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Thursday, 25 March 2004

Media media

Timothy Noah reports in Slate that a reporter has been fired for doing his job:

Nick Smith's allegation that a member of the House leadership tried to bribe him into supporting the Medicare drug bill. According to Roll Call, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is investigating the matter, too. But a Kalamazoo talk-radio host whose scoop made it impossible to sweep Smith's allegations under the rug is out of a job.

Kevin Vandenbroek, formerly of WKZO radio, should have gotten a raise for his contribution to the Smith story, which was picked up by Slate and subsequently by just about every other national publication covering the Medicare bribe. Instead, Vandenbroek was fired last month, apparently for political reasons.

Hesiod, recommending a storm of angry letters, has contact details for WKZO and the local broadcasters and papers. He's right - this kind of thing keeps happening because only right-wingers make their displeasure known.

I found this quote from an article about making books free online at Modulator, who thinks the RIAA needs to pay attention to this:

What happened was precisely the reverse of what the publisher expected. Instead of lost sales, the sales of the book shot up. In the few weeks since the text went online, more copies of this book left our warehouse than during the whole of the last decade.
Readers of The Sideshow will, of course, be unsurprised.

Pacifica Radio Reborn - Pacifica has been with us since 1950. But a funny thing happened not so long ago that is part of the growing takeover of media by the right:

At midnight December 23, 2000 on Instructions from Pacifica Executive Director Bessie Wash, all the locks at WBAI were changed, and security guards hired by Ms. Wash began barring entrance to the station. One of those people barred was Amy Goodman the host of the award winning show "Democracy Now." She was told by newly appointed interim general manager Ultrice Leid that she could not go in. Ultrice Leid was a programmer at WBAI recently passed over for a Program Director's position by long time General Manager Valerie van Isler. Ms. van Isler found herself subsequently fired as well, Program Director Bernard White - co-host of the morning drive show - was also fired.
Fortunately, this was turned around, but like I say, there is never a time to be complacent.

Buzzflash's Maureen Farrell on The Clear Channel Controversy, One Year On (Why Howard Stern's Woes Are Your Woes, Too):

Though plenty of journalists have pooh-poohed Stern's concerns, anyone who's been paying attention knows how accurate his assessments are. When Clear Channel president John Hogan appeared before members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, he openly admitted that though Stern had not committed any fresh sins, the company decided to drop him anyway.
The more I hear about this, the more I think Howard may be right about it. Though this snowball started rolling at least 20 years ago, these things have been happening more and more often over the last three years.

And it wouldn't be a bad idea to let your representatives know how you feel about the whole indecency campaign:

Unless Sen. Byron Dorgan's (D-ND) controversial provision throws an anti-consolidation wrench in the anti-indecency works, [The Nation] the Senate will likely pass this indecency legislation (how many Senators will vote against "decency?") and the effect on free speech will be immediate.

"The very notion (of the legislation) runs counter to everything prescribed in the First Amendment," Marvin Johnson, an ACLU legislative counsel, said. "The vagueness of the language will lead broadcasters and individuals to stifle their remarks and remain silent rather than run the risk of facing an FCC fine. Not only will our First Amendment rights suffer, but so will the national dialogue."

"This is going to be a very dark day in our history," Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-N.Y) said. "We're going down the slippery slope of eroding our Constitution."

Meanwhile, Pissed Off American has a look at pseudo-journalism used to sell the budget-busing prescription drug plan shoe-horned through Congress last session.
02:33 GMT

Wednesday, 24 March 2004

It depends what the meaning of "lie" is

Let's look again at this quote from Monday:

Clarke continued, "It was a serious look. We got together all the FBI experts, all the CIA experts. We wrote the report. We sent the report out to CIA and found FBI and said, 'Will you sign this report?' They all cleared the report. And we sent it up to the president and it got bounced by the National Security Advisor or Deputy. It got bounced and sent back saying, 'Wrong answer. ... Do it again.'
Did anyone read or hear that and think that the report actually had an accompanying note saying, "Wrong answer. ...Do it again"? I sure didn't. I assumed this was a paraphrase or summing up of something that conveyed the same message in more formal - and probably more oblique - terms.

It turns out that the notation on the returned document, from Steven Hadley, was,

Please update and resubmit.
John Cole of Balloon Juice thinks that makes Clarke a liar. He considers Hadley's note to be no more than a responsible request for follow-up.

I don't think so. Clarke was short-handing the description of an entire process in which the administration repeatedly refused to accept what was already demonstrably true: that Al Qaeda was responsible for 9/11 and Iraq was not. There was never any reason to think Iraq had anything to do with it. The report in question was not even necessary, and was only done because the administration wanted Clarke to come up with the non-existent goods on Iraq.

The term "resubmit" means the submission has not been accepted. If Clarke thinks his conclusions were rejected, it's because they were. It's pretty clear, in the context of what had been going on, that "Please update and resubmit" means precisely the same thing as "Wrong answer. ...Do it again." We already know what the right answer is, because - as we may recall from Barton Gellman's story in The Washington Post - Clarke had already given the same conclusion to George W. Bush himself on September 12th:

"Go back over everything, everything," Bush said, according to Clarke's account. "See if Saddam did this."

"But Mr. President, al Qaeda did this," Clarke replied.

"I know, I know, but . . . see if Saddam was involved. Just look. I want to know any shred."

Reminded that the CIA, FBI and White House staffs had sought and found no such link before, Clarke said, Bush spoke "testily." As he left the room, Bush said a third time, "Look into Iraq, Saddam."

So, in essence, Bush is telling him to "resubmit" every time he doesn't like Clarke's answer.

I understand the process of making submissions to government, having been asked for a few myself, and no one expects you to resubmit the same document in light of new evidence. I'm sure Clarke knows that, too. If our intelligence services had unearthed new information that contradicted their earlier findings, that would be the substance of a new report, not an addendum to an old one. I sincerely doubt that anyone would have had to tell Clarke that if the situation changed he should inform the administration. That was, after all, his job.

Cole's "evidence" for further alleged lying by Clarke appears to be based on the WashPost series from 2001 that painted Bush as some kind of a decisive leader in the aftermath of 9/11. But we all know that the authors of that piece were not present in the White House to view the events described -

This series, by Post reporters Bob Woodward and Dan Balz, is based on interviews with President Bush, Vice President Cheney and other key officials. Interviews were supplemented by notes of National Security Council meetings made available, along with notes taken by several participants.
- rather, they were working stenography for an administration that produced heroic fiction about a president we do not have. (You don't really think that Bush and his coterie would have given interviews admitting that they'd screwed-up royally, lied about where Bush was and why he was flying around the midwest, and tried to figure out ways to ignore Al Qaeda so they could chase Saddam instead, do you?) While Bush's supporters have been sleeping in their cocoons, they seem unaware that the series in question was the beginning of the end for Bob Woodward's credibility; most of its "factual" details have been "updated" continually since it was originally published, and as each story changes when new information about what really went on in the White House comes to light.

Time and again, people leave the administration when it becomes clear that the level of irresponsibility and dissembling this White House requires is more than they can bear to go along with - or to provide. Time and again, when they give their reasons, they are followed by a campaign of smears in an attempt to dismiss what they have to say. How many times does this have to happen before people wake up and wonder why that is, and whether they should really be carrying water for these people?
23:40 GMT


Quick notes

My latest DNO piece is called "It's About Power."

DHinMI at Daily Kos writes a letter to Joseph Lieberman. And Mike Finley writes to Maureen Dowd.

Do you think the Clarke revelations have been ruining Andrew Sullivan's vacation?

Seth at Infothought doesn't trust Declan McCullagh's journalism. And who can blame him?

Bush Allows Gays to Be Fired for Being Gay.

Steve Bell on Bush & gay marriage (via Black Box Recorder).
13:02 GMT


Blogospheric

Bill Scher has a couple of observations about the reaction to Clarke's revelations. The first is a memo to the press: Fierce Damage Control Means Something To Hide. But the second is this: Liberals Not Hysterical Enough, Who Knew? Well, it's like I've been saying since Watergate: No matter how cynical I am, I'm still not cynical enough.

Perhaps in the same vein, Scorpio tries on a tin-foil hat.

Skippy returns to the subject of the disappearing middle-class and makes an astute observation about how moving companies abroad to make production less expensive doesn't necessarily translate to cheap prices at home. He's right; savings for the company are far less often passed on to the consumer than is being claimed. The truth is that the money goes to the guys at the top and their investors. You know that when their costs go up, those costs are passed on to you in rising prices. How often have you seen the price go down as a result of savings in production costs?

Gregory Harris at Planet Swank briefly notes that the press got a little weird, with The Wall Street Journal putting a "devastating compilation of the lies inconsistencies in Administration statements about 9/11" on the front page, while The Washington Post "devotes op-ed space to Condi Rice for a "rebuttal" on the very day she refuses to make the same claims under oath before the 9/11 Commission."

I like the way John McCrory phrased it (and not just because he linked me): But it isn't just the freakish and bizarre theories of this crowd that are dismaying. It's that their perspective was stuck in an outdated Cold War worldview. When challenged by a new form of warfare - stateless terrorism - that commenced with America's second Pearl Harbor, these folks responded as though nothing had changed; Rather than fight this new form of war and fight the people who attacked us, they chose to fight a conventional war against people who didn't.

At Notes on the Atrocities, Jeff notices the disturbing appearance of cheers and applause in White House transcripts of Bush's stump speeches. Creepy.

Strata Lucida notices A Telling Slip in Bush's speech celebrating the anniversary of the invasion.

Suburban Guerilla dances on Powell's head. Oh, I forgot, I promised myself I'd try to remember always to refer to him as Colin "My Lai" Powell.
00:48 GMT


Tuesday, 23 March 2004

In other news...

At Balkinization, Hate Speech Codes For Broadcasting? on the FCC's recent decision that Bono's use of the word "fucking" (as in "fucking brilliant") during the Golden Globes violated federal laws against broadcast indecency.

At Orcinus, intolerance is bad for business, and is this the shape of things to come?

Wonkette interprets Bush, and explains the Joke Deficit.

Feorag passed me a link for this story in the Edinburgh News: Huge rise in vice girl attacks since city tolerance zone axed. ATTACKS on prostitutes have increased tenfold since the city's unofficial tolerance zone was scrapped, new figures revealed today. Of course, they were warned. Of course, they won't learn from it. (Have I mentioned lately that liberal policies reduce crime?)

Human Descent
13:20 GMT


Iraq story update

Atrios offers you the chance to watch Arlen Specter lie to America, and advises we support Specter's opponent in the coming race.

Remember Yuval Rubinstein's prediction when the man to smear was Paul O'Neill? Well, he was right. (Also, this is worth a read: Having said that, it is important to remember that Republicans have not won a presidential election outright since 1988. What's disturbing is their utter inability to accept this.)

Lambert has the quote from Condi Rice laying the decisions of the Bush administration at Clinton's feet. (And Tresy reports on Al Qaeda's endorsement of Bush in the election.)

The Road to Surfdom looks at a previous book on the Bush administration's response to terrorism, The Age of Sacred Terror, by former National Security Council directors Daniel Benjamin and Steven Simon, in posts called They were gambling nothing would happen, America's leaders may not yet have taken al-Qaeda's full measure, and Administration "opposed crackdowns" on al Qaeda money laundering that show concurrence with Clarke's view - which he also addresses (here and here, and here and here) in a series of posts called, "Reading Richard Clarke's new book."

Liberal Oasis notes an interesting sidelight to the Clarke revelations, in that Senator Chuck Hagel (R-NE) is pretty openly not disagreeing with Clarke's evaluation (in addition to which he never attacks John Kerry). On the other hand, there's Joseph Lieberman....(And Richard Lugar may also have his doubts about the Bush plan for the future of Iraq, according to Matt Yglesias at Tapped.)
12:12 GMT


Monday, 22 March 2004

What the Papers say

The New York Times, I'm told, put the Clarke story deep inside the front section on page 18 or so. If this is truly the case, a letter-writing campaign is certainly in order - a deluge. Write to the NYT and tell them that an important story like this belongs on the front page.

Weirdly, Judith Miller's piece, Former Terrorism Official Criticizes White House on 9/11, isn't too bad.

In a new book, Richard A. Clarke, who was counterterrorism coordinator for President Bill Clinton and President Bush, asserts that while neither president did enough to prevent the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the Bush administration has undermined American national security by using the 9/11 attacks for political advantage and ignoring the threat of Al Qaeda in order to invade Iraq.

Mr. Clarke, who has spent more than 30 years as a civil servant in Republican and Democratic administrations, issues a highly critical assessment of the Bush White House in "Against All Enemies: Inside America's War on Terror," which is being released on Monday.

Here's the top graf in Carl Hulse's story, Debate Grows Over Bush's Handling of Terror Threat:
The accusations by Richard A. Clarke, the former White House counterterrorism specialist, that the Bush administration failed to take the threat of Al Qaeda seriously before Sept. 11 overtook other campaign developments on Sunday and promised to reverberate this week when the Sept. 11 commission conducts a public hearing.
Note that the story does not begin with the damning information that the White House actually tried to avoid going after Al Qaeda and instead exploit the situation to attack Iraq. The following paragraph goes immediately to:
The White House moved quickly to respond to the harsh criticism by Mr. Clarke and his account of how top White House advisers were fixated on Iraq. It issued a detailed rebuttal that said Mr. Bush had "specifically recognized the threat posed by Al Qaeda."
The Washington Post site has two items, both by Barton Gellman, one of which says it appears on page A1, and in contrast to the NYT articles, they concentrate on the response to 9/11 at the top rather than the pre-9/11 negligence. I didn't like the title, though - Memoir Criticizes Bush 9/11 Response, which suggests this is just a book review rather than the word of the man who was actually in charge of terrorism for the United States government. However, the top grafs do spell out the problem with Iraq:
On the evening of Sept. 12, 2001, according to a newly published memoir, President Bush wandered alone around the Situation Room in a White House emptied by the previous day's calamitous events.

Spotting Richard A. Clarke, his counterterrorism coordinator, Bush pulled him and a small group of aides into the dark paneled room.

"Go back over everything, everything," Bush said, according to Clarke's account. "See if Saddam did this."

"But Mr. President, al Qaeda did this," Clarke replied.

"I know, I know, but . . . see if Saddam was involved. Just look. I want to know any shred."

Reminded that the CIA, FBI and White House staffs had sought and found no such link before, Clarke said, Bush spoke "testily." As he left the room, Bush said a third time, "Look into Iraq, Saddam."

"Any shred."

(White House rebuttal.)

The other page is a transcript of an online discussion between washingtonpost.com, Gellman, and readers about the reaction in Washington to Clarke's charges. Here's a little bit of it:

Washington, D.C.: Are there any allegations in Mr. Clarke's book that have been specifically refuted? We are hearing plenty of vague, blanket dismissals of his claims, and suggestions of his political motives, but nothing on the substance of his argument.

Barton Gellman: Not clear if you mean refute or rebut. For the latter, the White House says, for instance, that Clarke is wrong to say Bush delayed use of the armed Predator drone to go after bin Laden. Administration says the drone just wasn't ready until at lease August or early September, so they didn't lose much time before 9/11. My reporting a long time ago (my producer, I think, will post the links) found that it could have flown by early spring, and that Clarke among others pushed hard for that. The administration hadn't decided its terror policy yet, and didn't force resolution to a Pentagon v. CIA dispute on who would be responsible for using and paying for the drone. (Not what you may think -- neither one wanted it.)

Arlington, Va.: Everyone blew off Paul O'Neill's book as the ravings of an old man. Do you think people will take another look at what he had to say in light of Clarke's book which sounds like it corroborates much of what O'Neill said.

Barton Gellman: I don't know about "everyone." His book got the sharply partisan responses that have become usual in American politics in recent years. O'Neill is generally seen as a fairly serious guy, who speaks his mind, and people agreed or disagreed mainly from their own political values and judgments. Where he and Clarke overlap is in asserting that the Bush team had made up its mind to invade Iraq long before 9/11. Clarke offers more documentation, because he was in more of those meetings.

I'm glad he picked up that distinction between "refute" and "rebut". I've noticed a lot of articles and public statements where (partisan or just lame) hacks treat any old responses by the White House as refutations when, in fact, no charges are ever properly answered at all, and when they seem to be getting direct answers, those answers turn out to be lies. There hasn't been a single refutation yet, to this or any other charges. A denial is not a refutation. And neither is a non-denial denial.
23:49 GMT

Maniacs & Lying Liars - again and again

The big news, of course, is Richard Clarke's book tour, which has involved a number of fascinating interviews, including on 60 Minutes last night. Atrios and Josh Marshall have both been covering this, and at the moment it all seems so devastating that the only question some people have is whether the other side will manage to smear Clarke effectively or just crash his plane.

The blow-out revelation is that the administration was told on the day that Al Qaeda was responsible and Iraq had nothing to do with it, and yet they refused to accept this information and kept demanding further investigation to find an Iraq connection.

Clarke continued, "It was a serious look. We got together all the FBI experts, all the CIA experts. We wrote the report. We sent the report out to CIA and found FBI and said, 'Will you sign this report?' They all cleared the report. And we sent it up to the president and it got bounced by the National Security Advisor or Deputy. It got bounced and sent back saying, 'Wrong answer. ... Do it again.'
So it's absolutely clear: Our intelligence experts were all correct in their assessment, and the White House itself refused to accept their judgment.

Atrios finds a neat summing-up from Steve Gilliard:

If Richard Clarke is right, and there is every reason to think he is, the US was days, if not hours, away from letting Osama Bin Laden get away with murder.
[...]
Perle and Wolfwowitz, despite all available evidence, would have let Osama sit in Afghanistan untouched just to get Saddam. The fact that no state would have ever launched a 9/11 attack and not expect a B-2 response was beyond them.
[My emphasis.]

Let's keep this in mind, and it's really simple: the Bush response to 9/11 would have let Osama get away with murder, killing thousands of innocent people. Only the professionals of the CIA and FBI prevented this insanity. When Bush was told that "you'll lose the whole world", was he prevented from attacking Iraq.

Temporarily. But, ultimately, they thought they could lie their way past that, too. And when it didn't work, it was everyone else's fault, of course - the French are "our enemy", "Old Europe" is out of touch, etc. Josh Marshall on the Clarke interview:
One chilling note in this passage is that Paul Wolfowitz, the prime architect and idea man of the second Iraq war, spent the early months of the Bush administration focused on "Iraqi terrorism against the United States", something that demonstrably did not even exist. A rather bad sign.
[...]
That screw up is a reality -- their inability to come clean about it is, I suspect, is at the root of all the covering up and stonewalling of the 9/11 commission. And Democrats are both right and within their rights to call the White House on it. But screw-ups happen; mistakes happen. What is inexcusable is the inability, indeed the refusal, to learn from them.

Rather than adjust to this different reality, on September 12th, the Bush war cabinet set about using 9/11 -- exploiting it, really -- to advance an agenda which had, in fact, been largely discredited by 9/11. They shoe-horned everything they'd been trying to do before the attacks into the new boots of 9/11. And the fit was so bad they had to deceive the public and themselves to do it.

As the international relations expert John Ikenberry noted aptly in a recent essay, the Bush hardliners "fancy themselves tough-minded thinkers. But they didn't have the courage of their convictions to level with the American people on what this geopolitical adventure in Iraq was really about and what it would cost."

An RNC talking-point is that Clarke has spilled the beans on the White House because of sour grapes after being demoted. The Stepford Press, naturally, is carrying water for them, as usual, as Atrios notes:
Stahl thinks the important issue is that Clarke's demotion may have caused him to throw a hissy fit. I think the important issue is the fact that when the Bush administration came into power, they decided that the position of National Coordinator for Counter-terrorism wasn't important enough to be a Cabinet level position.
One of the most scandalous actions of the administration, which I have referred to on several occasions, was that they pulled the FBI off of Al Qaeda as soon as they got into office. The press scandal is that this has not been treated as headline news, as it should have been immediately, certainly after 9/11. Atrios briefly notes what he calls Operation Ignore:
Newsweek has learned that in the months before 9/11, the U.S. Justice Department curtailed a highly classified program called "Catcher's Mitt" to monitor Al Qaeda suspects in the United States, after a federal judge severely chastised the FBI for improperly seeking permission to wiretap terrorists. During the Bush administration's first few months in office, Attorney General John Ashcroft downgraded terrorism as a priority, choosing to place more emphasis on drug trafficking and gun violence, report Investigative Correspondent Michael Isikoff and Assistant Managing Editor Evan Thomas in the March 29 issue of Newsweek (on newsstands Monday, March 22).
It's nice that Newsweek has finally learned something I've been talking about for more than two years. And remember, this was all going on at a time of heightened awareness of an impending attack by Al Qaeda. They had been warned by the Clinton administration, bin Laden had gone on radio with threats, allied intel was sending alerts, and John Ashcroft was switching to chartered flights rather than flying commercially. (Oh, and Bush went on a month-long vacation.)

And then the towers fell, and then they apparently went into paralysis because they couldn't get our intelligence people to support the fantasy that Iraq was responsible. And then, having bombed Afghanistan even though they really wanted to bomb Iraq, they decided not to let it go, and started making up lies to get us in, and then lies to cover their lies. Guess who's the latest defender of the regency:

PHILADELPHIA, PA: On CNN's Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer on Sunday, Sen. Arlen Specter told America that the Bush Administration NEVER CLAIMED a connection between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda.
It has always baffled me that Arlen Specter once had a reputation (and still has it among some people) for some kind of hard-nosed integrity. On almost every opportunity that I've had to observe this man in action, he's demonstrated something considerably lower than those qualities.

But never mind, this is just one bit-player in the grand play before us at the moment. The administration changes its story every ten minutes and they've always got the chorus coming in behind them to "straighten it out". The truth is, as Atrios shows, that the administration based a considerable portion of its case for invasion on a connection between Saddam and Al Qaeda and Iraqi participation in 9/11 - a connection that many soldiers currently serving in the Gulf still believe is why they are there.

Now, it would be too much to expect some individuals to ever admit that they have had the wool pulled over their eyes by maniacs and liars, but I'm still kind of ticked off at the people who once supported the invasion but now, having realized they fell for a sucker-play, think the reason folks like me could put 1+1 together to get 2 were able to do so - when they couldn't - only because we "hate Bush" and therefore wouldn't have believed him even if what he was saying had been obviously true and as plain as the nose on my face.

That is, if Bush had been saying, "1+1=2," we would all have instantly turned around and said that, no, it equals six, or seven, or something else.

Yes, I've beefed about this a couple of times before, but I'm not done with it, yet. It irritates me that these people who think they are being "moderate" and "reasonable" still think they can dismiss the clarity of others who were sharper than they were as some kind of insanity.

Let's get this straight, oh Moderate Matt and Cool-headed Kevin, you guys were the ones who suffered temporary insanity. And we weren't. Even as the towers were falling, we never forgot that one plus one still equals two.

Richard Clarke has only provided the details of what we already knew - what has always been known.

  • It has always been known that bin Laden hated Saddam and that there was no common cause between them.
  • It has always been known that Iraq had absolutely no reason to launch a 9/11 and had many, many good reasons to want nothing to do with any such thing.
  • It has always been known that the Bush administration are liars. They were lying from at least the moment Bush received the Republican nomination, on the record and in front of God and everyone.

If someone has been lying to me consistently, why should I believe them when they are now telling me something that is obviously not true?

The attack on the World Trade Center on 11 September 2001 changed none of these things. It did not mean "everything had changed." It did not suddenly mean Saddam had inexplicably become suicidal. It did not make George W. Bush into the brave man of integrity he had never been in his life and had certainly proven on 9/11 he was still not, as he hid on Airforce One and scuttled away at a time when he should have been leading his nation.

What changed for you on 9/11? Did you learn that terrorism existed?

It was something I already knew. I have said this before and I will say it again: I have sat in my home and felt my house shake from the force of a bomb in the Docklands area. I have mourned the destruction of the atmospheric warrens of Camden Town, a favorite wandering-place for me. I've thanked my luck when I just missed being in a department store that was bombed at a time when I had originally planned to be shopping there.

And I've watched the over-reaction of a government that seemed to think it could eliminate terrorism with restrictions on civil liberties that only provoked further terrorism. (And which, not incidentally, gave the police opportunities to abuse favorite targets who had nothing to do with terrorism. Or, as one taxi driver remarked ironically to me, "Did you ever know there were so many black people in the IRA?")

On 9/11 I watched the buildings fall over and over on my screen and could feel my nightmare unfold before me. Not everything had changed, not yet - but it was about to. And you let it.

Meanwhile... Bush called for unity over Iraq. Got your unity right here.
16:47 GMT


Sunday, 21 March 2004

Blogarithm

Housekeeping note: Elayne Riggs wrote to let me know that the RSS feed from Blogmatrix no longer seems to be working. I haven't got the replacement together yet, but I'm seeking advice.

Josh Marshall has a smart post up about some campaign missteps by Kerry. Someone needs to tell him that he can't be on vacation at all between now and November. And right now he needs to be playing hard to make sure the Republicans don't get a chance to define him. This is what fighting is all about, and this is what Democrats were furious at the Gore team for not doing. Kerry and his surrogates have to be in there all the time to make sure there is a response to every slur. And there's plenty to respond with. As Josh says: The winning campaign against the president is equally clear. He doesn't tell the truth. Almost nothing he has told the American people has turned out to be true (from budgets to jobs, from wmds to his personal past). In many cases, that's because he's lied to them. In others, it's because he's promised things he had no reason to believe were true. In some instances, he just failed to deliver. And Josh rightly points out that the "credibility" issue in the Bush campaign amounts to: "Vote Bush: When Dangers Threaten, You Know He'll Go Berserk!"

Watch the video of Eric Alterman's segment on the Dennis Miller show. For those unfamiliar with Miller's reputation, such unprofessional behavior may be surprising. Best thing, though, is that Alterman responds exactly the way he should: "Is that the best you can do?"

Oliver Willis says The Culture War Is Over.

Mark Fiore: School Daze

Register to be included in Zogby polling.

Work-safe porn (Via Epicycle.)
18:55 GMT


Doing the work

This post is from the Bartcop Forum, posted by Jody B:

I Want To Talk About Platform & No Child Left Behind

Today I attended a district platform committee meeting in Iowa's southeast district. I volunteered to work on the Education Sub-Committee. There was a college administrator in attendance, a kindergarten teacher, a school librarian and me. I said that our convention had voted for a repeal of the No Child Left Behind Act. The administrator said, "Let's be realistic. That's not going to happen." Well when we had sifted through the platforms from thirteen of the counties represented, seven of them had a Plank about the Repeal of the No Child Left Behind Act. I let the committee bat the subject around until the librarian finally asked me what I thought about the subject.

I said, if you guys so choose, there are three of you and one of me, but I came here to represent my constituents for voting for a repeal of the No Child Left Behind Act. In my hometown of 23,000, we have our one and only high school and one of our elementary schools on the at-risk list. If we lose our high school funding, we would be looking for area schools to transfer over a thousand high school students to. Since we are the largest town in Wapello Co., that means we would be trying to divide those students between the five school districts closest to us, and those communities are a third to half the size of ours. I'm standing behind my convention's decision to endorse a plank for a repeal of the No Child Left Behind Act."

Well, to my utter amazement, the debate stopped, and the rest of my committee members agreed to support the 'Repeal' plank as I had written it.

I am hoping that there are others of you out there who will take an aggressive stand on this subject as well. Eventually, Congress is going to have to hear us, folks. Just keep talking to them. Don't let up, and stand by your convictions.

To me, trying to fix it is like trying to fix a house that was built on sinking sand. No matter how much we attempt to shore it up, it's never going to be a solid, reliable house to live in. We need Congress to go back to the drawing board and come up with something realistic that can actually be implemented, something professional educators have had input on, and something with a fair evaluation process.

Facing these issues head-on is the only way to deal with them - this is a program that cannot work to do what it purports to do, and there is no point in pretending otherwise. This is a fine example of someone who is in a position to work for change and simply getting down and doing the business.

And this post in the same thread provides some needed background for what the program does and why it can't work - not least because it is not designed to work, but to destroy public education.
11:40 GMT


Saturday, 20 March 2004

Headlines from the news sites

The age of the universe
Why Hubble was killed

A few items from Democrats.com:

Condi Caught in Lie to Cover White House Failure to Remove bin Laden before 9/11
In an interview with Lisa Myers of NBC this week, Condi Rice went on record with an easily provable lie. She claims one reason Osama Bin Laden wasn't taken out in the summer or early autumn of 2001 before the 9/11 disaster is because the armed Predator surveillance craft - which had had OBL in its sights - was not operational. But according to several sources, this is a lie. The "Washington Post" reported: "On September 15, 2001, CIA Director Tenet tells Bush, 'The unmanned Predator surveillance aircraft that was now armed with Hellfire missiles had been operating for more than a year out of Uzbekistan to provide real-time video of Afghanistan.'"
[See also link and link]

Condi Rice Continues to Slither Out of Testifying to 9/11 Panel to Avoid Lying to Protect Bush
"The federal panel reviewing the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks disclosed its witness list yesterday for its two-day hearing on counterterrorism next week. But the list omits one invited official: national security adviser Condoleezza Rice. She has repeatedly declined on the advice of the White House, citing separation of power concerns. Commission officials haven't ruled out a possible subpoena." There is only one possible reason that Rice insists on slithering out of testifying: She is hiding the explosive truth and would be forced, by testifying to either lie and open herself up to a huge perjury charge, or tell the truth and bring down the White House.
[link]

The headline of the original of this story is self-explanitory: US tried to plant WMDs, failed: whistleblower

Some low-bandwidth links from The Smirking Chimp:

Bush Medicare reform bill become a nightmare for GOP, from The Miami Herald.

Jeff Softley: 'Sean Hannity has a small....' is really an article intended to "illustrate the manner in which the Republicans use strategic, repetitive rhetoric - which often bears zero relation to the truth - to shape public perception."
20:36 GMT


I saw this

This is the weirdest-looking photo from a lingerie catalogue I've ever seen. Never mind that it's not lingerie, but it looks like that woman has a science fictional disease.

Kevin Hayden sent me links for two personal weblogs by a woman who also does it in pinks. She doesn't give her name. I've looked at one of them, Prose and Cons. She takes pictures as well as posting other images she likes. This amusing item is one she found elsewhere, but don't miss her photo of breaking waves. She's not a bad writer, either.
20:21 GMT


Friday, 19 March 2004

A site to play at

I was just cruising around at Biomesblog and found this picture and zillions of neat links. Here are just a few:

Tasteful white frog

The world's most fannish house

The Barcode Clock

VCR Clock

Google in Klingon

A new presidential candidate

The Democratic Candidates and their Cartoon Equivalents

Go there and find more.
19:16 GMT


Affirmative action

Atrios has the skinny on the bust of a USA Today reporter busted for making stuff up. There are some eerie parallels - in fact - with what was said about the Jayson Blair case. The difference is that people let this guy get away with it because he was an evangelical Christian. (And if the media were really liberal, would it look like this?)
18:51 GMT


Boy, is irony ever NOT DEAD

Patrick has found a humdinger about how - get this - liberals love conspiracy theories, and says:

You can understand why this particular writer is interested in cutting off talk about "foul play and dirty tricks," seeing as he's Oliver North.
At Electrolite.
18:34 GMT

Scoundrels

Jack is spot-on here:

Imagine, if you will, the Labour party introducing a resolution in the House of Commons saluting the Iraqi people and brave British Troops and declaring the world to now be a safer place because of the stalwart effort of Tony Blair and his party and passing it within a hundred hours of a terrorist attack in...oh, say, Boston...that left 1200 dead and over 6000 injured. That is the equivalent hypothetical comparison to what the House Republicans did yesterday. It was a simple partisan exercise designed to give neither comfort to the Iraqi people nor actual tangible support to the troops (you know, things like sufficient body armor or humvee armor or - in some instances - decent garrison facilities to make their one-year deployment somewhat more bearable), but instead geared to fostering Republican electoral prospects.
Read the rest at RuminateThis
18:25 GMT

Seen in Blogtopia
(Yes! I know who created that word!)

Kevin Drum is now getting paid to blog by The Washington Monthly, so he's doing all his political posting there, now. He did not approve of Tom Friedman accusing the Spanish of appeasement. Many comments ensued.

But before he started his new gig, he did this post at CalPundit in which he mentions Donald Rumsfeld repeating the claim that the UN inspectors were not in Iraq. This seems to be a current administration talking point, weirdly. And I think it's something that should be pounded - why does the administration keep claiming that Saddam never allowed the inspectors into Iraq? Are we really supposed to have mass amnesia on this? Did Hans Blix actually exist? Write to your favorite member of the White House press corps and tell them to ask this question. At least it'll be another opportunity to make Scottie dance.

Max remembers when the terrorists supported Reagan. (Much more in the October Surprise files.) Also, on outsourcing: The bottom line: criticism of unregulated capitalism is not an obstacle to Progress. It is progress. And how to fix it. Plus: economics and the Spanish election result explained for InstaIdiots.

Scalia claims he practically wasn't there at all!

Thom Hartmann says There is no such thing as a "free market". He also says that, The "middle class" is the creation of government intervention in the marketplace, and won't exist without it (as millions of Americans and Europeans are discovering). A good article explaining why liberals are right.

Drug War Rant, a good article from The Denver Post on the drug war quagmire.

Hey, look, a blog from Kentucky!

Scoobie Davis on Limbaugh's Hate Speech Against Kerry and the Democrats and The Crooked, Lying Group: A Case Study.

Watch the ads from Media Fund that explain what Bush has done for jobs and for the American Dream.
18:10 GMT


World of wars

Kathryn Cramer has been all over that plane full of mercenaries that was detained in Zimbabwe, tracking it's history and owners. Hmmm.

If you didn't read Kerry's speech, "Protecting Our Military Families in Times of War" when Atrios posted the link, have a look now. We all know how Bush has been abusing our troops, but there are things mentioned in that speech that even I hadn't heard about. I read stuff like this and I get outraged all over again. (But not enough that I don't wish he'd let me edit it first.)

Nat Parry, Bush's Iraq Getaway: The key now for George W. Bush is to manage a political escape from his mugging of a fundamental precept of democracy - an informed electorate - and still win a second term. To achieve that, Bush has employed some tried-and-true tactics, like hand-picking a presidential commission that will report on his use of intelligence after the November elections. But most importantly, he is still trusting that the U.S. news media is incapable of sustaining much scrutiny. Among other things, a quick refresher course in the build-up to the invasion of Iraq as it began in January of 2001, with plenty of background on the much longer history of Republican deceit and betrayal.
00:55 GMT


Thursday, 18 March 2004

Holy warriors

Atrios has excerpted an excellent James Pinkerton article that considers a more realistic approach to terrorism, but here's something he didn't quote:

To be sure, the PP said it went to Iraq to help promote peace, but Spain's intervention had "war of civilizations" written all over it. Many Spanish troops serving in Iraq, for example, wore an arm patch depicting the Cross of St. James of Compostela. That insignia commemorates the Battle of Clavijo in 844. According to legend, the Apostle St. James the Elder came down from the sky and killed every Moor - as Muslims were then called - in his path. Ever since, St. James has been called "Santiago Matamoros," St. James the Moor Killer.

In July, the Madrid newspaper El Mundo warned: "To put the Cross of St. James of Compostela on the uniforms of Spanish soldiers demonstrates an absolute ignorance of the psychology of the society in which they will have to carry out their mission."

Boy, is that ever understating the case. Because you don't need to know much about "the psychology of the society" in question, you just have to think about walking into any society with soldiers wearing symbols that specifically spit on their beliefs. Soldiers? Hell, imagine sending even disaster-relief workers into some flooded town in America if they're all wearing armbands with inverted crosses and Satanic mottos emblazoned on them and ask whether that would leave a nasty taste on the palates of the local populace. And that's just assuming that all those Satanists did was straight-up disaster-relief. Let a few of them point guns at the locals and man are you asking for it!

The really alien psychology here isn't that of Muslims who remember St. James the Moor-killer too well, it's that of leaders - in Spain and in America - who deliberately use provocative language and symbols to alert the Muslims we are ostensibly "liberating" to the fact that our ruling parties are hostile to them and we hate their religion. No, more than that - that, while we say we are coming to liberate you, we are actually making war on your entire culture.

What else can explain the Cross of St. James? Who thought it would be a good idea for Bush to say we were embarking on a "crusade"? What earthly good can such a show of contempt ever do?

One of the most clever impediments the Republicans have set up for their opponents to deal with is the continuing conundrum of whether their leadership is clueless or just ... well, deliberately embarked on a program of evil criminality. Reagan was visibly suffering from Alzheimer's, of course, but was his whole administration? No one really believes that George H.W. Bush was "out of the loop", but as long as you can't prove otherwise (because he pardoned everyone before they had to testify), nothing is ever on the record.

But this administration has got to be the most spectacular example of arrested development I've ever seen in an entire group of supposedly functional adults - and I'm saying this as someone who worked with rock musicians in the '60s. Whatever it means to be "the grown-ups", this definitely is not it. (And at least those guys in the '60s had the excuse of being teenagers or very young adults who were on drugs, you know?)

They're brash, they're rash, and frankly even if they are embarked on a program of deliberate criminality, it's hard to avoid the feeling that they don't know what the hell they're doing. But you don't have to be that smart, or that "mature", to know that all this "culture wars" and "war of civilizations" stuff is just plain crazy.
17:12 GMT


Media Bias

Media Concentration--The Silent Killer of Democracy is particularly interesting because it is a blog post on Alex Alben's campaign blog, and there aren't too many people running for Congress who are talking about this issue. (Via Atrios.)

Audiences for US journalists decline: Only 5% of stories on cable news contain new information, the report found. Most were simply rehashes of the same facts. There was also less fact checking than in the past and less policing of journalistic standards.

From FAIR, One Year Later, Sunday Shows Short on Iraq Critics. FAIR provides e-mail addresses for ABC's This Week, CBS' Face the Nation, NBC's Meet the Press, and Fox News Sunday and advises you to write.

Lead Balloons at Bad Attitudes says that ABC's The Note has been exhibiting a lack of fairness: Having played a leading and egregious role in the media tear-down of Big Howard Dean, ABC News's The Note has decided that what America needs most right now is for ABC News to tear down John the Warrior by highlighting the president's criticisms of Kerry without providing equal time to the responses of Kerry's defenders.
10:33 GMT


Early morning media

The Farmer has an interesting post up at Corrente considering a bit of back-and-forth between Pat Buchanan and Chris Matthews on Kerry's statements about atrocities in Vietnam. Lambert thinks outsourcing hasn't gone far enough. And are the Republican spinmeisters laying the groundwork to cancel the election?

Getting Tough with the Press.

Bartcop recently mentioned something called Maroon Bells and said it was one of the most photographed things in the world. I did a quick Google and found some of those photos.

Jon Stewart with the bottom line on gay marriage. (Worth the wait to load.)
01:17 GMT


Wednesday, 17 March 2004

Calling them out

Molly Ivins: How much fun can one administration have? More dead GIs. New record trade deficit. Stock market plunge. Defeated ally in Spain. New Spanish prime minister says the occupation in Iraq is a "continuing disaster" and he's pulling his troops out. Still no jobs. And then the guy who was supposed to be the new jobs czar turns out to have laid off 75 of his own workers while building a $3 million factory in China to employ 165 Chinese people.

You can have it both ways, says Josh Marshall, responding to Andrew Sullivan's claim that the Spanish election result was a victory for bin Laden: Just because you've inflamed or emboldened your enemies doesn't mean you've used the most effective means of attacking them. Indeed, quite the opposite can be true. Also, some polling results, from Iraq and the US.

The Pinocchio presidency by former ambassador Joe Wilson, who says Bushista lies are due for some hammering.

Paul Krugman says George Bush is in no position to call anyone else Weak on Terror. The truth is that Mr. Bush, while eager to invoke 9/11 on behalf of an unrelated war, has shown consistent reluctance to focus on the terrorists who actually attacked America, or their backers in Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. That's the issue that's bugged me since the idea of bombing Kabul first came up. Not that I didn't like the idea of bringing down the Taliban, but the madrasses are in Pakistan, and the moneyed promoters of Wahabism are the leaders of Saudi Arabia. Iraq was such an obvious irrelevancy that I was frankly astonished that anyone ever took it seriously.
14:17 GMT


Creeps

John at Sore Eyes is understandably speechless after reading yet another example of the creepiness of Home Secretary David Blunkett, quoting this article:

On Tuesday, Blunkett will fight in the Royal Courts of Justice in London for the right to charge victims of miscarriages of justice more than £3000 for every year they spent in jail while wrongly convicted. The logic is that the innocent man shouldn't have been in prison eating free porridge and sleeping for nothing under regulation grey blankets.
And then there's this post with a sample of responses to the question: "What is the most insane thing your boss has ever said to you?" I think my favorite is: "Please try not to read too much into the fact that your job is being advertised in the paper this week."

Stepford Whistle-blower: Hesiod reports that: Now the fuckers are saying that John kerry ignored a warning about lax security at Logan airport in 2001, which directly led to (ta! da!) the 9/11 attacks! But in an update, Hesiod finds an interview with the author of the piece from September 16, 2001, in which he credited Kerry with having done the right thing. Hmmm.

Ginger says: The sort of thing mentioned in this Chronk editorial is why I laughed my ass off at the idea that Chuck Rosenthal botched his anti-sodomy argument in front of the Supreme Court in Lawrence v. Texas because he's secretly gay-sympathetic. It's not that I think his continued refusal to treat an innocent man like an innocent man associates him with anti-gay bigotry, it's that his pedantic insistence that the accuser must be made to feel good leaves me thinking that he has no idea that justice is law tempered by mercy.
03:00 GMT


A PSA from Atrios

Important enough to quote a significant part of this one:

But, having said that the situation in Illinois provides a wonderful lesson about why the Democratic party organizations, and not just the candidates themselves, need money. The presumed Democratic candidate flamed out spectacularly after some nasty information about his past came to light. Fortunately, this happened before the primary. These kinds of things can happen at any time in the election cycle. Something can happen, a candidate can stumble - either ours or theirs - and only the party organizations are in a position to capitalize on the shifting campaign fortunes by placing money strategically. Only they can really make a sudden money drop into a race when it might matter.

It's this flexibility and ability to look at the entire campaign picture which makes them an essential part of the process. Every Democrat is trying to get elected, but only the DNC, DSCC, and DCCC are focused entirely on the bigger picture goal of winning majorities in the House and Senate.

I try to limit the fundraising begging here as much as possible. But, our side needs money. Feed them turkee, and they will grow stronger. With strength comes confidence, and with confidence victory. I'm tired of reading news reports about how poor the Democrats are, and how behind they are in fundraising.

So, if the mood strikes - throw some nickles to:

The DNC

The DSCC

The DCCC

And, if you're not in the mood to donate you can just go and read their weblogs. Kicking Ass is the DNC's, From the Roots is the DSCC's, and The Stakeholder is the DCCC's.

Do what he said.
00:35 GMT

Tuesday, 16 March 2004

Chewy bits

John Kerry's call for monthly debates with Bush is lovely, underlining the fact that, of course, Bush couldn't possibly do it. Condi Rice says Bush is too busy - and it's true, he can hardly find time to memorize his campaign talking points well enough to make them fly with his hand-picked pro-Bush audiences. (Well, except for the ones who don't speak English.) Every time he does anything public these days he embarrasses himself, and this time the press isn't quite as willing to cover for him as they once were. If even Russert - and it's not just Russert - is starting to press the administration on their numerous lies and inconsistencies, Bush is in very big trouble indeed. I'd love to see Kerry hammer the point at least thrice weekly that George Bush doesn't dare debate his lousy policies before the public. Refusing to debate didn't do his father much good, I seem to recall.

Just let the GOP try and replace Cheney on the ticket with Giuliani and watch the fur fly. Rudy's credentials as the hero of 9/11 won't look so good once people are reminded of how he was responsible for the communications breakdown for first-responders on the day - negligence that cost many people their lives. (Here's Breslin's original article.)

All your questions answered, about the Holy Underwear, the Secret Handshakes, and - oh, Moroni's Homepage. (Plus! Sing along with Moroni.)

Drunken Polish nuns on tractors (via August J. Pollak )
23:33 GMT


If/then

From Tarek at The Liquid List, a look at the shape of things:

I've been saying for so long now that with so many of our actions in the United States, we've been handing victories to our presumptive enemies in this war on terrorism. We've been cowed into a shaky state of constant fear, not by the terrorists who attacked us one day, but by the klaxon fearmongering of our leaders day after day, whose true leadership doesn't appear to have anything to do with the safety of the American public at all. When one citizen lost his rights, and then another, it became beyond ironic to say, "then the terrorists will have won," because I began to believe it. I still do, but at least something marginally sane is beginning to take shape, and these citizens will have something like a day in court. (No free access to counsel or due process of law yet, but at least their lawyers can tell them, on DoD videotape, that their cases are going to the Supreme Court.)
Tarek is right: If we allow minorities of our country's residents and citizens to lose their Constitutional rights, if we allow our lives to be ruled by fear, then the terrorists have accomplished exactly what they set out to do. That's why they call it "terrorism", you know - the point is to terrorize. 9/11 gave us horror, but it is the Bush administration itself that has created the climate of fear. When our own government colludes by encouraging us to feel fearful while actually giving dissenters and some ethnic and religious minorities something to fear from them, the populace has indeed been terrorized.

We are fortunate in that some of the apparatus of civil libertarian activism still exists in the US despite 30 years of clever and well-funded attacks on liberalism from the right. Though we are weakened by those attacks and by divisions into "libertarian", "liberal", and "leftist" camps, some progress has been made in fighting back against fear-mongering and hysterical legislation that has been falling on our heads since September of 2001.

Every generation seems to have its watershed events, or movements, when we believe we can permanently change history, when the sins of the past will never trouble us again. And then the next, when we learn, finally, that no such thing can ever happen, and that complacency is forever unacceptable. It's why Dale Spender made an entire book out of the insight that there had always been a women's liberation movement throughout the 20th century, telling readers that each iteration of the WLM started off thinking they were the first to recognize and fight women's inequality, to then learn that they had had predecessors, and to believe that this time things were different and that there would be no need for a later movement. And then, to make the same mistakes, to face the same failures. (The term "feminazi" should come as no surprise to those who remember Shulamith Firestone's chapter on "the 50-year ridicule" of the suffrage movement.)

World War II and the discovery of the camps and the final solution were also a watershed event, and we all believed we would "never forget", that we would watch for the signs of encroaching fascism and stop them before they spread. "Never again," we said, and we believed it. And for many years the survivors of Nazi Germany themselves were indeed vigilant, fighting for civil liberties even for people they despised, demanding that the promise of the Bill of Rights be kept. But look how easy it has suddenly become to forget, to allow the mine to be strewn with dead canaries.

It's why I keep repeating that tired old phrase that takes so long for people to genuinely absorb, that the price of liberty is for-goddamn-sure eternal vigilance, and it's not just "the government" or "the corporations" or "the powerful" you have to watch out for; it's also your neighbors, and yourself. Complacency, arrogance, and fear can and will co-opt the living hell out of you.

This is an important moment in history. It won't be the end of history, even if we win. It won't be the day we can at last breathe a sigh of relief and decide we never have to worry about this stuff again. But it's a moment when we can make the choice to fight to keep America, and maybe retain the ability to keep fighting for it - or lose this wonderful experiment.

(While you're at TLL, you might want to see how Oliver is doing with his experiment of immersing himself in right-wing newsmedia. And don't miss the Public Service Announcement that explains how George W. Bush is too liberal for America.)

[A shorter version of this article has been posted to DailyNewsOnline - which, remember, has comments.]
04:34 GMT


So much to read...

From Talk Left: Lethal injection is not humane, tough sentencing policies don't reduce crime, making life miserable for prison inmates doesn't reduce crime, a drug law under attack - from its author, and an example of everything that's wrong with the system.

Matt Yglesias doesn't know what "socialism" means. We used to put tax money into most of the things he's talking about, and no one called it "socialism" in those days. And it wouldn't be "socialism" to use taxes to pay for universal healthcare. It would just be facing reality.

Billmon's readers respond to a push-poll with poll questions of their own.

Via Atrios, would you believe H. R. 3920: To allow Congress to reverse the judgments of the United States Supreme Court?

The hot gay scene in Saudi Arabia (Via Silt)

Max takes on the libertarians over Social Security: The rights you recognize determine the side you're on. And democracy works - somewhere, at least.

A Clever Sheep received a forward from an aunt (we all know how that is), with an interesting response by a Rabbi to the question of whether he would recommend seeing Mel Gibson's movie.
03:38 GMT


Monday, 15 March 2004

Things to read

GOTV says eVoting, the menace spreads, and quotes an article warning that electronic voting is being introduced in the European Union elections - and, of course, there is already at least one group fighting to alert people to the danger.

Consortium News asks, Which Way on Election 2004? George W. Bush's argument for a second term boils down to "trust me, I know what I'm doing." John Kerry is faced with trickier message: does he play it safe and go for a narrow majority or will he raise the stakes and bid for a breakthrough Democratic victory.

Atrios has been doing a lot of great writing on a variety of issues lately, not just the unexplained links. And he's right, The New York Times has no excuse for their sloppy and way too administration-friendly response to events with regard to Spain.

Who laundered Bush's military records? That seems to be the question, since there are papers that should have been with his records that simply aren't there. Removal of those records is a serious crime. So somebody has a lot of questions to answer - questions the press seems unwilling to ask, unfortunately. David Neiwert has the goods at Orcinus.
20:18 GMT


Media Notes

Take Back The Media

On-demand truth radio from TBTM

Stern Partially Silenced, Defended by Congressman:

Howard Stern was partially silenced today - by himself. The King of All Media signed on this morning with a montage of radio station promos and soundbites from Talk shows and government officials speaking about the raging debate over indecency. The dramatic audio collage was laced with snippets fom protest songs, like Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Fortunate Son," Bob Marley & The Wailers' "Get Up, Stand Up," Thunderclap Newman's "Something In The Air" and Stern's own remix of KoRn's "Y'All Want A Single."
[...]
The opening marathon montage included audio from a speech by NY Congressman Jos� E. Serrano from yesterday's debate prior to the House vote. "The big question on this bill is 'Why now?' There are enough laws in place and regulations to deal with this issue," Serrano said. "I feel that some of the good, well-intentioned members have been caught up in this desire to all of a sudden clear up the airwaves. I believe it is a distraction. It is a weapon of mass distraction to keep us away from the real issues at hand. The fact is, that this part of my opinion of the continuing thinking of the Patriot Act, the philosophy of the Patriot Act, that says we will read your e-mails, we will find out what you take out from the library. We will hold you in detention without charges or a lawyer and we will then tell you what you can listen to on the radio. Now, let's understand something, the target here is coming from the political and religious right and it is directed only at that which they think is bad, anti-American, or indecent. Right-wing radio which demonizes liberals, minorities, environmentalists, pro-choice and animal rights activists, they are fine, they will not be touched. And let me for the record say, I support their right to say whatever they want about me and other liberals.

"The main target these days is Howard Stern," Serrano continued. "What does Howard Stern have to do with this issue and the political agenda? For years, he supported the administration on the war. He supported the administration on capital punishment. He supported the administration on just about everything. The last couple of months he has had a change of heart and started opposing the war, opposing the opposition to [stem cell] research, opposing the opposition to pro-choice and all of a sudden, he's in deeper trouble than he has ever been in before. How else can we explain that the day before his bosses, Clear Channel, were to face a congressional committee, they fired him from six markets throughout this country? The FCC has been complaining about his locker humor jokes for years. Some people have suggested that he was not in good taste for years. But now the big bang to get him off the air? Was he okay when he was supporting the administration? How did Clear Channel decide to knock out its number one money maker one day before facing Congress? I wish I was the telephone company and could have heard those phone calls coming in with the political pressure. My friends, this is a dangerous time. This bill should be defeated. If for no other reason to send a message that there is something larger here at work than simply something you don't like. What I don't like, may be something you like and vice versa. The best protection we have is not this bill. Just turn the channel, switch the station."

Stern also said this morning that ABC put in a request for FCC Chairman Michael Powell to be a guest on his first interview show. The reply was a curt: "We thank you for your invitation. We regretfully decline your interview request at this time."

Wouldn't it be cool if there was a massive letter-writing campaign to Powell and to Clear Channel from people saying that Howard Stern is not what is indecent about Clear Channel?
16:32 GMT

Culture clash

Free Howard Stern (and don't miss the fabulous "Free Stern Anthem").

The Elitism Myth: That's the mystery of the United States, circa 2004. Thanks to the rightward political shift of the past 30 years, wealth is today concentrated in fewer hands than it has been since the 1920s; workers have less power over the conditions under which they toil than ever before in our lifetimes; and the corporation has become the most powerful actor in our world. Yet that rightward shift-still going strong to this day-sells itself as a war against elites, a righteous uprising of the little guy against an obnoxious upper class.

Reasons not to like John McCain: He's terrible on social security privatization, and most importantly, foreign policy -- he's a full-fledged neocon, closely associated with Project for the New American Century's Bill Kristol. Not to mention the fact that he's said that Bush deserves to be re-elected.

Macadamia has been checking out the OED appeals. Would you believe they can't source the term "gaffer tape" earlier than 1988? (Hm, maybe they should look for "gaffer's tape", which is how I always heard it used. But, of course, that was way back in the '60s.)

Lord of the Ring: The Musical

Frequently Asked Questions
04:04 GMT


Dammit

Moshe phoned to tell me that Jon White died early Friday morning. It was a shock, as it always is, even though he had been sickly for as long as I've known him and in truth it's a surprise that he lasted this long. There's not much online about him but he published Riverside Quarterly and he was a really sweet guy and I'm sorry I'm never going to see him again. He was 57.
02:00 GMT


Blogosphere

The Rude Pundit pulls no punches with an absolutely scathing indictment of Shifty George, prez of a country he can't even pronounce the name of.

StoutDem says: KILL IT BEFORE IT GROWS: "Politicians who spark a culture war for the sake of their own power are playing with fire, and journalists who exploit a culture war for the sake of its unleashed furies are throwing gasoline on the flames.

The Spanish have demonstrated that they are serious about terrorism, and Jim Henley has a question.

Here it says: The City of Miami has been relieved of its authority to decline to issue permits for public demonstrations until such time as they can demonstrate to a Federal Court that they've finally grasped the First Amendment. If Miami would like not to issue a permit, they must now ask the court's permission to do so, documenting their justification for such an act. And some citizen action on that pesky little problem of partisan campaigning on tax-payer-funded .gov websites.

Why Bush thinks his failures are successes

Bad Attitudes: ...America today (this blog included) greeted the butchering of 200 Spaniards and the wounding of 1,500 more basically with a yawn. [...] Terrorists are not stupid: they will see now, if they didn't before, that nothing short of mass slaughter on American soil will get America to look up from our fried foods. [...] America's total apathy to anything but a nuclear fireworks show with the Golden Gate Bridge in the background makes getting rid of Shifty George all the more important, because he sucks at fighting terrorism.

One for our team: Another ad: Reframing September 11th (Via Ezra Klein)
01:42 GMT


Sunday, 14 March 2004

Simon Hoggart's diary

I missed this last week, but this tells you what kind of guy the Home Secretary really is:

The other day David Blunkett came in for some mockery in the Indian papers, because he said he'd always wanted to see the Taj Mahal. And I've noticed that in the Commons sometimes he'll say something like, "I see the hon. member is very agitated." I sought an explanation from one of his friends, who said "David doesn't actually realise he is blind." Which is why, as a youth, he complained to the BBC about naked bodies on television.
He complained about naked bodies on television? Jeez.

Meanwhile, go read the rest of the column, and discover the context for this:

It was one of those moments when you expect to wake up and suddenly shout to your wife: "My god, I've just had the weirdest dream! I was having bacon and eggs with David Frost and John Major and Joan Bakewell and Moira Stuart and suddenly David Frost said ..." But it wasn't a dream.
But I have no trouble imagining this, actually. David Frost says a lot of weird things, and honestly, this is by no means the weirdest.
16:30 GMT

Some stuff

I was reading Jesus as Box-Office Superhero by A. O. Scott, in which he talks about the unpleasant reaction his review of Mel Gibson's movie drew, and at the end he says: My last word on the subject is a sentence that, in normal circumstances, should be anathema to a film critic but that here seems both urgent and true: it's only a movie. But then I thought, "So was Birth of a Nation." I sure hope he's right.

Skippy reports that Judge Roy Moore thinks - can you believe it? - that there's just not enough God in the Constitution.

From Peevish: What happens to Democratic representatives who vote with Republicans? Heh. Heh. Also, Anne's thoughts on Homophobia.

From Ones and Zeros: I've come to the conclusion that we got an administration being run by Calvin. It all fits: the grades, the ADD symptoms, the adventures of Spaceman Spiff on the desert-planet Iraq II, his imaginary friends in their undisclosed locations, his uncanny ability to rationalize how doing what he wants will really be good for everyone and, of course, the quote in the image.

Happy 50th birthday to Cyndi Lauper, even though I'm late. (Via Outside the Beltway.)

Neat APOD pix: The Witch's Broom Nebula, N49's Cosmic Blast, and Moon and Venus over Corona Del Mar Beach
14:22 GMT


Saturday, 13 March 2004

Media notes

Ted Rall says the real reason the NYT axed his cartoons is that they fell for right-wing e-mail campaigns. It's not hard to believe:

"Here's the feedback form for Yahoo!'s opinion syndicate," a blog called "The Agitator" suggests. "Write and tell them it's time to drop Ted Rall's column." "No paper should ever run Rall again," howls Andrew Sullivan, a Time magazine columnist who also writes the country's most prominent extreme-right blog. "I urge all of our readers to write to the NY Times," urges another hate site. "Here is their Contact page. I wrote to the publisher this morning."
[...]
Unlike Congressional staffers accustomed to the phenomenon of mass letter-writing campaigns, aging editors at old-school print outlets like the Times don't comprehend that they're being fooled and manipulated by fringe interest groups--most of whose members don't even buy their newspaper--into believing these orchestrated correspondence campaigns reflect genuine reader outrage. And so the bullies get their way.
And it works because there is no balancing deluge of support from the other side. A useful antidote might be someone like Atrios acting as a clearing-house for reports of such efforts by right-wing bloggers and columnists, and committed troops who will counter such calls from the right with advice to the target publication or show that this is a right-wing letter-writing campaign and that they should steel themselves against it.

Meanwhile, Bill Maher demonstrates why he was too dangerous to keep on TV:

Hearing President Bush these days constantly complain about "the politicians" and John Kerry being part of a "Washington mind-set," and saying things like "I got news for the Washington crowd" is like hearing Courtney Love bitch about junkies.

"Washington insider" is by definition a function of one's proximity to the president. That's you, Mr. Bush.

(Via Suburban Guerilla, who also reports that Bush has spent more than a quarter of his term on vacation.)
17:29 GMT

Local activism

This is from a Yahoo Groups post that Sasha forwarded to me:

Hello. My name is Michele and I am new to this group. I live in California and I'm a lifelong registered Democrat.

I've been following the political arena for three decades and I've never lived to see such a poor excuse of a President than President Bush.

I've been passing out a flier that points out Bush's actions that have harmed our schools, environment; abused our seniors and minority communities (i.e., racially, nationally and sexually oriented). It's geared for those who voted for Bush in 2000, but are unsure they want to vote for him again. If you would like a copy just email me.

So far, I've distributed approximately 5,000 in my community. It's now been distributed in 491 cities in the US and 6 foreign countries with American voters (including military bases). I work 60 hours a week, but felt compelled to do more than just vote. That seemed too passive for an election as important as this one.

Thank you for listening.

We Have the Power Now

For a long time I've been advocating just this kind of thing. If you have access to a decent word processor and a printer, you are in effect a print shop. If you don't like Michelle's flier, devise your own - workshop it with like-minded souls, keep it as simple as possible (don't get wordy, absolutely no more than two different fonts max, and not too many colors), and distribute it to your neighbors, leave some at local gathering places (eateries, churches, bookshops, libraries, etc.), and so on. If you feel like you're all alone and you need a second pair of eyes, try asking your local librarian for help. Do the legwork; November is closer than you think.
16:06 GMT

Friday, 12 March 2004

Stuff I saw

Loquacious Fool appears to be someone who has decided to celebrate retirement by starting a weblog. Not being loquacious about it, when I looked, but does provide a link to a page of salaries of the White House staff. Scott McClellan sure earns that $125K.

As we like to point out from time to time, the degree to which this administration supports our troops is a huge vulnerability for Bush. The way they've slashed both veteran's benefits and actual support for soldiers in the field is a scandal. Democrats should absolutely not drop the ball on this one, because it really matters, for all the right reasons, and for the politics of it as well. Most Americans understand what we owe our troops, and they need to know why they aren't getting it.

There's no overstating the grotesqueness of watching George "Don't Investigate Al Qaeda!" Bush exploiting 9/11, but even I have to wonder why Mr. Bunnypants can't even soil his little feet at a fer-godssakes ground-breaking ceremony.

There's always a Dick in it somewhere.
18:33 GMT


Calling a spade a spade

The new Pentagon papers by Karen Kwiatkowski is up at Salon and doesn't require you to watch an ad, apparently thanks to MoveOn.

In the spring of 2002, I was a cynical but willing staff officer, almost two years into my three-year tour at the office of the secretary of defense, undersecretary for policy, sub-Saharan Africa. In April, a call for volunteers went out for the Near East South Asia directorate (NESA). None materialized. By May, the call transmogrified into a posthaste demand for any staff officer, and I was "volunteered" to enter what would be a well-appointed den of iniquity.

The education I would receive there was like an M. Night Shyamalan movie -- intense, fascinating and frightening. While the people were very much alive, I saw a dead philosophy -- Cold War anti-communism and neo-imperialism -- walking the corridors of the Pentagon. It wore the clothing of counterterrorism and spoke the language of a holy war between good and evil. The evil was recognized by the leadership to be resident mainly in the Middle East and articulated by Islamic clerics and radicals. But there were other enemies within, anyone who dared voice any skepticism about their grand plans, including Secretary of State Colin Powell and Gen. Anthony Zinni.
[...]
At the time, I didn't realize that the expertise on Middle East policy was not only being removed, but was also being exchanged for that from various agenda-bearing think tanks, including the Middle East Media Research Institute, the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs. Interestingly, the office director billet stayed vacant the whole time I was there. That vacancy and the long-term absence of real regional understanding to inform defense policymakers in the Pentagon explains a great deal about the neoconservative approach on the Middle East and the disastrous mistakes made in Washington and in Iraq in the past two years.

Josh Marshall finds electioneering where it should not be: This is a taxpayer-funded website -- one for a House committee. This seems hands-down inappropriate, if not a breach of House rules. ("Inappropriate" is a good word; "corrupt" is another one.)

Tom DeLay's Greatest Hits

The NYT and The Chicago Tribune stories quoting Kerry: These are the most crooked, you know, lying group I've ever seen, it's scary.
16:13 GMT


Thursday, 11 March 2004

Promise you won't really investigate

More on the development of the One-Party State, from The Hill, in a story about McCain's attempts to get the commission some real power to investigate intelligence:

McCain has appeared more active than Robb, the top-ranking Democrat, in seeking wide authority. In a conversation with Bush prior to his appointment, Robb assured the president he would not support examining the administration's use of intelligence, said a Senate source familiar with the meeting.

"Robb bent over backward [to say] he did not support looking at the users," said the source.

Bush has made it clear to Robb that he must keep his distance from Senate Democrats. Robb learned that he was to be appointed co-chairmen only a few hours before Bush made a public announcement.

And Robb was warned that if he consulted with Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) before the announcement, he would be stripped of his appointment, Senate sources said.

This is supposed to be an "independent" commission. So where is the independence if the White House can strip Robb of the appointment if he gets too close to actually investigating the subject at hand? If you ever needed any evidence that it's all a PR exercise with the administration, I certainly hope this helps.

(Via Bartcop.)
17:30 GMT


Looking around

History of a dying star

Hubble Wallpaper
Don't miss The PNH Galaxy.

Talk Left refers us to an article warning that the Patriot Act isn't the most dangerous thing Bush is doing to take away our rights. Jeralyn is also talking about one of my own hobby-horses, voting rights for convicted felons, and notes the odd fact that Diana Ross has been told she has to virtually re-serve her sentence for DUI.

Report from the Daily Mislead: Why Bush Supports Outsourcing.

Liberal Oasis says Kerry once again has a staff problem with people who babble too much to the press. Everyone should fax this article to Kerry's campaign. (LO has a lot of Kerry links up on the sidebar, now - under "Get Kerry", of course.)

[Your Logo Here] reports that Auntie Beeb has this: "Young Americans who pledge to remain virgins until they marry have the same rates of sexually transmitted diseases as those who do not, a new study says." Well, it stands to reason that those who are not prepared for sex aren't going to take precautions, doesn't it? You can almost write the Joe Bob Briggs column yourself. (I see James is referring to the White House spokesbeing as "Scott McMuffin". I can't help it, I'm amused.)

Atrios has been otherwise occupied but Tena is sitting in at Eschaton and reports that the Log Cabin Republicans are really pissed off with Bush and "spending a lot of money to run ads that are, "according to the story, the most critical of a Republican president ever done." What took them so long? But don't miss this earlier post from Atrios on the economy. Scary stuff.

From Bloomberg: U.S. Senate Approves Barrier to Making Bush Tax Cuts Permanent. Four Republicans voted with the Democrats, and "one Democrat" did not. Gee, I wonder who that could be. No, I don't. I haven't looked, but do the words "Zell Miller" come to mind? I also haven't checked out the bill itself, yet, but on the surface this certainly looks like good news.

Finally, you can simulate bovine rectal palpation.
15:54 GMT


We want the music!

Ungodly Politics has a post up discussing the decline of local radio - something that I regard as a serious danger to society - and reckons it hurts music sales.

The only trouble with that, as regular readers of The Sideshow already know, is that there is no real decline in sales of music recordings - in fact, there has been a decline in the release of product, by about 25%, so the decline in sales of 15% is a relative gain.

But we've all felt that decline in product release, haven't we? And I certainly agree that Clear Channel and the like have had a deleterious effect on the production of, and our access to, creative new music.

Which is my opportunity to remind readers that those links for free music down on the sidebar are worth some attention. I know you've already heard of some of these people, but bear in mind that I list them not because they are particular favorites of mine, but because they are making their music available for free, and I want to encourage that. Here they are again:

Beck, Country Joe, Daniel Cainer (last time I was at Cainer's site, he was revamping, but do listen to "London Cries" if it's up again), Dana Lyons, Flaming Lips, Kelley Hunt, Jason Mraz, Janis Ian, Lojo Russo, Sara Messenger, Barry Thomas Goldberg.

And if you have other suggestions for the list, don't forget to send them along.
14:20 GMT

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Avedon Carol at The Sideshow, March 2004


And, no, it's not named after the book or the movie. It's just another sideshow.