Swedish Meatballs
9 hours ago
Increasingly pessimistic about Iraq and skeptical about President Bush's plan for Social Security, Americans are in a season of political discontent, giving Mr. Bush one of the lowest approval ratings of his presidency and Congress one of its lowest rating in years, according to the New York Times/CBS News Poll.Let's just say, the numbers don't get better. In fact, they get worse. Try this one:
Forty-two percent of those polled said they approved of the way Mr. Bush is handling his job, a marked decline from his 51 percent rating in the aftermath of the November election, when he embarked on an ambitious second-term agenda led by the overhaul of Social Security. Sixteen months before the midterm elections, Congress fared even worse in the survey, with the approval of just 33 percent of Americans, and nearly three-fourths saying Congress did not share their priorities.
Only 25 percent said they approved of the way Mr. Bush was handling Social Security, down slightly from what the poll found in March.and this:
only 37 percent said they approved of Mr. Bush's handling of the situation in Iraq, down from 45 percent in February. And a strong majority of Americans now say the United States' effort to bring stability and order to Iraq is going badly - 60 percent, up from 47 percent in February.Watch how quickly the GOP rats on the hill jump ship. Read More......
Whatever your views on the treatment of detainees and alleged excesses at the Guantanamo Bay facility, it is inappropriate and insensitive to suggest that actions by American troops in any way resemble actions taken by Nazis in their treatment of prisoners. Suggesting some kind of equivalence between their interrogation tactics demonstrates a profound lack of understanding about the horrors that Hitler and his regime actually perpetrated.Really? Wow. Nothing our soldiers could ever do could EVER EVER EVER compare to what the Nazis did to their prisoners. Wow. Is that because we're Amurikans and, you know, that 'banality of evil' thing doesn't infect us? Was it just genetic, the whole Nazi thing?
Michael Smith: There are number of people asking about fixed and its meaning. This is a real joke. I do not know anyone in the UK who took it to mean anything other than fixed as in fixed a race, fixed an election, fixed the intelligence. If you fix something, you make it the way you want it. The intelligence was fixed and as for the reports that said this was one British official. Pleeeaaassee! This was the head of MI6. How much authority do you want the man to have? He has just been to Washington, he has just talked to George Tenet. He said the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy. That translates in clearer terms as the intelligence was being cooked to match what the administration wanted it to say to justify invading Iraq. Fixed means the same here as it does there. More leaks? I do hope so and the more Blair and Bush lie to try to get themselves off the hook the more likely it is that we will get more leaks.(Hat tip to Briebrooks) Read More......
On another occasion, the [air conditioner] had been turned off, making the temperature in the unventilated room well over 100 degrees. The detainee was almost unconscious on the floor, with a pile of hair next to him. He had apparently been literally pulling his hair out throughout the night.Nah, doesn't sound like Nazi Germany at all. Stalinist Russia, perhaps. The Khmer Rouge. Rwanda. Mussolini. Caligula. Sure. But Nazis?
The Pentagon on Thursday invited more members of Congress to visit the Guantanamo jail for foreign terrorism suspects, saying criticism by some U.S. lawmakers showed "a real ignorance of what's really going on...."What do you mean, Larry? Are you saying you have some inside information on the coordinated conservative swarm attacking Senator Durbin for telling the truth about what you people have done to violate international law at Gitmo? What do you know and when did you know it, Larry?
"And the way they are describing it is unfortunate, and in some places I believe those people will regret having made those kind of comments."
“While I am told on one hand The Blade is after a certain individual in Toledo and we a (sic) simple collateral damage, I have also been told by several Democrat friends (yes, I do have one or two) that the minority party caucus hopes to use these articles and resulting investigation as a way to kill workers comp reform and make it so unpalatable that a veto might be forthcoming. We continue to point out the truth and hope it will prevail (‘‘Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free’’)....On April 14, Mr. Conrad wrote to Mr. Taft under the heading “Capital Coin: “I believe we ‘‘may be’’ starting to turn the corner (knock on wood) on this issue. Our message is being sought out and delivered via Toledo-area media — Toledo Free Press, Toledo Business Journal (extensive article soon to be published), WSPD AM radio, and the local ABC TV affiliate — which are all concerned with the one-sided approach demonstrated by the Blade.”Yeah, it was all a big conspiracy between the Democrats and the Toledo Blade....Right. The whole thing really exploded when it turned out "a certain individual in Toledo" a.k.a. Tom Noe was missing $12 million in public funds.
The suburban Denver home of a former employee of Tom Noe was burglarized over the weekend, with thieves making off with artwork, guns, jewelry, cars, and $300,000 in wine — possibly purchased with money from the state of Ohio.A tad suspicious....like everything else involved with Tom Noe and "Coin-gate." Even Colorado law enforcement is intrigued according to Chris Nelson who works for the local sheriff:
“There were immediately some red flags when you have a house of a suspect in a high profile case getting burglarized,” he said. “We are very aggressively pursuing this in light of the other ongoing investigations.”Read More......
Majority Leader Bill Frist this morning on the Today Show:Read More......LAUER: But when you stood on the floor and you said, She does respond, are you at all worried that you led some senators…Frist on Senate Floor, 3/17/05:
FRIST: I never said, She responded. I said I reviewed the court videotapes – the same ones the other doctors reviewed – and I questioned, Is her diagnosis correct?I have looked at the video footage. Based on the footage provided to me, which was part of the facts of the case, she does respond.More from Frist, 3/17/05:She certainly seems to respond to visual stimuli…
Gary Bauer, president of American Values, said in an interview that the sit-down sessions, likely to begin after the 2006 elections, would be "a very effective way to nail down where people are on cultural issues." He said candidates have become "very astute" at answering written questionnaires in ways that avoid making firm commitments.They might even endorse one candidate if all those power-hungry fellows can agree to support the same guy. (Rick Santorum, perhaps?) I'll be praying that they do -- a Republican candidate branded as the choice of these far right radicals would be hobbled severely during the general election.
The criticism came in a letter delivered Tuesday to the White House from five of the nation's most high-profile African American pastors. They called on the president to give his "ardent" support to a proposal by British Prime Minister Tony Blair under which industrialized nations would double their aid to Africa by 2010. Bush rejected the proposal last week....Maybe the cynical links between the far right and African American religious leaders -- based solely on their shared hatred of gays -- will continue to fray. Sorry Bush, you have to actually fight poverty in Africa if you want credit for fighting poverty in Africa. Read More......
The pastors' letter also marked the second time this week that the administration has faced public criticism over its Africa policy. On Monday, leaders of several African nations told Bush at an Oval Office meeting that bureaucracy was delaying the delivery of needed relief funds through one of the president's signature programs, the Millennium Challenge Account....
The letter couched African relief as a national security issue, saying that U.S. aid was an important defense against the rise of Islamic fundamentalism. Some pastors made that point to Rice last month, contending that a greater role for black churches in Africa would help block efforts by terrorist groups to recruit the millions of orphans resulting from the AIDS epidemic.
"Our failure as a nation to adequately support Africa is fundamentally a failure to adequately support our own national security," the letter said.
Jakes, Blake, Long and Rivers all represent large churches, and each has developed a high profile through television, radio or books. White House officials view the pastors and their large churches as a key entry point to a voting bloc that has long sided overwhelmingly with Democrats.
"Oh my God, his daughters! I’d LOVE to party with his daughters. I’d love to meet them. I totally want to have sex with them. You can write it the day after I leave here."Yes, Concerned Women for America, your little White House had no problem with this. (Not that I do, but hey, it's YOUR family values White House - NOT!
Sen. Lamar Alexander was one of 16 senators who did not join in when the Senate apologized for its failure to pass a federal law against lynchings....Read More......
Although 84 senators signed on to the lynching apology, Alexander, a Tennessee Republican, did not. He said he preferred a resolution he introduced called "celebrating Black History Month," which condemned lynching and pledged to address racial disparities in education and health care. His version made no mention of the Senate's failure to ban lynching....
Civil rights leaders said they didn't understand why Alexander or any lawmaker would decide not to join the apology as a co-sponsor.
"An apology begins with an acknowledgement of wrongdoing," said Hilary Shelton, the director of the Washington bureau of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. "For those who weren't willing to do that, you have to pause and take wonder as to why they're here in the first place."
The Rev. Enoch Fuzz, president of the Interdenominational Ministers Fellowship in Nashville, said he was disappointed by Alexander's decision.
"There were lynchings that took place in Tennessee,'' Fuzz said. Tennessee lawmakers "should just be as proactive as they can to move our nation past the hurt and the history and the old wounds because of the terrible history of racism in Tennessee."
A roadside bomb attack killed five U.S. Marines, and gunfire killed an American sailor in a western Iraqi town, the U.S. military said Thursday.Yeah, more deaths and an upsurge in violence. Meanwhile over in the delusional White House, Scott McClellan, talking about Terri Schiavo, told the New York Times:
The U.S. deaths came amid an upsurge in violence appeared to be aimed at derailing stepped up efforts by Shiite politicians to bring the disaffected Sunni Arab minority into the political process.
"The president believes we should stand on the side of defending and protecting life."Of course, that only means for Terri Schiavo and other theocracy issues, not the kids being killed in Iraq. Read More......
The House handed President Bush the first defeat in his effort to preserve the broad powers of the USA Patriot Act, voting yesterday to curtail the FBI's ability to seize library and bookstore records for terrorism investigations.The GOP really is starting to back away from Chimpy....the Repubs. in Congress are feeling more free to buck Bush...they are reading the polls, too. Read More......
Bush has threatened to veto any measure that weakens those powers. The surprise 238 to 187 rebuke to the White House was produced when a handful of conservative Republicans, worried about government intrusion, joined with Democrats who are concerned about personal privacy.
"We do not want politics to be perceived as the underlying motivation, and that is certainly a risk if we make adjustments in our remedies presentation that are not based on evidence," the two top lawyers for the trial team, Sharon Y. Eubanks and Stephen D. Brody, wrote in a memorandum on May 30 to Associate Attorney General Robert D. McCallum that was reviewed by The New York Times.Read More......
The newly disclosed documents make clear that the decision was made after weeks of tumult in the department and accusations from lawyers on the tobacco team that Mr. McCallum and other political appointees had effectively undermined their case. Mr. McCallum, No. 3 at the department, is a close friend of President Bush from their days as Skull & Bones members at Yale, and he was also a partner at an Atlanta law firm, Alston & Bird, that has done legal work for R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, part of Reynolds American, a defendant in the case.
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