Keeping pace with Gonzo


Word must have gotten out to Dick Cheney that Alberto Gonzales had pulled ahead of him for “
Moron of the Moment” awards, because he was bound and determined to get one today.

Tonight CNN will be broadcasting an interview with Dick Cheney conducted by Larry King. It is pre-recorded; what’s wrong, Dick, not up for taking phone calls and possibly having to be accountable to the American people?

Well, read the material below and the related article, and know now that Dick is back in the race. Any son of a bitch stupid enough to defend Gonzales gets the same Golden Momo that Gonzo earned.

Cheney calls this a witch hunt. Well Dick, you know all about hunting…


Cheney: Congressional probe of attorneys’ firings ‘a witch hunt’

WASHINGTON (CNN) — Vice President Dick Cheney Tuesday dismissed congressional investigations into the firings of nine U.S. attorneys as “a bit of a witch hunt.”

“First of all, there’s no charge,” Cheney said. “What’s the allegation of wrongdoing here? Frankly, there isn’t any.”

“They keep rolling over rocks hoping they can find something, but there really hasn’t been anything come up that would suggest there was any wrongdoing of any kind,” Cheney told CNN’s Larry King, adding that he did not feel that Bush senior political adviser Karl Rove need testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on the matter.

“The president feels strongly — and I do too, I agree with him — that it’s important for us to pass on these offices we occupy to our successors in as good a shape as we found them. And that means protecting and preserving the integrity of those processes,” Cheney said.

The interview with Cheney will air Tuesday night on “Larry King Live” at 9 p.m. ET.

Full story here…

Staying Normal


It’s not as if I was ever truly “normal” (not that anyone is…)…

I got the news yesterday that I did not get the position in Wisconsin, which I had figured out when I didn’t get a call last Friday. The feedback that I got was that the evaluations were good, but (to summarize) the fit wasn’t quite right. I wish them well, and am bummed I won’t be a part of it… lots of good stuff is going to be taking place there.

On the positive side, I don’t have to address the issue of physical distance with my kids, and I truly enjoy the folks I work with. It’s the best team I have ever worked with, and about the best I could imagine for what we have going on here. I have gotten some very kind notes from people who are happy that I am staying (or are very good liars!), and we have a lot taking shape here this year; it should be a lot of fun.

Now to find a place to live and start that transition. One thing for sure - life definitely does not get any less complicated as we get older!

Run, Michael, Run


So the NAACP wants us to reserve judgment until all the facts have been reviewed. And after that probably until the jury comes back with a guilty verdict. And after that until the appeals process is over. And so on.

WTF?

Exactly why am I or anyone else supposed to withhold judgment or a point of view?

Am I going to be on the jury? NO

Am I going to serve as the judge? NO

Newsflash to the NAACP - the presumption of innocence applies in court, not outside of it. And while I understand that the NAACP might be reasonable in encouraging the media to withhold its fire, the fact of the matter is that the NFL and the companies with endorsement deals lined up with Michael Vick are perfectly within their rights to suspend any relationships with Vick pending the conclusion of the criminal process.

And I damn well have a right to my opinion.

Given the fact that Vick denied having ANY involvement with dog-fighting and that this statement is being contradicted by an FBI informant, Vick’s credibility is, at the most generous, strained beyond belief. Add to that the fact that this was going on at property owned by Vick, the fact that equipment was found that spoke to the most cruel treatment of dogs, and the fact that one of the defendants has now “flipped” on Vick, and I for one am willing to say it is far more likely than not that Vick belongs in prison, preferably given a cell mate named Bubba who is a dog lover. Is it possible he is innocent? Sure. Is it likely? No. The beauty of this is that he gets his day in court and that I won’t impact the jury proceedings one bit. There he will have to be convicted “beyond a reasonable doubt” - I can’t think of anything fairer. But people like Vick need to begin to understand that high profile positions like the one he holds demand higher accountability and role-modeling, no matter how strongly Charles Barkley might disagree. Now if Vick had a drinking, gambling, or drug problem, I’d be all for seeing him get help. But the fact that he was highly involved, both personally and financially, in the horrible “sport” of dog-fighting, and the fact that he may well have personally killed dogs, tells me that all Vick deserves is this:


I guess Marcus is looking like the responsible kid in the family now.

A brief foreign policy quiz from the Bush administration


Dear Prospective Department of State Employee:

Please answer the following two questions.

1) This nation called the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq illegal and has served as a destabilizing force in Iraq, funneling money to foreign fighters in Iraq, creating fraudulent documents implicating the Iraqi leader as a foreign agent and providing money to forces opposing the Iraqi government. This nation is:

a) China
b) Iran
c) Canada
d) Saudi Arabia

2) As a response to this nation’s interference in Iraq, the United States has developed the following response:

a) Nuke ‘em until they glow
b) Impose economic and military sanctions until the interference is terminated
c) Declare that nation a rogue, terrorist state and cut off all communication
d) Provide that nation an arms deal totaling twenty billion dollars

ANSWERS:

Question #1) D - Saudi Arabia

Question #2) D - Provide that nation an arms deal totaling twenty billion dollars

That’s right, prospective employee. If you want to come to work for this administration, you must realize that despotic regimes are not inherently negative, so long as that regime is willing to pretend to cooperate with our everlasting and global war on terror. It is also important that the regime have something we can benefit from (crude oil) and that our leaders gain personal financial benefit from their personal relationships with members of the regime. The rule to remember is that it’s not that they are despots… it’s that they are OUR despots.

Congratulations, you now have amassed enough knowledge to qualify to serve as Secretary of State. We hope that you will find this to be an improvement from your current posting in the Department of Justice.

BREAKING: Gonzo in trouble… finally!


MSNBC is reporting that House Democrats will be investigating impeachment proceedings against the Attorney General. Specifically, Rep. Jay Inslee (D-WA) announced he will introduce a bill tomorrow that would require the House Judiciary Committee to begin an impeachment investigation of Alberto Gonzales.

This is promising, and shows that Congress is not going to simply allow this administration to run out the clock. Thank you, Rep. Inslee!

NY Times goes after Cheney on DOJ scandal


The Department of Justice scandal just keeps getting worse and worse. Mr. Gonzales has to be one of the worst liars on the face of the earth, and his only defense when caught lying is to say he will “go back” to see if he can answer the question later. Alberto - Dude - here’s a newsflash: You are corrupt as shit and need to be impeached and then tried. If you had a single shred of dignity you would resign from office immediately. Now the New York Times is saying that Vice President Cheney was at the helm on this. Hold on, let me pretend to be surprised about that. Hopefully though, this news will serve to facilitate impeachment proceedings against both Gonzales and Cheney.

I have come to realize that we must be living through the end of times, because the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse have arrived. Their names? Bush, Cheney, Gonzales and Rove.

Here is an editorial from the New York Times from yesterday (posted in its entirety):

Editorial
Mr. Gonzales’s Never-Ending Story
Published: July 29, 2007

President Bush often insists he has to be the decider — ignoring Congress and the public when it comes to the tough matters on war, terrorism and torture, even deciding whether an ordinary man in Florida should be allowed to let his wife die with dignity. Apparently that burden does not apply to the functioning of one of the most vital government agencies, the Justice Department.

Americans have been waiting months for Mr. Bush to fire Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who long ago proved that he was incompetent and more recently has proved that he can’t tell the truth. Mr. Bush refused to fire him after it was clear Mr. Gonzales lied about his role in the political purge of nine federal prosecutors. And he is still refusing to do so — even after testimony by the F.B.I. director, Robert Mueller, that suggests that Mr. Gonzales either lied to Congress about Mr. Bush’s warrantless wiretapping operation or at the very least twisted the truth so badly that it amounts to the same thing.

Mr. Gonzales has now told Congress twice that there was no dissent in the government about Mr. Bush’s decision to authorize the National Security Agency to spy on Americans’ international calls and e-mails without obtaining the legally required warrant. Mr. Mueller and James Comey, a former deputy attorney general, say that is not true. Not only was there disagreement, but they also say that they almost resigned over the dispute.

Both men say that in March 2004 — when Mr. Gonzales was still the White House counsel — the Justice Department refused to endorse a continuation of the wiretapping program because it was illegal. (Mr. Comey was running the department temporarily because Attorney General John Ashcroft had emergency surgery.) Unwilling to accept that conclusion, Vice President Dick Cheney sent Mr. Gonzales and another official to Mr. Ashcroft’s hospital room to get him to approve the wiretapping.

Mr. Comey and Mr. Mueller intercepted the White House team, and they say they watched as a groggy Mr. Ashcroft refused to sign off on the wiretapping and told the White House officials to leave. Mr. Comey said the White House later modified the eavesdropping program enough for the Justice Department to sign off.

Last week, Mr. Gonzales denied that account. He told the Senate Judiciary Committee the dispute was not about the wiretapping operation but was over “other intelligence activities.” He declined to say what those were.

Lawmakers who have been briefed on the administration’s activities said the dispute was about the one eavesdropping program that has been disclosed. So did Mr. Comey. And so did Mr. Mueller, most recently on Thursday in a House hearing. He said he had kept notes.

That was plain enough. It confirmed what most people long ago concluded: that Mr. Gonzales is more concerned about doing political-damage control for Mr. Bush — in this case insisting that there was never a Justice Department objection to a clearly illegal program — than in doing his duty. But the White House continued to defend him.

As far as we can tell, there are three possible explanations for Mr. Gonzales’s talk about a dispute over other — unspecified — intelligence activities. One, he lied to Congress. Two, he used a bureaucratic dodge to mislead lawmakers and the public: the spying program was modified after Mr. Ashcroft refused to endorse it, which made it “different” from the one Mr. Bush has acknowledged. The third is that there was more wiretapping than has been disclosed, perhaps even purely domestic wiretapping, and Mr. Gonzales is helping Mr. Bush cover it up.

Democratic lawmakers are asking for a special prosecutor to look into Mr. Gonzales’s words and deeds. Solicitor General Paul Clement has a last chance to show that the Justice Department is still minimally functional by fulfilling that request.

If that does not happen, Congress should impeach Mr. Gonzales.

This raises some interesting questions (from Daily Kos):

(1) Why did Schumer, during Gonzales Testimony, hit on whether the Vice President asked him to visit Ashcroft? Does he know something which is not public? (2) Does someone on the NYTimes Editorial Board know something we don’t? More importantly, does the NYTimes fact-check its OpEd pieces, and can we get them to either source the statement which has already appeared in their press?

If it really was Vice President Cheney who sent Gonzales to try to force Ashcroft to approve the TSP, we now have the face for who was trying to gain the barest thread of legitimacy for the illegal program.

And in case you want to see the ‘exchange”:

I give credit to Senator Schumer… I could not possibly have sat there and resisted the urge to walk over and bitch-slap Gonzales.

A green car

Here is a great little article about how one person is thinking completely outside the box, and how that might have dramatic implications for the automotive industry. It’s nice to see someone develop the electronic automobile further, as well as to take a completely different perspective on how an automaker can operate.

Article excerpt:

…Think’s factory in the rural town of Aurskog is more reminiscent of Ikea than of Henry Ford, with its louvered wood exterior, bright open spaces, and shiny surfaces. There’s nary a drop of oil or smudge of grease on the factory floor. This is an assembly plant, and the company puts together the Think City much the way a child builds a model car.

“It’s a rather low investment,” says Think managing director Ole Fretheim. “We can put up new factories quite easily.”

He points to the black steel chassis of a City standing on a nearby pallet; it’s shipped preassembled from Thailand. At one station, workers attach the car’s aluminum frame — made in Denmark — and drop in a French motor. At another station, prefabricated rust-and dent-resistant polymer-plastic body panels produced in Turkey are hung on the frame of a nearly completed car.

The modular design means that Think can change body styles — a prototype of a sporty convertible is parked in one corner of the factory — without major retooling. It also means that Think can set up shop near its primary markets so it doesn’t have to export the finished cars.

I get behind the wheel of one of 10 prototype coupes. With baby-seal-eye headlights and a rakish rear, the black test car is about 2 feet shorter than a Mini Cooper but 6 inches taller, giving it a surprisingly spacious feeling — an effect that is magnified by the glass hatch that stretches from roof to bumper and that makes parking just about idiotproof…

Full story here…

TSA Issued False Warning


So all of the media initially reported the TSA bulletin warning of terrorist “dry runs”. Now CNN reports that was a bogus warning. Interesting though, that they only reported it on the air and it doesn’t show up on their web site. It’s like the reporters try to cover real news, and then CNN brass makes it go away. One more example of how our corporate media doesn’t dare offend the Bush administration.

What happened to the press in this nation? You know, the same media that took down Richard Nixon by uncovering the truth behind Nixon’s lies? Don’t hold your breath waiting for the mainstream corporate media to hold Dubya accountable. It appears that only Stewart, Colbert and Olbermann are capable of that.

CNN: TSA knew ‘dry run’ terror alerts were bogus
David Edwards and Nick Juliano
Published: Friday July 27, 2007

The Transportation Security Agency’s national security bulletin issued was based on bogus examples that were combined to give the impression of ominous terrorist plotting, CNN reports.

“That bulletin for law enforcement eyes only told of suspicious items recently found in passenger’s bags at airport checkpoints, warned that they may signify dry runs for terrorist attacks,” CNN’s Brian Todd reported Friday afternoon. “Well it turns out none of that is true.”

Todd highlights the case of Sara Weiss, who was detained in San Diego after two ice packs covered in tape were found in her baggage. Weiss, who works for a faith-based organization, also was carrying a survey about Muslim Americans, which CNN says also raised law enforcement provisions.

Full story here…

Go to the link to see the CNN video on the story. All four of the incidents, including the one with the 66 year old woman, were completely benign.

Military Rule Coming to a City Near You?


I normally do a quick scan of the blogs when I get started in the morning, and this morning I should not have read Mixter’s Mix! Mixter found a startling little piece that, coupled with “Worse than Watergate” (by John Dean) is making me think that I need to expand my collection of aluminum foil hats.

Read the piece below (posted in its entirety). Then keep in mind that at the end of the Clinton administration, there was a very disturbing piece of intelligence available that has never been mentioned by the current White House. For all the lies told by this administration to justify war, they have left out one very important piece of factual information… anywhere from 20 to 100 Russian “briefcase sized” nuclear weapons are unaccounted for, and there is credible intelligence that suggests that bin Laden has acquired two of them (see Dean’s book for citation).

And yet, despite this intelligence being available prior to Bush assuming office, we abandoned the threat in Afghanistan to focus on the non-threat of Iraq. Why would that be?

Could that have something to do with the fact that a real threat kept alive helps this administration justify whatever it wants to, including the unjustifiable? Is all the talk about an increasing al Qaeda threat a sign that Bush and Cheney know that a limited nuclear attack may be imminent? And wouldn’t such an attack be the justification for the overt abandonment of the Constitution and the declaration of military rule?

Bush thought 9/11 provided a lot of latitude. Imagine a limited nuclear attack carried out by terrorists, or at least looking like it is carried out by terrorists… we are dangerously close to seeing the death of our own republic.

I’d better get to Wal Mart before they run out of foil.

Dave Lindorff: Martial Law Threat is Real
Submitted by BuzzFlash on Sat, 07/28/2007 - 8:22pm. Dave Lindorff

The looming collapse of the U.S. military in Iraq, of which a number of generals and former generals, including former Chief of Staff Colin Powell, have warned, is happening none too soon, as it may be the best hope for preventing military rule here at home.

From the looks of things, the Bush/Cheney regime has been working assiduously to pave the way for a declaration of military rule, such that at this point it really lacks only the pretext to trigger a suspension of Constitutional government. They have done this with the active support of Democrats in Congress, though most of the heavy lifting was done by the last, Republican-led Congress.

The first step, or course, was the first Authorization for Use of Military Force, passed in September 2001, which the president has subsequently used to claim — improperly, but so what — that the whole world, including the U.S., is a battlefield in a so-called “War” on Terror, and that he has extra-Constitutional unitary executive powers to ignore laws passed by Congress. As constitutional scholar and former Reagan-era associate deputy attorney general Bruce Fein observes, that one claim, that the U.S. is itself a battlefield, is enough to allow this or some future president to declare martial law, “since you can always declare martial law on a battlefield. All he’d need would be a pretext, like another terrorist attack inside the U.S.”

The 2001 AUMF was followed by the PATRIOT Act, passed in October 2001, which undermined much of the Bill of Rights. Around the same time, the president began a campaign of massive spying on Americans by the National Security Agency, conducted without any warrants or other judicial review. It was and remains a program clearly aimed at American dissidents and at the Administration’s political opponents, since the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court would never have raised any objections to spying on potential terrorists. (It, and other government spying programs, have resulted in the government having a list now of some 325,000 “suspected terrorists”!)

The other thing we saw early on was the establishment of an underground government within a government, though the activation, following 9-11, of the so-called “Continuity of Government” protocol, which saw heads of federal agencies moved secretly to an underground bunker where, working under the direction of Vice President Dick Cheney, the “government” functioned out of sight of Congress and the public for critical months.

It was also during the first year following 9-11 that the Bush/Cheney regime began its programs of arrest and detention without charge — mostly of resident aliens, but also of American citizens — and of kidnapping and torture in a chain of gulag prisons overseas and at the Navy base at Guantanamo Bay.

The following year, Attorney General John Ashcroft began his program to develop a mass network of tens of millions of citizen spies — Operation TIPS. That program, which had considerable support from key Democrats (notably Sen. Joe Lieberman), was curtailed by Congress when key conservatives got wind of the scale of the thing, but the concept survives without a name, and is reportedly being expanded today.

Meanwhile, last October Bush and Cheney, with the help of a compliant Congress, put in place some key elements needed for a military putsch. There was the overturning of the venerable Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, which barred the use of active duty military inside the United States for police-type functions, and the revision of the Insurrection Act, so as to empower the president to take control of National Guard units in the 50 states, even over the objections of the governors of those states.

Put this together with the wholly secret construction now under way — courtesy of a $385 million grant by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to Halliburton subsidiary KBR Inc — of detention camps reportedly capable of confining as many as 400,000 people, and a recent report that the Pentagon has a document, dated June 1, 2007, classified Top Secret, which declares there to be a developing “insurgency” within the U.S, and which lays out a whole martial law counterinsurgency campaign against legal dissent, and you have all the ingredients for a military takeover of the United States.

As we go about our daily lives — our shopping, our escapist movie watching, and even our protesting and political organizing — we need to be aware that there is a real risk that it could all blow up, and that we could find ourselves facing armed, uniformed troops at our doors.

Bruce Fein isn’t an alarmist. He says he doesn’t see martial law coming tomorrow. But he is also realistic. He says, “This is all sitting around like a loaded gun waiting to go off. I think the risk of martial law is trivial right now, but the minute there is a terrorist attack, then it is real. And it stays with us after Bush and Cheney are gone, because terrorism stays with us forever.” (It may be significant that Hillary Clinton, the leading Democratic candidate for president, has called for the revocation of the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force against Iraq, but not of the earlier 2001 AUMF, which Bush claims makes him commander in chief of a borderless, endless war on terror.)

Indeed, the revised Insurrection Act (10. USC 331-335) approved by Congress and signed into law by Bush last October, specifically says that the president can federalize the National Guard to “suppress public disorder” in the event of “national disorder, epidemic, other serious public health emergency, terrorist attack, or incident.” That determination, the act states, is solely the president’s to make. Congress is not involved.

Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, has added an amendment to the upcoming Defense bill, restoring the Insurrection Act to its former version — a move with the endorsement of all 50 governors — but Fein argues that would not solve the problem, since Bush still claims that the U.S. is a battlefield. Besides, a Leahy aide concedes Bush could sign the next Defense Appropriations bill and then use a signing statement to invalidate the Insurrection Act rider.

Fein argues that the only real defense against the looming disaster of a martial law declaration would be for Congress to vote for a resolution determining that there is no “War” on terror. “But they are such cowards they will never do that,” he says.

That leaves us with the military.

If ordered to turn their guns and bayonets on their fellow Americans, would our “heroes” in uniform follow their consciences, and their oaths to “uphold and defend” the Constitution of the United States? Or would they follow the orders of their Commander in Chief?

It has to be a plus that National Guard and Reserve units are on their third and sometimes fourth deployments to Iraq, and are fuming at the abuse. It has to be a plus that active duty troops are refusing to re-enlist in droves — especially mid-level officers.

If we are headed for martial law, better that it be with a broken military. Maybe if it’s broken badly enough, the administration will be afraid to test the idea.

DAVE LINDORFF, a Philadelphia-based investigative journalist and columnist, is author, most recently, of “The Case for Impeachment: The Legal Argument for Removing President George W. Bush from Office” (St. Martin’s Press, 2006 and now in paperback), co-authored by Barbara Olshansky. A veteran investigative journalist and columnist, his work is also available at thiscantbehappening.net.

UGH…10:15 am update—

No sooner do I post this, and Mixter posts some even more disturbing material; government secrecy in this nation is OUT OF CONTROL!

DeFazio asks, but he’s denied access
Friday, July 20, 2007
JEFF KOSSEFF, The Oregonian Staff

WASHINGTON — Oregonians called Peter DeFazio’s office, worried there was a conspiracy buried in the classified portion of a White House plan for operating the government after a terrorist attack.

As a member of the U.S. House on the Homeland Security Committee, DeFazio, D-Ore., is permitted to enter a secure “bubbleroom” in the Capitol and examine classified material. So he asked the White House to see the secret documents.

On Wednesday, DeFazio got his answer: DENIED.

“I just can’t believe they’re going to deny a member of Congress the right of reviewing how they plan to conduct the government of the United States after a significant terrorist attack,” DeFazio says.

Homeland Security Committee staffers told his office that the White House initially approved his request, but it was later quashed. DeFazio doesn’t know who did it or why.

Full story here…

Nail Fox Noise in Bloomington/Normal


So Murdoch and Fox Noise want to go after liberal bloggers? OK, that’s their prerogative. And it’s the right of the bloggers to go after Fox Noise.

Liberals Go After Fox News Advertisers
By DAVID BAUDER
AP Television Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Liberal activists are stepping up their campaign against Fox News Channel by pressuring advertisers not to patronize the network.

MoveOn.org, the Campaign for America’s Future and liberal blogs like DailyKos.com are asking thousands of supporters to monitor who is advertising on the network. Once a database is gathered, an organized phone-calling campaign will begin, said Jim Gilliam, vice president of media strategy for Brave New Films, a company that has made anti-Fox videos.

The groups have successfully pressured Democratic presidential candidates not to appear at any debate sponsored by Fox, and are also trying to get Home Depot Inc. to stop advertising there.

At least 5,000 people nationwide have signed up to compile logs on who is running commercials on Fox, Gilliam said. The groups want to first concentrate on businesses running local ads, as opposed to national commercials.

“It’s a lot more effective for Sam’s Diner to get calls from 10 people in his town than going to the consumer complaint department of some pharmaceutical company,” Gilliam said.

Full story here…

So I will add to this list as I go, but here are some local retailers to contact in the B-N area. Let them know you won’t be frequenting them until they stop advertising on Fox Noise.

Home Depot:(309) 452-4031

Heller Ford: (309) 527-6050

O’Brien Mitsubishi in Normal: (888) 483-3446

Lehman’s Chevrolet: (309) 663-4311

MORE TO COME…