I truly do. I want to see them lose in a landslide. I want to see these radical idiots so trounced the the Republican party throws them completely out and never let's them in again. They can form their own radical independent party and the republicans and democrats can get back to the serious work of cleaning up this stinking pile of crap these monkeys have bequeathed us.
June 2003 Archives
While everyone's interest is understandably piqued by the religious overtones to Bush's remark, it just occurred to me that what Bush said at the end of the quote is the really scary part:
If you help me I will act, and if not, the elections will come and I will have to focus on them.Meaning that if the whole middle east thing isn't tied up by election season, Bush is going to completely ignore it while he spends 250 MILLION dollars winning the next election.
And if we happen to be at a critical juncture between descent into chaos and a solution to the violence? Well, you will all just have to wait. We can't have you scheduling your uprisings, bombings and occupation problems in the middle of the inevitable landslide of 2004.
Yi. We are so screwed.
All throughout the nuclear weapons reduction talks, the one reoccurring thought I kept having was "they're just making the world safe for conventional warfare". They weren't doing this to make us safer, they were just fixing things so that we could all engage in a bit of friendly combat without the fear of triggering global thermonuclear warfare and the end of the world.
Finally read the post by Eugene Volokh. Yi.
Okay, let's just concede that what the administration really meant was WMD programs. The question is, is that what everyone understood? The amount of untangling that Eugene needs to do to prove his point is itself damning evidence of the duplicitous and deceptive way the entire Iraqi WMD issue was presented to the public.
From Stratfor
Middle East: Cease-Fire Producing Splinter Groups?
Summary
An apparent splinter group of the al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigade has claimed responsibility for the June 30 shooting death of a Bulgarian worker in Nablus, saying it rejects the wider Palestinian cease-fire agreements. Meanwhile, sources say cells within Hamas are debating whether to observe the cease-fire or splinter off themselves. For now, the shooting is an isolated incident and has not elicited a violent reaction by the Israeli military. However, if Hamas, al-Aqsa or Fatah cannot rein in their splinter groups or the Israeli army reacts harshly to further attacks, the fragile new cease-fire will shatter.
From Stratfor.
Israeli and Palestinian groups have agreed to a cease-fire. The visit of U.S. National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice finally brought the complex negotiations among the Palestinians to a close. The major negotiations that were under way were not between the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) and Israel but between the PNA and Hamas. In the end, both Hamas and Islamic Jihad agreed to a three-month cease-fire, while Fatah, including the Al Aqsa Martyr's Brigade, agreed to a six-month cease-fire. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine refused to agree to a cease-fire but promised to respect it -- whatever that means. As for the Israelis, they began removing their forces from the town of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip, in the first stage of a withdrawal from Palestinian territories.
And that, believe it or not, ends the easy part. Each side -- Israelis and Palestinians -- has definitions of what the cease-fire entails that are not so much at odds as they are completely unrealistic. Israel believes the PNA has agreed to dismantle all groups that engage in what it regards as actions of terrorism. Specifically, this means that it expects the PNA to disarm Hamas to prevent further attacks. Israel is prepared to help the PNA by providing intelligence information and will refrain from acting on that information, so long as the PNA acts on it. Put another way, if Israel identifies a target for the PNA and the PNA doesn't hit it, Israel will.
Calif. Near Financial Disaster
Any day now, community colleges here may begin telling faculty members that they cannot be paid and students that summer classes are canceled.Got to say guys, this will certainly teach us Californians not to spend money. Yep, having the Fifth largest economy on the planet implode is going to do wonders for all the other economies you all inhabit out there.Nursing homes are losing so much state aid that many soon may have to shut down or limit their services, a prospect that has elderly residents confused and frightened.
As many as 30,000 government workers who had been expecting pay raises in the fall are instead receiving formal notices warning that they could lose their jobs by then, because the state is broke.
This is life in California, on the brink of a fiscal disaster.
(heh) This is Elton. This is Elton on a serious riff. Any questions? :)
Might I direct your attention to a post by the Farmer. Hopefully Atrios, jr. will miss this post or decline to lambaste me.
I must say though, the "NeoConArtist" is a great turn of phrase. No wonder they're trying to come up with a brand new moniker.
And don't forget to read the original post that the Farmer was riffing on.
Who Lost the WMD? -- Jul. 07, 2003
Administration officials have a further concern about where all these questions are leading. They fear that any problem with the prewar intelligence could undermine Bush's ability to continue his muscular campaign against terrorism overseas. The Administration has argued that to counter new kinds of threats posed by terrorists, rogue states and WMD, it has to be able to act pre-emptively. But pre-emption requires excellent intelligence, and the whole doctrine is undermined if the intelligence is wrong.Undermined.
1. To weaken by wearing away a base or foundation: Water has undermined the stone foundations.
2. To weaken, injure, or impair, often by degrees or imperceptibly; sap: Late hours can undermine one's health.
3. To dig a mine or tunnel beneath.
Check it out. Matrix is the new Rocky Horror Picture Show in Japan.
We will see. I pray to all I hold holy that this is finally going to see progress. And I must say that I'm impressed to see three - THREE - terrorist groups agree to a cease fire.
But, my feeling is that even if they can stop blowing people up for 3 months, Sharon won't do anything to show he's serious during that time. Maybe he can, and I'll be doubly impressed.
From the process we've witnessed with the British and the IRA, we can see how hard it is to make even small amounts of progress.
The question will be, is the Bush Administration in it for the long haul? That's going to take an enormous amount of effort from the administration.
I fear with all the other things they want to do, they're going to get very bored with all the necessary work, and they will be looking for excuses to drop it.
Answered the questions and came up 2 out of three. 1) No 2) Yes 3) Yes . Not that I'm running for the Senate or anything, but that's how I wished my representatives would vote.
I have mixed feelings about NAFTA, but I'm of the opinion that it's on the whole better than not. It really urks me that Labor and the Environment get screwed by these jokers, but I think that's something that can be fixed without throwing out NAFTA altogether.
I participated in an internet Harris poll a day or so ago, and I was looking at the results after I went through the process. One of the questions is what kind of car you were looking to buy over the next several years. Something like 60% or so were intending to buy an SUV.
So the only obvious public policy is to vastly up the miles per gallon of the SUV's. And I don't see why this would be such a vast burden on the car companies. People really love these vehicles, and are willing (apparently) to pay vast sums for them, despite their disadvantages and high cost. Increasing their MPG only makes them more attractive to the likely owners.
I can't remember whether it was a JD Edwards survey or what, but a while back I remember hearing that the single biggest complaint of the HUGE Humvee2 was the vast amount of gas it consumed.
Seems like the auto companies would sell more of them if they simply got off their butts and actually made the damn things efficient.
And if it's a question of whether or not they can make it efficient, then I'd say that we have to come down on the side of efficiency. I believe that technology exists to perhaps double the mileage of most of the SUVs out there. Maybe not the H2, because it's such a boat, but almost all the ones driven by the Soccer Moms should be able to get up to 40 mpg in the city.
So it can't be the case that the reason we can't make an efficient SUV is because no one would buy it.
What a bunch of aqua maroons.
Okay, this is just getting ridiculous. I just heard Mary Matlin characterize Dean as "Left of Left". I mean, really. Does anyone but the Republican faithful believe this crap? Over at Alas, a blog, A. writes about why progressives support Dean.
A more important reason, though, is that Dean has emerged as the voice for progressive anger - not only anger at Bush, but anger at the Democratic party's cowardice. From a good Salon article on Dean:It's going to be hilarious to see the Republicans paint Dean as a liberal's liberal.Dean starts most meet 'n' greets by saying there are two reasons why he's running for president. "I'm horrified by the president's economic policy and I'm horrified by the president's foreign policy," he tells the Manchester crowd. "And the sad thing about what's going on here is the Democrats are voting for this kind of stuff. I think our party has decided that the way to be popular is to be almost as conservative as President Bush."That, Jake, is why progressives support Dean.
Progressives may feel that no matter what we do, the Democratic nominee is going to be another damn centrist Democrat. If that's the case, people may be figuring, might as well support the best of the centrist lot - and that's Dean.
Just watching two of the authors on Meet The Press talk about this report.
Nearly Two Years After 9/11, the United States is Still Dangerously Unprepared and Underfunded for a Catastrophic Terrorist Attack, Warns New Council Task ForceOkay, can I just say it again? THESE BOZOS RUNNING THIS COUNTRY ARE NOT ADEQUATELY DEFENDING US. The myth that the Republicans are better at national security is just that. A MYTH.Overall Expenditures Must Be as Much as Tripled to Prepare Emergency Responders Across the Country
What they have given us is a wonderful illusion of smoke and mirrors. It will come crashing down when reality finally happens.
My god. I can't believe that ANYONE thinks this Administration is actually paying attention, much less doing a great job on National Security.
Sure glad we just gave away a trillion dollars to the rich and haven't done jack about our own Homeland Security.
You guys rock.
They have a list of "Unknown Weblogs by Popularity". The monster looks at your subscription list and cross checks it with others "in your immediate blogging community". It's a really neat list to check every once and a while. Found MyDD, the "Due Diligence of Politics, Election Forecast & the World Today", in it.
I like the categories feature of MovableType... I should start using the blasted things. Makes it easier for me to search what previous idiocy I may or may not have said about some topic.
The monster is a bit flaky, but at least it doesn't consume all space and time when it fails like .NET based systems seem to. It politely dies and seems to clean up nicely after itself. And doesn't do it nearly as often as I've seen other aggregators do in the past.
Averting judicial 'Armageddon'
So history shows that the Senate's advice traditionally has been given before a nomination was made, not after. Consultation in advance of a Supreme Court nomination makes good governing sense, it makes good constitutional sense, and it makes good political sense. When there is bipartisan consultation in advance of a Supreme Court nomination, a Supreme Court battle can be avoided and a highly regarded, consensus nominee can usually be agreed upon. On the other hand, a phone call informing senators of a nomination just before Fox News breaks the story is not real consultation.Again, need I point out this is a pattern with these guys? Remember back before 9/11 when the Europeans were saying precisely the same thing when had a treaty shredding spree? Notification is not consultation. Telling me you're going to do something is a heads up. It is not asking for nor is it listening to advice.
And that brings me to the point of this column: While we may be emotionally distancing ourselves from the world, the world is getting more integrated. That means that what people think of us, as Americans, will matter more, not less. Because people outside America will be able to build alliances more efficiently in the world we are entering and they will be able to reach out and touch us.And so I ask again, Tom. Why the heck did you think the war with Iraq was a great idea?
None of this means we, America, just have to do what the world wants, but we do have to take it seriously, and we do have to be good listeners. We, America, "have to work even harder to build bridges," argues Mr. Wright, because info-tech, left to its own devices, will make it so much easier for small groups to build their own little island kingdoms. And their island kingdoms, which may not seem important or potent now, will be able to touch us more, not less.The golden age of propaganda has arrived with the internet.
Steve Gilliard has a post about the "Baby Steps" we're modeling the fiasco we call democratic transition in Iraq.
The racism inherent in many US dealings with Arabs shine through. The Iraqis need "baby steps" to reach democracy. Well, no, they're not children. They can fumble their way to democracy like everyone else. The assumption of Arab incompetence and perfidery is ingrained in US dealing with Iraq. We assume they cannot manage themselves and that they are not like us. They they should be grateful for US help and reject their own, flawed culture for western enlightenment.This was something I encountered quite frequently in my discussions with right wing friends before the war. At the risk of being offensive, I believe the operative description of how they feel towards the Arabs can be summed up in two words: Sand Niggers.
Yi. I think that now, after this point, more soldiers will have died in occupation rather than in the battle for Iraq.
But at least we're not involved in a guerrilla war, mind you. And even if we were, we'd win.
Found the Shifted Librarian blog when poking around in NewsIsFree. Gotta say, I whole heartedly agree with this quote.
"I want to see online reference librarians become the first web celebrities, flesh and blood personifications of the Internet, sought after, overpaid, and spoiled, who are raided and traded just like professional athletes. I want to see library webpages become essential local information resources with busy online communities that spontaneously create entirely new social structures. Most important, I want to see the library profession finally move to center stage in the Internet revolution, where we should have been all along." Jack Colbert, librarian, Librarea
Scientific American Web Awards 2003
It's a jungle out there. With more than three billion Web pages to sift through, finding great science sites is harder than ever. The good news is the editors at Scientific American have once again trawled the Internet for the best the Web has to offer. We think our list of winners has something for everyone.Could be interesting to some out there. Especially those of you who really like puzzles and math (and you know who you are).
Also a couple of other interesting articles up on SciAm:
The Scientific American 50 Award
New Technique May Simplify Nanotech Manufacturing
Hot Words -A claim of nonhuman-induced global warming sparks debate
The latter being quite timely with the Administration's recent EPA fiasco...
That was my favorite line from last night's Monk.
Browsing around, I found Josh's latest post about the ever widening WMD fiasco. One thing that struck me when reading about what happened to Obeidi.
Then, two days later, the US Army showed up at his house, busted his door down and took him into custody.Apart from the obvious incompetence of the whole sordid affair, what should be crystal clear that this is a re-occurring pattern of behavior. And it's quite specific."They took me outside, and they handcuffed me," he told CNN. "I saw tens of soldiers and tens of tanks and Hummers and helicopters were all around. And then I was taken to the side, and I was put on one of these Hummers ... and they took me to the airport" where the US is incarcerating detainees.
Okay, so I caved in pretty fast. NewsIsFree's emailing service is good for somethings, but pretty lousy at filtering. So I went looking again for an RSS news aggregator and found one that I'm starting to get attached to. It's called News Monster, and works within the Mozilla browser. It doesn't use .NET (thank "Bob") and appears pretty stable. I was able to import almost all of my NewsIsFree feeds, plus a host of others.
I really like the browser integration, though. Having the "back" button work as expected is a small miracle. The other aggregators are a bit of a pain when you're blogging. They'll allow you to see the page within the aggregator, but you have to open the page in the browser to be able to get the link so you can refer to it. A bit of a pain, as the aggregator would always choose the browser I'm editing the entry with to open the page.
Anyways, we'll see how it goes. I'm still using the NewsIsFree email service for stuff I can't seem to subscribe to with News Monster - a surprising number of news sites don't yet have RSS feeds, and so they need to be scraped...
I'm really becoming attached to Mozilla as well. The 1.4 version (release 3) is pretty nice and has a lot of features that IE hasn't even thought of, much less implemented.
Boy, am I behind. It started out as just a little bit behind, but now I find myself so far behind the rest of the blogo sphere that I may never catch up again. But then again, the snake has eaten its tail. Oroborus seems to be the perfect metaphor from my viewpoint. The wheel seems to have completed a full revolution. Up is down. White is the new black. Soon those behind will find themselves out ahead of the pack.
Memory Hole has found a full five minute video of a previously truncated 2.5 minute version of the same point in history.
Truly bizarre to see.
Be sure to also check out the complete 9/11 time line from the fine folks at the Center For Cooperative Research. Particularly the minute by minute time line of the day. Interesting to see this 5 minute video in context...
Found this blog via Josh, so you may have already seen it. Looks pretty interesting. I haven't read the book yet, but as soon as I finish Darwin's Cathedral...
The Supreme Court's most conservative members don't always side with business. That's why execs are fretting about new appointments
I was listening to Jerry "My Main Squeeze" Falwell on CrossFire yesterday, and what he said was pretty telling.
, I don't think there's anyone watching this program who thinks that laws against adultery between heterosexuals or laws against sodomy among homosexuals is an enforceable law.You see, what Falwell is for is the stigma of a law that cannot be enforced. It's a passive aggressive way of enforcing morality. If you have a law on the books which cannot be enforced, you end up with people using that law as a way to discriminate.
It's a perfect scam. You have the old saw "it's an unenforceable law anyway" which translates to "why should you worry about something that can't be enforced" which is targeted at the "let sleeping dogs lie" citizen. That way, the bureaucracy can kick into gear and craft policy about de facto criminalization - i.e. if your homosexual, then you're violating a law that we can't enforce, therefore you're a de facto criminal, and we can't hire you as a teacher.
It's perfect. It's sleazy. And it's precisely what I'd expect from such a pinnacle of morality such as Falwell.
Can the Senate Bind Itself So that Only a Supermajority Can Change Its Rules?
That means that the old Senate can't bind the current Senate. It also means that Republicans could, indeed, revisit the rule change rule; amend it to require only a simple majority, not a supermajority; and then, by majority vote, change the filibuster rule - and put through any nominees they want. Game, set, match.
From Stratfor.
Combat in Iraq intensified over the past 48 hours as guerrillas launched a series of attacks against U.S. forces. The focus of the guerrillas is now on U.S. forces moving in convoys. The road to the airport in Baghdad has become a repeated target, while grenades being dropped from overpasses also have become more widely used. The concentration on movement might be a deliberate tactic to tie U.S. forces down, but a more likely explanation is that vehicles provide an opportunity for attack where rapid response is less likely and where mines and rocket-propelled grenades are particularly effective. Casualties continue to mount.
Wolfowitz To Choose Tribunal Commission
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on Thursday delegated to his top deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, the final word on which terrorism suspects are to be tried by a military tribunal.Wolfowitz also was given the authority to decide who will serve on the tribunals, which the Pentagon calls commissions.
After President Bush determines which terrorism suspects in U.S. custody are subject to be tried under his Nov. 13, 2001 military order, a chief prosecutor would draft charges against any or all of those suspects. It would then be for Wolfowitz to decide which would actually go to trial, according to Air Force Maj. John Smith of the Pentagon's Office of Military Commissions.
Several have pointed out that it was impossible to find new comments, so I found an MT snippet which displays recent comments. They're now down under the links on the right...
Hope this helps.
From StratFor.
by Dr. George Friedman
Summary
When we step back, the broader picture of the U.S.-al Qaeda war becomes clearer. It appears to us that both sides are gearing up for a summer offensive. Each, for its own reasons, is going to try to engage in operations in a series of theaters, including in the United States. This does not mean the offensives will be successful. It does mean we can expect complex action from both sides on a broad geographic scale. These need not be individual large-scale operations, but collectively they will constitute significant attempts to get an advantage in the war.
Progress reported in Iraq weapons hunt
"My suspicions are that we'll find [things] in the chemical and biological areas. In fact, I think there may be some surprises coming rather quickly in that area," chief CIA weapons inspector David Kay told CNN over a secure teleconference between Baghdad and CIA headquarters in McLean, Virginia.Any day now, they're going to find Bloefeld's secret base.
But seriously, though. The gas centrifuge find is emblematic of what Josh MarsAzaell talked about in a previous post.
Unfortunately, we're now in a situation in which if we do turn up some nerve gas that will be taken as evidence that the White House found the WMD.And no sooner than Josh posts do we find centrifuge pieces buried in someone's rose garden in 1991. I have no idea what the piece is, nor how "valuable" a find it is. But it matters not. It's more teaser convincing those on the WMD fence to hold out hope that the Administration didn't completely lie to them.
And to ignore that they absolutely knew the Niger documents were fake, but used it to whip up the nation into a 9/11 frenzy anyway.
Sometimes you got to bend the truth, I guess. What's an exaggeration or thirty between friends?
Out of the mouths of Libertarians
During his campaign, Mr Bush said many sensible things about foreign policy, including the need for the US to have "humility" in its relations with other nations. But since September 11, neo-conservative influence on US foreign policy has reached new heights. We have grave concerns over the doctrine of preventive war and the seeming abdication of the responsibilities of Congress with respect to committing lives and treasure to armed conflict.A while back I was reading this wonderful guest column in the National Review Online (I know...). It was written by a gentleman from the Cato institute who's name I forget at the moment.Some in the neo-conservative movement have openly called for an American empire around the globe. Max Boot, the writer, recently praised what he termed America's "imperialism" and said it should impose its views "at gunpoint". James Woolsey, former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, has called for a decades-long campaign to reorder the entire Middle East along neo-conservative lines. Such thinking is profoundly un-American.
Row escalates over Iraq dossier
BBC News: "The BBC refuses to apologise for its coverage of the "sexed up" Iraq dossier as Jack Straw prepares to give further evidence to MPs."
A test of posting from NewsIsFree.
Cool. It works.
In the process of rebuilding my life after the great June environment implosion. All the feed readers I've used have all... well... they've all started sucking eventually. Since I already have a NewsIsFree account (best $20 bucks I've spent in a while), I finally started poking around the pages and found they'll send you a page based on the channels you select, at a frequency of up to once an hour. That's far more than any mortal needs anyways.
And I don't have to install the 28 Meg .NET framework on my laptop. That stuff is like installing athlete's foot into your shoes to get laces.
Okay, it's official. I'll have more to say about this when I actually get time to write, but this article is pretty funny.
Jake has an excellent post today on Conservative Thought Patterns. Go read it, 'tis great.
All I can really add is that this thought pattern is really just Calvinism. The summary being if you're rich, God likes you. If you're not, then you're obviously a sinner.
I'd write a lot more on this, as it's something that's been seething in my twisted brain now for some time, but Jake has taken the pressure off with his post. For now, that is.
From the N.Y. Times.
The 400 wealthiest taxpayers accounted for more than 1 percent of all the income in the United States in the year 2000, more than double their share just eight years earlier, according to new data from the Internal Revenue Service. But their tax burden plummeted over the period.And check out the graphics. These guys are paying 20%. 20%. Amazing.
From Stratfor.
We suppose it does not constitute news to say the Israeli-Palestinian peace plan is in trouble, but it represents the primary event of the day. The reason is simple: If Israeli-Palestinian relations deteriorate to the levels of violence seen in the not-too-distant past, the implications will go beyond Israel and the Palestinian National Authority (PNA). The goal of U.S. President George W. Bush's administration, from the beginning, was to isolate this issue and quell tensions by reducing U.S. intrusion. Sept. 11, 2001, reduced that possibility dramatically, and the invasion of Iraq eliminated the possibility. An element of diplomacy leading up to the war, particularly in the Islamic world, was the guarantee of best efforts on the part of the United States in creating a solution to the problem.
From Stratfor
SummaryU.S. President George W. Bush has designated an al Qaeda suspect who has been in U.S. custody since December 2001 as an enemy combatant. Justice Department officials say Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri was a "sleeper operative" enlisted to direct future attacks in the United States. This would imply the existence of a middle management structure within al Qaeda -- possibly even inside the United States.
From Stratfor.
The guerrilla war in Iraq moved decisively on June 24 into the southern part of the country. Six British soldiers were killed in a police station in Majar al-Kabir, just south of the city of Amarah, which is 180 miles southeast of Baghdad. Reports indicate that the soldiers were killed by guerrilla gunfire. In another engagement in the same town, a "large" number of guerrillas opened fire on a British patrol, leaving one British soldier wounded.These are extremely important events. The southern part of Iraq is dominated by Shiites. It has been relatively, but not completely, quiet since the end of the conventional war. Apart from demonstrations, there have been a few, relatively unreported minor guerrilla attacks. British troops reportedly were patrolling without flak jackets in Basra, due to the settled conditions in the area. This attack certainly has changed that perception. It also has turned the guerrilla war from an operation confined to the areas north and west of Baghdad to a nationwide operation.
Okay, so I'm weak. But I do so dearly want to see Tucker Carlson eat his tie. The man is the yipping lap dog of political punditry (my apologies to all the lap dogs I insulted by making this comparison). Incredibly intelligent and using all his talents in the service of the RoveCo propaganda machine.
I know it's petty, but I think Tucker could make a lot of money selling the opportunity to bitch slap him a couple of times - voluntarily, of course. He can keep all the money. I just want the opportunity to sell the tickets.
Yes it is indeed happening. Same Bat-Place. Same Bat-Time. I've just been a lazy, braindead, slovenly snail in getting the invites out. Oh. And I lost all my email addresses in the big crash of June. It's not much of an excuse considering it only happened last week, but I'm taking advantage of all the excuses I can get lately. Ping me if you haven't already.
Just discovered Rantivation. The owner seems to be a fellow Dean supporter. Strange that the archives are only February and the last month.... But very good stuff, none-the-less. And a big heart, too... If you get comments from someone from beerdrinker.org on a post... Well, I think you're okay in my book.
And by the way, "Revisionist Positioning" is a great turn of phrase.
Is a moron. He's really just completely lost it. Over the edge. Toppled.
The overwhelming consensus among inspectors and monitors, including Hans Blixs sidekick Mohamed ElBaradei, is now to the effect that Irans mullahs have indeed been concealing an enriched-uranium program. For good measure, it is a sure thing that they are harboring al-Qaida activists on their territory. Will the peace camp ever admit that Bush was right about this? Or about the evil of North Korea: a demented starvation regime now threatening to export ready-to-use nuclear weapons (which Saddam Hussein, say, might have been interested in buying)?Geesh. For the record, Iran having nuclear weapons is a very, very bad thing. Ditto for N. Korea. But JHCORFC! Did all of history start with this Administration? Doesn't Hitchens have a memory? I mean, doesn't anyone remember the past anymore?
Dont make me laugh: The furthest the peaceniks will go is to say that Bushs rhetoric made these people turn nasty. I am not teasing here: The best of the anti-war polemicists is Jonathan Schell, who advanced this very claim in a debate with me earlier this month. Meanwhile, the overwhelming moral case for regime change in both countries is once again being left to the forces of neoconservatism, with the liberals pulling a long face while they wait to be reluctantly persuaded.
Okay, okay, okay. Slack.
In any event, if you want a sneak peek at what the 2004 election will be like, go read Hitchens.
I'll be waiting back here with the barf bag.
From Stratfor
SummaryOrganized crime groups in Rio de Janeiro and other major Brazilian cities have become increasingly involved in politics in recent years. But now Brazilian gangs with known ties to Colombian militants and corrupt military officers in Paraguay and Argentina also are adopting a populist political rhetoric to justify their criminal activities. If the gangs take the next logical step -- to link politically with Brazil's Landless Movement -- within a couple of years, President Luiz Inacio "Lula" da Silva's government might be facing a security nightmare that could destabilize Brazil politically and undermine its economic growth.
Got pointed to this nice little gem from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas by one of my Russian friends who's always on the lookout for that cloud on a bright sunny day.
If short-term interest rates fall toward zero, it may be necessary for the Fed to re-think how it conducts monetary policy. In this document, we examine why conventional policy loses its effectiveness at very low interest rates, and review some of the alternative policy tools that are available. Were hopeful that this entire discussion will prove to be academicthat our economys natural resilience, together with the easing the Fed has already undertaken, will be sufficient to get employment and output growing again. But its nice to know that if additional stimulus is required, there are still arrows left in the quiver.This subject is particularly timely because it is widely believed that the Feds will cut interest rates next time they meet. That means that interest rates will be the lowest since Eisenhower.
If standard policy options are exhausted, the Feds quiver is by no means empty. But the arrows that remain are less familiar and, perhaps, not quite as straight as the ones that have already been fired.Which is to say, it may be a pig but at least we've put lipstick on it...
I agree with Jeanne. Kevin is a truly wonderful soul. A heart as big as the wide open west. And might I just add that Kevin seems to be tireless in his organization of the left. He must put an enormous amount of time into the stuff he does, and there isn't enough thanks in the world for people like him.
Thanks Kevin. It was good to read your post while I'm wallowing in the insanity around me.
Why don't we just eliminate the Senate all together? Read the whole thing. It's depressing.
"There's no mystery in what will happen with today's vote," said Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. in a written statement. "But when it comes to the floor, I hope and believe that at least a few of my friends from across the aisle will see the light."I can't believe this is happening.
Tipping Point for School Choice
This is a complicated subject of which I've had numerous debates about. However, one point that I think is being completely missed is the Religious aspect of the argument.
I was first introduced into the "vouchers" meme when I was in sixth grade (don't ask when that was, but it was quite a long time ago). I was moved into a Christian school Azaelf way through the fifth grade, and by mid term of the sixth, my parents were starting to feel the bite of having to pay taxes for public schools and also spend the money to send their three kids to private religious schooling.
The point is that there is a very, very LARGE segment of the voucher movement that has absolutely nothing to do with choice or the quality of the school or anything about getting a better education via the free market fairy.
What it has to do with is subsidizing religious education.
And it's my personal opinion that if you took away those who support vouchers purely on these religious grounds, the movement would fade back into the woodwork. There simply wouldn't be anything near approaching a critical mass of supporters without them.
And so all you out there who are for vouchers for the "right" reasons, I strongly urge you to check the pedigree of your fellow supporters, and figure out why they are there along side of you.
Having been seen the quality afforded by a fundamentalist religious school, not to mention the sheer indoctrination, I can tell you that any solution that ends up sending most of these kids to a religious school is going to be bad news.
I'm not against religious schooling. What you do with your own money and your own kids is (within reason) your own business. But when you start getting my money to subsidize your religious indoctrination - as well as the appalling (if not outright fraudulent) scientific curriculum - well, I have to put my foot down and ask you politely to stop it.
Think about it. There is a major structural change pending here. We can either do this right or regret it forever. And those who support this shouldn't be lampreys parasitically using the support of those with a very questionable agenda just to get your pet education theory put into practice. They will require sacrifices on the alter of separation between church and state.
You lie down with dogs, you wake up with fleas.
Getting about 2% of my traffic from .gov addresses. Received quite a few hits from treas.gov. Guess all those comments about security clearances, encryption and nuclear weapons got somebody's attention. I feel sorry for the people who had to wade through my blog to see what was up...
My apologies to you all in the government who are subjected to my rhetoric against your will.
From Stratfor
Diaries should not begin with news from last week as a rule, but the news of the combat incident along the Syrian-Iraqi border last week forces us to break the rule. We feel justified by the fact that the U.S. Defense Department didn't tell anyone about the clash until Monday.
According to official statements and leaks, a convoy of vehicles was heading from Iraq into Syria near the town of Qaim. U.S. special forces attacked the convoy and, in the course of the engagement, apparently engaged some Syrian troops. Pentagon officials said five Syrians were wounded, three of whom were being treated for their injuries by U.S. forces. Lt. Col. Gary Keck, speaking for the Pentagon, said, "It is still to be determined which side of the border" on which the incident occurred -- which is another way of saying that it occurred inside Syria.
US sends warning to Libya over 'pursuit of WMD'
Why not just collect the whole set?
I mean, really. What kind of a teaser is that?
Yea, we cackle with delight every time something goes wrong with our defenses. Rubbing our hands at the prospect of delivering a crippling blow to the defenses of the US.
Moron.
Well, the war still continues. The Sim world of the blogs has just crossed over to become a Reality TV show.
Combined with the implications of this, I think we're now past the line in the sand that separates adolescent fun from serious business.
If you don't like the mutants, we're going to have to stop growing them in toxic waste.
I think I just read my 666th article on the continuing WMD scandal. Is it okay to start calling it a scandal yet? I mean, I don't want to get slapped down prematurely for using the "S" word.
From the spooks @ Stratfor
Counterinsurgency operations continued over the weekend in Iraq, with U.S. forces raiding private homes and detaining Iraqis. The U.S. command reported that the raids produced additional intelligence on the guerrilla movement and how it operates; guerrilla operations continued. On Saturday, June 21, two U.S. soldiers were wounded near the town of Hit, about 90 miles northwest of Baghdad, when their vehicle ran over a land mine. On Sunday, June 22, a U.S. soldier was killed south of Baghdad when a rocket-propelled grenade was fired at the vehicle he was driving. Also on Saturday, there was a demonstration by a few thousand Shiites in Baghdad. It was not destabilizing by itself, but it clearly was intended as a warning to the U.S. command in Iraq that the Shiites -- and their Iranian allies -- had important cards to play in Iraq.
Wait. Make that a chained, dead dog
We are all simply on crack or something.
Report Cast Doubt on Iraq-Al Qaeda Connection
Powell Regrets Killing of Militant
Iraqi Shiite Leader Uneasy With U.S. Role
And this is just from visiting the Washington Post.
Been away from news trolling for quite a few days lately, and it's just frightening to peer back behind the curtain again. I'm astounded at how easy it is to slip back and become clueless again. You kind of relax for a little bit and...
U.S. forces may have found WMD documents
Truth is specific. Propaganda rarely is.
"It's potentially significant," said Capt. Ryan McWilliams, the battalion intelligence officer, who examined the documents at his unit's headquarters. He said there were "potentially some pretty strong documents regarding the intelligence service."Unfortunately the same old pattern here. Hype the find and then when it peeters out, let it fade away without comment.
update: And another thing. Documents of Mass Destruction are not scary enough. Anyone on the internet with a brain and 5 college graduates could likely assemble similar information. Having evil plans really is an important thing to discover. But are we really saying we're going to start waging wars to destroy information? To supress advanced chemistry and biology labs around the world? No nuclear power for anyone but the US and its protectorate?
If you really believe in... say... nuclear power (and I know people who do) then you have to eventually come to grips with the fact that pretty much everyone on the planet is going to be doing it at some point. Unless you believe in the oil fairy, that is.
U.S. troops may be in Iraq for 10 years
Again, is there anything that these guys have said which has turned out to be true. Oh. There's the winning the war in three weeks thing.
But 10 years?????
Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and Marine Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, gave no explicit estimates for the time U.S. forces would stay in Iraq, but they did not dispute members of Congress who said the deployment could last a decade or more. The comments were among the most explicit acknowledgements yet from the Bush administration that the U.S. presence in Iraq will be long, arduous, costly and a strain on the military.Man, Wolfi "not disputing" is quite the interesting thing to see.
I can feel Bevan's pain. He's trying to support a pretty unsupportable argument. And then there's the whole cognitive dissonance thing.
Put aside for a moment, as Kinsley does by failing to mention it in his column, the fact we recently found two mobile bio weapons labs in Iraq that exactly match the detailed description given by Secretary Powell on February 5. Isn't this a textbook definition of good intelligence and good evidence? Doesn't it also prove Hussein had an active WMD program in violation of UN sanction and lend credence to the "dire warnings" of the Bush administration?Actually it doesn't. There is at least reasonable doubt - if not a heck of a lot more than merely reasonable doubt- that these are merely Trailers of Hydrogen Production. And the fact that they exactly match the detailed description given by Powell doesn't prove that they are bio weapons trailers. This is quite likely only more damning evidence that they knew before hand that all they had was a pig and they used lipstick to make it prettier.
The only think Mike Kinsley knows for sure, and the standard of proof he now implies is necessary as justification for the war, is that the administration didn't have a smoking gun with respect to Iraq's WMDs.Apparently, we don't even have a gun, much less a smoking one. Not even all the pieces of a gun, nor a factory for making guns were such pieces around. And the question comes down to what the heck kind of evidence they did have if we can't find a stinking trace of them anywhere.
There's a bit of the argument of the type "I was swerving the car because I think I see a deer in the shadows". Your intent is good, you were just spooked. Intelligence is a "probabilistic" science anyway. It was justified even though it was jumping the gun.
But just let me remind everyone the obvious cost that we've all paid for this "swerving of the car" to avoid the WMD deer in the headlights. There is such a thing as reckless endangerment if you're driving on Crack and you Azaellucinate the deer. And if you are completely fabricating the deer entirely out of whole cloth, well... That's called fraud and does, I believe, fall under the rubric of "high crimes and misdemeanors".
Even so, Kinsley's statement is still quite remarkable for someone who was never present at any intelligence briefings over the two years prior to the war. Kinsley has no idea what intelligence the Bush administration had or didn't have.And that's the point we'd all like to rectify. Out in the open. I'd prefer to make my own judgment on the facts - or my representatives' analysis of such facts in open hearings - rather than rely on the "trust us" coming from this Administration.
Trust may be good enough for Bevan. I think there is likely a lot of people who would disagree. Perhaps Stratfor is correct, and the only thing that matters is what Bush does in rebuilding Iraq. But that is just "the ends justifying the means" thinking. And quite frankly, that kind of thing is precisely what irked a lot of the Republican core voters about Clinton.
And having Bush and Clinton linked in voter's minds like that can't be good for next November.
Love to hear this.
This is a similar case. Even if the consequences of going into Iraq turn out to be good -- and that seems to be an open question, though I think it was and to a degree remains possible -- it's wrong to have deceived the public to make the policy happen. It's wrong to have damaged the country's intelligence agencies. Let's not even get into the damage that was done to the country's standing in the world. It's also wrong for the political opposition not to say it was wrong, even if the short-term political consequences are uncertain or even damaging.
Radicalness is a life attitude, a search, regardless of party lines, an attitude in which there is no compromise. Radicalism is a sloppy bundle of compact and logically incoherent opinions. That burden I won't carry. It is pathogenic both for the individual and for society. Jens Bjørneboe Interview (1967)
They ain't so anonymous, either. Most people don't know it, but web email services like Yahoo and Hotmail will include the IP address of the computer that is connecting to them. This means that in the headers is your IP address of the computer you're on.
Again, if you must send me anonymous email via these kinds of services, please go through a scrubbing proxy to connect to the service to send the email. Otherwise I don't get the thrill of knowing I can't find out about you... There's nothing so disheartening as to find several emails from someone who thought they were anonymous, with their cable modem IP address on each and every one.
From the spooks @ Stratfor.
The war in Iraq continued today with more attacks and casualties. U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell downplayed the significance of his visit to the Middle East, saying it was just another day. The United States continued to warn Iran about developing nuclear weapons while Iran continued to resist. These are the same stories, different day.
However, the situation in Britain is a much more interesting tale. British Prime Minister Tony Blair is now in trouble. Whether he faces a mortal blow is not clear, but we tend to believe that his ability to govern is in rapid decline, with little to reverse it. The issue is Iraq. Two former ministers who resigned from Blair's Cabinet have claimed that Blair bypassed the normal operations of the British Cabinet in making the decision to go to war with Iraq. More damaging is the claim that intelligence reports that should have gone to the Cabinet were suppressed, while laundered versions tilted to support the decision to go to war were distributed instead. According to the ministers, the United States and Britain decided last summer to invade Iraq, with the date set for February. The justification for the war came later.
Nothing is ever anonymous on the web. Unless you take precautions, even proxies leak information about you. If you use DSL or a cable modem, then things are much worse. It's pretty trivial to find a lat/lon of your location from the IP address, and with just a little more work even a name, address and phone number.
If you really want to leave anonymous comments, I suggest you clear your browser's cache and cookies and then view my site via something like http://www.idzap.com/, which does an excellent job of scrubbing incriminating information.
Just found The Basic Laws of Human Stupidity on Prometheus 6.
My three rules:
1) Everyone is an idiot
2) I am one too
3) If doubting rule #2, see rule #1
to catch up on.
To Chris for fixing my style sheet and making the site cross platform. Microsoft is pretty evil, I must say.
Man oh man. I hate computers. All of them. Even though I make my living off of them, I still hate them. They hate me as well.
Of course, I couldn't buy a laptop with XP/Pro. Only XP/Home installed on all the laptops @ Fry's. So I go to upgrade and then it asks me for a CD I don't have. Okay, feeling stupid. So I click cancel. It chugs on the installation upgrade and no other problems. Now I don't have a video driver. But I do have a video driver as I obviously have a display. Doesn't show up anywhere. Go to the driver information and it's all question marks and unknown. Very strange. So I call Fujitsu support and after tracking down everything he knows, we're both stumped.
I try to install from the recovery disk, and it tells me that I can't install the ATI driver, and to try using a standard VGA driver to reinstall. There is none.
So, the only thing I can do is roll back the system and do the process over again, hopefully using the recovery CD when it asks for the mystery CD.
Having spent 4 hours getting to this point, I can tell you I'm so excited about going through the process again.
I really think the "Network Computer" is the way to go. I used to manage a couple of VAXen in the old days - for 150 people. It was a breeze. Now, everyone owning a computer is their own SYSADMIN, and the computers are, like, a zillion times more complex. I can remember being so excited when we upgraded the VAX from 8 Meg of memory to 16 Meg. And we were supporting 150 people on these suckers...
Oh well. Complexity is a monotonically increasing function. Have to keep up, or die.
Right now, the death option is looking pretty attractive. (just kidding).
BTW, no spell checking was done on this post, and it probably shows. I have to install Word (apparently) before I can get spell checking on my email.
Yi. What a major pain in the ASCII
Well, last night my laptop died. Lots of data on it that I, of course, had carefully backed up. Not. Then my Lynksys router that I used to connect to DSL mysteriously stopped working. Yi.
So I finally looked at my site through Netscape, and I must say SORRY. Yi. Don't know why it's not looking the same as when I view it through IE. The style sheet seems to be completely whacked. Stuff showing up on the bottom that should be on the sides. Graphics missized.
Oh wait. I know that answer... It's... um... IT'S BECAUSE THERE ARE NO FRICKIN' STANDARDS THAT MEAN ANYTHING ON THE WEB.
Okay. Okay. Slack.
I'll try to fix it so it at least looks okay on both.
Geesh. I can't believe that this looks like this under Netscape.
My apologies.
David Neiwert has a really great post wrapping up his "Rush, Newspeak and Fascism" series.
Okay, so maybe sociopath isn't the right term for the few who are leading us past the event horizon of this black hole. Dave has coined a better term.
We have to starve the N. Koreans and force them into cannibalism.
We have to completely dismantle the govenment so that we can save it.
We have to take away every single benefit from the needy in order to help them.
We have to completely drain our schools in order to reform them.
We have to eviserate the bill of rights in order to protect ourselves.
We have to torture people in order to save ourselves.
We have to strike first at the shadows because there might be Godzilla hiding behind the bush.
Anne @ Peevish has said
The key is to remember that evil people almost never know they're evil, okay? Everyone's the hero of their own life story and almost no one sane enough to be functional deliberately fosters ruin for those around them.I disagree. I'm sure that the zombie followers of these people believe that. They get caught up in the rhetoric and believe they're on some grand and glorious mission from God.
The people in charge, however, are simply sociopaths.
From the spooks at Stratfor
The real Palestinian peace talks are under way -- with Palestinians negotiating with Palestinians. This might yield negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians. Israeli television is reporting that Israel has made a proposal to the United States through Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's director-general, Dov Weisglass, and Avi Dichter, the head of Shin Bet, Israel's internal security organization. They proposed that the Israeli army reduce military operations for about a month, including targeted assassinations. During this period, the Palestinian National Authority would have to control attacks by Hamas and other groups, acting on its own intelligence and intelligence provided by the Israelis.
Jim Treacher has had enough of blogfeuds and comment trolls.
Having just had a similar experience with the jackanapes of the internet... Well, let me say it ain't fun.
The Libertarian utopian fantasy is that if we could all just communicate, everything would be all peachy and we'd live in some Libertarian free market love fest of ideas. But like all Libertarian utopias, it just descends into despotism and roving bands of warlords. Heathers on crack.
Blogdom is the Somalia of the web.
Yi.
A computer memory chip based on carbon nanotubes has passed a manufacturing milestone, according to the US company developing the technology.The prototype chip would store information using hundreds of billions of nanotubes with a theoretical capacity of 10 gigabits of data, says Nantero, based in Boston, Massachusetts.
Once fully developed, the company says nanoscale random access memory (NRAM) could hold more data that existing types of RAM and would also be non-volatile, meaning data would not be lost when the power is been turned off. Computers using such memory could boot up almost instantly. Nantero also claims that NRAM would be much faster than current non-volatile memory, such as Flash.
From Stratfor
The peace talks between the Israelis and Palestinians appear to have hit a snag, which seems wholly inadequate for the situation. Actually, the real negotiations at the moment appear to be between Hamas and Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas, mediated by the Egyptians, with Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat as the secret guest. Hamas representatives at talks within the Palestinian community demanded international guarantees that the targeted assassination of Palestinian leaders by the Israelis would stop. However, Hamas has not yet abandoned its position that attacks against Israeli military targets and settlers be suspended. That means that the Israelis will not agree to end their own operations, so that is at a stalemate, with Egypt suggesting that talks resume in Cairo.
The old saw is that sanctions always hurt the people more than they hurt the regimes. For a recent object lesson, just look at Saddam. He nor his elite guards were really hurting in any real way. Corruption ran rampant, people lived in substandard to severe conditions, poor to non-existent medical care, crumbling if not completely absent infrastructure.
But what differs in the situation in Iraq vs. the situation in N Korea was that at least there was some food getting into Iraq. Some medicine. Some infrastructure. It wasn't like there was widespread cannibalism throughout the country.
Best comment I ever read by Frank Wilhoit
No Republican can be a supply-sider.Now please read slowly and carefully, because this (apparently) can be confusing for some people.
Any Republican...
...who really believed...
...that cutting taxes would increase revenue...
...would therefore oppose cutting taxes. Q.E.D.
Nobody knows, OR CARES, whether the Laffer curve really works or exactly what shape it is.
The problem with supply-side is that its advocates are not honest about the outcomes that they want, and everybody, on both sides, knows it.
70's - the decade that fashion forgot
80's - the decade we bent over
90's - the decade where everyone talked about ethics, but nobody had any
00's - the decade where everyone talked about character, but nobody had any
Just tentative.
Another Stratfor briefing.
Now, what's interesting here is that if these aren't attacks by professional soldiers, then it means that the claims that "Ba'athists" or Saddam loyalists are behind the increasing number of attacks are just baseless. And that makes it more of a popular uprising than a grudge match between supporters of Saddam and the US.
SummaryThe June 12 attack on a U.S. armored patrol, in which the attackers suffered heavy losses and the United States suffered none, betrays a lack of guerrilla training. It is unlikely that professional soldiers and guerrillas are behind the majority of these actions, save a few more professional-grade sniper attacks and a shooting attack on a U.S. gunship. This likely indicates that U.S. forces are not yet in serious trouble in Iraq.
T. Bevan over at RealClearPolitics has been one of the conservative voices that has recognized the implications of the whole "lack of WMDs" thing. Her posts have been consistently pointing out the problem that Herr Taranto just can't seem to grasp. Today's post was about the very interesting profile on Rand Beers in today's Washington Post.
She ends up with an interesting conclusion
Even though I may disagree with him, I don't begrudge Beers's [sic] opinion on point number one. After all, this is a man who sat around all day looking at the scariest scraps of terrorist intelligence in the country - of course he's going to think we need more money spent here at home. But points number two and three are purely ideological and just aren't supported by any facts whatsoever.I can't tell if this is a back handed compliment, or a subtle crack appearing in her otherwise full support for the Prez...The Post's treatment of Beers makes it seem like he's more than just a liberal-leaning bureaucrat who had ideological differences with the direction of the war on terror.
I know that's a heavily redundant title, but the latest stinky loaf he squeezed out in Best of the Web is pretty stinky.
Of course, no sensible person thinks the Iraq war is Watergate, any more than it was Vietnam. There's no crime here. The complaint seems to be merely that administration officials spoke with too much assurance when they described their beliefs about the present state of Iraq's weapons programs. In other words, they did what politicians always do when trying to win public support for a policy: They made the most compelling argument they could. It's hardly a scandal that the administration didn't make its opponents' case for them.Well, the occupation is looking a heck of a lot like a quagmire. And given what the number of very intelligence analysts who are not pleased with the scapegoat label, I'm sure that it's going to be potentially a lot bigger than Watergate. Well, that's if anyone cares. As Herr Taranto points out repeatedly, the American populace is still pretty much clueless. And I find it just a little bit suspicious that so many people believe things that even James knows are absolute lies.
I was talking to my parents over the weekend - traditional Father's day call and such - and I mentioned this fact to my parents: No one cares. My dad said that was not the case. He lives in a very conservative town, where Christian Fundamentalism is pretty much instilled into the very concrete sidewalks. And the newspaper is very, very conservative. He notes that there's a heck of a lot of questions being asked.
My response was "Who cares if they ask questions. They don't want to hear the answers". His reply was that they do. He doesn't think the issue will go away. I asked if he thought that this was worse than lying about an affair with an intern, and he said it was much, much worse.
James, my dear, you're forgetting that there's a heck of lot of your core who really take the character stuff seriously. They really believed the whole WMD thing, and if it isn't true, then they're going to descend on you like a pack of wolves for lying to them.
They are going to remember this.
(heh) So on the heels of the last... uh... interesting story about N. Korea's problem with Cannibalism, I found this gem of an article Divided by Zealots
But for some incomprehensible reason, Republicans seem to like to eat their young. We have the steely-eyed zealots trying to inflict their personal views on others. They don't care a whit whether you are with them 90 percent of the time. They are the 100 percenters, and what really matters to them is that old 10 percent, and they'll use venom and invective to tear people down. We do that too many times and it sure turns folks off. And the Democrats just love it!Hey guys, guess what? It's an inevitable outcome of your position. You've built up one gigantic hate machine, and as soon as the wolves figure out that the Democrats aren't fun to kick around any more, the Frankenstein's monster will start looking around for other things to rip apart.
The Republicans - well, the neoCons at least - have done an absolutely stunning job at keeping absolute control on the party. I've simply been amazed that the whole thing hasn't imploded years ago. But sooner or later, it's going down. Anything based on blind hatred is inevitably going to consume itself.
Your entire philosophy is based on the fundamentalist notion of a belief in Absolutes. Black and White partitions of the world. And that is just a complete illusion. Politics is defined by compromise and if a fundamental tenet of your belief system is no compromise, then the only recourse is to lie - and that will eventually be found out.
And when they figure it out, it's going to be a cannibalistic piranha love fest.
Found this via Anne @ Peevish. I must say that I agree with her that one would think this would get far more column inches if it's even remotely true. Certainly all the great humanitarians on the Right should be foaming at the mouth now, ready to save N. Korea. Oh wait. They actually have WMDs.
Cannibalism is increasing in North Korea following another poor harvest and a big cut in international food aid, according to refugees who have fled the stricken country.Yi.Aid agencies are alarmed by refugees' reports that children have been killed and corpses cut up by people desperate for food. Requests by the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) to be allowed access to "farmers' markets", where human meat is said to be traded, have been turned down by Pyongyang, citing "security reasons".
Anyone caught selling human meat faces execution, but in a report compiled by the North Korean Refugees Assistance Fund (NKRAF), one refugee said: "Pieces of 'special' meat are displayed on straw mats for sale. People know where they came from, but they don't talk about it."
That'll do, Pig.
Now on Movable Type. Will likely be changing format and tweaking things here and there over the next few days. Also need to find a MT publisher with a spell checker. And the DNS change over will take about a day or so to this new site. Lot's o' fun.
What a tangled web we weave
Something that should be kept in mind in the whole Middle East mess is the followingIsrael and Hamas may currently be locked in deadly combat, but, according to several current and former U.S. intelligence officials, beginning in the late 1970s, Tel Aviv gave direct and indirect financial aid to Hamas over a period of years.Which is basically the same pattern we see over and over and over again in the world, isn't it? There's a thorn in the side of a powerful government, so that government indirectly funds and supports another movement which is opposed to the current thorn. Then the law of unintended consequences kicks in and you have an even worse problem.Israel "aided Hamas directly -- the Israelis wanted to use it as a counterbalance to the PLO (Palestinian Liberation Organization)," said Tony Cordesman, Middle East analyst for the Center for Strategic Studies.
Israel's support for Hamas "was a direct attempt to divide and dilute support for a strong, secular PLO by using a competing religious alternative," said a former senior CIA official.
According to documents United Press International obtained from the Israel-based Institute for Counter Terrorism, Hamas evolved from cells of the Muslim Brotherhood, founded in Egypt in 1928. Islamic movements in Israel and Palestine were "weak and dormant" until after the 1967 Six Day War in which Israel scored a stunning victory over its Arab enemies.
After 1967, a great part of the success of the Hamas/Muslim Brotherhood was due to their activities among the refugees of the Gaza Strip. The cornerstone of the Islamic movements success was an impressive social, religious, educational and cultural infrastructure, called Da'wah, that worked to ease the hardship of large numbers of Palestinian refugees, confined to camps, and many who were living on the edge.
"Social influence grew into political influence," first in the Gaza Strip, then on the West Bank, said an administration official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
According to ICT papers, Hamas was legally registered in Israel in 1978 by Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the movement's spiritual leader, as an Islamic Association by the name Al-Mujamma al Islami, which widened its base of supporters and sympathizers by religious propaganda and social work.
According to U.S. administration officials, funds for the movement came from the oil-producing states and directly and indirectly from Israel. The PLO was secular and leftist and promoted Palestinian nationalism. Hamas wanted to set up a transnational state under the rule of Islam, much like Khomeini's Iran.
Let's see. US supporting Saddam while he was a useful enemy of Iran and then became a frickin' pain in the asterisk when he invaded Kuwait. Ummm. The US supporting the Taliban when they were fighting against Russian occupation and then became a frickin' pain in the asterisk when they turned out to be worse than any communist ever was.
What took Israeli leaders by surprise was the way the Islamic movements began to surge after the Iranian revolution, after armed resistance to Israel sprang up in southern Lebanon vis-à-vis the Hezbollah, backed by Iran, these sources said.Which is why the adage "Careful what you wish for" is so critical one to remember. It's like having your henchmen slip you the brain from Abby Normal into your Frankenstein's monster."Nothing provides the energy for imitation as much as success," commented one administration expert.
A further factor of Hamas' growth was the fact the PLO moved its base of operations to Beirut in the '80s, leaving the Islamic organization to grow in influence in the Occupied Territories "as the court of last resort," he said.
When the intifada began, Israeli leadership was surprised when Islamic groups began to surge in membership and strength. Hamas immediately grew in numbers and violence. The group had always embraced the doctrine of armed struggle, but the doctrine had not been practiced and Islamic groups had not been subjected to suppression the way groups like Fatah had been, according to U.S. government officials.
Israel was certainly funding the group at that time. One U.S. intelligence source who asked not to be named said that not only was Hamas being funded as a "counterweight" to the PLO, Israeli aid had another purpose: "To help identify and channel towards Israeli agents Hamas members who were dangerous terrorists."So go ahead and flame. Call me anti-Semitic because I think it's a really stupid strategy to help create the very thing that is now causing so much pain and suffering. To trade one enemy you don't want to negotiate with for a far worse enemy.In addition, by infiltrating Hamas, Israeli informers could only listen to debates on policy and identify Hamas members who "were dangerous hard-liners," the official said.
In the end, as Hamas set up a very comprehensive counterintelligence system, many collaborators with Israel were weeded out and shot. Violent acts of terrorism became the central tenet, and Hamas, unlike the PLO, was unwilling to compromise in any way with Israel, refusing to acquiesce in its very existence.
But even then, some in Israel saw some benefits to be had in trying to continue to give Hamas support: "The thinking on the part of some of the right-wing Israeli establishment was that Hamas and the others, if they gained control, would refuse to have any part of the peace process and would torpedo any agreements put in place," said a U.S. government official who asked not to be named.
"Israel would still be the only democracy in the region for the United States to deal with," he said.
Aid to Hamas may have looked clever, "but it was hardly designed to help smooth the waters," he said. "An operation like that gives weight to President George Bush's remark about there being a crisis in education."So when you're thinking about all the chaos in the Middle East, and the very real tragedies and unspeakable suffering going on, just remember that there's more than a little bit of "setting fire to own's own hair and then trying to put it out by hitting it with a hammer" going on.Cordesman said that a similar attempt by Egyptian intelligence to fund Egypt's fundamentalists had also come to grief because of "misreading of the complexities."
An Israeli defense official was asked if Israel had given aid to Hamas said, "I am not able to answer that question. I was in Lebanon commanding a unit at the time, besides it is not my field of interest."
Asked to confirm a report by U.S. officials that Brig. Gen. Yithaq Segev, the military governor of Gaza, had told U.S. officials he had helped fund "Islamic movements as a counterweight to the PLO and communists," the official said he could confirm only that he believed Segev had served back in 1986.
Most of the time, the enemy of your enemy is likely to be your enemy as well.
Word.
Know you've seen it, but
There's no point in getting mad at Mr. DeLay and his clique: they are what they are. I do, however, get angry at moderates, liberals and traditional conservatives who avert their eyes, pretending that current disputes are just politics as usual. They aren't what we're looking at here is a radical power play, which if it succeeds will transform our country. Yet it's considered uncool to point that out.Liberal Heathers, in other words.
You know, people so plugged in and jaded that - although they have their own pet peeves against the Right - can't see the nose on their face. The ones who believe it will all blow over when the whole thing inevitably collapses. The kind of people who are sipping wine and eating cheese at the parties thrown by the jokers who are inserting a telephone pole where it shouldn't be in the body electorate. Those political history buffs who think this is all just a cyclical thing that the nation goes through all the time.

Happy Friday the 13th, y'all.
I think the most appropriate metaphor for the Iraq is the old tale about "Stone Soup". In this case, the "WMD imminent threat" was the "stone". Everyone then threw in their pet reason for going to war and pretty soon it was soup. It's like a variation of the scapegoat resolution of mimetic conflict. A way to engender collective blame so that any one individual isn't responsible.
Well, except for the guy who started it all with the stone that is.
Karl Rove is an evil, evil man.
Love Triangle
(via Stratfor)
Iran's Nuclear Program: Risk-Mitigator or -Multiplier?Summary
Over the past several weeks, Russian officials have made conflicting statements about an agreement to help Iran build the Bushehr nuclear facility. Moscow has appeared both to succumb to U.S. pressure to stop helping Tehran's nuclear program and to retain its commitment to the relationship, despite Washington's displeasure. Iran has complicated the situation by issuing several conflicting statements of its own. Both sides realize that they will have to yield to U.S. demands eventually, but each will try to extract maximum gains from the situation in the meantime.
Analysis
Russian officials in recent days have issued a series of seemingly conflicting statements about the construction of a nuclear power plant in Iran. On one hand, they assured the United States and Europe that they will not aid construction of the Bushehr plant until Iran's nuclear facilities meet the standards of the International Atomic Energy Agency. However, others have assured Tehran that the Bushehr deal -- which stands to net Moscow about $1 billion -- will move forward as is.
Iran has been taking seemingly contradictory stands as well. It has consistently rejected U.S. claims that it is concealing a weapons program under the cloak of a nuclear power project for civilian use. But at the same time, officials in Tehran have acknowledged that they have not revealed certain details about the state's nuclear operations to the IAEA, as required by the international treaty on nuclear technology. In fact, Iran blocked an inspection of the Kalaye Electric Co. nuclear plant in Tehran on June 12, and the inspectors left the country shortly thereafter.
The United States has not wavered in its demands that Iran avoid attempts to produce weapons of mass destruction and that Russia lend no aid to any Iranian weapons program.
No one side will easily achieve all its objectives in this three-player game. The key question instead is what compromise, if any, is each side willing to make?
Russia's position in this triangle is not critical, as its calculus does not depend upon facilitating Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapons. Instead, its main objective is economic. Moscow desperately needs cash -- and wouldn't mind curbing growing U.S. power either. It is doubtful that Russia will be able to fully achieve both of these objectives by building the Bushehr plant, but if not, it has other ways of accomplishing its goals. Therefore, it is not crucial for Russia to follow the Bushehr deal through to the end.
Moscow will ignore warnings from the United States for as long as it can. It will make as much money as possible from helping Iran -- while also trying to weaken Washington's position -- until U.S. pressure forces it to stop. Russia cannot withstand U.S. pressure indefinitely and, in the end, does not want to see Iran acquire nuclear weapons any more than Washington does.
Iran also is aware of the limits to this game of brinksmanship. Tehran will try to advance its nuclear program, but ultimately wants to avoid a U.S. attack. The Islamist regime feels its sovereignty is threatened by the presence of U.S. troops to its east and west: Having seen the downfall of the Taliban in Afghanistan and the Baath regime in Iraq, as well as being designated a member of the U.S. "axis of evil," the Iranian government has cause to worry about its future.
Iran likely sees its security tied to the acquisition of WMD. Tehran believes that Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program was a factor in Washington's decision to attack Iraq before North Korea, the third member of the "axis of evil," and therefore is desperate to acquire nuclear weapons. But it is walking a tightrope: Rather than assuring Iran's security, pursuit of a weapons program easily could attract U.S. military action instead.
Tehran is using a mixture of defensive and offensive tactics to avoid a U.S. attack. Most recently, Iranian officials have tried to put the ball back in the U.S. court by demanding that Washington produce evidence for its charge that Iran is not being transparent about its nuclear facilities. They also have claimed that the United States uses the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty selectively, citing its aid to nuclear-equipped Israel.
Washington's position is clear: Under no circumstances does it want Iran to acquire nuclear weapons, with which it could threaten U.S. power in the Middle East.
Tehran's goals also are apparent: Though it does not seek to provoke hostilities with the United States, it is not willing to give up its nuclear program and risk its long-term viability.
Moscow's objectives are twofold. In the near term, the Kremlin wants to secure a billion-dollar deal with Iran by helping to build its nuclear facilities. And though having a nuclear-equipped Iran is not in Russia's long-term interests, Moscow nevertheless will try to thwart U.S. hegemony by aiding Iran at Bushehr.
In this regard, Russia and Iran's interests converge: Through collaboration, they hope to check the United States' ability to act unilaterally.
The triangular tension between Washington, Tehran and Moscow likely will persist. Russia will continue to assist Iran and ignore U.S. pressure for as long as possible, and Tehran will continue to use diplomacy to get the United States off its back while pursuing its nuclear objectives. It remains to be seen how Washington will react, however. Reports have surfaced that the Pentagon has suggested encouraging an internal uprising against the hard-line Iranian government. But the United States does not appear ready to open a third front in its war to effect regime change -- at least not yet.
At the risk of sounding like Chicken Little, I am going to describe the economic situation in plain English. The United States is flirting with a low-grade depression, one that may last for years unless the government takes decisive action to overcome it. This would most likely be depression with a small d, not the financial collapse and "grapes of wrath" devastation Americans experienced during the Great Depression of the 1930s. But the potential consequences, especially for the less affluent and the young, would be severe enough--a long interlude of sputtering stagnation, years of tepid growth and stubbornly high unemployment, punctuated occasionally with a renewed recession. Depression means an economy that is stuck in a ditch and cannot get out, unable to regain its normal energies for expansion. Japan, second-largest economy in the world, has been in this condition for roughly twelve years, following the collapse of its own financial bubble. If the same fate has befallen the United States, the globalized economy is imperiled, too, since America's market for imports and its huge trade deficits keep the global trading system afloat.Where is that scotch?
Check out The Rational Enquirer's Perpetual War Portfolio
All I can say is They Rule.
Lying Media Bastards has posted the latest Eat The State satire "The Majority of Americans Agree" - thank "Bob" he couldn't wait.
In a related story, the Bush White House has announced steps to counteract what it describes as "800 years of liberal bias," in America's history classes and has ordered the revision of textbooks to reflect that the reason Europeans invaded and colonized North America in the first place was to prevent Native Americans from developing weapons of mass destruction.In a speech announcing this new program, President Bush declared that, "If our forefathers hadn't stepped in and stopped the weapons programs being conducted in secret by Native Americans, who were known to possess smallpox infected blankets among other things, in clear violation of numerous treaties and solemn promises, we might very well be speaking Ojibojiway, Kicklitilcattat or some other impossible to pronounce language today."
When queried by a reporter (who was immediately fired by his employer and then hustled out and shot) why, after several hundred years, US forces had not found any of these claimed Native American weapons of mass destruction, Presidential Spokesman (Ret.) Ari Fleishcher responded with, "The United States is a large country, larger than California and Iraq combined and the Pre-Columbian regime had well over 12,000 years to hide those weapons. These things take time, but the Administration is confident they will eventually be found. And I shouldn't have to remind anyone that, as dozens of John Wayne movies have clearly shown, the Native American regime expressed its enmity and hatred over and over again for traditional American values and our way of life."
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has suggested that the weapons were destroyed shortly after the sails of Columbus's ships were spotted on the horizon. He also pointed to the thousands of unmarked graves that are still being uncovered by archaeologists as proof of the brutality of the Pre-Columbian regime.
According to polls, 87% of Americans are satisfied with the explanations of the Administration on the matter, while slightly more, 91% would prefer to have it explained by a trained monkey.
US plays aid card to fix war crimes exemption
Ah, now it becomes clear.
In an exercise in brute diplomacy which is causing more acute friction with the European Union following the rows over Iraq, the US administration is threatening to cut off tens of millions of dollars in aid to the countries of the Balkans unless they reach bilateral agreements with the US on the ICC by the end of this month.
SupremeBeing.com. Didn't know she/he/it was so lousy at HTML, but I guess we should give him/her/it a break.
THIS IS NOT A CHRISTIAN WEB SITE, NOR IS IT AN ISLAMIC, JEWISH, OR BUDDHIST SITE. YES I AM THE "SUPREME BEING", BUT I AM DEFINITELY NOT AFFILIATED WITH ANY EARTHLY RELIGION.A bit of entertainment in an otherwise completely bleak day. I'm kind of scared to click on the streaming audio, though...
It's history, but it's not dead. Anne is much better at this than I. Dovetails nicely with Josh's post...
Lies about why we went to war matter, if such lies exist. Not because, as liberals have been forced to say again and again, Hussein should have been left in peace, but because the ends do not justify the means.If we're commencing with pre-emptive invasions to insure our access to oil, then say so.
If we're undertaking a series of wars with an eye to bringing freedom to the third world, then say so.
If we're just sick and tired of the turmoil in the Middle East and the way it threatens to destabilize the West, then say so.
You might be surprised at how many people in the USofA and elsewhere would agree with any of those motives. I'm not saying that I would, but there are millions who would.
It's not the war, tragic as it is that so many have died. It's the lies that matter.
If an Administration isn't open with us about why we're invading a country before said invasion, then why should be believe anything they say after the fact?
Where is that drink?
Brad DeLong has three successive posts about how exactly full the glass is
A Glass That Is One-Third Full
Make That, "The Glass Is at Most 1/4 Full
Make That, "The Glass Is Only 1/8 Full"
I'm going home and getting drunk.
Super-strong nanotube threads created
Things are going to get pretty surreal. Remember the tethered elevator to space? The technology required to do this is quickly becoming a reality.
Clothes woven with electrically conducting threads are a significant step closer with the creation of super-strong carbon nanotube fibres up to 100 metres long. They are stronger than any natural or synthetic organic fibre known.Materials made from such strong threads could be used to make bullet-proof vests as light as a T-shirt. And their electrical properties could be harnessed to put microsensors into our clothes, measuring everything from temperature to heart rate.
The nanotube threads, created by Ray Baughman and colleagues at the University of Texas, Dallas, and Trinity College, Dublin, have a breaking strain of 570 Joules per gram. This is more than three times stronger than the toughest natural material, spider silk.
I Found Life on Mars in 1976, Scientist Says
This is a really weird story.
During the Viking mission, Levin was in charge of the life-detection experiment, known as "Labeled Release," in which he used nine samples of Martian soil to test for metabolic activity.The samples were moistened with a radioactive carbon and incubated for up to ten days to allow for any microorganisms to consume the nutrient and give off radioactive gases, which could then be measured.
"The data was clear," said Levin. "The experiment, as designed, performed in a manner that everyone before the mission agreed indicated the presence of life."
But before announcing that life had been found on Mars, NASA conducted more experiments, searching for evidence of organic matter. Nothing was found. This presented a serious problem. Living organisms are made of organic materials. If there is no organic material, there can be no life.
"NASA opted for the easy way out, that there's no life on Mars," said Levin.
He now charges that the organic analysis instrument used by NASA for the Viking expedition was too insensitive, requiring millions of microorganisms to detect any organic matter. It even failed to detect organic material on Earth in some instances, said Levin.
Scientists may have succeeded in reproducing matter as it first appeared after the big bang
Scientists studying the unique physical properties of the quark-gluon plasma have been trying to recreate this primordial matter using an accelerator, called RHIC, built especially for this purpose at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. This accelerator creates two beams of gold ions and accelerates them one towards the other, causing a head-on collision. The power of the collisions (about 40 trillion electron volts, also termed 40 tera electron volts) turns part of the beams' kinetic energy into heat, while the other part of the energy turns into various particles (a process described by Einstein's well-known equation E=mc2). The first stage in the creation of these new particles, like the first stage of the creation of matter in the Big Bang, is assumed to be the stage of the quark-gluon plasma.40 TRILLION electron volts. 40 TRILLION. Ye gods.
Practice to Deceive.
Josh's most recent post neatly sums up the situation.
The only thing that's pretty clear is that there was no imminent threat. And there is a growing body of evidence -- much of which was known, frankly, before the war -- that the administration did everything it could to push the claim that there was an imminent threat using what was often very, very weak evidence. I don't think 'lie' is necessarily the best word for it. I think a more apropos analogy is a lawyers' brief. You pull together every piece of evidence you can find -- good, bad, flimsy, obviously bogus, uncertain, it doesn't matter, just throw it all in -- and you make the best case you can with what you have. You put in everything that helps your case and forget about everything that hurts it. And the case was that there was an imminent threat that required war against Iraq. I repeat, imminent.And the imminent threat was used as a big stick to beat the ever living crap out of anyone who dared question either the war itself or the way it was being prosecuted (I fall into the latter category). The imminent threat was used to destroy international treaties, alliances, and organizations. It was used as a trump card in any argument for the war. From the liberal hawks to the neocon jackanapes. Everyone.
The imminent threat was used to bend, if not break, certain constitutional mechanisms that would have required a calmer look at the evidence and more time to figure out what to do.
But then, I've already whined about this at some length... No need to regurgitate what you can merely link to.
Stratfor has a rosy view of the Middle East situation.
The Israelis and Palestinians are at war again. What had struck us as amazing -- that Hamas was even considering a cease-fire -- has turned into short-lived amazement. One can parse the events as finely as one wants to try to figure out who wrecked the U.S.-supported peace plan, but that really depends on where you start in a regression that leads back indefinitely. Each side will make its claims, but the stark geopolitical fact is that there is no way to end this war.Looking back, we should remember that U.S. President George W. Bush's administration really had no confidence in the entire process. It had tried to stay clear of making any grandiose moves, like former U.S. President Bill Clinton's Camp David initiative, on the theory that nothing good will come of it. It was trapped into the peace plan by the Iraq campaign. The Saudis, among others, tried to deflect U.S. pressure on them to support the war by arguing that they could not participate while the United States did nothing about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In general, this was simply an attempt to deflect U.S. pressure to participate in the war. The administration defused it by guaranteeing that, following the war against Iraq, Washington would commit itself to an attempt to resolve the conflict. The United States never really believed it would work, but it hoped that the psychological shift engendered by the Iraq campaign would induce caution on the part of the Palestinians.
For a few days it seemed to do that. Hamas seemed to be saying that, given U.S. power, it would have to at least consider the peace plan. The problem was that, from the Palestinian side, the plan simply didn't provide enough in the early stages. More important, the invention of Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas by the United States, instead of marginalizing Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat, actually gave him substantial leverage. Not intending to be pushed aside and fully intending to delegitimize Abbas, Arafat aligned himself with Hamas. Hamas, no longer isolated, refused to grant a cease-fire in the context of the peace plan.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, for his part, had nothing to lose. If the process succeeded, he would be a hero. If it failed -- as he fully expected -- he would be positioned as a man who tried peace and was thwarted. An interesting question to ask -- after last weekend's attacks on Israeli troops -- is if Sharon had used a response other than an attempt to kill Hamas leader Abdul Aziz Rantissi whether today's suicide campaign would have begun. That is the wrong question to ask -- in our view.
The right question is this: Every major peace initiative attempted in the past decade has ended in catastrophic warfare. What made anyone think that this would be different? The fact is that we don't think that any of the players thought that the peace plan would work. The United States viewed it as a Camp David II, but went ahead to please its allies. The Israelis didn't think it would work, but went ahead to please the Americans. The Palestinians didn't think it would work, but went ahead because their prime minister had been selected solely for the purpose of proceeding with this process.
What little can be done to salvage the situation is being done. Omar Suleiman, Egyptian intelligence chief, met with Abbas and Arafat to calm down the situation, Reuters reported June 11. Suleiman promised to resume talks with Hamas on Abbas's appeal for a cease-fire. Bush called for an end to funding of the Palestinian militants. All of it is futile in the long run.
The situation is simply this: People have said in the past that the land is large enough to accommodate two nations. Empirically, that simply doesn't seem to be the case. Israeli requirements and Palestinian requirements are not unreasonable. They are simply incompatible. Apart from an occupation of the region by foreign troops -- which would have to be crazy to take on the task -- there is no way to solve the problems. Some problems are insoluble, and this seems to be one of them.
There seem only two possible outcomes. One is a war in which one or the other side is defeated so completely that war is no longer possible. The second is a total moratorium on all peace initiatives from the outside -- particularly those that are undertaken to satisfy Saudi, European or Chilean requirements. This disaster was brewed up as a sop to opponents of the war in Iraq. If there is one thing that should be obvious, whenever a major peace initiative occurs, violence rises dramatically.
This shouldn't be a surprise. Peace initiatives raise fundamental questions about Israeli and Palestinian nationhood for which there are no answers, and which are better left unasked. Moreover, peace initiatives bring in major powers from the outside, giving Israeli and Palestinian factions a global audience in which to act out their drama. Clearly, the consistency of the failure of peace initiatives should drive home certain obvious principles:
First, no outside power should ever propose to settle the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Second, no one should ever agree to undertake a settlement attempt trade for an unrelated strategic accommodation. Third -- and most important -- where there can be no general settlement, there is a chance for small ad hoc accommodations by people who want to make a living, raise their children and live their lives. There are people like this on both sides but they are rendered powerless when the grand architects get to work. The quietist times in the region occurred when outsiders stayed away.
The land is too small, the people are too many and the differences are too great. The choice is not between war and peace but between levels of violence.
So, with the current situation in Israel, it certainly looks like yet another strategic reason for the Iraq war - i.e. that we would be able to achieve peace in the middle east with Saddam out of the way - is likely to bite the dust. And given what's going on - now with 26 deaths, 96 injured in 2 days - maybe it will become obvious to everyone that perhaps the problem wasn't Saddam at all.
Just watching Tucker Carlson and some Republican yokel on CrossFire use the "Conspiracy" excuse for WMD MIA. The idea being that it would take a conspiracy theory to explain how all the intelligence agencies in the world were duped.
The short answer is that the rest of the world's intelligence agencies seem to get the vast bulk of their intelligence from the US. U.K., by their own admission, gets something like 70% of their intelligence from the US. They simply can't afford to spend as much as we do. Yes, they do their own analysis. But when the vast bulk of the raw material and even processed material comes from one source... Well, you're pretty much reliant on them to tell you the truth, right? But hey! We're allies.
And it's not like all the civilians you usually hear quoted in this excuse (national figures, usually Democratic politicians) have their own intelligence agency either. Well, not unless they are Sam Nunn. In any event, almost without exception each one of these Liberal individuals are relying 100% on US intelligence. I'll even bet that France and Germany get a very significant chunk of their intelligence from the US as well. China and Russia are probably the only major nations which get most of their own intelligence via their own mechanisms. But they probably intercept our analysis and that forms a significant input source for them as well.
So to say that it would take a conspiracy to fool the entire world into believing Saddam had WMDs... Well, all it really would take would be the single source of the bulk of the world's intelligence input to be slanted or politicized. Then everyone would be pretty much reading the same script, wouldn't they?
Again, diversity of sources is a good thing.
Isn't it an odd coincidence that this Administration values loyalty over all else? Even David Frum - hardly a liberal - says that they value ideology over intelligence. If you're a pointy headed intellectual, then you can probably count the number of days before you're out of a job. If you don't get fired, they'll make it so you really, really wish you were fired. Heathers.
U.S. Stocks Rise, Sending S&P 500 to Highest in Almost a Year
But then, as Republicans were so quick to point out in the past, the Stock Market is not the Economy. Still, good news.
Wolf Blitzer's poll today is on whether we should send US troops to the West Bank and Gaza strip to keep the peace. Looks like all the humanitarians on the right have Freepered the poll, as it's running 80% negative.
Quite frankly, if they actually believed the non stop drivel they are shelling out regarding human rights in Iraq, they should be behind this 100%.
But the problem is that this would be a HUGE black eye to Israel. After all, having to have peacekeepers in your country isn't something you want to put on all the tourist brochures.
Somebody needs to send some peace keeping troops in there and needs to do it fast. Just penciling out a roadmap on the back of a napkin isn't enough. Both sides need monitoring. Both sides need to see we're serious.
Chances of happening: 0.
GOP Rejects Formal Probe of Iraq Intel
Know you've seen it, but I just love this line by Pat Roberts
"I will not allow the committee to be politicized or to be used as an unwitting tool for any political strategist"But politicization of the committee before the war with Iraq, being used as an unwitting tool for the republican strategist Karl Rove... Well, that's okay with Pat.
Icy claim that water has memory
I know, I know. But read the article.
Busy, Busy, Busy has an excellent shorter version of the above. But what I loved about the piece was this line
We do not need a frenzy, but we do need coolheaded analysis and a plan of action to get answers now.Right. We need a cool head now when the Administration is under attack, but back when we were warmongering, the last thing we needed was a cool head and careful analysis because of that non-existent imminent threat.
Last night I was leafing through an old copy of the Economist from last year in my... uh... reading room, and there was a nice piece about the "defiance" of Saddam. The article was written before the Iraqi disclosure of their WMD capability to the UN. What's interesting was the use of "We know you have WMDs, so if you say you don't we're going to use that as a material breach" argument over and over and over. I almost fell off the throne when I read that again. But Morat, over at Skeptical Notion pointed me at very nice post that underscores the ridiculousness of this entire situation.
All right, let me see if I understand the logic of this correctly. We are going to ignore the United Nations in order to make clear to Saddam Hussein that the United Nations cannot be ignored. We're going to wage war to preserve the UN's ability to avert war. The paramount principle is that the UN's word must be taken seriously, and if we have to subvert its word to guarantee that it is, then by gum, we will. Peace is too important not to take up arms to defend. Am I getting this right?Further, if the only way to bring democracy to Iraq is to vitiate the democracy of the Security Council, then we are honor-bound to do that too, because democracy, as we define it, is too important to be stopped by a little thing like democracy as they define it.
Also, in dealing with a man who brooks no dissension at home, we cannot afford dissension among ourselves. We must speak with one voice against Saddam Hussein's failure to allow opposing voices to be heard. We are sending our gathered might to the Persian Gulf to make the point that might does not make right, as Saddam Hussein seems to think it does. And we are twisting the arms of the opposition until it agrees to let us oust a regime that twists the arms of the opposition. We cannot leave in power a dictator who ignores his own people. And if our people, and people elsewhere in the world, fail to understand that, then we have no choice but to ignore them.
Top ten excuse for not finding WMD
10 - Iraqi weapons program personnel fooled Saddam into believing he had a WMD program. These sly jokers also fooled the US into believing this as well.9 - Saddam managed to scrub Iraq so clean, the CSI team from the TV show can't even tell they've ever been there. Our vast intelligence didn't detect a thing.
8 - Syria felt so confident about having the US armed forces on their border, they decided to take the WMD hot potato from Iraq. Our vast intelligence didn't detect a thing.
7 - Iran, with their own nuclear bombs just months away, decided that they needed to trade up to Anthrax and VX. Our vast intelligence didn't detect a thing.
6 - Saddam, Uber-capitalist, used the vast wealth of Iraq's oil to create a really, really huge Just In Time WMD factory. All he was waiting for was a purchase order from Ossama.
5 - There were so many strategic reasons to take over the country, the only one we thought the American electorate would buy was Weapons of Mass Destruction.
4 - By the time we got around to searching things, the looters had kept themselves warm at night by burning the incriminating documents in radioactive drums they found lying around.
3 - Hey, we found some Trailers of Hydrogen Production. That sounds like Weapons of Mass Destruction if you say it fast enough.
2 - It's a country the size of California. That's a heck of a lot of oil wells and pumping stations to get online, you know.
1 - We all believed Bill Clinton's CIA reports that told us WMDs were there. Just goes to show how soft Democrats are on national security.
Reposted because I really find them hillarious and I'm easily amused.
Praise "Bob" and pass the ammunition. Who knew that this is what "in order to form a more perfect union" meant. I mean, given all the grousing from the right during the '90s regarding being the world's policemen, who knew that the thing they were really angry about was that we weren't just cracking enough heads when we did it?
And another thing. The whole fixation on the actual numbers of artifacts looted from the Iraqi museum is just bizarre. Guess what? We have specific claims about what, where and how much WMD Iraq has, and we haven't found ANYTHING.
Think that'd be a bigger story to Glenn Reynolds, wouldn't ya?
Your logic has defeated me again Batman.
I note that NOWHERE in any of the comments used to justify their actions does anyone say that Iraq's WMDs was an imminent threat.
Hey Glenn, the issue is not whether anyone thought he had WMD. At issue was whether Iraq posed an imminent threat to the US that justified a preemptive war.
Go back and gather some quotes claiming that we had to act NOW to get rid of Saddam.
Bozo.
Israel's predicament: taking anti-Semitism seriously
The divide in the Israeli and Jewish world regarding the fate of the territories is often characterized as a dispute between Right and Left, or hawks and doves, or conservatives and liberals. I want to suggest a different categorization: between people who take anti-Semitism seriously, and people who don't.You know, I'm just getting sick and tired of the linkage of "Jew Hating" to "Criticism of Israel as a nation". To turn it on its head, are all the Israelis anti-Arab because they oppose a Palestinian state? And if they are, does anyone care that they are anti-Arab?To put my cards on the table: I oppose the current road-map initiative and hope that, in the foreseeable future, Israel concludes no further deals and makes no further land concessions to the Palestinian Authority or, for that matter, Syria. My basic reason is that the people Israel is supposed to deal with are anti-Semites. I take anti-Semitism seriously and don't believe Jews should sign agreements with, trust, much less give up land to people who espouse it.
It's like a blood feud. I'm getting really sick of it. Both sides. They're like adolescent punks trying to climb on top of a pile of crap and claim moral superiority. "They hate us" is the reason that they give for hating each other, and then they go and beat the ever living crap out of the other side to prove how much they are morally superior.
Geez. Go ahead. Flame away. Call me anti-Semitic too for thinking the whole situation is a big pile of crap caused by both sides.
Rumsfeld Repeats "Old Europe" Comments
The man is a menace to society.
NASA May Plan Extreme Shuttle Inspections
Just had to add that because of the headline. Sounds like a new sport for the young, don't it? Or a new reality TV show. Wait a minute. It already is.
Sidney has an interesting point - already made, of course, regarding 9/11 and the charge that the Clinis is responsible for it.
Crystal City, Va: Good morning, Mr BlumentAzael. How do you respond to the charges made by right-wingers that Clinton is to blame for 9/11? Didn't he try to put an anti-terrorism bill through Congress, and wasn't it watered-down by the GOP?But we all know it was an "intelligence failure", right?Sidney BlumentAzael: After the bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993 and after the bombing of the Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995 President Clinton proposed a host of anti-terrorism measures, a number of which were defeated through an unlikely alliance of right-wing Republicans and left-leaning Democrats. Some of these measures were finally passed, like roving wiretaps after 9/11. President Clinton, after the East Africa embassy bombings in 1998, organized a concerted campaign against al Qaeda. He tried to kill bin Laden, but the missile strike against his Afghan base camp missed him by just hours. We rolled up terrorist cells and stopped the plot of the millennium bombings around New Year's of 2000. President Clinton wanted to drop Special Forces into Afghanistan to kill bin Laden but the Pentagon, including Gen. Shelton, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, was opposed.
The Clinton national security team gave three extensive briefings on the present danger of al Qaeda to the incoming Bush administration. In my book, I quote three-star general Donald Kerrick who was Deputy National Security Adviser under Clinton and served during the first four months of the Bush Administration on the National Security Council. Gen. Kerrick tells me that he wrote a memo for the Bush NSC stating, "We will be struck again." Gen. Kerrick says he received no response to his memo and was not included in any meetings. Dick Clarke, head of counter-terrorism on the NSC, was very frustrated during the first nine months of the Bush Administration. As he tried to get the principals committee, the central body of top national security figures in any administration, to take up terrorism as an issue. The principals committee discussed terrorism finally only once, in that case, deciding against funding the unmanned predator drone plane over Afghanistan before 9/11.
I believe it's essential that all the details of the so far unreleased 9/11 report become public so that the American people can understand what happened and have an informed opinion about what changes must be made in regards to our intelligence agencies and government to meet the cAzaellenge of terrorism.
I woke up this morning and it appears I've entered into a parallel universe. One where Tom Friedman is actually making sense.
Democrats have been groping for a way to counter George Bush's maniacal tax cuts, which are designed to shrink government and shift as many things as possible to the market. May I make a suggestion? When you shrink government, what you do, over time, is shrink the services provided by federal, state and local governments to the vast American middle class. I would suggest that henceforth Democrats simply ask voters to substitute the word "services" for the word "taxes" every time they hear President Bush speak.This is a fantastic strategy.That is, when the president says he wants yet another round of reckless "tax cuts," which will shift huge burdens to our children, Democrats should simply refer to them as "service cuts," because that is the only way these tax cuts will be paid for by cuts in services. Indeed, the Democrats' bumper sticker in 2004 should be: "Read my lips, no new services. Thank you, President Bush."
Say it with me now: "Read my lips, no new services or old ones."
Whenever Mr. Bush says, "It's not the government's money, it's your money," Democrats should point out that what he is really saying is, "It's not the government's services, it's your services" and thanks to the Bush tax cuts, soon you'll be paying for many of them yourself.
Because the single biggest problem facing the democrats is the complete ignorance of the US population as to what the US government does for them. And waiting for everyone to wake up after the destruction takes place is a stupid strategy. Stupid. Sure, they'll wake up eventually. But think about the amazing amount of damage that will have to occur to get that to happen.
The conservatives have often complained that the Democrats are just waiting for bad things to happen. Let's get on the offensive and make damn sure these horrible things don't happen.
Amazing. Who'd of thought? Tom Friedman actually doing some penance for the Iraq fiasco.
Record deficit -- $400 billion -- in store for U.S.
Ever notice how this estimate keeps getting bigger and bigger? Just a few short months ago it was at $200 billion.
Blix: I was smeared by the Pentagon
I don't think Hans is going to be forgetting this any time soon, do you?
Hans Blix, the UN chief weapons inspector, lashed out last night at the "bastards" who have tried to undermine him throughout the three years he has held his high-profile post.In an extraordinary departure from the diplomatic language with which he has come to be associated, Mr Blix assailed his critics in both Washington and Iraq.
Speaking exclusively to the Guardian from his 31st floor office at the UN in New York, Mr Blix said: "I have my detractors in Washington. There are bastards who spread things around, of course, who planted nasty things in the media. Not that I cared very much.
"It was like a mosquito bite in the evening that is there in the morning, an irritant."
Turned comments back on.
Just as a side note here. I use AdSubtract as a proxy for my web browsing. Filters out all the annoying crap that makes the web so tedious sometimes. Anyways, AdSubtract completely screws with Enetation comments that a lot of blogs use. The upshot is that I have to completely disable AdSubtract to even notice a blog has comments. And that usually means that pop ups and flash presentations start pummeling me into an epileptic spasm at which point I turn AdSubtract back on and comments melt away from the blogs.
Trying to work out a compromise with the blasted program. Nothing seems to work. Maybe there's an alternative... Will see if I'm motivated enough to search for one.
(heh) Ask and ye sAzaell receive.
Well, let me think. Offhand,Let me just add the adverb "yet". I'm sure there are ways to screw things over no body has thought of yet. I have a feeling their just warming up for their second act in 2004. Imagine how cool the second term is going to be.He hasn't publicly announced forced conversions to ChristianityThat's all I can think of. And, as you note, they're not things he did right. They're large errors he didn't make. Or hasn't.
He hasn't instituted illegal trials for captured Iraqis.
He hasn't planted chemical or biological weapons
Looting Leaves Iraq's Oil Industry in Ruins
Can anyone name one - just one - strategic objective that has been reached in this Iraq campaign? I mean, we're occupying Iraq, so I guess that's one. Is there another? It's looking more and more like Iraq is a boat anchor, rather than a launching pad for Rummy's nation building tour de force. What is the mind boggling wonder that has somehow thrown us into a war where the overthrow of entire countries are considered to be merely battles?

Wow. Brad Delong rips Sullivan but good.
Does Sullivan, in writing the phrase "Strauss's profound understanding of the... foibles of modernity" and in endorsing Bret Stephens's piece really intend to send a coded esoteric message that he--Andrew Sullivan--thinks that the Jeffersonian principles on which the United States is founded are complete nonsense?Which pretty much hits the nail right on the head. No thumb involved.I cannot tell. If Sullivan is writing as a normal guy, then no. If Sullivan is writing--as Stephens is--as a second-order disciple of Leo Strauss, then yes.
This is what is so poisonous about the whole Straussian circle: They are not talking to us. We are "gentlemen": to be propagandized, to be lied to, and to be blocked from understanding the esoteric message that is the true teaching of the inner party. We are not to be informed, or to be listened to, or to be argued with.
Weapons of political destruction found Azaelf-buried in Washington. Found this very interesting post via KillingGoliath
Let's try to understand the nature of how political scandals develop in Washington and how the elite media cover political news. You need, as a start, an aggrieved community inside the Beltway - and finally we have one, or two, or three. The intelligence "community," pushed and shoved by the neocons and radical nationalists in the Pentagon and the White House, sidelined, forced to support positions with which they felt uncomfortable, pressured to come up with information supporting the administration's secret decision to invade Iraq, undoubtedly filled with personal (and political) pique, roused by a sense of injury, are now carrying their grievances to the press. I almost feel sorry for well-connected journalists. We're not talking leaks any more; we're talking torrents, we're talking cascades of unnamed, angry sources.As I've said in the past, the white hats were being set up from the start as the fall guys for the empire building. Kevin Drumm, Nicholas Kristof and hundreds of others on the net are all finding themselves in a really strange position: defending the CIA.
Myself, I don't find that such a strange position. As much as I hate what the CIA has done in the past, I do actually see the need for them. In my fantasy world, our intelligence organizations are populated with folks of high moral fibre on the level of Jean Luc Picard from Next Generation. Intelligence is a dirty business, but someone has to do it. I'm not a pacifist, either. But having said that, I know that our intelligence agencies are likely populated with people who have run of the mill morals at best. I'm sure they lean very far to the right and because of the job they're in, do some extremely nasty things. For the most part, I think that they've been repeatedly used as a tool by pretty corrupt people, and that kind of stuff likely doesn't wash off. It just accumulates.
But still. It's incredible to see the level at which Rumsfeld and company are stooping to pin all the blame on the intelligence agencies. Just like 9/11.
And then, who should come out of the woodwork but John Dean, a central figure in the now three decades old Watergate scandal, now writing columns for a legal website (see below). He sums up the controversy over what the president said and when he said it, reminding us that scandals like this, if they get a certain momentum, can lead in unknown directions as Watergate showed. His key line, "It's important to recall that when Richard Nixon resigned, he was about to be impeached by the House of Representatives for misusing the CIA and FBI."Well, I'll believe it when I see it. Having done my share of trolling through the right wing blogs and given the state of noncAzaelance of even my centrist friends, I can't imagine anything turning into a scandal regarding the whole WMD imminent threat. I think pretty much everyone really did know that the whole thing was just an excuse for us to lash out at a wimpy enemy, while at the same time getting us prime real estate in the middle east.
Which kind of makes the whole thing just a big bag of shit. I mean, the whole WMD thing was used as a big stick to beat the ever living crap out of anyone who dared to express a different point of view. Even by those who were in the war for "the right reasons". Which means that pretty much everyone knew it was a crock of shit, but it was a convenient crock of shit, and they just rolled over the opposition and our constitution anyway.
Which is worse? A leader who lied to take us to war or a population that knew he was lying but just let it happen anyway because the whole thing sounded so good.
Going to be interesting. Well, that is if it doesn't fade away like I suspect it will.
Not that there aren't any Right Wing Christian Fundamentalist Terrorists, mind you.
This story has gotten minimal media play. What's the story?
I tell ya. If this guy had only been a Muslim, then the entire media would be swarming around and we'd probably have a rushed through PATRIOT Act II right now.
But White, Christian Terrorists? Well, they're not something to worry about.
Again, I'm just in shock n' awe at the Christian Right's ability to compartmentalize.
A novel way to squeeze more data onto CDs and DVDs.
While the idea of using water to produce blue laser light is incredibly cool, there is a further story here.
Blacklight Power is a company with an interesting history. I first found out about them about 8 months ago on a fusion site I belong to. The company has produced a book about their Grand Unified Theory of Classical Quantum Mechanics . I ordered the book and it really is quite good. Surprisingly. Most quantum theories outside of the mainstream are entirely insane and this one actually survives the idiot test and beyond where I can make any rational judgement about the theory.
In any event, what they claim to be doing is extracting power from hydrogen through a process which they contend causes the electrons in the hydrogen atom to fall to a lower orbit than predicted by current theory. They call this the Blacklight Process. It's a fascinating thought.
Even more fascinating, however, is their Blue Light laser which Sony is going to be using for the 5x increased storage DVDs. Normally, when a company is based on the whacky theories of the founders, the company is a huge black hole sucking in money and never - ever - producing anything of value. Black Light power has managed to produce a product, and not just a product but a very novel, very good product. It at least shows that they're not just a bunch of bozos.
Someone to watch...
Andrew Sullivan has some pretty scarry powers.
Top ten excuse for not finding WMD
10 - Iraqi weapons program fooled Saddam into believing he had a WMD program. These jokers also fooled the US into believing this as well.9 - Saddam managed to scrub Iraq so clean, the CSI team from the TV show can't even tell they've ever been there. Our vast intelligence didn't detect a thing.
8 - Syria felt so confident about having the US armed forces on their border, they decided to take the WMD hot potato from Iraq. Our vast intelligence didn't detect a thing.
7 - Iran, with their own nuclear bombs just months away, decided that they needed to trade up to Anthrax and VX. Our vast intelligence didn't detect a thing.
6 - Saddam, Uber-capitalist, used the vast wealth of Iraq's oil to create a really, really huge Just In Time WMD factory. All he was waiting for was a purchase order from Ossama.
5 - There were so many strategic reasons to take over the country, the only one we thought the American electorate would buy was Weapons of Mass Destruction.
4 - By the time we got around to searching things, the looters had kept themselves warm at night by burning the incriminating documents in radioactive drums they found lying around.
3 - Hey, we found some Trailers of Hydrogen Production. That sounds like Weapons of Mass Destruction if you say it fast enough.
2 - It's a country the size of California. That's a heck of a lot of oil wells and pumping stations to get online, you know.
1 - We all believed Bill Clinton's CIA reports that told us WMDs were there. Just goes to show how soft Democrats are on national security.
Finally all illusions are cast off
The Bush administration -- wisely -- has not proposed fundamental tax reform in a single piece of legislation. But the president has been taking deliberate steps toward such reform with each tax cut. There are five steps to a single-rate tax, which taxes income one time: Abolish the death tax, abolish the capital gains tax, expand IRAs so that all savings are tax-free, move to full expensing of business investment rather than long depreciation schedules and abolish the alternative minimum tax. Put a single rate on the new tax base and you have Steve Forbes and Dick Armey's flat tax. Each of the Bush tax cuts, past and proposed, moves us toward fundamental tax reform. The step-by-step annual tax cut avoids the problem that faced Bill and Hillary Clinton's too ambitious effort to nationalize health care in one gulp: It is easy to stop oversized reforms.And it's really hard to stop a bait and switch.
In crafting its agenda for economic reform, the Bush administration has the luxury of being able to think and plan over a full eight years. This is because the 2002 redistricting gave Republicans a lock on the House of Representatives until 2012 and the Founding Fathers gerrymandered the Senate for Republican control. In the 50-50 election that was 2000, Bush carried 30 states and Al Gore 20. Over time, a reasonably competent Republican Party will tend to 60 Republicans in the Senate. This guarantee of united Republican government has allowed the Bush administration to work and think long-term.Well. There you have it.
Bush Insists Iraq Had Illicit Weapons
Where there's smoke, there's a fire. Note the shift in rhetoric
In a subtle shift, some U.S. officials have begun to talk of finding weapons "programs" or "capabilities."Which is a sure sign of spin. We were damn specific in our claims. Now we're just getting more and more nebulous as time goes on."Programs in and of themselves give rise to tremendous concern with the weapons themselves," Fleischer said.
Another thing to note is that almost all of the quotes in the above article are from Ari, not GW.
Curious.
The monitor gets into the game. Mostly a rehash, especially this
But the latter-day conspiracy theorists who contend Iraq had neither weapons nor the labs to make them also have to explain why Hussein put up with UN sanctions for so many years. They must also ask if such a tyrant and aggressor, who invaded two countries and used unconventional weapons twice to kill thousands of civilians, would throw those weapons away or even eliminate all knowledge and capability to make them.Yi. I can see how this is all going to turn out like Iran-Contra.They can also ask themselves why top Clinton-administration officials and French officials also believed intelligence about the existence of Iraq's weapons.
Gotta love this country.
Luskin really is becoming a complete embarrasement for the NRO. I mean, this guy is a complete loon.
The duty officer asked General Ripper to confirm the fact the he had issued the go code and he said, "Yes gentlemen, they are on their way in and no one can bring them back. For the sake of our country and our way of life, I suggest you get the rest of SAC in after them, otherwise we will be totally destroyed by red retaliation. My boys will give you the best kind of start, fourteen hundred megatons worth, and you sure as hell won't stop them now. So let's get going. There's no other choice. God willing, we will prevail in peace and freedom from fear and in true health through the purity and essence of our natural fluids. God bless you all." Then he hung up. We're still trying to figure out the meaning of that last phrase, sir.
Wow. Where to start? This guy hits all the standard defense lines and thinks up a few more.
But the New York Times report on Iraq's pillaged nuclear facility reminds us that Saddam did in fact possess weapons of mass destruction nuclear materials that could easily have supplied terrorists with "an inestimable quantity of so-called dirty bombs." And that very real danger was only the promise of a full-fledged nuclear bomb a few years down the road. We are all in debt to President Bush for acting, while there was still time, to prevent that disastrous outcome.Anyone with even a passing knowledge of nuclear physics and access to the CIA's world fact books knows how trivial a case this gentleman from the Hoover institution is making.
Again, my theory is that they certainly believed they would find at least some WMDs, which they could spin into justification for the imminent threat. With even a flask of old, degraded and no longer useful VX, they could have spun it into imminent death for every soccer mom in America and everyone would have believed them. But to find absolutely nothing... Well, all I got to say is that the ploy backfired and they're now trapped in their web of lies. The only way this could have been done is if there were absolutely, positively no WMD. And lord knows nobody predicted that.
Who says the Universe doesn't have a sense of humor?
Blow to Blair over 'mobile labs'
The news just keeps getting better and better.
Questions over the claimed purpose of trailer for making biological weapons include:No doubt the defense will be "Blair and Bush aren't that stupid".· The lack of any trace of pathogens found in the fermentation tanks. According to experts, when weapons inspectors checked tanks in the mid-Nineties that had been scoured to disguise their real use, traces of pathogens were still detectable.
· The use of canvas sides on vehicles where technicians would be working with dangerous germ cultures.
· A shortage of pumps required to create vacuum conditions required for working with germ cultures and other processes usually associated with making biological weapons.
· The lack of an autoclave for steam sterilisation, normally a prerequisite for any kind of biological production. Its lack of availability between production runs would threaten to let in germ contaminants, resulting in failed weapons.
· The lack of any easy way for technicians to remove germ fluids from the processing tank.
And quite frankly, the absolute worst thing about this is that Bush has managed to create a far greater loss of face and American credibility than we would if we would have backed down on the war.
I just love it when my government starts looking like a bunch of lying punks. Makes everything so much cheerier.
Not.
Another nugget from the recent past, this time from the Washington Times - hardly a bastian of liberalism.
On the eve of Mr. Bush's ultimatum, it came to light that a key piece of evidence used by the Bush administration to link Iraq to a nuclear weapons program is a forgery. Sen. Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, has asked the FBI to investigate the origin of the forged documents that the Bush administration used to make its case that Saddam Hussein possesses weapons of mass destruction.update: Apparently the link is a dead one. I'll have to track it down and see if they have it in their archives. Considering the prescient nature of the editorial with respect to WMDs, I'm not surprised to see it gone.Secretary of State Colin Powell denies that the Bush administration created the phony documents. "It came from other sources," Mr. Powell told Congress, but he could not identify the source.
As George Santayana said, "Those who do not remember the past are condemned to relive it." The administration's use of forged evidence opens Mr. Bush to unflattering comparisons that his enemies will not hesitate to make. They will point out that it was Adolf Hitler's strategy to fabricate evidence in order to justify his invasion of a helpless country. He used S.S. troops dressed in Polish uniforms to fake an attack on the German radio station at Gleiwitz on Aug. 31, 1939. Following the faked attack, Hitler announced: "This night for the first time Polish regular soldiers fired on our own territory." As German troops poured into Poland, Hitler declared: "The Polish state has refused the peaceful settlement of relations which I desired, and has appealed to arms." The German High Command called the German invasion of Poland a "counterattack."
Thanks to his neoconservative cadre, outside the U.S. Mr. Bush is now a disliked and distrusted politician. Mr. Bush's enemies will exploit parallels to "naked aggression." After many decades of U.S. leadership in building an "international order," Mr. Bush's enemies will hold him accountable for his defiance of this order.
My expectations for the War circa March 18, 2003
First, on March 17, 2004 - a year from now - our Terror Threat Level better be on fucking serene white. If a year from now we're still on piss yellow or scared shitless orange Terror Threat Level, then I'd say the Administration sold us a bill of goods. Quite simply, this war of choice - a preemptive war - hasn't made us any safer. If the Terror Threat Level isn't on Economy is Booming pink on March 17, 2005 - two years from now - I'm thinking we're in the toilet and the Administration put us there.Gee.Second, one year from now, if Iraq is essentially the same security state as Palestine is under Israel today we have a 10 year occupation on our hands. If we still have troops fighting, suicide bombers and all the trappings of modern day Palestine, the critics of this war with Iraq are right. The administration has sold us a bill of goods that we were going to paying for decades from now - occupation of chaos is costly both in dollar terms and lives lost.
Third, if we haven't found any credible evidence of WMD, nefarious connections with Al Qaeda, rape rooms and baby killing factories a year from now, we've been sold a bill of goods. By credible, I mean independently verified. I think the US should take it upon themselves to bring in UN investigators and monitors to ensure that all revelations and facts are verified. We've seen the finest US intelligence agencies and US state department fooled by amateur forgeries, RC model "WMD delivery vehicles" made out of duct tape and weed whackers, as well as Aluminum tubes not as suspicious as we were told. So anything we won't let Hans Blix verify the validity of, I claim is too suspect for evidence in satisfaction of this criteria - either way.
Captives Deny Qaeda Worked With Baghdad
Two of the highest-ranking leaders of Al Qaeda in American custody have told the C.I.A. in separate interrogations that the terrorist organization did not work jointly with the Iraqi government of Saddam Hussein, according to several intelligence officials.No WMDs. No Al Qaeda nor 9/11 connection.Abu Zubaydah, a Qaeda planner and recruiter until his capture in March 2002, told his questioners last year that the idea of working with Mr. Hussein's government had been discussed among Qaeda leaders, but that Osama bin Laden had rejected such proposals, according to an official who has read the Central Intelligence Agency's classified report on the interrogation.
In his debriefing, Mr. Zubaydah said Mr. bin Laden had vetoed the idea because he did not want to be beholden to Mr. Hussein, the official said.
Again, what was said in the past which hasn't been shown to be a lie?
And the ENTIRE Fourth Estate just missed all of this?
What a bunch of aqua maroons.
Wow. Glenn squeezes out a stinky one.
THE CONGO IS ANOTHER HUMAN DISASTER, on a par with Cambodia. The U.N. has been nominally in charge of dealing with things there for several years (there may be a connection here. . . .). But Joe Katzman does an excellent job (in connection with Bruce Rolston -- follow the links to multiple posts) of explaining why the U.N. can't do anything constructive. It also explains why the political costs to the United States of trying to do anything constructive would be excessive -- in fact, paralyzingly high, and much worse than Iraq.Who knew? Man, it's just like the libertarians to say that any selfless international organization is just making it too hard for selfish nations to do selfless international actions.The U.N. and the mindset that goes with it, built to prevent genocide, seems in fact to promote genocide and make it hard for anyone to do anything about it.
And I just love Glenn using the Anti-War arguments against a war he doesn't want to go into. Guess 2 orders of magnitude more deaths don't overweigh the economic benefits of Iraq.
Go Glenn, Go!
Well, I lost the $50! Both Rice and Powell fiercely defended that the basis of the war was imminent threat of WMD. Argument used was "Well, everyone believed they had WMDs, we know he had WMDs in the past, and while we didn't know where the WMDs are, we're absolutely positive they are there. Just give us time".
"We know where (the WMD) are," declared Rumsfeld in a television interview Mar. 30, well into the first week of the war. "They're in the area around Tikrit and Baghad and east, west, south and north somewhat."After the war
He has since retreated from that certainty, suggesting last week that the Iraqis "may have had time to destroy them, and I don't know the answer."Well, I'm sure there was a lot of people taken in by the arguments, but there's no doubt as to what happened before the war.
And another thing that is really stupid. Saying that "it wasn't just the opinion of US intelligence, it was the opinion of the world's intelligence" is really stupid on its face. Britain, for example, get's 70% of their intelligence from the US. I'll bet Germany and France do as well. Russia, well they intercept our intelligence analysis and it probably composes the bulk of their own intelligence.
So saying that everyone else was fooled when they got the vast bulk of intelligence from the same source is a laughable defense.
I repeat. Laughable.
Using both the "only a conspiracy theorist would believe such tripe" and "If we lied, then you're all idiots" arguments in the same post.
Go Glenn, Go!
$50 on "it was a strategic war, and everyone knew that was the real reason" will be the winning entry on tomorrow's talk shows.
Saddam ran chemical labs, but they made no weapons, report states
Enough justification?
Saddam Hussein's intelligence agencies ran a network of secret cells that carried out chemical and biological research but produced no weapons, The Sunday Times reported, quoting a top Iraqi security official.The British newspaper said a general who procured supplies for the program through an international network of front companies had told it that laboratories were hidden in basements in houses around Baghdad.
"But it was all just theory. The aim was to keep us up to date and ready so that if (United Nations) sanctions were lifted or we needed to produce chemical or biological weapons again, we could start up immediately," the unnamed general said.
The Sunday Times report came amid ongoing allegations that British Prime Minister Tony Blair and U.S. President George Bush exaggerated the threat of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction to justify going to war.
The general insisted that search teams would find no weapons. "I cAzaellenge anyone in Iraq, from north to south, to find anything," he told The Sunday Times.
Why Democrats Should Kill the Filibuster
Kind of a bizarre argument. Don't agree with it. But it's a good read anyway.
Me? I believe that the founding fathers (and mothers) were a heck of a lot wiser than we give them credit. Filibusters prevent the tyranny of the minority. And no matter who they are, the minority always needs to have a say - more importantly, a means of fighting back. Taking away this right of the minority would cripple our democracy and the stability we enjoy in it. Yea, the filibuster has been used to do some nasty things - depending on your point of view. But I don't want to see democrats with unchecked power any more than I want to see republicans with unchecked power.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Guess that's my conservative side speaking.
Some on the right are starting to see the problem that Bush has.
The "war for strategic merits" defense is now in the lead. This will still mean scapegoats have to be found in the administration, but there's a lot of them to go around (apparently). The problem with this, from my irrelevant point of view, is that a lot of what people admire about the Bush administration is the "Commander in Chief" image. The image that Bush has of "being the man in charge". The CEO. Captain of industry. A man alone between God and history.
So, regardless of the strategic merits of the war, the Commander In Chief was in charge of prosecuting this war. And regardless of the consequences, the Commander In Chief is responsible for it. Not the lackeys who may or may not have screwed up. Like all Corporations, the Administration's direction flows down from the top. Loyalty to the president and absolute obedience - regardless of the consequences, apparently - is prized far above being an "intellectual". To dissent is to be excommunicated.
Meaning, this was George W Bush's decision to prosecute the war the way he did. The responsibility is his alone. He stated this in SOTU speeches, speeches before the UN and the rest of the world.
I want to know what he knew, when he knew it and why they did what they did.
The last question - the why - is something I already get. Yea, Iraq is a huge strategic edge in the middle east. But quite frankly, the whole WMD thing is going to pretty much negate a lot of that strategic value. It's going to stoke a lot of resentment and rebellion. At the least it's going to take a lot longer, involve far more troops and personnel, cost far more, and require the sacrifice of more American lives than we were led to believe (and was part of the strategic assessment). At worst, we could have just inherited our own Palestine, complete with radical Islamic terrorists. And we just pissed off everyone else in the world, so we're pretty much on our own. Think Britain is going to be our bestest bud if it turns out MI6 was duped by Rumsfeld? I mean, really. We're not going to be very popular.
And this is regardless of whatever strategic reasons justified the war. It won't make that much of a difference.
So, maybe, you know. Like next time when you're whipping us all up to go to war, do you think you could STOP WITH THE NAME CALLING, DERIDING, AND GENERAL SUPPRESSION OF DISSENT? Just because someone doesn't agree with you doesn't mean they were wrong. Maybe next time, you know, we could, like, have a real debate?
This will have them shaking in their boots
I'm sure the last thing these guys want is to have future historians say that this was another gulf of Tonkin. Legacy, after all, appears to be their chief concern.
Shiite, Kurdish Leaders Decide to 'Play Hardball'
Yep, a big picinic in the park.
"We want to send the message that we, as Iraqi leaders, have a lot of weight and untapped resources," said Zabari, the Barzani advisor.While Barzani and Hakim are keen to avoid a direct confrontation with the occupation authorities, they discussed what sort of opposition could be launched if they fail to convince Bremer to make concessions.
"At this stage we're discussing to see how far we can cooperate," Barzani said at a news conference. "Our next move will depend on how much understanding we can get."
Ex-Official: Evidence Distorted for War
Well then. This is getting more interesting. Actual accusations and real allegations of wrong doing.
The Bush administration distorted intelligence and presented conjecture as evidence to justify a U.S. invasion of Iraq, according to a retired intelligence official who served during the months before the war."What disturbs me deeply is what I think are the disingenuous statements made from the very top about what the intelligence did say," said Greg Thielmann, who retired last September. "The area of distortion was greatest in the nuclear field."
Thielmann was director of the strategic, proliferation and military issues office in the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research. His office was privy to classified intelligence gathered by the CIA and other agencies about Iraq's chemical, biological and nuclear programs.
In Thielmann's view, Iraq could have presented an immediate threat to U.S. security in two areas: Either it was about to make a nuclear weapon, or it was forming close operational ties with al-Qaida terrorists.
Evidence was lacking for both, despite claims by President Bush and others, Thielmann said in an interview this week. Suspicions were presented as fact, contrary arguments ignored, he said.
Found this via Tom Tomorrow. Technorati shows that it isn't too spread around the blogs yet, so give it a read.
John Dean from Find Law eloquently describes the conundrum facing the Administration, the American people, and their elected representatives. Being thoroughly cynical, I just don't think it will get to impeachment. He deserves it. But what I fear is that he'll just sail by with a slim majority that leads to another contested election which will be settled by the supreme court. And that's my best case scenario. I think they are capable of far worse behavior, given that they basically lied to everyone about WMDs with the sole purpose of getting a strategic war on. I mean, that's why you impeach them: to run them out of town on a rail so they can't do any more damage.
Anyways, read the article. It's lucid (unlike me) and a great read.
To put it bluntly, if Bush has taken Congress and the nation into war based on bogus information, he is cooked. Manipulation or deliberate misuse of national security intelligence data, if proven, could be "a high crime" under the Constitution's impeachment clause. It would also be a violation of federal criminal law, including the broad federal anti-conspiracy statute, which renders it a felony "to defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose."Which is the rub. This is the most secretive Administration in the history of the US. Just look at how much stuff they have refused to even admit, much less allow investigation - i.e. ZERO. So proving this could be extremely hard, especially given that basically everyone who voted for the war is in the same leaky boat looking like a fool for believing them.
Does anyone else see the bizarro world being trotted out in front of us? A reporter who helped break the Watergate scandal writes a propagandistic book which helps sell the fake war which ends up being a bigger scandal than Watergate ever was. I mean, how big of a tool do you have to become to get that job?
Found this floating about the web. Seems the jury is still out regarding the mobile bio weapons labs.
All I can say is that it would fit the pattern.
Won't it be great to not even have a patina of evidence to hide behind? Won't the rest of the other countries in the world think we're so cool standing out in the cold with a hell of a lot of "shrinkage"?
Is it just me, or is the piranha like self congratulatory blog orgy over Howell Raines just downright creepy? Now that the Guardian and the BBC are thoroughly discredited (just read Andy, he'll tell ya), I guess the victory is complete. It's weird to celebrate diversity by completely crushing all dissent until your's is the only voice.
You guys rock.

"Is it safe?"
Sorry. Just been the theme lately.
You know, something that consistently bothers me. Why do we think the democrats are leaderless and have no ideas? The media. Amazing.
Iraq also handed over videotapes of mobile biological weapons laboratories to inspectors. Iraq says the videos show that the laboratories do not violate UN resolutions.Found this via Tom Tommorrow.
So, what was on the video tape, and are the mobile labs referred to the ones that the US is now claiming there is no other purpose for the labs other than manufacturing WMD? Inquiring minds want to know. Unfortunately, none of those inquiring minds work for our Fourth Estate.
I think this defense is currently the front runner.
Rumsfeld on Friday compared the search for Iraq's weapons of mass destruction to the hunt for Saddam Hussein.Yi. I'm just going to give up. If the press isn't willing to kick him in the teeth over crap like this, and the American populace just doesn't care anyway, what's the point?Rumsfeld says he believes the intelligence about Saddam's weapons will turn out to be accurate -- even though the U.S. military still has found no proof of that.
He notes that the U.S. military hasn't found Saddam either. But Rumsfeld adds no one questions whether Saddam existed.
"If we're lying, then you're idiots" defense.
Just listened to Dana Milbank explain precisely what the problem is. Because everyone believed there was weapons of mass destruction, and just about everyone ceded power to the President to do what he wanted, then everyone is an idiot for believing him and therefore no one will hold him responsible for lying.
No one wants to be a fool. Far better to let them get away with lying.
The conspiracy theory defense.
This is closely related to the "Blair and Bush aren't that stupid" defense.
Here's the story being pushed by the common narrative.
"Senator Graham sounds increasingly more like a conspiracy theorist than a presidential candidate," Schmitt said. "Whether it's national security or the strength of the economy, the Democrats' best hope seems to be to hope for the worst."So, take heed. We can't actually think there was a "conspiracy" to mislead the US populace because that would be a conspiracy theory. And we all know that anyone who promulgates a conspiracy theory is a crackpot. Worse, what they are doing is hoping for the worst so that they can get back into power.
Well, okay then.
Another land grab begins.
Bush's war doctrine questioned
Combined with that story from my last post, doesn't this make a sweet bookend on history?
Reactive. Slovenly. Pointy headed.
A failure by the Bush administration to prove its prewar allegations could undermine the pre-emption doctrine. The next time the president comes to Capitol Hill warning of an emerging threat, one that requires military action to pre-empt and defeat, some lawmakers of both parties say they will be skeptical.Uh, weren't you "skeptical" last time? What on EARTH makes anyone think that they are actually going to be "skeptical". All this means is that they're going to have to use something else to pull the wool over their eyes.
My prediction will be a reverse "boy who cried wolf" argument. The argument will be "yes, we haven't been right in the past, but now we can't let that blind us to the necessity of the action before us". Regardless of what has happened in the past, each and every crisis will be used as an excuse in the next battle in the war on terror because we don't want to be wrong about the bogeyman. After about the fifth or sixth time that we're completely wrong, they'll just stop justifying it. Because no one will care at that point.
In any event, the veil has been pierced, and it's pretty clear there's not going to be any punishment - other than a few scapegoats being fired - for pushing the preemptive war based on hyped up lies and self delusions.
Teflon. Nothing sticks to these guys, and there's always enough of a slim, slim majority that they can use to ram everything through.
After all, they're just changing the Senate's filibuster rules to completely eliminate any chance of opposition.
I tell ya. How stupid do you have to be to have them actually come right out and tell you what they're going to do, then act like they wouldn't really do that, then have it happen, and then wring your hands while you whine about the next cycle just repeat itself.
Morons.
US to eliminate WMD in all rogue states, by force if necessary
Gee. Why doesn't this surprise me. Now that we've done our war for strategic reasons, all illusions are cast off.
"We aim ultimately not just to prevent the spread of WMD, but also to eliminate or 'roll back' such weapons from rogue states and terrorist groups that already possess them or are close to doing so," Bolton told the House Committee on International Relations.Again. We're just going to see war after war after war.
He noted that while the administration of President George W. Bush (news - web sites) favored peaceful and diplomatic solutions to the proliferation threat, it ruled out no options, including "preemptive military force where required."
And all you people who helped... Well, I just want to say thanks. Your cold logic and assinine insistence on trotting out the boogeyman have made this world a much safer place. All the deaths. All the pain. All the loss. Well, I just hope you're happy.
Muchas Gracias
Blix slams allies over Iraq weapons
At this point, I don't think it was the "greatest hoax in the world". Well, at least not in the way the common narrative means.
Everyone is running around like a chicken with their head cut off claiming "we all couldn't have been fooled". Lot's of surprised looks as WMDs continue to be MIA. However, I remember a sh*tload of reports that should have had anyone nervous about what was going to be found. Yea, no body knew for sure, and everyone was hedging their bets, but geez. One or two incidents like Blix experienced, and you'd have the fear of "Bob" put into you regarding what was going on.
Hans Blix told the BBC that his teams followed up US and British leads at suspected sites across Iraq, but found nothing when they got there.And this is the point that should be made crystal clear. It wasn't just an intelligence problem - if that turns out to be the cause (ha!). Nope. What is truly amazing is that everyone bought it. There were clear warning signs that should have been jumped on by a truly independent, investigatory Fourth Estate. But absolutely no such thing happened. Rather, the exact opposite happened, with story after story whipping up fear until everyone was ready to nuke Iraq.The BBC's Greg Barrow at the UN says the comments will add to the growing controversy over the quality of intelligence used in the run-up to the Iraq war.
However US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has insisted that the information had been good.
In a BBC interview on Thursday, Mr Blix said he had been disappointed with the tip-offs provided by British and US intelligence.
"Only in three of those cases did we find anything at all, and in none of these cases were there any weapons of mass destruction, and that shook me a bit, I must say."
He said UN inspectors had been promised the best information available.
"I thought - my God, if this is the best intelligence they have and we find nothing, what about the rest?"
And that is a failure the Press will have to explain. And "we just believed them, why would they lie?" is a lousy excuse. It's your job to expose the truth, not just simply pass on information from Rumsfeld and CAzaelabi.
Josh MarsAzaell seems to be completely ignored regarding his analysis of the famed Wolfowitz Vanity Fair quote. Technorati shows only six inbound links for the post: Sense of the Common, The Belgravia Dispatch, The Iraq War Reader, Public Opinion, ncfocus, Deltiology,SullyWatch, Just a Gwai Lo: Filter.
More Technorati foolishness with Josh MarsAzaell. This time regarding what he wrote about today in The Hill.
Links to original mini-scoop post: idols of the marketplace, Johnny Two-Cents, Phaedo, An Unenviable Situation, Tristero, Abu Aardvark, SullyWatch, Meme Cauldron, Rook's Rant, different strings
Links to the actual Hill article: adTux, The American Constitution Society Weblog, rc3.org Daily, Free Dartmouth, Meme Cauldron,Dormouse Dreaming
Links to reminder post from Josh: karmalised
The Stratfor analysis concisely defines the strategic case for the war with Iraq. I think that the liberal hawks would agree with it far more than they would disagree.
And reading a nice analysis with 20/20 vision on the process, I can certainly see the case. If we are sitting in the middle east, we no longer have to depend on our allies to put pressure on other allies. With a major base of operations in the middle of the geographic area, surrounded on all sides by the very people we want to put pressure on... Well, yea. Damn yea. It's an incredibly superior strategic position.
But the question isn't whether we would have a superior strategic position or not. Nor was it a question that an Iraq war wouldn't be a cake walk (me, I got pretty scared there in the middle of the sandstorm until they got the supply line running).
At issue was the notion of a preemptive war against Iraq. Because without an imminent threat, the majority of Americans wouldn't support the war.
What kind of irks me about the hawks - both liberal and conservative - is that they seem to have been seduced by the notion that the strategic benefits of occupying Iraq outweighed the constitutional, political, and even moral considerations irreconcilably intertwined with a preemptive war. One against a country that doesn't threaten you and hasn't attacked you nor is about to attack you.
And that's inescapable.
Without the imminent threat of Iraqi WMD, the argument that we had to take preemptive action against Iraq is mighty darn thin. Does the lack of WMDs make the strategic argument less valid? Of course not. The lack of WMDs means there isn't even a patina of "Imminent Threat" to the justification for the war with Iraq. And if there is no imminent threat, then the only justification left is a strategic one.
And just again, for those who are keeping score, we have a devastation of international alliances, treaties and organizations because of this strategic war. Not to mention democratic debate and our bruised constitution.
A lot of crap got destroyed or really knocked about simply on the argument that the threat was imminent. Suppression of dissent. Questioning of patriotism. The whole nine yards.
We damn well better find out what we had "solid" evidence for WMD. The cost has been high.
It doesn't change the strategic value of the war. Not one iota. But it does change the way the entire process should be viewed, and the morality of the choice that was made. Clearly there were ways far short of war to solve the problem of Saddam and WMD. We've got DR Congo as another object lesson we should be dealing with now... The last one was Milosevic and that whole genocide thing. Then there was South Africa and their Apartheid. Sometimes these things take a lot of time to solve. Some would argue that doing things the "hard" way takes almost as long as occupation will take.
But then, if you're so scared of the shadows, or you treat the world stage like a game of Risk!, then all the silly things like world justice, aversion to an empire and other such things really pale in comparison to the strategic value of occupying Iraq. We just have to do it, and damn you if you get in the way of the "just" cause.
And there's the rub. You know you would never have gotten the American people to support a preemptive war for strategic reasons. No matter how "right" you thought it was. No matter how necessary it was to our survival (so you think).
You had to have an imminent threat - the country had to feel like it was under attack. And it is this threat alone which got the public to support it.
If you had actually had to bother with a real democratic decision, you would have lost. And it's that causal flinging away of democracy which is at the root of my problems with the pro-war side. It's the blasting of any dissent, either with a megaphone or a witty logical argument or a book written by a CIA analyst. Liberal or conservative.
A strategic argument should be weighed on its merit. Out in the open.
Not rushed through in a never ending pounding of WMD Tiffin phantasms.
Well. How about those WMD?
THE STRATFOR WEEKLY
5 June 2003
by Dr. George Friedman
WMD
SummaryThe inability to discover weapons of mass destruction in Iraq has created a political crisis in the United States and Britain. Within the two governments, there are recriminations and brutal political infighting over responsibility. Stratfor warned in February that the unwillingness of the U.S. government to articulate its real, strategic reasons for the war -- choosing instead to lean on WMD as the justification -- would lead to a deep crisis at some point. That moment seems to be here.
Analysis
"Weapons of mass destruction" is promising to live up to its name: The issue may well result in the mass destruction of senior British and American officials who used concerns about WMD in Iraq as the primary, public justification for going to war. The simple fact is that no one has found any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and -- except for some vans which may have been used for biological weapons -- no evidence that Iraq was working to develop such weapons. Since finding WMD is a priority for U.S. military forces, which have occupied Iraq for more than a month, the failure to find weapons of mass destruction not only has become an embarrassment, it also has the potential to mushroom into a major political crisis in the United States and Britain. Not only is the political opposition exploiting the paucity of Iraqi WMD, but the various bureaucracies are using the issue to try to discredit each other. It's a mess.
On Jan. 21, 2003, Stratfor published an analysis titled Smoke and Mirrors: The United States, Iraq and Deception, which made the following points:
1. The primary reason for the U.S. invasion of Iraq was strategic and not about weapons of mass destruction.
2. The United States was using the WMD argument primarily to justify the attack to its coalition partners.
3. The use of WMD rather than strategy as the justification for the war would ultimately create massive confusion as to the nature of the war the United States was fighting.
As we put it:
"To have allowed the WMD issue to supplant U.S. strategic interests as the justification for war has created a crisis in U.S. strategy. Deception campaigns are designed to protect strategies, not to trap them. Ultimately, the foundation of U.S. grand strategy, coalitions and the need for clarity in military strategy have collided. The discovery of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq will not solve the problem, nor will a coup in Baghdad. In a war [against Islamic extremists] that will last for years, maintaining one's conceptual footing is critical. If that footing cannot be maintained -- if the requirements of the war and the requirements of strategic clarity are incompatible -- there are more serious issues involved than the future of Iraq."
The failure to enunciate the strategic reasons for the invasion of Iraq--of cloaking it in an extraneous justification--has now come home to roost. Having used WMD as the justification, the inability to locate WMD in Iraq has undermined the credibility of the United States and is tearing the government apart in an orgy of finger-pointing.
To make sense of this impending chaos, it is important to start at the beginning -- with al Qaeda. After the Sept. 11 attacks, al Qaeda was regarded as an extraordinarily competent global organization. Sheer logic argued that the network would want to top the Sept. 11 strikes with something even more impressive. This led to a very reasonable fear that al Qaeda possessed or was in the process of obtaining WMD.
U.S. intelligence, shifting from its sub-sensitive to hyper-sensitive mode, began putting together bits of intelligence that tended to show that what appeared to be logical actually was happening. The U.S. intelligence apparatus now was operating in a worst-case scenario mode, as is reasonable when dealing with WMD. Lower-grade intelligence was regarded as significant. Two things resulted: The map of who was developing weapons of mass destruction expanded, as did the probabilities assigned to al Qaeda's ability to obtain WMD. The very public outcome -- along with a range of less public events -- was the "axis of evil" State of the Union speech, which identified three countries as having WMD and likely to give it to al Qaeda. Iraq was one of these countries.
If we regard chemical weapons as WMD, as has been U.S. policy, then it is well known that Iraq had WMD, since it used them in the past. It was a core assumption, therefore, that Iraq continued to possess WMD. Moreover, U.S. intelligence officials believed there was a parallel program in biological weapons, and also that Iraqi leaders had the ability and the intent to restart their nuclear program, if they had not already done so. Running on the worst-case basis that was now hard-wired by al Qaeda into U.S. intelligence, Iraq was identified as a country with WMD and likely to pass them on to al Qaeda.
Iraq, of course, was not the only country in this class. There are other sources of WMD in the world, even beyond the "axis of evil" countries. Simply invading Iraq would not solve the fundamental problem of the threat from al Qaeda. As Stratfor has always argued, the invasion of Iraq served a psychological and strategic purpose: Psychologically, it was designed to demonstrate to the Islamic world the enormous power and ferocity of the United States; strategically, it was designed to position the United States to coerce countries such as Saudi Arabia, Syria and Iran into changing their policies toward suppressing al Qaeda operations in their countries. Both of these missions were achieved.
WMD was always a side issue in terms of strategic planning. It became, however, the publicly stated moral, legal and political justification for the war. It was understood that countries like France and Russia had no interest in collaborating with Washington in a policy that would make the United States the arbiter of the Middle East. Washington had to find a justification for the war that these allies would find irresistible.
That justification was that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. From the standpoint of U.S. intelligence, this belief became a given. Everyone knew that Iraq once had chemical weapons, and no reasonable person believed that Saddam Hussein had unilaterally destroyed them. So it appeared to planners within the Bush administration that they were on safe ground. Moreover, it was assumed that other major powers would regard WMD in Hussein's hands as unacceptable and that therefore, everyone would accept the idea of a war in which the stated goal -- and the real outcome -- would be the destruction of Iraq's weapons.
This was the point on which Washington miscalculated. The public justification for the war did not compel France, Germany or Russia to endorse military action. They continued to resist because they fully understood the outcome -- intended or not -- would be U.S. domination of the Middle East, and they did not want to see that come about. Paris, Berlin and Moscow turned the WMD issue on its head, arguing that if that was the real issue, then inspections by the United Nations would be the way to solve the problem. Interestingly, they never denied that Iraq had WMD; what they did deny was that proof of WMD had been found. They also argued that over time, as proof accumulated, the inspection process would either force the Iraqis to destroy their WMD or justify an invasion at that point. What is important here is that French and Russian leaders shared with the United States the conviction that Iraq had WMD. Like the Americans, they thought weapons of mass destruction -- particularly if they were primarily chemical -- was a side issue; the core issue was U.S. power in the Middle East.
In short, all sides were working from the same set of assumptions. There was not much dispute that the Baathist regime probably had WMD. The issue between the United States and its allies was strategic. After the war, the United States would become the dominant power in the region, and it would use this power to force regional governments to strike at al Qaeda. Germany, France and Russia, fearing the growth of U.S. power, opposed the war. Rather than clarifying the chasm in the alliance, the Bush administration permitted the arguments over WMD to supplant a discussion of strategy and left the American public believing the administration's public statements -- smoke and mirrors -- rather than its private view.
The Bush administration -- and France, for that matter -- all assumed that this problem would disappear when the U.S. military got into Iraq. WMD would be discovered, the public justification would be vindicated, the secret goal would be achieved and no one would be the wiser. What they did not count on -- what is difficult to believe even now -- is that Hussein actually might not have WMD or, weirder still, that he hid them or destroyed them so efficiently that no one could find them. That was the kicker the Bush administration never counted on.
The matter of whether Hussein had WMD is still open. Answers could range to the extremes: He had no WMD or he still has WMD, being held in reserve for his guerrilla war. But the point here is that the WMD question was not the reason the United States went to war. The war was waged in order to obtain a strategic base from which to coerce countries such as Syria, Iran and Saudi Arabia into using their resources to destroy al Qaeda within their borders. From that standpoint, the strategy seems to be working.
However, by using WMD as the justification for war, the United States walked into a trap. The question of the location of WMD is important. The question of whether it was the CIA or Defense Department that skewed its reports about the location of Iraq's WMD is also important. But these questions are ultimately trivial compared to the use of smoke and mirrors to justify a war in which Iraq was simply a single campaign. Ultimately, the problem is that it created a situation in which the American public had one perception of the reason for the war while the war's planners had another. In a democratic society engaged in a war that will last for many years, this is a dangerous situation to have created.
Been thinking about population sampling and the map o' the blogosphere in the last post. One thing that popped up a while ago was the question why the number of right wing blogs is larger than the number of left wing blogs. And why the quality of writing was better (argument construction, analysis, depth).
I think I saw a comment go by where someone was wondering what the map of professional writers with respect to blogs would look like. Just a thought, but quality is usually related to profession. There are some natural writers out there who aren't making a living at it, but they do something quite close for a living (law or history).
And then there's a graph I'd like to see. Assuming there could be such a metric implemented in the map, what is the political position of a blog with respect to world opinion? I wonder if the the scale is so currently biased to the right that the blogs considered "lefty" would actually appear centrist. I'm not saying this is even the case, but it does seem that the rest of the world seems far more left than it does right. I mean, really. People shutting down France because of their nationalized pension plan? This Administration would have the national guard out with tear gas to put it down. Pretty much any red blooded, flag waving American would be volunteering to help out with the gassing. But it would never happen because America is a country that is on the Right of the world political spectrum. We don't even consider that kind of thing in our society. We eat our old.
Sample characteristics are really important when trying to draw conclusions from populations. There's a significant difference from "to the left of Ghengis Kahn" and "to the left of Mao" . I doubt there's a lot of communist blogs(although I think Atrios, jr. might be close), despite what the righties think of the American left.
MacDiva's got a nice post on several themes. The one that caught my eye was the "political map of the blogosphere". Love her analysis.
But I have to wonder what the metric is? What on earth is used as the mechanism to determine who is on the Left and who is on the Right. If I coded the metric, I doubt I'd get the same graph layout. I searched their site and can't find any explanation of how the decision was made. Again, it's just another "here's some stuff" without much analysis of how it was actually put together and how valid those assumptions are. Wish people would provide some explanation with their pronouncements.
Another thing is that the "middle" of the graph is quite unclear. Because of the layout, you can't just assume that the center of the graph area is the "center" of politics. Again. Some major explanation is required to interpret what the heck the display is telling you.
Garbage in, garbage out. Well, at least it's interesting garbage.
Political Leaders Resisting U.S. Plan to Govern Iraq
This shit just keeps getting better and better. Sure glad we did this for all the right reasons, used all the dimplomacy in our toolkit, worked hard to build an international coallition and had the entire world behind us. We're going to need all the help we can get to keep this from blowing up in our faces.
Wait a minute.
Yea, there are absolutely no Christian fundamentalist terrorists in America. Thank "Bob" for that.
Their mailbag is filled with love tokens for Eric Rudolph
Greetings friends , I just heard about eric. To bad i couldn't find him before the young punk cop. We could have hidden him forever right here in GA. I would really like to slap around that punk cop . He should have let him go if he had any balls. They have already convicted eric on the stupid news. It really pisses me off. Even if he did do it ,its an eye for an eye. Just look at the pictures if you don't believe me. I am trying to get in contact with XXXXX. I used to have his e-mail address but kind of lost contact. Can you help ? Please somebody HELP eric get a attorney before he gets screwed. I wish I could help him he is my hero. I am going to put signs up around this little town i live (milledgeville GA.) to free rudolph. after all its freedom of speech. Look forward to hearing from A.O.G.Check out their manual.
M.G.: Why an interview, and why now?A.O.G.: You asked for one, I know I can trust you, and I can't do
it alone.M.G.: Can't do what alone?
A.O.G.: Drive the abortion industry underground with or without
the sanction of government law.M.G.: By what method?
A.O.G.: Explosives, predominantly.
M.G.: Would you care to elaborate?
A.O.G.: Certainly. First by disarming the murder weapons. That
is, by destroying the structures where the actual crimes are
being committed. Second, by disarming the persons perpetrating
the crimes by removing their hands, or at least their thumbs
below the second digit.
The face saving dance of the seven veils begins.
Then again it may not. And that possible downside -- a quagmire in Iraq, for instance -- may come to haunt the Bush administration. Already, some commentators are suggesting that Bush lied about weapons of mass destruction. The Gulf of Tonkin incident -- Lyndon Johnson's pretext for greatly escalating the Vietnam War -- has been exhumed. Once again, we are told, a president tricked the American people into a war.He's such a tease. Only one veil will be suggestively removed at a time, remember. The dance will continue until a naked Richard Cohen stands revealed in all his glory.I don't buy it -- not yet, anyway.
Yi. That's a visual I didn't need.
Some Iraq Analysts Felt Pressure From Cheney Visits
Former and current intelligence officials said they felt a continual drumbeat, not only from Cheney and Libby, but also from Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz, Feith, and less so from CIA Director George J. Tenet, to find information or write reports in a way that would help the administration make the case that going into Iraq was urgent."They were the browbeaters," said a former defense intelligence official who attended some of the meetings in which Wolfowitz and others pressed for a different approach to the assessments they were receiving. "In interagency meetings," he said, "Wolfowitz treated the analysts' work with contempt."

In the winter of 2001-02, officials who worked with Wolfowitz sent the Defense Intelligence Agency a message: Get hold of Laurie Mylroie's book, which claimed Hussein was behind the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, and see if you can prove it, one former defense official said.Uh, maybe because it's not even close to true?The DIA's Middle East analysts were familiar with the book, "Study of Revenge: The First World Trade Center Attack and Saddam Hussein's War Against America." But they and others in the U.S. intelligence community were convinced that radical Islamic fundamentalists, not Iraq, were involved. "The message was, why can't we prove this is right?" said the official.
Retired Vice Adm. Thomas R. Wilson, then director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, directed his Middle East analysts to go through the book again, check all the allegations and see if they could be substantiated, said one current and one former intelligence official familiar with the request. The staff was unable to make the link.Surprise. And in the interest of "fair and balanced"
This recounting of the book incident was disputed by a defense official who, like many others interviewed, requested anonymity.With Wolfie staring down at you like an angry father, who wouldn't want anonymity.
Soccer moms, Security moms. Got to love the number crunchers. Been hearing a lot about how women are more concerned about security than they used to be (duh), and how this is forming an alignment of these former Soccer moms with the GOP - the party of national security. Well, the numbers don't quite add up. Check out Public Opinion Watch (scroll down to the second article).
All this suggests that the GOPs ability to capitalize on womens high level of concern about terrorist attacks could be limited and that there is an important dimension to these so-called security moms that the Time article ignores. Yes, women are more afraid than men about being a victim of such an attack (or more willing to admit it), but they are distinctly less gung-ho than men about the Bush administrations current approach to fighting terror. Now that the war is over, it seems quite possible that the adequacy of actual homeland security, rather than Bushs version of international toughness, will emerge as a key to the womens vote in 2004. But youd never know that from reading the Time article.
Terminus has a great little post on one of my favorite pet peeves: The "Fiscally conservative, socially liberal" canard. Given that pretty much everything these days is Orwellian beyond belief, this kind of crap isn't surprising. But if I hear one more person say this, I think I'm just going to tie them to a chair and make them watch "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" until their eyes bleed.
Natch, Vogel's blog is great. Far better than mine. Why are you still here? Go read his. Scoot.
BigPicnic has the lowdown on the Convoys of Terror operating throughout this country in plain sight!
WMD intelligence raises a need for major Hill probe
From Josh we get the terrifying notion that everyone's grand preemptive war is not based on your run of the mill "misunderstanding". Rather, every argument for a preemptive war may have been based on a delusional fantasy.
Did we have bad intelligence? Did political appointees dismiss good, but less threatening, intelligence? Or was damning intelligence actually cooked up for political purposes? Those are all legitimate questions. But when Congress starts trying to get at the answers we should be open to the more complex, but in its own way no less disturbing possibility, that at least some of the main proponents of this war were so consumed by their zeal to crush Saddam and so driven by ideology that they fooled themselves as much as anyone else.Great. The news just keeps getting better and better.
What's next? Aliens?
But this is "the greatest hoax in history"! No matter how it turns out, there really should be a hell of a lot of soul searching by everyone who was for this preemptive war. Regardless of their reasons for supporting it. Barring a miracle WMD find of James Bond proportions in Iraq, there isn't any way this is going to turn out good for the pro-war side. None. All scenarios pretty much have the stink of paving the path to hell with good intentions.
Just gotta say thanks to y'all. Going to be really fun for the next few decades or so dealing with the fallout of occupation. Not to mention trying to piece back together the massive number of things you destroyed in pushing a war on the world that it didn't want. Oh, and the damage to the credibility and prestige of the US is going to be just lovely to deal with as well. Double thanks for that. Everyone wasn't too happy with us before. Now they're just going to simply love us.
DOD Transcripts appear to be missing an interesting piece of the Wolfowitz/Tanenhaus Vanity Fair interview.
Josh has a scoop on it.
Gee, I wonder if Glenn Reynolds will have as much enthusiasm getting to the bottom of this interesting omission as he has had getting to the bottom of similar incidents on the left.
Yea, right!
US 'has frontier mentality' on oceans
In a telling indictment of US marine policy, a group of influential Americans say their country has lacked the imagination to care properly for its oceans.Tell the truth, we seem to have 'frontier mentality' on the entire globe.
And let me just point out that justifying the war with Iraq based on peace in the middle east implicitly lends credence to the belief that part of the reason we went to war was to help the Israelis.
I don't personally believe that, but basically what you all are saying (you who propagate this meme) is that we went to war to undercut the Palestinians. And seeing as how a lot of our allies are doing the same thing that Saddam was doing - i.e., sending money to suicide bombers and other financial support - well. . . I just can't seem to scrape up enough credulity to keep a straight face while you say this.
I mean, really. A preemptive war against someone who was giving less financial support to terrorists than our own allies give?
How stupid do you think we are. Oh wait. I know. Really stupid.
Okay, anyone want to place any bets on whether there will be any Israeli right wing "terrorism" as a result of "The Roadmap" to middle east peace?
Anyone who doesn't think we need UN monitors on the ground while this is going on is just completely insane. They're killing people over there, and we know that radical elements on both sides are on a knife's edge.
Oh, and another thing. Since when did peace in the middle east require the overthrow of Iraq? I hear this argument more and more often now that the WMDs are MIA. The whole Iraq thing is, what? Twelve years old? Before then, remember, Iraq was our friend. So does everyone trotting out this canard really believe that the main impediment to peace in the middle east was Iraq? I mean, really. Is everyone saying that now that Saddam is gone we can now finally get on with the issue of Palestine and Israel?
Who knew?
I guess that it was a proto-saddam before 1990 which was causing problems for the previous 40 years.
You guys are completely insane. If Bush manages to get peace in the middle east, I'll sure say that it was a great thing and good for him. But to claim that we're now seeing the problem finally get solved because of the war in Iraq... Well, I'll wait to see the logical connection and evidence that explains the past 50 years of Israeli and Palestinian conflict in terms of Saddam Hussein.
The only plausible explanation it would seem you can give is one that Tom Friedman advanced today in his OpEd column, "The only way to puncture that bubble was for American soldiers, men and women, to go into the heart of the Arab-Muslim world, house to house, and make clear that we are ready to kill, and to die, to prevent our open society from being undermined by this terrorism bubble." Basically, the argument goes that we had to go in and knock some heads about to show we mean business.
To summarize, because we have shown we have the biggest schlong and that we're itching to use it, everyone is now scared enough to come to the negotiating table.
Wow. Great reason for a preemptive war and subsequent occupation hell. You guys rock.
Okay, so Wolfowitz's oil quote from the Guardian is out of context. What Wolfowitz was saying is that a strategy of economic pressure works on N. Korea, but could not in Iraq because oil money was propping up the regime. Reading the various reports, this is clearly what he was saying.
But, let me snipe at this restructuring of reality anyway. Economic sanctions on N Korea seem to be having absolutely no effect what so ever. They are starving, dying in droves and still they keep going strong. What exactly can we do economically which won't result in not only more deaths and destruction, but more lunatic and psychotic behavior from Kim Boy?
So, Glenn Reynolds' picayune analysis got it correct. The Guardian story severely misrepresented the Wolfowitz quote. Good show, old boy.
Now. About that imminent threat from Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.
So, we're all just a bunch of idiots. Tom Friedman tells us the real reason we went to war was because we could and we needed to lash out in anger over 9/11. But then, Wolfowitz tells us that it really was because of the oil. Everyone but hard liners and those who are desperately trying to save face have given up on finding any weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. And meanwhile, back at the ranch, all hell seems to be breaking out.
Okay, so what exactly did the anti-war movement have wrong? What exactly was it about about the anti-war position that it deserved to be called treasonous, unpatriotic and just plain idiotic? Night after night I watched program after program lash out at anyone who had the audacity to suggest precisely what everyone is admitting as truth after the fact. Humiliating pieces totally trashing anyone with enough courage to stand up for the truth.
And now? Well, it's amazing to watch. We have the "liberal hawks" who are now either performing the face saving dance of 7 veils, or still sitting at their keyboard telling us that it still was a good idea. The American people... well they either just don't give a damn, or they think it's all just going swimmingly over in our own private Idaho.
And so it all goes. We don't care because we just don't care. Everyone was taken in by a big lie and we just shrug it off. We completely subverted the very constitutional mechanisms that were designed to prevent this exact thing from happening. And amazingly, there are even democrats - or people who call themselves that - who believe this is A-Ok. I mean, really. What exactly is the kind of nation we have become? We're willing to completely let the ends justify the means, as long as it works out okay. But even when the ends don't work out okay at all, we still imagine that it's okay and we just need to make it okay so it will be okay.
So go ahead an slither around trying to save face. Grab a couple of scraps and call it a feast of democracy. Tell me again that we won the war. Tell me again that democracy is flourishing in Iraq. Tell me again that what happened over the last year was a fair and balanced process that led us to this glorious future. Explain away.
But you're all a pack of losers. You knew what you were doing and you just went ahead and did it anyway. You lied and repeated other's lies. You did your part to crush dissent.
At best, I think you're all collectively a bunch of frightened bullies. At worst, you're just a bunch of evil sons of bitches.
We don't hate America. You do. You show it no respect. You trample the foundations of our democracy in your non stop psycho babble. You pretend to be a centrist, but in reality you're a toady. A tool.
And I'm sure we're just going to see it again. I have no doubt in my mind that all those who are currently scurrying for supportable positions like cockroaches when the lights are turned on, are all going to fall right into place when the next war comes around. You'll just dust off the old reasons, change a few names, and start blogging away at how idiotic, stupid and trivial anyone who dares to question your position is. You'll pretend to be fair and balanced - seeing all sides - but you'll be completely focused on proving that which you want to be true. You'll gladly put on the blinders that protect you from seeing alternative plans. You'll be whipped up like frightened puppies by ex CIA analysts who tell you what you want to believe. You'll conveniently forget not only the recent past, but the very events that led to the complicated and dangerous situations that we face.
And you'll sugar coat it so that no one can taste the poison.
Pissed? Yea, I think that accurately describes my mood. Pissed at all your excuses. Pissed at all your tactics. Pissed at your constant bobbing and weaving. Pissed at your amoralism, your rejustifications and your outright lies.
Pretty much sums up my feelings of late
Well the rain falls down without my help I'm afraidYou can listen to the MP3 here.
And my lawn gets wet though I've withheld my consent
When this grey world crumbles like a cake
I'll be hanging from the hope
That I'll never see that recipe againAs I walk, I think about a new way to walk
As I think, I'm using up the time left to think
And this train keep rolling off the track
Trying to act like something else
Trying to go where it's been uninvitedIt's not my birthday
It's not today
It's not my birthday, so why do you lunge out at me?
When the word comes down, "Never more will be around"
Though I'll wish you were there, I was less than we could bear
And I'm not the only dust my mother raisedSo, I'm rattling the bars around this drink tank
Discreetly I should pour through the keyhole or evaporate completely
But there'd be no percentage, and there'd be no proof
And the sound upon the roof is only waterAnd the rain falls down without my help I'm afraid
And my lawn gets wet though I've withheld my consent
When this grey world crumbles like a cake
I'll be hanging from the hope
That I'll never see that recipe againIt's not my birthday
It's not today
It's not my birthday, so why do you lunge out at me?
When the word comes down, "Never more will be around"
Though I'll wish you were there, I was less than we could bear
And I'm not the only dust my mother raised
I am not the only dust my mother raised
A while back, a friend sent me an article from the OnlineJournal - basically an organ on the Wall Street Journal. The article entitled On the Left: Hysteria and Name-Calling, grated on me like I was Parmesan cheese being sprinkled on some pasta. At the time, I wrote a nasty, sarcastic piece regarding it (before I blogged), based on the email conversations I was having with those who thought the article was a good representation of the Liberal point of view.
In any event, it's amazing to go back and read both the piece by Bartley and my own words.
Especially in light of what's happened over the last six months.
Yep, we're all just a bunch of chicken littles.
Middle Class Tax Burden Set to Rise
Conservatives and liberals alike agree that Bush's tax policies have shifted more of the tax burden to the middle class. Kevin Hassett, a conservative economist with the American Enterprise Institute, said it "makes complete sense" that this would happen as a result of Bush's polices.Can I help you load that gold bar into that dump truck, sir?Changes such as the elimination of the estate tax and the reduction of the stock-dividend tax disproportionately benefit the wealthiest 1 percent, who have the largest amount of assets and capital. Those at the other end of the income spectrum benefit disproportionately from targeted tax cuts such as the child tax credit.
With the biggest gains going to the wealthiest and to low-income taxpayers, those in the middle inevitably get a higher tax burden because they don't qualify for the targeted tax breaks that go to the poor or the investment-related tax breaks that go to the wealthy. "The middle class is predominantly labor income," Hassett said.
Ten killer questions to put to Blair
Tony has to face the opposition's questions tomorrow. Should be a rather interesting time, eh?
Don't you wish we had this tradition in the US? There's a few choice questions I'd like to hear GWB answer.
It isn't exactly rocket science ...
An inventor from New Zealand who is building a cruise missile in his garage using parts bought over the internet has said you don't have to be a rocket scientist to construct your very own rocket.
Bruce Simpson says he is planning to post step-by-step instructions on his website describing how to make the jet-powered missile, which he claims would be able to fly the 60 miles (100 kilometres) between his home and Auckland in less than 15 minutes, the New Zealand Herald newspaper has reported.The missile could carry a small warhead weighing 22lbs, and Mr Simpson claimed the air force would have no way of stopping it.
Mr Simpson, a 49-year-old internet site developer, said that his missile project, which he says will cost around US$5,000 (£3,058), was intended to warn governments how easy it would be for terrorists to build one.
Teen torture alleged at 'tough love' ranch
Lawyers, surgeons and business people seeking solutions to their children's problems paid $30,000 to $50,000 yearly to send them to Dundee Ranch in Costa Rica.The solutions turned out to involve alleged physical torture, filthy living conditions and the loss of basic human rights. After a raid by Costa Rican police officers, Narvin Lichfield, the school's owner, was arrested on May 22 for alleged physical and psychological mistreatment of pupils
Check out the Memory Hole's updating of their 9/11 documents. They've added transcripts of the open hearings. Makes my eyes glaze over to read them, but there's some interesting tid bits in them.
Andy thinks reality is determined by taking a poll.
Toady. Bootlicker. Tank wipe.
Orcinus answers Atrios. All I can say is amen, brother.
There's been a lot of claims that the justification of the war based on WMD doesn't matter. I don't know if people are just stupid or just plain evil in ignoring this. So here's my rant on the subject. I know. A fantasy yelled into the wind... But what the hey.
Year of the Jackanapes
Throughout the long summer of 2001 speculation ran rampant that the Administration was planning a war with Iraq. The Administration consistently denied that any decision had been made. Then, after August, the Administration went into full press on the Iraq war, pushing Iraq as an imminent threat . After floating earlier in the year that the Administration had all the legal authority it needed to go to war already, they decided to allow the Congress and UN to weigh in on the issue. Revelation after revelation of Iraq and its imminent threat to the US was paraded before us. The issue was immediate. Anyone who said "let's think about this" was branded an appeaser of Saddam or at the very least, unpatriotic. Congress was pushed into voting about war with Iraq before the November election. The argument given was that we just couldn't wait. Things were that deadly. Then we completely trashed the UN security council when they demanded more time. The war had to happen now to protect the self interests of the US.We are now learning that "everyone knew" that WMDs weren't the real reason we went to war with Iraq. It isn't important to find them, as there are overriding strategic issues for which we really went to war. However, throughout the entire process, the overriding justification for everything - from stifling debate to circumventing or bending constitutional requirements - was the real and imminent threat to the United States posed by Iraq.
Without evidence of a real and imminent threat to the United States, there is no other justification for the litter of destroyed international treaties, alliances, institutions in the wake of the Iraqi war. Every single act of destroying of things that took decades - if not centuries - to build was justified based on this threat and this threat alone. We circumvented, if not completely ignored the Constitution because we were told if we didn't fall into line behind the president during a time of war, bad things were going to happen. Really, really bad things.
In the fallout of the war, it is clear that none of these threats have materialized. Regardless of what we find in the future, it's clear that Iraq's military was never a threat to the US, nor any of the surrounding states. There was never a threat to Israel from WMD. We have found that alleged terrorist training camps that doubled as WMD factories for Al Qaeda have turned out to be nothing more than refuge camps or ruins where teenagers hang out and party. None of the claims of imminent threat are true.
What is so important about the issue of no WMD is precisely the missing imminent threat. Without the claims of imminent threat, everything we did to this point has been based on a complete lie.
We are going to have to deal with the realities of the Iraq war. We're now an occupying country, and it's our duty to clean up the mess. But regardless of the future, the past is tainted beyond repair. Whatever Iraq's fate, it seems clear we made the decision in a completely fallacious fashion. A decision process driven entirely by fear and desperation.
And the process that we went through, combined the actions that were taken by many to ensure the outcome, are incredibly pressing issues that need objective investigation and analysis.
If we just turn our heads and ignore the obvious at this point, then we really will have dealt our democracy a punishing blow. It is not simply a matter which can be ignored and shoved under the carpet. How we come to the decision to go to war is one of the most important processes a country can undergo. To say that we should not look too closely for fear of gaining cold feet in the war on terror is an unconscionable suggestion.
It is inevitable that any of these questions are going to reflect badly on the current Administration. It is, after all, the architect of the war. It is those who pushed this war from the media, writing opinion pieces, doing exposes on WMD claims. Pieces deriding and humiliating the anti-war movement. Even that once great investigative reporter who wrote a book called "Bush at War". Senators who were briefed on intelligence regarding Iraq and told us the case was justified. Everyone. All of these people are going to have to answer some very troubling questions.
You all should really explain exactly what went on. I want to know how Judith Miller got away with being a tool for CAzaelabi's ambitions. I want to know what intelligence the CIA/DOD had. I want someone to tell me how it all happened, and how who's responsible for this crap. I want to understand the complete and utter failure of our vaunted Fourth Estate to fact check these jerks.
But more importantly, I want to know how it is going to be prevented from happening again. Because if we get into this position again, we better have a plan in place for dealing with this in a rational fashion. I don't want to automatically gainsay a case to go to war because I believe the world is still a very dangerous place. What I do want is to be as sure as we can regarding our evidence and our reasoning. I want my representatives to carefully consider the evidence and report back to me via speeches and position papers. Above all, I don't want a year long "imminent" threat mentality to be running the show.
Regardless of whether we find WMD, we were never in imminent danger. Period. We had plenty of time to discuss the rationale for doing this. Plenty of time to use diplomacy rather than belligerence when dealing with our allies. Plenty of time to work within the framework of international treaties. Plenty of time to maximize the use of international forums such as the UN security council to gain consensus. Plenty of time to tell the truth.
Absolutely nothing gets better if you don't objectively examine the process that produced it. A process clearly driven by fear caused by non-existent threat is a shitty process indeed. There's a hell of a lot of crap that has been destroyed, lying all around us. It's not clear we're all that much safer, and we have a lot of very real future commitments to Iraq and Afghanistan - as well as the rest of the world. Anyone saying that we should just sweep it under the rug and forget about it is simply a traitor to these United States or just a complete idiot.
Either explanation, I would argue, is just plain dangerous to our democracy...
Big Picnic has a most excellent piece on the history of the War on Terror. And by Terrorism, we mean the Christian Fundamentalist Terrorism that has been so much in the news. Give it a read.
Unfortunately, this extra scrutiny has often led to hostility towards the Christian-american community. Many have been subject to anti-Christian bigotry and violence. Many Caucasians have complained of constant suspicion and wayward looks, whether or not they even practice the Christian religion. In response, religious leaders have pled for tolerance, claiming that the terrorists represent only a tiny proportion of Christians.
I'm getting pretty sick and tired of the "If Saddam didn't have WMDs, then why did he not cooperate with UN inspectors" argument. As any person with a spec of logical reasoning knows, this is a completely fallacious way to justify anything. It's the entire reason why our constitution specifically proscribes unreasonable search and seizure. It's precisely why police have to go to a judge and convince them that they have a good enough reason to suspect someone before they come bashing the door down looking for drugs or whatever evidence of a specific crime they are looking for.
As I've said before, there are plenty of plausible explanations for why Saddam didn't cooperate with the UN inspectors.
What has happened is that we have completely turned the rules of evidence and suspicion on its head. And what happened with Iraq and WMDs is just a facet of the problem. We have, in the last two years, completely turned these same rules on their heads with respect to our own citizens. Given what's already in PATRIOT act I, and given what's in PATRIOT act II, it's quite clear that the doctrine of preemptive strikes is not only something we're using against other nations, but we're doing it to ourselves.
C'mon people. Anyone who promulgates these kind of farcical justifications is simply stupid. People who do this are either ignorant, or are obviously trying to propagate myths and untruths in a completely transparent attempt to mislead and misdirect attention from questions that truly matter.
Geesh. What a bunch of aqua-maroons.
Why Andrew Sullivan gets paid so well. (emphasis mine)
War, however, is not being seriously discussed in Washington. What is being discussed is whether American policy should formally shift to regime change in Iran, and whether financial, military, and propaganda tools should be sent to the democratic opposition. That's a debate as urgent as it is important. Yes, we should examine how and why we may have made mistakes in the war on terror so far. The question of Iraqi WMDs is an important and pressing one. But if a sensible attempt to examine the past prevents us from acting to oppose growing threats in the future, then the war on terror will be over before it has fully begun. That's why Iran matters. And why the fight over Western policy toward Tehran's tyrants has only just begun.We can't look too closely at the indications we were duped about WMDs, as that would prevent us from being duped again in the next battle in the War On Terror.
I think CAzaelabi is being set up as the fall guy for the intelligence failures for Iraq. Or maybe you all knew that. The idea seems to have floated before the war when the news came out that CAzaelabi, who was apparently our primary source of intelligence, was convicted of fraud in Jordan. But the Newsweek piece pretty much seems to be setting him up for burning at the stake. Both sides of the argument can now hate him. Our intelligence agencies are chastised, and the Administration promises more transparency to ensure this will never happen again.
At least until the next time. Then it'll be "we have to decide now or the entire universe is going to blow up" Tick, tock, tick, tock.
I think when you're a benevolent hyperpower, you can afford to be a little cautious in your overthrowing of countries for strategic purposes. Especially if your being led around by the nose by some joker who appears to have been feeding Rummy exactly the scraps of information he wanted to hear.
Not that we should have all figured this out by simply insisting that more questions be answered, though.
If anything was a failure which resulted in the Iraqi war, it was us as a democracy. There are checks and balances built into our constitution which were designed to prevent idiocies like this from happening in the first place. But then questioning the Administration was unpatriotic back then.
How patriotic is it now?
![]()
Sunset on old glory
Click on the above for a larger image...
Tonight was a beautiful sunset over the Pacific ocean. The sun was in the perfect position behind the continually deteriorating US flag on my neighbors' porch. As I mentioned before, he's a heart surgeon, and keeps the rest of his house and yard in immaculate shape. Never talked to him about politics of any kind...




