Swedish Meatballs
10 hours ago
The Voice of America's bureau in Baghdad has been closed for the past six months, ever since the government-funded agency withdrew its only reporter in Iraq after she was fired upon in an ambush and her security guard was later killed.Hey, maybe VOA can hire Joe Lieberman to be their Baghdad correspondent. I hear he's going to be looking for a job, come August. Read More......
All Western news organizations have struggled with the dangerous conditions in Iraq, which have led to such high-profile incidents as the kidnapping of Christian Science Monitor reporter Jill Carroll and the wounding of ABC News anchor Bob Woodruff. But for a federally funded information service to pull out of Baghdad for such a prolonged period raises questions about the Bush administration's insistence that conditions there are gradually improving.
Republican leaders, who previously sought to focus attention on the Jefferson case as a counterpoint to their party's own ethical scandals, said they are disturbed by the raid. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) said that he is "very concerned" about the incident and that Senate and House counsels will review it.So if you guys care so much about privacy, where's the cell phone records privacy legislation that Frist refuses to pass in the Senate, and Hastert mysteriously pulled from the House floor a week ago? Or is banning gays in the Constitution (and your own privacy) more important than your constituents' privacy?
House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) expressed alarm at the raid. "The actions of the Justice Department in seeking and executing this warrant raise important Constitutional issues that go well beyond the specifics of this case," he said in a lengthy statement released last night.
"Insofar as I am aware, since the founding of our Republic 219 years ago, the Justice Department has never found it necessary to do what it did Saturday night, crossing this Separation of Powers line, in order to successfully prosecute corruption by Members of Congress," he said. "Nothing I have learned in the last 48 hours leads me to believe that there was any necessity to change the precedent established over those 219 years."
Lieberman said Lamont is rich enough to try to buy his way into the Senate.The response from Lamont's campaign is perfect:
"Having between $90 million and $300 million, Ned Lamont can not only try to buy a seat from Connecticut in the U.S. Senate, he can probably buy a seat in a couple of other states if he wanted," Lieberman said.
Swan said he does not believe Lieberman's gibes about wealth will resonate.Hmm. Considering how much Joe loves the GOP, it's a little odd that he's attacking someone who has money. Did Lieberman ever attack Dick Cheney's wealth when he ran against him back in 2000? Just wondering. Read More......
"I think it makes an incumbent senator look weak," Swan said.
When the subject of Bill and Hillary Clinton comes up for many prominent Democrats these days, Topic A is the state of their marriage — and how the most dissected relationship in American life might affect Mrs. Clinton's possible bid for the presidency in 2008.Just who are these "prominent Democrats" obsessing about the state of the Clinton's marriage? And why would any "prominent Democrat" deign to talk to the media about that subject. One would hope that "prominent Democrats" would spend more time obsessing about how to win. That's what Bill and Hillary Clinton spend a lot of their time thinking about.
A frustrating aspect of writing about Iraq since the invasion is that the worse the situation becomes, the easier it is for Tony Blair or George Bush to pretend it is improving. That is because as Baghdad and Iraq, aside from the three Kurdish provinces, become the stalking ground for death squads and assassins, it is impossible to report the collapse of security without being killed doing so.Hmmm...quite a contrast.
There was a ghastly absurdity about Mr Blair's optimism as he stood beside the new Iraqi Prime Minister, Nuri al-Maliki, in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone yesterday. As usual, Mr Blair arrived by helicopter. Anybody entering the zone on foot has to negotiate eight checkpoints defended by heavily armed troops and guards surrounded by sandbags, razor wire, sniffer dogs and X-ray machines.
The problem for the US and Britain in Iraq is at one level quite simple. " If you have democracy in Iraq it will be in the interests of Iran, religious organisations and the Shia," said Sami Shoresh, a commentator on Iraqi affairs.Read More......
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