Sunday reading: Tied
6 minutes ago
Defeatism may have its partisan uses, but it is not justified by the facts. For every scene of destruction in Iraq, there are more scenes of rebuilding and hope. For every life lost, there are countless more lives reclaimed. And for every terrorist working to stop freedom in Iraq, there are many more Iraqis and Americans working to defeat them. My fellow citizens: Not only can we win the war in Iraq – we are winning the war in Iraq.Next we learn that we can't pull out of Iraq, even if it's a total loss, because, well, apparently people would make fun of us.
It is also important for every American to understand the consequences of pulling out of Iraq before our work is done. We would abandon our Iraqi friends – and signal to the world that America cannot be trusted to keep its word. We would undermine the morale of our troops – by betraying the cause for which they have sacrificed. We would cause tyrants in the Middle East to laugh at our failed resolve, and tighten their repressive grip. We would hand Iraq over to enemies who have pledged to attack us – and the global terrorist movement would be emboldened and more dangerous than ever before.Then there's the kicker. If you think the war is a mess and that Bush has botched the entire thing, you have committed an act of "dishonor." Funny, I wonder how dishonored our dead soldiers feel, the ones who died because Bush still hasn't send them the necessary body armor three years into the freaking war?
To retreat before victory would be an act of recklessness and dishonor … and I will not allow it....Yeah, and let's not even talking about dishonoring the Constitution. I can't think of no better way to dishonor our soldiers than to make mockery of the entire system of free and democratic government they are giving their lives to defend.
I also want to speak to those of you who did not support my decision to send troops to Iraq: I have heard your disagreement, and I know how deeply it is felt. Yet now there are only two options before our country – victory or defeat. And the need for victory is larger than any president or political party, because the security of our people is in the balance.Then Bush concludes by telling us that we'll win in Iraq because God has said so:
And we remember the words of the Christmas carol, written during the Civil War: “God is not dead, nor [does] He sleep; the Wrong shall fail, the Right prevail, with peace on Earth, good-will to men.”That's comforting. Unfortunately the other guys are saying the same thing. And both of you can't be right. (Though it is amazing how similar you both sound.)
Thank you, and good night.
This cannot stand. In ordering the NSA to spy secretly on America, George Bush has overturned United States Signals Intelligence Directive 18, which prohibits domestic spying by NSA; violated the federal act which created the FISA court to oversee covert domestic investigations; and trampled upon the Fourth Amendment guarantee against warrantless searches. It cannot stand for a day, much less a month while Congress is in recess....Later on in the post there are the "methods" they propose using to get to the bottom of this. Nowhere is impeachment mentioned. I add it to the list. "If" - and I say "if" generously " - George Bush broke the law 30 or more times in order to spy on American citizens, one of the greatest no-no's our country has - then the man needs to be removed from office immediately, whether it's impeachment, the 25th amendment, or his immediate resignation.
Operation Flabbergasted We cannot let that happen. We have to ensure that by Monday, all hell has broken loose in D.C.
Every Senator needs to know there'll be jolly hell back home if they don't demand Bush stop it now. The MSM needs to be discussing the `constitutional crisis.' There has to be a plan immediately to make this happen. I've got one.
We know that domestic spying by the NSA is Orwellian. We don't need to wait for panels of experts to declare the obvious, that Bush's policies violate the Fourth Amendment in the most fundamental way.
This morning, Condoleezza Rice defended the NSA evesdropping program by arguing that congressional leaders — specifically “leaders of the relevant oversight intelligence committees” — had been briefed on the activities.Read More......RICE: It’s been reviewed not just by the White House counsel but by the lawyers of the Justice Department and by the lawyers of the NSA, the National Security Agency, and by the Inspector General of the National Security Agency, and it has to be reauthorized every 45 days. And the Congress, the congressional leaders, including —This is apparently not true. At the time the program was initiated, the Chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee was former Sen. Bob Graham (D-FL). On Friday’s “Nightline,” Graham made clear he had never once been briefed by the administration about the program:
RUSSERT: Those are administration lawyers. Why not go to an objective court?
RICE: — including leaders of the relevant oversight intelligence committees have been briefed on this.
There was no reference made to the fact that we were going to…begin unwarranted, illegal — and I think unconstitutional — eavesdropping on American citizens.
"I'm saying, 'I'm not a victim, and you're not going to treat me like this anymore! I'm taking my retirement money somewhere else,'" Tibby says, banging her fist on the dining room table one afternoon. But the women know there is another side to their decision to leave Virginia, a skittering away, a cautiousness that has clung all these years. And the story of where that caution comes from explains why they believe they need to go.Read the article, meet Barbara Kenny and Tibby Middleton, and decide for yourself when you think enough will be enough. Read More......
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It's unlikely they would have paid much attention to Virginia's Affirmation of Marriage Act if they hadn't been so worried that it could keep them apart during a medical emergency. The law infuriated them. "The way Virginia is treating us, what they are saying to us, I feel like it's being in an abusive house," Tibby says.
"I'm saying, let's get out of this house."
A string of attacks killed 19 people, including two relatives of a senior Kurdish official, and Vice President Dick Cheney made a surprise visit Sunday in which he suggested that Iraq's recent elections were a major step toward withdrawing U.S. troops.Yeah, what a coincidence he's there in time for the "big" speech tonight. Read More......
Cheney's visit, under heavy security, was so secret that even Iraq's prime minister said he was surprised when he showed up for what he believed was a meeting with the U.S. ambassador only to see Cheney waiting to greet him.
Cheney toured the country the same day President Bush scheduled a prime-time address on Iraq.
President Bush defended the program yesterday, saying it was saving lives, hotly insisting that he was working within the Constitution and the law, and denouncing The Times for disclosing the program's existence. We don't know if he was right on the first count; this White House has cried wolf so many times on the urgency of national security threats that it has lost all credibility. But we have learned the hard way that Mr. Bush's team cannot be trusted to find the boundaries of the law, much less respect them.If you cross the boundaries of the law, you are a criminal. And this was a willful violation of those boundaries. The Washington Post also lays in to Bush:
As with its infamous torture memorandum, the administration appears to have taken the position that the president is entitled to ignore a clearly worded criminal law when it proves inconvenient in the war on terrorism. That argument is not as outlandish in the case of FISA as it is with respect to the torture laws, since administrations of both parties have always insisted on the executive's inherent power to conduct national security surveillance. Still, FISA has been the law of the land for 2 1/2 decades. To disrupt it so fundamentally, in total secret and without seeking legislative authorization, shows a profound disregard for Congress and the laws it passes.If Bush disregards Congress and a "clearly worded criminal" law that it passed, he's a criminal. Because criminals disregard the laws that Congress passes. Read More......
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