Green diary rescue & open thread
36 minutes ago
After all, a Harris Poll found that 90 percent of Americans support the use of contraception.CNN keeps promoting an interview that Larry King is doing with George and Laura Bush on Thursday night. He needs to ask them about the Bush family policy on abstinence and contraception. Is what they're trying to impose on the rest of America the same policy in the family? King is too much of a wuss to ask, but someone should. Read More......
Check that. Harris found that 90 percent of Catholics support contraception.
Among Americans, the number is 93 percent.
Yet, New York Times Magazine recently presented the alarming case that our government is a staging platform for a "war on contraception."
Considering how many Americans use contraception, or support it matter-of-factly, this is comparable to being governed by forces sworn to eradicate peanut butter or fluorescent lights.
Yes, the issues aren't comparable. But public acceptance being comparable, how could officials elected by the people be so inclined? Maybe it's because the people who ought to care just don't.
They should. Making it possible for one to control one's reproductive destiny short of a crisis pregnancy would be, should be, one of the centerpieces of health policy, sort of like reading or math in education.
One senior government official familiar with the discussions between Bush and Cheney -- but who does not have firsthand knowledge of Bush's interview with prosecutors -- said that Bush told the vice president to "Get it out," or "Let's get this out," regarding information that administration officials believed would rebut Wilson's allegations and would discredit him.This was the same guy who last week said it was "disgraceful" for newspapers to print articles about national security. How can anyone take Bush seriously? The press should just laugh at him. Bush doesn't keep us safe and he leaks national security info. for poltiical reasons.
A person with direct knowledge of Bush's interview refused to confirm that Bush used those words, but said that the first official's account was generally consistent with what Bush had told Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald.
Libby, in language strikingly similar to Bush's words, testified to the federal grand jury in the leak case that Cheney had told him to "get all the facts out" that would defend the administration and discredit Wilson. Portions of Libby's grand jury testimony were an exhibit in a recent court filing by Fitzgerald.
Lieberman said he will still be running as a Democrat even if he's not the party's nominee and plans to remain part of the Democratic caucus in the Senate if re-elected.Well, there are a few problems here. First off, you can't run as a Democrat if you think you have to run as an independent because not enough Democrats will vote for you. In a democracy, you get to be the Democratic candidate by winning the Democratic primary. If you have to short circuit the democratic process in order to win the office, you're not a Democrat (or a democrat either).
"I want the opportunity to put my case before all the people of Connecticut in November," Lieberman said.
Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman announced today he will petition for a place on the November ballot as an "independent Democrat," giving him a chance to stay alive politically should he lose an Aug. 8 primary for the Democratic nomination.What a bastard. He is sooo important, that he can't abide by the decision of his party. Lieberman's arrogance is off the charts. He's addicted to his own power, or sense of power. And, clearly, he's smarter than the rest of the Democrats in Connecticut.
Lieberman, 64, a three-term senator whose outspoken support of the war in Iraq has brought months of grief and inspired a strong primary challenge from Greenwich businessman Ned Lamont, announced his decision this afternoon at a brief press conference at the State Capitol.
The only negative shouts seemed directed at Lieberman, who is facing a primary challenge from Ned Lamont of Greenwich.Read More......
"Hey, look at that, a Democrat walking with a Republican," came one shout to Lieberman.
"How's the president," shouted another parade watcher, giving Lieberman a thumbs-down sign.
COSTELLO: OK, let's show the first set of numbers we have from "Time" magazine. You can see the president's approval rating stands at 35 percent. That's down 2 points from March 29 and 30.Try as they might, the Bush team and the pundits couldn't make Bush even a little bit more popular. Read More......
Now, you would think with Zarqawi dead and Iraqi government in place, his surprise visit to Iraq and Karl Rove in the clear, that the president's approval ratings would be up and not sinking.
SCHNEIDER: Well, some polls did show them going up a very little bit, in last few weeks, after those events just mentioned, somewhere in the range of 37 to 41 percent. But this is the most recent poll. The only one taken since the Supreme Court's Guantanamo decision, which went against the White House and it shows the president with a low number indeed, 35 percent. So any improvement was very short lived.
People in Britain view the United States as a vulgar, crime-ridden society obsessed with money and led by an incompetent president whose Iraq policy is failing, according to a newspaper poll.A few highlights, errr, lowlights:
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