Saturday, February 05, 2005

Jonah Goldberg Embarrasses Himself


"Jonah Goldberg knows absolutely nothing about Iraq."

- Juan Cole

Jonah Goldberg Embarrasses Himself

You may have already seen this, but I didn't want any of you to miss this beauty of a post by Juan Cole. He aptly takes on Jonah Goldberg, who has, (true to form), embarrassed himself once again. As Markos has said, I'm surely glad Juan's on 'our side'!

There's more from Professor Cole HERE, where he quotes a James Wolcott blogpost about the situation. He includes this: Oh my God! He actually said it! (Goldberg replied to this comment from Juan Cole's reader at the National Review website):
"But if you actually do get an oppurtunity [sic] to verbally castrate this weasel, ask him if he truly meant "In the weeks prior to the war to liberate Afghanistan, a good friend of mine would ask me almost every day, "Why aren't we killing people yet?" And I never had a good answer for him. Because one of the most important and vital things the United States could do after 9/11 was to kill people." '

He looks to be of military age. Ask him why his sorry a** isn't in the kill zone."]
Goldberg actually says,
"For the record, I did in fact mean it. I wrote it here. As for why my sorry a** isn't in the kill zone, lots of people think this is a searingly pertinent question. No answer I could give -- I'm 35 years old, my family couldn't afford the lost income, I have a baby daughter, my a** is, er, sorry, are a few -- ever seem to suffice."
Goldberg helped send nearly 1500 brave Americans to their deaths and helped maim over 10,000, not to mention all the innocent Iraqi civilians he helped get killed. He helped dragoon 140,000 US troops in Iraq. And he does not have the courage of his convictions. His excuse is that he couldn't afford to take the pay cut!"


___________________________


Goldberg must feel like a real ass after all this, even if his overblown ego would never allow him to admit it.

The Worship of the Market God



The Worship of the
Market God

How we lose spirit, moral value, tradition, and democracy

Reading Nick Lewis' fantastic blog, I came across an article I could not resist reading in its entirety - even on a sunny Saturday afternoon when the outdoor sky was beckoning. It's called The Market as God, written for The Atlantic in 1999. It's theme is timeless, and deals with a strange theological crossover discussion. It speaks of "the religion of The Market" in contrast and comparison to the traditional religions. One of the most interesting comments made by the author, Harvey Cox, makes an all-important distinction between what I see as the differences between the view of Conservatives and Left-leaning people:
"..for all the religions of the world, however they may differ from one another, the religion of The Market has become the most formidable rival, the more so because it is rarely recognized as a religion. The traditional religions and the religion of the global market, as we have seen, hold radically different views of nature. In Christianity and Judaism, for example, "the earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof, the world and all that dwell therein." The Creator appoints human beings as stewards and gardeners *(see UPDATE below)* but, as it were, retains title to the earth. Other faiths have similar ideas. In The Market religion, however, human beings, more particularly those with money, own anything they buy and -within certain limits- can dispose of anything as they choose."
I would venture to say that Conservatives, for all their talk about their adherence to God's principles in a traditionally religious sense, are worshipping the gods of The Market before their traditional Gods. (Isn't that a major breach of some Commandment? Yes, I think it is).

In some ways, The Market religion represents values which directly oppose traditionally religious principles.
."In Catholic theology, through what is called "transubstantiation," ordinary bread and wine become vehicles of the holy. In the mass of The Market a reverse process occurs. Things that have been held sacred transmute into interchangeable items for sale."
Sounds incredibly shallow in spirit, doesn't it?

Enter philosophy and economist-theologians who justify The Market's ways to men:
".."process theology," a relatively contemporary trend influenced by the philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead. In this school although God wills to possess the classic attributes, He does not yet possess them in full, but is definitely moving in that direction. This conjecture is of immense help to theologians for obvious reasons. It answers the bothersome puzzle of theodicy: why a lot of bad things happen that an omnipotent, omnipresent, and omniscient God-especially a benevolent one-would not countenance. Process theology also seems to offer considerable comfort to the theologians of The Market. It helps to explain the dislocation, pain, and disorientation that are the result of transitions from economic heterodoxy to free markets."

Jude's Note: Whitehead believed that without God, the cosmic process would not be an orderly, creative process, but only a chaos. Therefore, Cox is telling you that the worshippers of Wall Street are comforted by thinking they are following a "divinely-created" order by their political gods.
Harvey Cox finds at least one major contradiction between the religion of The Market and the traditional religions. It's a contradiction that seems to be insurmountable. He says:
"All of the traditional religions teach that human beings are finite creatures and that there are limits to any earthly enterprise. A Japanese Zen master once said to his disciples as he was dying, "I have learned only one thing in life: how much is enough." He would find no niche in the chapel of The Market, for whom the First Commandment is "There is never enough." Like the proverbial shark that stops moving, The Market that stops expanding dies. That could happen. If it does, then Nietzsche will have been right after all. He will just have had the wrong God in mind."
I asked myself a couple of questions, which were inspired by this article.

What is the value of a human life in the theology of The Market? I worked in the liability insurance industry for many years and, often, I had to calculate the value of a human life. It sounds cold, but it's done every day in The Market. Life is not sacred there. It is simply calculated. If everything is for sale under the rule of The Market, I imagine that nothing can truly be 'sacred' except the monetary units against which we measure life. There's no time for emotion or spiritual venture. At the office, there are only a few things: a calculator, a set of statistics, and bargaining skills, which are required to measure the worth of one human being's entire life.

How do we know The Market's will? Cox says the diviners and seers of The Market's moods are the "high priests of its mysteries". These "high priests" are Wall Street and all who work for its thriving survival. "The Market may work in mysterious ways, "hid from our eyes," but ultimately it knows best."

Because our government so closely relies upon The Market (especially the GOP, but Democrats are also worshippers), much of their work is "hidden from our eyes". They become part of the mystery in a religion of greed. This is Constitutionally anithetical to the right of the American people to an open government and a civic democracy.

In the religion of The Market, the parishioners are lifeless and spiritless. They're easily dissociated with tradition and their extended family in pursuit of the monetary unit that rules over the course of their lives. They are no more than little Red and Blue players on a Checkers board.

When did we sign away our souls in America? Did anyone record the moment when that happened? Did we get a good deal?

Some think Heaven will be their great reward after a devoted life of Market-worship, but that's another religion altogether.

______________________


* UPDATE- I give credit where credit is due. In today's Washington Post, we see that some Christians are speaking out for their religious duty of stewardship of the Earth. Could this be a healthy beginning?
"We affirm that God-given dominion is a sacred responsibility to steward the earth and not a license to abuse the creation of which we are a part," said the statement, which has been distributed to 50,000 member churches. "Because clean air, pure water, and adequate resources are crucial to public health and civic order, government has an obligation to protect its citizens from the effects of environmental degradation."

Signatories included highly visible, opinion-swaying evangelical leaders such as Haggard, James Dobson of Focus on the Family and Chuck Colson of Prison Fellowship Ministries. Some of the signatories are to meet in March in Washington to develop a position on global warming, which could place them at odds with the policies of the Bush administration.."



Lies are spread too easily by media



Lies are spread too easily by media

When I went to the Google News headlines page, this headline was the top (World) story:

"Rice says Europe ready to move beyond difference with U-S"

I went to the article,and found that, for all the hype in the headline, the article was a big "nothing".

This is how Americans get fooled into thinking all is well, when in reality,they are being given bad information.

The article with the 'major-headline' (if you can even call it an article) says:
Rice says she's hearing "a desire to move on to the next chapter."

Relations were strained over the war -- partly because of comments from Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. He referred to France and Germany -- which opposed the war -- as "old Europe."

What an incomplete piece of shite. An almost total absence of factual investigation. And it's a "top story"...a "big headline".

After reading it, I thought about how Condoleeza Rice has lied through the gap in her teeth about the reasons we went to Iraq. I thought about how she scared Americans about the threat of mushroom clouds coming at Saddam's willing and capable hands (another lie).

I thought about how Condoleeza Rice has betrayed America.

I thought about how she lied for President Bush, who has betrayed America's trust.

I wondered, why the hell would Europeans trust the America that is governed by the Bush administration when most of America no longer trusts them?

We tend to forget that our "national interest" is truly interdependent. The Iraq war has severely damaged our own national interest because a Constitutionally sacred trust has been broken by the Bush administration.

You really have to think about what you're being fed by the media these days. I wonder if they know they are perpetuating lies, or if they are simply in need of far better journalistic training and guidance?


Friday, February 04, 2005

The Emperor's New Hump



The Emperor's New Hump


The New York Times killed a story that could have changed the election—because it could have changed the election. LINK

Following Ted Kennedy's Advice, US Withdrawing 15K Troops from Iraq



Following Ted Kennedy's Advice, US Withdrawing 15K Troops from Iraq


CNN


Right wingnuts can say whatever negative garbage they would like to say about Senator Ted Kennedy. He was right. And 15,000 troops will soon be coming home.
The United States is to pull 15,000 troops out of Iraq, signalling the launch of a new, post-election phase.
Last week, on the FOX News Sunday show, I heard Brit Hume say that Ted Kennedy "would have to be out of his mind" to suggest such a withdrawl so soon. It looks like Brit Hume's hair dye was getting to his brain and affecting his judgement again.


I'm A Hunter Soul



You Are a Hunter Soul



You are driven and ambitious - totally self motiviated to succeed
Actively working to acheive what you want, you are skillful in many areas.
You are a natural predator with strong instincts ... and more than a little demanding.
You are creative, energetic, and an extremely powerful force.

An outdoors person, you like animals and relate to them better than people.
You tend to have an explosive personality, but also a good sense of humor.
People sometimes see you as arrogant or a know it all.
You tend to be a bit of a loner, though you hate to be alone.

Souls you are most compatible with: Seeker Soul and Peacemaker Soul



What Kind of Soul Are You?

Simon Rosenberg, Out of DNC Race, Backs Howard Dean




Howard (with Judy)


Simon Rosenberg, Out of DNC Race, Backs Howard Dean
Activist Simon Rosenberg abandoned his bid for Democratic National Committee chairman on Friday and backed front-runner Howard Dean, moving the former presidential candidate closer to capturing the party title.


This means that Howard Dean is now likely to win the DNC Chair.


YES!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


* UPDATE: Governor Bill Richardson of New Mexico said yesterday that he is supporting Dean for the chairmanship. "The race is essentially over," said Richardson, chairman of the Democratic Governors Association. "He's won fair and square." LINK


U.S. Complicit in Oil For Food Scandal



"This was a bit of a special arrangement here," former U.N. Ambassador John Negroponte explained in an April Senate hearing, to avoid "unnecessarily and unfairly penalizing the people of Jordan [and other countries] from the negative economic consequences of sanctions on Iraq."


U.S. Complicit in Oil For Food Scandal
Moral Perversion and Hyposcrisy Galore

I'd like to know why anyone would be surprised to read this headline.

While the "oh-so-moral" Senator Norm Coleman (who can smile with even more pretty fakery nowadays) publically tries to beat the credibility crap out of Kofi Annan, the newly-appointed ambassador to Iraq, John Negroponte, who was the U.N. ambassador during the Oil-For-food scandal, looked the other way while Jordan and Turkey were granted embargo-breaking oil sales.

I love the way we reward our own scandalous crooks by handing them ambassadorships to countries we choose to occupy, while at the same time we attempt to deligitimize the U.N. for something in which we willingly and knowingly participated.

It's morally perverted.

There are many in the Republican party today (and I'm not saying all of them, but many, especially within in the Bush administration) who are dangerous hypocrites and moral perverts.


Dem Senators Who Voted "Yes" For Gonzales



Dem Senators Who Voted "Yes" For Gonzales

Here are your Democratic senators who voted 'yes' to the confirmation of Alberto Gonzales:

(1) Senator Ken Salazar (Colorado).
(2) Senator Joseph Lieberman (Conn.).
(3) Senator Ben Nelson (Neb.).
(4) Senator Mary Landrieu (La.)
(5) Senator Pryor (Ark).
(6) Senator Bill Nelson (Fla.)

I thought you'd like to know which of your Senators compromised on their party's long-held values of respect for the Rule of Law and Human Rights, when political circumstances were such that they never even had to compromise. If they could have voted for this supporter of torture, they would more than likely sell you out in the blink of an eye.



Thursday, February 03, 2005

Strange Journalism:Iraq the Model in the News Again



Strange Journalism:
Iraq the Model in the News Again


A couple of months ago, I passed along some information about some bloggers who were having doubts about the credibility of a couple of brothers (actually, there are three) by the name of Omar and Muhammad, and Ali. Blogger Jeff Jarvis has championed the brothers' blog, known as Iraq, the Model.

Jay Rosen is talking about the blogging brothers at Press Think. A NY Times article by Sarah Boxer, titled "Pro-American Iraqi Blog Provokes Intrigue and Vitriol, has reported about unsupported allegations that the brothers from Iraq are actually C.I.A. agents. It produces no proof whatsoever for such claims.

Whether they are CIA or propagandists, I am disturbed when I read that these brothers are being financed by ideologues. I don't make a single dime as a blogger. I speak my heart and I am politically obligated to no man or woman besides myself and my own conscience. One of these brothers, Ali, has quit. Poof. Cold turkey. He claims he just can't do this anymore. The other two brothers claim to have met with President Bush. I'm sorry, this is just too bizarre, people! Sarah Boxer writes:
As for financing, Ali said that Iraq the Model had received private donations from Americans, Australians, French, British and Iraqi citizens. In addition, the brothers were promised money from Spirit of America. But, he added, "We haven't got it yet."


What Sarah Boxer was trying to tell us in her report, as a mainstream journalist, seems just a litte fuzzy to many people. A theme that runs through many of the comments I see about the article is that the report seemed more like a blog entry than a professional journalist's NY Times report.

Jay says:
The finished report is supposed to reduce the "befuddling complexity" of the online world, not produce a more exquisite sense of it.

Jeff Sharlet of The Revealer (who is teaching a course at NYU this term on religion and journalism) has said that "good reporting is ordinarily the opposite of opaque, and that the situation should be more intelligible when the journalist's labors are completed."

Jay Rosen has concluded that:
Sarah Boxer's article about Iraq the Model was really about the Net and how you can't trust anyone or anything that originated on it. Leaving the situation opaque, at the level of a brouhaha, was part of the point. (And in that context, suggesting a CIA connection served quite well.) It remains, however, a strange assignment.
I have to wonder if Sarah Boxer wasn't trying to mock the blog world with her opaque article. Was she branding us, with crafty poison pen, a band of hooligans with our hands out for bribes; not to be trusted as you'd trust a NY Times journalist? I hope this was not the case. We honest, hard-working bloggers can be sensitive souls.

Here's what I really want to know. I'd love to know the facts, with which Sarah never bothered to satisfy us. The facts. Sarah ends her article by referring to a statement by one of the brothers, the last line reading "Now that seems genuine..", yet she never offers true investigative insight or a promise of investigative follow-up.

I could have written this piece, and I'm a blogger..not a NY Times journalist. If the NY Times would like a blogger who's a real deal, however, I am always willing and ready. ;)

I mean, are Muhammad, Omar, and Ali CIA agents or paid operatives of any kind? Are they simply propagandists? Have they been paid by DoD or any other governmental agency? Are they the Armstrong Williams of Iraq? Has anyone bothered to dig into this and give us a real investigative story? Are they too afraid they'll wind up suffering the fate of Dan Rather if they REALLY try to "dig in"? For Sarah, whose article I found entertaining, it seems as if it was easier just to muddy up the waters and make political bloggers look like most of them on the take.

I have to say that I deeply resent that soft accusation.


Bush Foreign Policy Devoid of Solid Moral Values



"Our generational commitment to the advance of freedom, especially in the Middle East, is now being tested and honoured in Iraq."

--President GW Bush


Bush Foreign Policy Devoid of Solid Moral Values
His actions betray his words

I have a bone to pick with President Bush about his frothing rush to be Reaganesque.

The BBC has an excellent analysis of foreign policy-related statements made by President Bush in his SOTU speech. World Affairs Correspondent Paul Reynolds felt that Bush's use of language was reminiscent of Ronald Reagan and the Cold War.

He says:
where President Reagan called for liberty in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, so President Bush declares that he is trying to do the same for the Middle East.
While President Bush may intend to be the NeoReagan and saviour of the Middle East, there are some things he and many Americans are forgetting.

President Bush wants to lead the world to freedom, yet through his actions, most of the world sees him as a threat - especially the people who live in the very part of the world he wishes to change. The way he chooses to deliver freedom to the Middle East has been terribly unsuccessful, in reality.

The world sees directly through the broad and sweeping freedom-speak of George W. Bush and regularly glimpses, with horror, a little bitty mind with a big, big agenda. The most appalling thing about that agenda is the absence of real moral values and an ignorance about the culture and worldview of the part of the world he wishes to change.

Lenten Reflection #2



Lenten Reflection #2

Today's reflection is from a book by Carol Osborn titled "Nothing Left Unsaid". Carol's father, gravely ill, was about to be taken into surgery. She reveals how the language of love is spoken in the simple stories that we tell. Love can grow so large that it can break your heart. There's so much we wish to say when we are fully conscious of the fact that our time here on Earth is limited. There are times when we are not sure how to say what we want to say to a loved one when "the time" comes - and you know that one of you must part with this life. The simplest of words can carry loving messages we wish to relay in those unspeakable moments of sorrow and loss.

Listen to Carol's story.




"Despite his discomfort and the effort it obviously took, Dad wanted to share a story with me about something that had happened to him during World War II. Stationed in the Phillipines, far away from home, he had bonded deeply with his companions. Medics, sent to care for those injured and ailing on the front lines, he and his companions lived through dangerous times together.

Then, for no apparent reason, there was a lull in the fighting. Shortly after, a dispatch arrived, offering the medics much-needed R&R. The boys were free to take the day and go to swim in a lake nearby. Dad readied himself for the celebration, but soon a second dispatch arrived. This one contained orders that Dad, only, was to be shifted later that afternoon from his companions to a new battalion many miles away. He would have to say goodbye to his friends while he awaited transport to arrive to take him to his new assignment. His friends hugged Dad an emotional farewell then boarded the company’s Jeep. Dad stood there a good long time, listening to their laughter and singing fade into silence, feeling alone and abandoned. Every moment he waited for his transport to come felt like an eternity. And of course, the transport was hours late. When the driver finally arrived, he apologized, explaining that there had been an accident and the road had been closed. “A Jeep, carrying a group of medics, careened off the road and over the side of the cliff into the lake below. All had been instantly killed.” Dad paused to take a deep breath, then went on to finish his story quietly.

I would have been on that Jeep, having nothing more serious on my mind than going swimming with my buddies at the lake.” I know what Dad was saying to me. He did not explicitly use the words “Life is precious” or “Every day has been a gift.” But these words, and more, were in the squeeze of his hand before he drifted off into sleep.



As I stood there beside him, thinking about his story, my mind wandered back to the sunny afternoon over forty years ago when Dad had run beside my wobbly two-wheeler, teaching me to ride. As long as his hand made contact with my arm, the bike stayed upright and I felt like I was riding on my own. But the moment he withdrew his hand, the bike would suddenly careen and crash. Eventually, of course, I pedaled faster than even he could run. Until this moment, I had not remembered the last time I felt his hand on my shoulder; I had only remembered the first time I took off down the road holding strong and steady. I had taken so much for granted in my life. Suddenly, I was overwhelmed with gratitude for it all. There were no words to communicate my feelings, so we just kept on telling stories and sharing memories — until the very last moment they came to get Dad and roll him away to surgery.

The stories and memories we shared were simple and sweet, And yet, just being together — sometimes sharing our thoughts, sometimes sitting in silence, some kind of completion was taking place that went far beyond the words that were being spoken."

Bush tells the truth - Twice!



Bush tells the truth - Twice!

President Bush told the truth at least a couple of times last night during his SOTU speech.

At the beginning of the speech, he averred that it was a great privilege to have been placed in office by the votes of people he serves. That was no lie. He serves his supportive base very well. It's the other 50% of the nation he plans to screw with every ounce of political capital he's gained.

He said he will listen to anyone who has a "good idea" to offer when it comes to Social Security. That was no lie. We know what he thinks of Democrats' ideas. They're all bad. Therefore, he will not be listening to them.


Wednesday, February 02, 2005

Byron Norwood’s Mother



Byron Norwood’s Mother

I felt so sorry for Byron Norwood’s mother at the State of the Union speech tonight. She forever has lost her son in a war of lies; a war now unpopular with the majority of Americans. The best (and closest) symbolic reason she could find for her son’s ultimate sacrifice was embodied in the Iraqi woman who stood one row below her in the audience.

Two women caught up in a liar’s web, they embraced. The Iraqi woman seemed truly grateful to the U.S. for bringing a war for democracy to her country. Completing the liar’s web, the dead Marine’s dog tags became entangled in the democracy-seeking woman’s dress-jacket as the women continued to hug. For a brief moment, they were as one.

GOP cheerleaders showed appreciation almost wildly, perhaps a bit too long and loud for Byron Norwood’s mother’s comfort.

President Bush had prefaced the introduction of Byron Norwood’s parents by saying that Byron “died for our freedom”.

But he didn’t. Byron Norwood died for a nation inside which his Commander in Chief told him were dangerous weapons of mass destruction. The weapons, Byron’s Commander in Chief told him, were imminently threatening U.S. national security and the lives of Byron’s countrymen. The prospect of a mushroom cloud was lurking. That, we now know for certain, was untrue, and seems to have been no more than a ruse to turn Iraq into President Bush’s testing ground for him to become some kind of ‘Freedom-Messiah’ for posterity’s sake, all at great risk to the lives of U.S. troops.

“Bring ‘em on,” he’d said. As one might expect, when invited and dared, insurgents ‘brought ‘em on’. What was once a land run by a internationally-contained tin-pot dictator has become a haven for something far more insidiously destructive to the safety of the Iraqi people and the preservation of their culture.

Iraq is now a magnet for terrorists. Iraq is in shamble, traces of their cultural history destroyed. Before the pre-emptive war, there was no provable connection whatsoever between Iraq’s government and the 9/11 terrorists, even though we were lied to, time and time again, about it. [Speaking of 9/11, remember how many times you heard it invoked during the Republican convention? How many times did you hear it tonight?]

He was a brave and loyal soldier, but Byron Norwood didn’t die for ‘our freedom’. We’ve been a free nation for centuries now, and the only threat to our freedom these days seems to come from within.

Let’s be honest. Byron died for Iraq’s freedom, a freedom that has not arrived yet. Elections do not equate to democracy. It’s going to be a long haul for the Iraqis, and it’s not the U.S. military’s responsibility to unilaterally fight a never-ending and violent battle for a foreign government when there is no threat to our own national security. I’ll wager that Byron didn’t even understand wht he was actually fighting (and dying) for. If there was one salvation for Mrs. Norwood, I’d imagine it was the day the elections went off with less than 50 Iraqis being blown to bits. It gave her what she could grab onto as a noble reason for her son’s sacrifice.

How many more U.S. soldiers will die for a foreign government in a war they never should have been sent to initiate in the first place? Millions of Americans are gullible. We know that, after seeing their acceptance of being lied to (so boldly) by their own government and forgetting so easily, with the tried-and-true recipe of a few repeated lines in a political speech, an emotional scene set up for political effect, and a few ounces of all-too-positive media coverage.

If we say we’ll be leaving when democracy takes hold in Iraq, that might mean “never”. It’s time for an exit strategy to be made clear to the American public.

I don’t want to have to see another American soldier’s mother hugging another woman from some other foreign land whose sovereignty we had no business meddling in next year, or the year after that. President Bush’s overt threats to Syria and Iran tonight gave me no comfort or trust in his future judgements


Jesus Pan



Peter Jesus Pan



*A tip of the hat to Tony Francis

Tonight's SOTU Speech



Tonight's SOTU Speech

President Bush has been so dismally predictable up to now, that I feel as if I could write up my critique of tonight's State of The Union speech before he even opens his mouth to speak. I am already picturing the cheers and the standing ovation after the President gives mention of the recent farce of an election in Iraq. (Oh, yay.)

According to Atrios, the G.O.P. is intent on politicizing everything Iraq-related. Congressional Republicans are reportedly planning to show up at tonight's State of the Union address with purple ink on their fingers to send the message that they support Iraqi voters. At Buzzflash, they suggest trying the color red. A good idea. They may take credit, then, for all the dead at their bloodied hands and lying tongues.

A leak of the talking points for the SOTU is HERE at Raw Story.

William Rivers Pitt, hard at work at his Truthout blog, summons the memory of a State of the Union 'best-of-hypocrite-highlights' past, the infamous "sixteen words", and the reality that followed the spewing of those irresponsible words. Says Will:
"None of the agents themselves were found. A few rusted-out munitions were dug up. The mobile biologial weapons labs were weather balloon platforms sold to Iraq by the British in the 1980s. The uranium from Niger story has been so thoroughly debunked that a special investigator is looking into the lie. Several journalists are in the dock because they carried water for a couple of Bush hatchetmen who went after the CIA-agent wife of the man who first blew the whistle on this nonsense.

That's quite a bit of disgraceful history inserted into the long story of the State of the Union, yes? Way to be, George.

One specific policy proposal has been leaked prior to tonight's speech. Anyone on any kind of governmental assistance program better perk up and read this closely:


Bush to Call for Near-Freeze in Spending: Aide
By Adam Entous
Reuters
Tuesday 01 February 2005

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Bush will call for a near-freeze in the overall growth of government spending not connected to national defense to try to rein in record deficits, a senior administration official said on Tuesday.

Bush will make the proposal in Wednesday's State of the Union address, previewing the fiscal 2006 budget he will send to Congress next Monday.

A senior administration official pointed to Congress' approval last year of a 0.8 percent cap in non-defense, non-homeland security discretionary spending, and said Bush "will articulate a similar type of goal or principle, which his budget will adhere to."

With the White House projecting inflation at about 2 percent, government programs subject to the cap would face the budgetary equivalent of a cut in spending from levels enacted in fiscal 2005.

The senior administration official left open the possibility the cap would be less than 0.8 percent, saying Bush "believes we can even go further" in restraining spending growth.

Having pushed through sweeping tax cuts in Bush's first term as president, "it's now time also to focus on the priority of fiscal discipline," the official added.

Read the rest from Reuters."

--WR Pitt
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Bush administration will campaign hard on a platform filled with many lies and scare-tactics in the coming months in order to acccomplish their goal. That goal is to slowly kill any form of democratic socialism in America. The buffer between your economic security and the natural flaws in our imperfect Capitalism-based system will disappear. You, my friends, will be left with no protection as you plunge to the abyss of the greedy mammonites. You think you've seen the worst of exploitation of the masses for the benefit of the few? Just wait until your built-in protections are no longer there!

Oh, well - what good is democracy, anyhow? No one really seems to care these days. It's much easier to fall into a comfy chair and stare at the framed stage the Republican party loves to set and watch their scary movies.

What about your economic welfare? Your future? There's always that charity down the street from you. I'd tell you to start saying your prayers, but that faith-based charity will force you to pray, anyhow, if you want what they're dishing out.

Welcome to Bushworld.

Right Bloggers Stalk CNN



Right Bloggers Stalk CNN

According to Rebecca MacKinnon, Right-wing blogs, including Little Green Footballs, have moved their sights from CBS to CNN. Find out why by visiting Rebecca's blog. It involves CNN's Eason Jordan, at Davos this week, asserting that he knew of 12 journalists who had not only been killed by US troops in Iraq, but of whom had, in fact, been targeted. Rebecca is hoping that, perhaps, other CNN reporters and free lance journalists blogging from Iraq (ie: Kevin Sites) will weigh in and let us know what they think.

Common Ills: Stories You Shouldn't Miss



Common Ills: Stories You Shouldn't Miss

Many thanks to Rob for the mention of Iddybud at Common Ills this week. It's not very often that I get to see my name up there with the likes of Katrina vanden Heuvel.

Since we're on the topic of The Common Ills, I wanted to mention a couple of their recent blog reports. (They're all superb, but these really stand out).

Be sure not to miss IRAQ ELECTIONS- DON'T BUY OPERATION HAPPY TALK It's everything I would like to have written. Why duplicate the effort when it's already been done so beautifully and competently?

Adam Nagourney and the NY Times have scrambled to get on the story they missed on Monday--Howard Dean emerged Tuesday as the almost assured new leader of the Democratic National Committee. (My note: "YEEEEHA!" I don't know about Adam, but count me in as one Nagurney who DOES support Gov. Dean for DNC chair! )

**Scrutiny Hooligans has a great piece on the Howard Dean story as well. See Give 'em Hope, Howard!


As The Lenten Season Approaches


People with disabilities are humanity’s privileged witnesses. They can teach everyone about the love that saves us;
they can become heralds of a new world, no longer dominated by force, violence and aggression, but by love, solidarity and acceptance
...”

--quoted from a statement by Pope John Paul II in his January, 2004 message to an International Symposium in Rome

As The Lenten Season Approaches

The Lenten season will begin a week from today.
Being raised Roman Catholic, Lent is a season with deep meaning to me.
I believe we are all sojourners before our creator, whoever we deem that creator to be. We're little more than tenants on Earth, as all who came before us were. Our days on the earth are little more than time spent in shadows. Where our hope springs from is a deeply personal matter, but there is no doubt we all require hope to guide us through the shadows...we need a map to steer us through the shallows.

In the coming week, I plan to take extra blog-time for reflection on the Lenten season, politics aside. My secular friends, I beg, you will have to indulge me.

I would like to extend prayers and healing wishes for the Pope, who is gravely ill as I write these words today.

I wish to begin with some words from Henri Nouwen, who came clearly to a realization that his vocation was to spend his life among the poor. [* not the unwealthy, but the poor in spirit and the disabled.] In the mid-80s, he made a break with Harvard, which was a difficult one because he felt that he could do much there. He'd begun to believe, however, that the way, for him, was the "downward mobility" of living with the poor, rather than the "upward mobility" of the academic world. He moved to Trosly, France, where the L'Arche community for the disabled was founded by Jean Vanier and Pere Thomas. Having succeeded in the academic world where productivity was an expectation, Nouwen discovered the pain and joy of caring for people who some had seen as "useless". He was attracted to the extreme vulnerability and honesty of the disabled community. These disabled peopel were to become his teachers. They were the people that were going to bring him the words that he was destined to bring to others in his spiritual writing.

Henri Nouwen writes about this one Good Friday experience with the disabled in his book: The Road to Daybreak: A Spiritual Journey. Whether or not you are a Christian, I ask you to set aside any prejudice you may be harboring and listen to the heart of Henri Nouwen. What he derived from this experience is the inspiration that could only come from a communion of unconditional love. What we can personally take away from Nouwen's words is up to us.

In them, I have found great hope....

“During the liturgy at the L’Arche Community in Trosly, Pere Thomas and Pere Gilbert took from the wall the huge cross that hangs behind the altar and held it so that the whole community could come and kiss the dead body of Christ.

They all came, more than four hundred people – handicapped men and women and their assistants and friends. Everybody seemed to know very well what they were doing: expressing their love and gratitude for him who gave his life for them. As they were crowding around the cross and kissing the feet and the head of Jesus, I closed my eyes and could see his sacred body stretched out and crucified upon our planet earth. I saw the immense suffering of humanity during the centuries: people killing each other; people dying from starvation and epidemics; people driven from their homes; people sleeping on the streets of large cities; people clinging to each other in desperation; people flagellated, tortured, burned and mutilated; people alone in locked flats, in prison dungeons, in labor camps; people craving a gentle word, a friendly letter, a consoling embrace; people – children, teenagers, adults, middle-aged, and elderly – all crying out with an anguished voice: ‘My God, my God, why have you forsaken us?

Imagining the naked, lacerated body of Christ stretched out over our globe, I was filled with horror. But as I opened my eyes I saw Jacques, who bears the marks of suffering in his face, kiss the body with passion and tears in his eyes. I saw Ivan carried on Michael’s back. I saw Edith coming in her wheelchair. As they came – walking or limping, seeing or blind, hearing or deaf – I saw the endless procession of humanity gathering around the sacred body of Jesus, covering it with their tears and their kisses, and slowly moving away from it comforted and consoled by such great love. There were signs of relief; there were smiles breaking through tear-filled eyes; there were hands in hands and arms in arms. With my mind’s eye I saw the huge crowds of isolated, agonizing individuals walking away from the cross together, bound by the love they had seen with their own eyes and touched with their own lips. The cross of horror became the cross of hope, the tortured body became the body that gives new life, the gaping wounds became the source of forgiveness, healing and reconciliation. Pere Thomas and Pere Gilbert were still holding the cross. The last people came, knelt, and kissed the body, and left. It was quiet, very quiet..."

--Henri Nouwen

MIA in Iraq: $9 Billion U.S. Taxpayer Dollars


"Wake up, America!
Your democracy is disappearing!"


--Congressman Dennis Kucinich
see link

MIA in Iraq:
$9 Billion U.S. Taxpayer Dollars


Over the past nine months, we've had a mysterious disappearance of $30 million per day in Iraq funds.

Where is our $9 billion?

Did it go to dirty bribes?
Was it out-and-out theft?

Where is Claudia "oil-for-food" Rosett when America truly needs a great investigative journalist? Too busy delegitimizing the U.N., I guess.

Is there a new "Iran-Contra"-style scandal looming?

Why is there no call for a Grand Jury investigation for our unaccounted-for billions? Doesn't democracy (small d) mean ANYTHING anymore? Are Americans that stupid?

Which blogger or journalist might get the "deep throat" tip that will win them the Pulitzer? Josh Marshall? William Rivers Pitt? Duncan? Jerome? Markos? Anonymoses? We can hope that one of these excellent bloggers might be chosen as a trusted carrier of truth, if our own government abandons their sworn duty to the people.

I thank Dennis Kucinich for keeping this at the forefront for public discourse and action. I also thank Reps Tom Lantos and Henry Waxman.

WRITE YOUR REPRESENTATIVES TODAY!
TELL THEM YOU WANT AN INVESTIGATION.
MAKE YOUR GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABLE!