Swedish Meatballs
7 hours ago
The Federal Emergency Management Agency's lack of planning, not the failures of state and local officials, was to blame for much of what went wrong with the government's response to Hurricane Katrina, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told member of Congress today.Read More......
The assessment by the most senior administration official to answer legislators' questions since the hurricane struck in late August contrasted sharply with testimony offered earlier by former FEMA Director Michael Brown. Brown had blamed the "dysfunction" of Louisiana state and local officials for the problems that hobbled the relief effort.
"From my own experience, I don't endorse those views," Chertoff said.
He told lawmakers that he found the governors and mayors of the region to be responsive as the crisis unfolded.
1. Consider the blog a newspaper or magazine. You'd pay for those without missing a beat, why not do the same for your favorite blogs?Why do we need contributions?
2. Consider the blog an advocacy organization, like your favorite gay rights group, civil rights org, liberal non-profit, etc. We do the same activism they do, some might argue we do it a lot better, and they get millions to the campaigns we do for free.
3. More generally, if you like what we do, help us do it. I do a lot more than just write on the blog. I do advocacy on a variety of issues, help out on local campaigns when I can (like in Maine this past weekend), do TV punditry on progressive causes, etc. If you like the work I do across the board, help me do more of it (please).
1. This is now my full-time job, which means my salary comes pretty much exclusively from this blog rather than the consulting business I've mostly given up in order to do AMERICAblog.Ok, enough of that. As always, the blog will remain free, so you don't have to give anything. And, as I've noted before, please do NOT give if you're struggling to make ends meet. That's very kind, but seriously, save your money until you can truly afford to give.
2. We are about to move and upgrade the blog to a new server, and that is going to cost us thirty to forty thousand dollars over the next year. (And those of you who think it won't cost that, you don't know the details of how much traffic we're getting. We used up 500 gigs of bandwidth just for those war-for-porn photos a few weeks ago. I have a proposal put together by an expert I know and trust, we've already gotten bids from vendors, this is what it's going to cost.)
Some more background on why we're upgrading the blog:
As I mentioned the other day, we hit our server limit with Blogger - the blog has simply gotten too big for the space they offer. It's not Blogger's fault, they're just not built for really big blogs. What that means is that I've had to delete old files on the server - meaning, pretty much every upload (orchids photos, sound files, documents, etc.) that I've posted to the blog between its launch and June of this year has been deleted to make room for "new" posts to the blog. I estimate in a few weeks to a month or so we'll have hit our Blogger server limit for good (all the old uploads will be deleted), and that will mean we'll have to delete our archives in order to keep the blog running. I don't plan on letting that happen.
We have a detailed plan for moving the blog to a dedicated server and redoing the entire blog itself with LOTS of new features. But that will cost good money - we'll be paying around $1500/month in Internet bandwidth alone (on Blogger, bandwidth is free). But if we don't want the blog to grind to a halt in short order, we have no choice but to move ahead and assume the cost. I'm talking to some big donors about helping the blog out overall, but no cash is yet forthcoming.
As an aside, I know some of you have offered "free" deals to help us out. I appreciate that, but this blog is now a serious entity and we need to treat it as such. I'd rather avoid patching together free things here and there at the expense of making a product that works and can be scaled up to something even bigger and better as we grow - that was the problem we've had with Blogger, going with "the free" rather than "the best." We need to move AMERICAblog over to the best tech solution we can get, and that will take serious money.
Columnist/ex-Talon news reporter/man about town Jeff Gannon can soon add "author" to his list of titles.Whatever.
"It is the book that so many have urged me to write for many months now," he says in an e-mail to us. But he wouldn't divulge any other details. The title "has yet to be determined."
"I'm working on the content right now," he says. "I'm sure there are people who had hoped I'd never write about this."
The truth that is now dawning on many movement conservatives is that George W. Bush is not one of them and never has been. They were allies for a long time, to be sure, and conservatives used Bush just as he used them. But it now appears that they are headed for divorce. And as with all divorces, the ultimate cause was not the final incident, but the buildup of grievances over a long period that one day could no longer be overlooked, contained or smoothed over.Read More......
From the conservative point of view, the list of grievances is a long one, dating back to the first days of the Bush administration....
I could go on, but the point is that George W. Bush has never demonstrated any interest in shrinking the size of government. And on many occasions, he has increased government significantly. Yet if there is anything that defines conservatism in America, it is hostility to government expansion. The idea of big government conservatism, a term often used to describe Bush's philosophy, is a contradiction in terms.
Conservative intellectuals have known this for a long time, but looked the other way for various reasons. Some thought the war on terror trumped every other issue. If a few billion dollars had to be wasted to buy the votes needed to win the war, then so be it, many conservatives have argued. Others say that Bush never ran as a conservative in the first place, so there is no betrayal here, only a failure by conservatives to see what he has been all along.
Of course, this doesn't say much for the conservative movement. At best, conservatives were naive about Bush. At worst, they sold out much of what they claim to believe in.
The Miers nomination has led to some long-overdue soul-searching among conservative intellectuals. For many, the hope of finally turning around the judiciary was worth putting up with all the big government stuff. Thus, Bush's pick of a patently unqualified crony for a critical position on the Supreme Court was the final straw.
The contentious nomination of Harriet E. Miers to the Supreme Court hit another snag this afternoon when both the Republican chairman and ranking Democrat of the Senate Judiciary Committee said her responses to senators' questions had thus far been unsatisfactory.Add incompetent, too.
The committee chairman, Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, said Ms. Miers should redo a questionnaire prepared by a bipartisan Senate panel because her initial responses had been insufficient on "many, many of the items."
The ranking Democrat, Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, agreed that Ms. Miers's effort on the questionnaire had been "inadequate," adding that some of his Senate colleagues had found her responses "ranged from incomplete to insulting."
A Texas court issued a warrant Wednesday for former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay to appear for booking, where he is likely to face the fingerprinting and photo mug shot he had hoped to avoid.Read More......
...if Rove came clean in 2003, was that before or after Scott McClellan told the press that he was "not involved" in the leak?Read More......
More importantly, if this story is true, particularly the part about this disclosure taking place in 2003, there is a potentially far more serious problem. Let's go back to Murray Waas' Oct. 7 article in the National Journal, which was one of three articles that leaked the "Rove misled Bush" story. Waas wrote:White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove personally assured President Bush in the early fall of 2003 that he had not disclosed to anyone in the press that Valerie Plame, the wife of an administration critic, was a CIA employee, according to legal sources with firsthand knowledge of the accounts that both Rove and Bush independently provided to federal prosecutors . . .So if this new story is true--Rove "came clean" to Bush in 2003--and Waas is also right, doesn't that mean that Bush lied to Fitzgerald in June 2004?
In his own interview with prosecutors on June 24, 2004, Bush testified that Rove assured him he had not disclosed Plame as a CIA employee and had said nothing to the press to discredit Wilson, according to sources familiar with the president's interview.
I don't know if we're going to find out the senior administration official. Now, this is a large administration, and there's a lot of senior officials. I don't have any idea. I'd like to. I want to know the truth. That's why I've instructed this staff of mine to cooperate fully with the investigators -- full disclosure, everything we know the investigators will find out. I have no idea whether we'll find out who the leaker is -- partially because, in all due respect to your profession, you do a very good job of protecting the leakers.The NY Daily News reports that sometime in 2003, Rove told Bush he was the leaker. It is now incumbent on the White House to tell us WHEN Rove told Bush. Because if Rove told Bush prior to October 7, 2003, then Bush actively engaged in a conspiracy to deceive the American people about a possible crime.
A second aide to Vice President Dick Cheney is cooperating with the special prosecutor's probe into the outing of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson, those close to the investigation say.Read More......
Other sources confirmed, however, that Bush was initially furious with Rove in 2003 when his deputy chief of staff conceded he had talked to the press about the Plame leak....So:
A second well-placed source said some recently published reports implying Rove had deceived Bush about his involvement in the Wilson counterattack were incorrect and were leaked by White House aides trying to protect the President.
"Bush did not feel misled so much by Karl and others as believing that they handled it in a ham-handed and bush-league way," the source said.
Q Given -- given recent developments in the CIA leak case, particularly Vice President Cheney's discussions with the investigators, do you still stand by what you said several months ago, a suggestion that it might be difficult to identify anybody who leaked the agent's name?4. Bush's comments border on obstruction of justice. He went public and made clear that he didn't know who the leaker was - he said he'd fire anyone found to have been involved, he hadn't yet fired Karl, so clearly he was saying that he had no evidence that Karl was involved. Bush was trying to cover up the fact that Karl was the guy. That's obstruction.
THE PRESIDENT: That's up to --
Q And, and, do you stand by your pledge to fire anyone found to have done so?
THE PRESIDENT: Yes. And that's up to the U.S. Attorney to find the facts.
Bush has always known that Rove often talks with reporters anonymously and he generally approved of such contacts, one source said.So, it wasn't what they did that made Bush angry. It was how they did it.
But the President felt Rove and other members of the White House damage-control team did a clumsy job in their campaign to discredit Plame's husband, Joseph Wilson, the ex-diplomat who criticized Bush's claim that Saddam Hussen tried to buy weapons-grade uranium in Niger.
A second well-placed source said some recently published reports implying Rove had deceived Bush about his involvement in the Wilson counterattack were incorrect and were leaked by White House aides trying to protect the President.
"Bush did not feel misled so much by Karl and others as believing that they handled it in a ham-handed and bush-league way," the source said.
Given the political ramifications attached to Mr. Fitzgerald's decisions, officials at the White House have begun discussing what would happen if Mr. Rove was indicted.See, at the White House, they know what Rove did. They know if Fitzgerald gets the facts, Rove is busted. Read More......
Among the names being discussed to take some of Mr. Rove's responsibilities should he have to step aside, an outside adviser to the White House said, are Dan Bartlett, currently Mr. Bush's counselor; Ken Mehlman, the chairman of the Republican National Committee; and Robert M. Kimmitt, the deputy Treasury secretary.
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
|
![]() |
© 2010 - John Aravosis | Design maintenance by Jason Rosenbaum
Send me your tips: americablog AT starpower DOT net