Quote of the Day
2 minutes ago
...the GOP has played a trick on itself. The party brought so-called gay Republicans into positions of power in Congress only to realize that the confidential information they held about a secret gay network was political dynamite that could backfire....Like the guy said. It's early in the probe, but he's gonna get to the bottom of it and make sure everything is exposed. (Is it warm in here?)
A New York Times story by Mark Leibovich confirmed that gay Republicans have occupied "crucial staff positions" in Congress and "have played decisive roles in passing legislation, running campaigns and advancing careers."....
If you are getting the idea that gay Republicans may be closeted Democrats, then you are beginning to understand how the Mark Foley scandal could have been a Democratic Party dirty trick.... gay Republicans are in reality "liberal activists" who want to use the party to advance the same homosexual agenda embraced by the Democrats....
Ominously, the Foley scandal suggests that this network has inside information about the sexual behavior of members of Congress and their staffers that can be exploited in order to create scandals at a moment's notice.... It is now apparent that this power has been used to sabotage the party from within....
It is also beyond dispute that the current scandalous state of affairs will outlive the Foley scandal unless the secret network of bludgeon and blackmail is exposed....
It's early in the probe, but we may be looking at emerging evidence of a homosexual recruitment ring that operated on Capitol Hill. It's time to get beyond partisan politics and follow the evidence wherever it leads. Our media should not be intimidated by charges of "gay bashing." They must lead the way in getting to the bottom of this terrible abuse of power.
Five conservative nonprofit organizations, including one run by prominent Republican Grover Norquist, "perpetrated a fraud" on taxpayers by selling their clout to lobbyist Jack Abramoff, Senate investigators said in a report issued today.Senator Max Baucus, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee which authored the report, said the IRS and FBI should investigate Norquist's group. The Republican chair of the Finance Committee, Charles Grassley from Iowa, "endorsed [the reports] findings of wrongdoing by the nonprofit groups."
The report includes previously unreleased e-mails between the now-disgraced lobbyist and officers of the nonprofit groups, showing that Abramoff routed money from his clients to the groups. In exchange the groups, among other things, produced ostensibly independent newspaper op-ed columns or press releases that favored the clients' positions.
U.S. military casualties have surged in Iraq in recent weeks, with U.S. troops engaging in perilous urban sweeps to curb sectarian violence in Baghdad while facing unrelenting violence elsewhere.Read More......
At least 44 U.S. troops have been killed so far in October. At the current pace, the month would be the deadliest for U.S. forces since January 2005. After falling to 43 in July, the U.S. toll rose in August and September before spiking this month. The war's average monthly U.S. death toll is 64.
I am disappointed to report that following participation in initial drafts of this report, the Minority staff earlier this month chose to no longer participate in producing this valuable [sic] report. While the decision of the Minority is regrettable, I believe the report can make a useful contribution to the ongoing debate over this critical national security issue.Good for the Democrats on Intel for refusing to legitimize the report with their participation. For the terrorism report, Democrats expressed some important minority views, but when reality-based views are being excluded, sometimes refusing to participate is the best option. And if the political nature of the document isn't clear enough already, the first quote on the report is this:
'The United States should consider the danger that we could transfer nuclear weapons to terrorists, that we have the ability to do so.' – North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Gye-Gwan, April 2005That's right, North Korea equals terrorists!! Anybody who's not still living the Cold War understands that there’s a big difference between states and non-state actors. Non-state actors, which most terrorist groups are these days, don't have a power apparatus consisting of borders, armies, or an economic system. They don’t have the institutional wealth and power of dictatorial leaders, and you tend to see them in caves rather than palaces. The state leaders, conversely, tend to really like being filthy rich and all-powerful. I mean, according to the report, Kim Jong Il is the world's leading purchaser, at as much as $720,000 per year, of "Hennessey" cognac (and yes, all you really need to know about this report is summed up by the fact that they spelled Hennessy wrong), and rich and powerful dictators generally tend not to do things that will instantaneously result in their being toppled by a pissed-off foreign power. For North Korea to hand weapons to terrorists would be suicidal, and Pakistan has already proven that the U.S. will sit idly by if nuclear technology is sold to state actors, so they’re pretty safe on that front.
According to the source, Foley said he was being pressured by "the White House and Rove gang," who insisted that Foley run. If he didn't, Foley was told, it might impact his lobbying career.What did Karl know and when did he know it? Read More......
“Tempting Faith’s” author is David Kuo, who served as special assistant to the president from 2001 to 2003. A self-described conservative Christian, Kuo’s previous experience includes work for prominent conservatives including former Education Secretary and federal drug czar Bill Bennett and former Attorney General John Ashcroft....Read More......
He says some of the nation’s most prominent evangelical leaders were known in the office of presidential political strategist Karl Rove as “the nuts.”
“National Christian leaders received hugs and smiles in person and then were dismissed behind their backs and described as ‘ridiculous,’ ‘out of control,’ and just plain ‘goofy,’” Kuo writes.
I have decided not to run for President.Read More......
This past weekend, my family and I went to Connecticut to celebrate my Dad’s 81st birthday, and then we took my oldest daughter Madison to start looking at colleges.
I know these moments are never going to come again. This weekend made clear what I’d been thinking about for many weeks—that while politically this appears to be the right time for me to take the plunge—at this point, I want to have a real life.
Weeks before the Nov. 7 elections, the Mark Foley scandal and its aftermath have already had a visible effect on Republican prospects: Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) and Rep. Thomas M. Reynolds (R-N.Y.), the two men leading the GOP efforts to keep power in the House, have both been largely sidelined from the public campaign.This is a major distraction for the GOP campaign apparatus. The NRCC's flack actually said the scandal hasn't impacted Reynolds' ability to run the organization. Right. Reynolds is losing in his own race. The Republicans have to spend money on races they thought were safe. Their campaign infrastructure is crumbling.
Under normal circumstances, the House speaker and the chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, currently Reynolds, would be in a full sprint in the closing weeks of an election campaign -- raising money and rallying partisans to help House members in the most competitive races. Both leaders, however, have drastically curtailed their appearances this month after coming under fire for what critics have called an inadequate response to early warnings about Foley's behavior with House pages.
For planning purposes, the Army is gearing up to keep current troop levels in Iraq for another four years, a new indication that conditions there are too unstable to foresee an end to the war.Just for planning purposes, naturally. Sounds like Rummy had a child-like temper tantrum at the news conference as well. It must be tough for someone as arrogant as Rummy to see such a self created mess with nobody but himself and his inside circle to blame. Read More......
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