy.  History and Supreme Court precedent favors this interpretation, although some of it may be predicated on a mistaken understanding of our Founders' intent.  But what Bush and Cheney are doing goes beyond having a strong executive.  They are trying to leverage the President's primacy in executing foreign policy into a hostile takeover of all government functions and a siege against individual rights and liberties.

As we can start to see above and will see more fully tomorrow, the unreviewable military tribunal system in effect sets up a separate judiciary under the President's sole ultimate control.  The President's position on laws like the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act ("FISA") are that they encroach on his unilateral ability to act as Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces, because the prohibited actions he would like to take would be helpful to him in providing for the national defense.  In other words, both the intent of Congress and constitutional protection of civil liberties such as that contained in the Fourth Amendment requirement of search warrants are subordinated to the needs of the Commander-in-Chief.

That is radical.

And, of course, the fun does not stop there.  The President has obtained expanded Congressional authorization to federalize the state militias (National Guard) and use them to enforce federal law even over the objections of the states -- effectively, this gives him an expanded power to declare martial law (or military rule.)  Our friends at the flu wiki express concern over the extraordinary steps the President might take in a national emergency.  Where does it end?

Here's the sad and weird truth:  we don't actually know.

There is one Supreme Court case, however, that may give the clearest guidance on the extent of the President's emergency powers.  (I should note that what follows may be an idiosyncratic opinion.  Nonetheless, it's my best guess.)  It's a case that even Bush and Cheney would probably go out of their way not to cite; their opponents would generally say that it is no longer "good law", which is the lawyerly term for the rules that we expect would apply today.  And yet this case is out there; in fact, you know already the name of the case That Shall Not Be Named:

"Korematsu".

Before I got to law school and actually read the accursed thing, I had thought that Korematsu was a case about racism.  At base, it is not.  Korematsu is a case about civilian deference to military authority in a time of national emergency.  That's it.  In fact, Korematsu is now generally cited for introducing the concept known as "strict scrutiny", in most cases the most exacting standard to which a court will hold a government action before being willing to accept it.  Strict scrutiny is what protects our free speech, our privacy, our protection against racial discrimination.  But it did not protect Fred Korematsu.  The irony is that in the very case that the Court first set the high bar that the government must clear to trench on our constitutional rights, the government cleared it.

To survive strict scrutiny, a law must be justified by a "compelling governmental interest," it must be "narrowly tailored" (successfully serving the compelling interest without affecting more activity than it must), and must constitute the "least restrictive means" of serving that interest.

Imagine that!  Forcing Japanese citizens to sell their possessions and relocate to distant internment camps satisfied all of these tests!

The opinion's author, Justice Black, was a liberal Alabaman and one of our greatest ever on the Court.  He is palpably uncomfortable in his writing with the notion of any racial justification for this act.  Instead, here are some of his quotes from the opinion, which I've taken from Wikipedia's selections:

[E]xclusion of those of Japanese origin was deemed necessary because of the presence of an unascertained number of disloyal members of the group, most of whom we have no doubt were loyal to this country. It was because we could not reject the finding of the military authorities that it was impossible to bring about an immediate segregation of the disloyal from the loyal that we sustained the validity of the curfew order as applying to the whole group. In the instant case, temporary exclusion of the entire group was rested by the military on the same ground.

...

There was evidence of disloyalty on the part of some, the military authorities considered that the need for action was great, and time was short. We cannot — by availing ourselves of the calm perspective of hindsight — now say that at that time these actions were unjustified.

...

Citizenship has its responsibilities as well as its privileges, and in time of war the burden is always heavier. Compulsory exclusion of large groups of citizens from their homes, except under circumstances of direst emergency and peril, is inconsistent with our basic governmental institutions. But when under conditions of modern warfare our shores are threatened by hostile forces, the power to protect must be commensurate with the threatened danger.

Now, substitute "terrorism" for "war" and ask yourself if a much more conservative Court might write the same "shoot 'em all and let God sort 'em out" opinion that somehow applied to American citizens of Japanese but not German or Italian extraction.  Is this the rule Hugo Black would have generated?  Almost certainly not.  Read again: he is not making a policy; he is deferring to a policy made up by (probably racist, possibly crackpot) military officials.  Everyone should read Korematsu.  I barely scratch the surface here of the absolutely stunning the extent to which the Court essentially throws up its hands and says "we have no choice but to defer to the judgment of the military commanders who were in the area" and (in a whisper) "we hope they will always be wise."  Here's a link to the original opinion.

Now ask yourself: where did this right of the military to take these actions come from?  Where in the Constitution does it say that the government can do any of that, let alone the President by his own Executive Order?

It doesn't say it anywhere, not explicitly.  It's implicit in what it means to have armed forces, I suppose, and in what it means to be a "Commander-in-Chief."

Is it clear yet why we don't want our leaders pulling at this thread?

We know -- from Korematsu, its predecessor Hirabayashi (dealing with curfews for Japanese-Americans and exclusion from militarily sensitive areas), and elsewhere -- that from some source the government has the power to infringe on its citizens' rights in time of war, evidently even in a discriminatory way.

The opinions of other Justices are interesting as well.  Justice Frankfurter's concurrence characteristically disclaimed any role for the judiciary in restricting the government at all, writing "That is their business, not ours."  Justice Murphy, in stark contrast, prefigured the modern view of the case as one involving actionable racism:

All residents of this nation are kin in some way by blood or culture to a foreign land. Yet they are primarily and necessarily a part of the new and distinct civilization of the United States. They must accordingly be treated at all times as the heirs of the American experiment and as entitled to all the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution.

But it is the great civil libertarian Justice Robert Jackson who saw the gravest danger of Korematsu:

A military order, however unconstitutional, is not apt to last longer than the military emergency ... But once a judicial opinion rationalizes such an order to show that it conforms to the Constitution, or rather rationalizes the Constitution to show that the Constitution sanctions such an order, the Court for all time has validated the principle, ... [which] then lies about like a loaded weapon ready for the hand of any authority that can bring forward a plausible claim of an urgent need.

Whether or not Korematsu is the case that will be cited as precedent, we know that that loaded weapon remains ready.  And the hands of the Constitution's would-be assassins now reach out to place it in their grasp.

5. The embezzlers, the molesters, the con men

What we know from Korematsu, even if we like to pretend we don't, is that our Constitutional rights are, to some degree, restricted in time of national emergency.  We don't really know which ones or how much, but we know that can and will happen if circumstances allow.  It is a bit like what happens when, while walking along, you run into a cop in charge of the scene at an emergency that happened in your path.  Your normal freedom to do as you please is going to be restricted, at least a little.

What we can ask of an Administration in such circumstances is what Justice Black so wanted to believe he had been given by FDR.  We want our leaders to constrain our rights only given a truly compelling interest, and then in as narrowly tailored a way as possible, and through the least restrictive means.  That's not just being a good leader, it's being a decent human being.

And that, right there, is the crux of where the Bush-Cheney Administration has been so radical.  At every opportunity, it has tried to justify the unilateral exertion of executive power to the detriment of our civil liberties and the separation of powers, for the least possible compelling interest, with plans as loosely tailored as possible, through the most restrictive means.  They have tried to sweep as much power as possible into their personal domain, and use the executive Commander-in-Chief power as a basis for justifying secrecy, corruption, and malfeasance.

They are the bellhop who rifles through our suitcase for valuables.  The mechanic who makes an extra copy of our keys.  The broker who raids our account.  The youth leader who molests our children.  The con man who steals our life's savings.  They have betrayed our trust.  We knew that they were in a position to do so by virtue of their job, but we trusted them not to do so and they did it anyway.

The problem with the Military Commissions Act is not merely the Military Commissions Act.  Some form of military commissions might conceivably have turned out to be appropriate in some circumstances, though with greater respect from the start for international law and without the insulation from review imposed by jurisdiction stripping.  The other problem with the Military Commissions Act is who proposed and would execute the Military Commissions Act.  When political leaders slaver to expand their power in every direction, using every trick and artifice, they cannot be trusted to exercise wise discretion.

We cannot trust them to tap our phones.  They may use it to intimidate their enemies and expand their power.

We cannot trust them to set up an extrajudicial legal system.  They may use it to bury their mistakes.

We cannot trust them to control a war without great oversight.  They may use it to consolidate control and reward their friends.

We cannot trust them with enhanced powers to impose martial law.  We cannot trust them with enhanced powers to replace U.S. Attorneys.  We cannot trust them to make a case for war.

A libertarian may be comfortable with those conclusions.  But, without intending to start a fight in comments, I am not a libertarian.  Nor are our elites, nor do I believe most of our populace is strongly enough so to withstand the enormous pressure that will sometimes be brought to bear for stronger executive powers.  The problem, for one other than the most committed libertarian, is that we must trust the government, to some degree in normal times and to a greater degree in times of national emergency, to do some of these things.  They must provide for our common defense.  They must find, fend off, and fight those who truly mean us harm.  They must be trusted to administer a judicial system, a penal system, an electoral system.

We cannot trust them, and yet we must.  We must trust them, and yet we cannot.

That is the seam that could survive so long as no one pulled too hard, the bone that need not break so long as no one pushed too hard.  But they did it.  They wanted to do it and they really did it.  They pulled, they pushed.  They did the damage we could not abide, that cannot be undone.

That, in the end, may be the most lasting effect of Bush and Cheney upon our constitutional order, the one that will forever haunt the laws we pass and structures we create.  Having seen what an Administration can do when they push hard enough on the pressure points of our democracy, we can never quite trust anyone the same way again.  We can never look again upon even a small encroachment on liberties that might somehow be justifiable in time of emergency, on any curtailment of habeas corpus or other due process rights, without thinking of Cheney and Bush, and how easily and with what abandon they might abuse it.  We can never trust anyone again.  What they have broken cannot be repaired.  Our political system could survive much -- but not them.

 

Bush Clan Doing U-turns?

Policy Successes -- or U-Turns

Views Differ on Bush Moves on Iran, N. Korea, Mideast

By Karen DeYoung and Glenn Kessler

Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, March 11, 2007

If all goes according to plan, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will sit down next month with the foreign ministers of Iran and North Korea -- two "axis of evil" nations that the Bush administration has long shunned. And after criticizing her predecessors for pointless diplomatic shuttling in the Middle East, Rice now makes near-monthly negotiating trips there.

Administration officials insist that what appears to be a sudden turn toward diplomacy is rather the fruit of six years of careful and deliberate policymaking. But outside experts, and even some insiders, say that the initiatives have less to do with reaping rewards than with reversing course after years of policy stagnation and failure.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice contends that apparent turnarounds in administration policy abroad are the result of patient work over the past six years. Others see a response to the failure of previous policies.

"What has changed?" asked one former high-level Bush administration official. "That we finally like these people? That we finally have them where we want them? Or gee, we're at 30 percent [public approval] and we've only got 20 months to go?

   Patient work over the past six years? Miss Rice must be into the Bush basket of drugs again. If you weren't even speaking to the " axis of evil " then how can you say you've gotten to this point by working on it?

   This would still be the Bush Crime Family refusing to face reality and admit that they were wrong about not needing to use diplomatic means to solve some of the mid east problems which have occurred mostly over the past six years under Bush.

 

Bush Is A Liar When Troop Escalation Numbers

    So Bush lied to us once again ( surprised ? ) this time about his troop escalation manpower numbers.

ABC News:

President Bush's troop buildup in Baghdad apparently will be bigger and more costly and perhaps last longer than it seemed when he unveiled the plan in January as the centerpiece of a new Iraq strategy.

U.S. officials say it's too early to tell whether the troop reinforcements will succeed in containing the sectarian and insurgent violence, but it looks as though the Pentagon is preparing for an expanded commitment assuming that by summer there are solid signs that the extra effort is yielding significant results.

The Bush plan called for sending 21,500 extra U.S. combat troops to Iraq mainly to Baghdad with the last of five brigades arriving by June. The estimated price tag was $5.6 billion. Officials have refused to say exactly how long it would last, but Defense Secretary Robert Gates had suggested that it could be over by fall.

In recent days a different picture has  emerged.                                                                                       

Jeffrey Feldman calls it President Bush's new math

 

IceRocket tags: , ,

Abortion Blamed For Military Manpower Shortage

   Did you know that the United States has a military shortage of manpower because of abortions? Abortions are also contributing to the Social Security problem and to the flow of illegal's coming into the United States?  That is what former Sen. Zell Miller said during the past week!

    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution  

It hasn't gotten widespread play yet, but former U.S. Sen. Zell Miller made a little news this week in Macon when he declared that abortion has contributed to the military's manpower shortage, the Social Security crisis, and the flow of illegal immigrants into the United States.

"How could this great land of plenty produce too few people in the last 30 years? Here is the brutal truth that no one dares to mention: We're too few because too many of our babies have been killed," Miller said.

"Over 45 million since Roe v. Wade in 1973. If those 45 million children had lived, today they would be defending our country, they would be filling our jobs, they would be paying into Social Security," the former Georgia governor said. "Still, we watch as 3,700 babies are killed every single day in America. It is unbelievable that a nation under God would allow this."

If you doubt us, check out the video at the Macon Telegraph's web site. The comments were made at a Tuesday night fund-raiser for a local anti-abortion counseling center.