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"No matter how paranoid or conspiracy-minded you are, what the government is actually doing is worse than you imagine." - - -
William Blum

November 29, 2003
 
Damage: Global Warming Catastrophe - New Evidence
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November 26, 2003
 

Kucinich yesterday on NPR.
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Quotes of the Week

 

"The U.S. military has had considerably more success in turning Iraq around than liberals have had in turning the ghettos around with their 40-year 'War on Poverty.' So far, fewer troops have been killed by hostile fire since the end of major combat in Iraq than civilians were murdered in Washington, DC, last year. How many years has it been since we declared the end of major U.S. combat operations against Marion Barry's regime? How long before we just give up and
pull out of that hellish quagmire known as Washington, D.C.?" ---Ann Coulter

That makes as much sense as, well, as Ann Coulter.

And then this from Mahablog:

This gets us to the "electability" factor in the upcoming presidential elections. It is unfortunately the case that while the GOP has become the party of knee-jerk, right-wing extremist ideologues, the Democratic Party is the home of long-winded justifications. We may have truth on our side, but it won't do us a damn bit of good as long as we can't boil down truth to fit on a bumper sticker.

Well, what about using a really small font?
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Read Matt Taibbi's new piece, Clark's True Colors, currently posted on The Nation website. Snippet:

Now Clark is presenting himself as a White Knight to the modern version of that same demographic, and he is being welcomed with open arms. He appeals to roughly the same class of people as Howard Dean, with a subtle difference. The Dean crowd self-consciously sees itself as a political force. When Dean tells supporters, "You have the power!" they holler like banshees, creating a Mike-Dukakis-teach-in-meets-Who-Let-the-Dogs-Out? kind of effect. But the chief crowd ritual in the Clark campaign is that of a group of hushed, groveling supplicants staring dewy-eyed at their savior Caesar. The vibe is all about ceding power, not empowerment.
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FRIDAY FUN - Thanksgiving, 2003 Edition

 

Actual Bumper Stickers
Excuses for Missing Work
Bizarre Album Covers
DanceMan
Marry Your Pet
Others' Accomplishments at Your Age
Let Them Sing It for You
The Matrix in Six Minutes
Words That Are Fun to Say
25 Most Gloriously Stupefying Moments in B-Cinema History
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Some Thanksgiving Day thanks, courtesy Mark Morford:

Be thankful that you do not have to suffer Dubya's massive crushing karmic burden, as wrought by inflicting heaps of environmental disaster and vicious unnecessary war and a stunning string of lies lies lies like a firehose of giblet gravy splattered all over the planet. For it really is all too plain: G.W. Bush is one of the most reviled and openly disrespected major world leaders in modern history. America has never been so embarrassed and reluctant to send a president abroad. We cringe when the man takes the stage. We offer humiliated apologies to our former allies, and to the 200,000 Bush/war protesters in London, just last week. In Bush's defense, it cannot be easy to be so undeservedly powerful, yet so bumbling and inarticulate and globally loathed for your abhorrent policies and hollow corporate agenda and baffled doofus manner. This Thanksgiving, be grateful you are not him.

Thanks, you might want to give, that you are not Iraqi. Be grateful you did not go from brutal scowling despot who at least kept the damn lights on to brutish occupying army no one asked for that is right now laying waste to whatever remains of your once semi-proud oil-rich nation. Give thanks, furthermore, that you are not one of the estimated 10,000 Iraqi civilians killed to date by U.S. forces, not to mention one of the untold tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers who were hammered by our million pounds of billion-dollar ordnance in the first few days of the massacre. Be grateful you are not dead in the name of American political and petrochemical profiteering.

Give thanks you are not a member of the much-abused U.S. military. Sad but true. Be grateful you are not right now suffering that sickening sinking feeling that you are not, in fact, protecting America from any sort of marauding terrorists, or defending our honor, or our way of life, or guarding innocents from swarthy evildoers and nonexistent WMDs. But that you are, instead, a wholly disposable henchman for the BushCo corporate regime, with the odds increasing every minute that you will soon join the more than 9,000 U.S. wounded or more than 430 "necessary" dead U.S. soldiers Rumsfeld mentions when he shrugs off the latest round of guerrilla bombings that killed another batch of your friends. Support our troops. Bring them home right now.

Kneel down, right now, for free speech. Oh yes. We must. Because it is under severe duress. To exercise it now, to speak out against BushCo and war and global corporate profiteering, is a true sign that you are a traitor and an al Qaeda operative and a personal friend of Barbra Streisand. This is what they sneer at you.

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November 25, 2003
 

Here is a rousing snippet from Paul Edwards' Weapons of Mass Hysteria:

Bush told us Saddam had Weapons of Mass Destruction and was threatening to attack America. This was the paramount, indeed, the single solid justification for his war.

While the world implored him to give U.N. inspectors time to find the WMDs he swore were there, Bush refused on the grounds that an attack by Saddam on America was not only likely, but imminent. He implied, and led Americans to believe, that Saddam and Osama bin Laden were allies when they were, and always had been, bitter enemies.

After the bludgeoning of an already prostrate Iraq, the world waited for evidence, for the discovery that was to have justified this brutal blitzkrieg. It never came. And it never will, because there were no WMDs and never had been. Bush lied to goad Americans to a climax of fear and fury so as to launch a baseless, shameful assault for which we will answer to our consciences, our children, and the world, for as long as our country exists.

The Constitution cites "high crimes and misdemeanors" against the state as grounds for impeachment. Could there be any higher crime against the American people than to have knowingly deceived us in order to stampede us into an act of barbarism that has betrayed our finest ideals, our highest ethical standards, our national honor, and our whole history?

Now, as the web of lies that created the Iraq disaster collapses in the light of bitter, incontrovertible truth, and the unending cortege of our dead and wounded young people continues to come home to hospitals and graveyards, we are asked to forget Bush's lies. We are told by cynics and moral defectives that his monstrous lie about WMDs didn't matter. We are told that eliminating its dictator was reason enough to bludgeon Iraq and to kill, maim and brutalize its stunned and powerless people.

Facing a furiously rising national rebellion and clear evidence that we are justly blamed, hated, and seen as the enemy by the Iraqi people, we are asked to swallow the horror of this deception, to accept what has been inflicted on Iraq and on us, with all its bloody, bankrupting consequences, and to authorize, by our silence, cowardice and quiescence, the continuation of this grisly nightmare, and of our sociopathic appointed figurehead's odious misrule.

I submit that Bush has committed the vilest, most cynically depraved act of betrayal of the American people in the history of the Presidency. Nothing less than impeachment, with the conviction that must inexorably follow, can begin to address the damage and redress the harm this President and his amoral handlers have inflicted on America.

But since impeachment will never happen, the next best solution is revolution.
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Honor the Soldier but Not the War?

 

Should we be honoring our soldiers in Iraq? Gabriel Ash explains why that would be the wrong thing to do (snippet):

We can choose to honor people according to relativistic, aesthetic principles. We can choose to appreciate professionalism for its own sake, without regards to consequences. Indeed, one could say this is the natural moral code of professionals. It allows us to admire the beauty of a perfectly executed murder, the logistical brilliance of the people who designed Auschwitz, the verbal dexterity of a skilled disinformer such as Ari Fleischer, the majesty of the Enola Gay bomber. It allows us to live in peace with our own participation, in countless ways, in the mayhem that our government unleashes upon others and the devastation of the planet by the corporations we work for. But we pay a steep price for this comfort -- a desiccated soul and a dying planet.

But wait, you say, our democratic government will cease to function unless people respect legitimate authority even when they disagree with the command. The soldiers risk their lives for their country, taking orders from the properly elected government. Their fulfillment of their duty is thus honorable, even if the orders they obey are not.

Putting aside the question of who elected our government, this argument shouldn't be persuasive. If the smooth functioning of the U.S. government is more valuable than the life of its victims, than we shouldn't be honoring people like Daniel Ellsberg and Phillip Berrigan, who disrupted the functioning of the government, and people like Michael Simmons, who spent two years in jail for refusing to serve in Vietnam. We cannot, unless we are confused, honor two such diametrically opposed moral choices simultaneously.

Our men and women in uniforms, as they are often called, are just beginning a dirty war against the Iraqi resistance. They blow up buildings and cars of "suspected targets" in the middle of a town. They now demolish homes, a practice learned from that other beacon of virtue, Israel. Without the newspeak, they lash out blindly against unknown Iraqis. The resulting slaughter of civilians is motivated less by the hope of success -- for every fighter accidentally killed in such attacks ten new recruits will join the resistance -- but by the iron demands of Bush's electoral calendar. The heavy handed attacks draw press and create the impression of forward momentum, necessary to protect the presidential swagger.

Our men and women in uniform, reduced to hired guns for the Mugger in Chief, deserve compassion and understanding of their predicament. We should wish them a safe return and we should mourn their losses, and we should mourn the people they kill. But to honor them is something altogether different. Honor is more than understanding and compassion. It is the elevation of an act to an example worth following and repeating. If we don't want this war repeated, if we want people to be thoughtful before they engage in killing, to refuse to participate in crimes, even crimes authorized by "legitimate" government, we can't honor the opposite behavior.

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Unplug the Icemaker

 

Disrupt the 2004 Election - By David J. Rothkopf

Recently, I co-chaired a meeting hosted by CNBC of more than 200 senior business and government executives, many of whom are specialists in security and terrorism related issues. Almost three-quarters of them said it was likely the United States would see a major terrorist strike before the end of 2004. A similar number predicted that the assault would be greater than those of 9/11 and might well involve weapons of mass destruction. It was the sense of the group that such an attack was likely to generate additional support for President Bush. These are serious people, not prone to hysteria or panic -- military officers, policymakers, scientists, researchers and others who have studied such issues for a long time. They know that in country after country, elections have held an irresistible lure for terrorists. In Israel, Colombia, Russia, Sri Lanka, Spain, Turkey and elsewhere, recent elections have been disrupted by strikes designed to commandeer the spotlight, to derail democracy, or to discredit or perhaps inflame a political leader.

Even in this country, there is at least one notable example of a contest that was altered by anti-American radicals. When we go to the polls next November it will be 25 years after Iranian militants captured U.S. diplomats in Tehran and began the hostage crisis that dominated the 1980 election and helped bring down President Jimmy Carter.

From the perspective of the terrorist, attacking in an election year makes perfect sense. The objective of terrorism is not so much to strike a blow against a particular physical target as it is to strike a psychological blow against a target audience. That is why terrorists will often hit symbolic targets such as the World Trade Center or conduct "message" strikes on buses or sidewalk cafes to suggest that no one is safe. Elections heighten the stakes because a blow during an election is a blow against a society's political foundations. Elections also enable terrorists to lash out more directly at individual political figures and to do so in a highly visible way.

Read the entire article here.

So it looks like Bush may once again generate his own major terrorist event (with al Qaeda doing the dirty work) to scare us back into submission. With the proven connections among Bush, al Qaeda and 9-11, you could say that Osama bin Laden and Bush will be working hand-in-hand.

As Left-is-Right has been saying for a year now, there will be another catastrophic event right before the 2004 election, and Bush will get re-elected as a result of both catastrophe and the Democrat's inability to mount a cohesive opposition. The only course of action is to either accept our fate as dictated by the Neocons, or start a revolution. Nothing less will bring resolution to the rapidly deteriorating state of our nation.

Most readers refuse to accept such an extreme view, and that's understandable given our undying faith in humanity as taught in school, at church and in our homes during our childhood. Once you do accept the fact that we are entering a period of a power-hungry, elite class that is rapidly assuming control of government and business, revolution as the only course of survival makes a lot of sense. The Left so far has failed miserably at nurturing the acceptance of these facts, and time is running out.

Oh, golly gee, we temporarily stopped the Energy Bill, and filibustered judicial nominations, and threw a bone to Massachusetts gays. In the meantime, the Ultra-Right has become so blatantly successful they could care less if their "lies" are uncovered, or their illegal Medicare HR votes are dissed, or environmental bills are passed that undermine decades of reform, or that everyone and their daughters know that Halliburton et al. are getting billions funneled into their coffers with no accountability or consequences, or that the christian "god" is becoming a major player in the formulation of bills/laws, or that they violated international law by invading and occupying, for no justifiable reason, a third-world nation of good, hard-working people.

We are all so focused on the "little" things going on, like tax breaks for the rich, Iraq, the Clean Air Act, electronic voting, who lied about what, No Child Left Behind, Ann Coulter, Rush Limbaugh, AWOL Bush and his flight suit/aircraft carrier banner, the deficit, redistricting, Halliburton, partial-birth abortions, Florida and California, that we are running around trying to put out the fires with our liberal rhetoric. Sure, these are all important issues, but has anyone stopped to notice that they all started from the same source? We're not attacking the source, we're haphazardly trying to hold onto everything. It's like grabbing an ice cube made of Neocon blood and watching it melt through our fingers. Forget the ice cubes, unplug the icemaker!

Exactly what consequences has the Bush Administration paid for their behavior over the past three years? None. We are all standing around, praying that SOMEONE will get their act together, confront evil Bush, and save us all. It isn't gonna happen because the Neocons now hold all the aces.

The only way to upset the card table and throw out the cheaters is to revolt. At least think about it.
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Boyne on Bush and Kucinich

 

James Boyne has a few things on his mind (snippets):

It’s truly amazing that once our President in seen landing on an aircraft carrier in a fighter jet, and he is on the campaign stump giving those “let’s go get the terrorists” speeches, with the gigantic American flag waving in the background, the Congress and Senate will march lockstep arm-in-arm and throw $200 billion at Iraq in 4 months time, with hundreds of billions more to follow; but $400 billion for prescription drugs for seniors gets bogged down in a 10 year debate because all the drug and health insurance companies want a piece of the action.

Like all sinister and cynical leaders, when things aren't going well at home, a nice, colorful, exciting, war with "shock and awe", shadowy, nameless terrorists that hide in caves and fight with "cloak and dagger" efficiency, use suicide car bombers and are harbored in 60 countries, is a great distraction to keep our minds off the millions of baffled, befuddled, and bewildered seniors found dead everyday clutching an empty medication bottle.

Even conservative Republicans are dismayed at the reckless, irresponsible spending spree that President Bush is on. Whatever taxpayer money left over, he throws back at the wealthy. President Bush is like a little kid playing war with an animated PC video game and is handling our economy like he is sitting on the back porch playing monopoly with the neighborhood kids. And he is the “banker”.

And this opinion about Kucinich:

James Boyne... is a satirical, political freelance writer .... He has previously been a diehard, staunch, conservative Republican who has voted for Goldwater, Nixon, Ford, Reagan, Bush I and Bush II, and now has made a 180 degree turnabout and supports the candidacy of Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), who appears to have the most integrity, honesty, common sense, straightforwardness, enthusiasm, optimism, and “fire in the belly” to be possibly the best President in recent memory. He is a progressive, populist, liberal, Democrat and is a man of principal, intelligence and experience. Mr. Kucinich comes from a humble background and clearly spells out his positions on issues on his web site www.kucinich.us so there is no question where he stands on issues. He is an eloquent, articulate, inspiring, motivating, positive, optimistic and enthusiastic speaker. He writes his own speeches, which is truly refreshing.
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"Getting Democrats organized is like herding cats." ----Al Sharpton
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Your Conservative Friends and Family

 

Must-read post of the month: Ornicus bows out of his friendships with conservatives. Snippet:

I have heard all kinds of anecdotes about interpersonal alienation over Bush and his handling of the "war on terror." Some of these involve family members, others longtime friendships. One can only imagine what scenes will erupt from the coming Thanksgiving and holiday seasons too. For myself, it is not profound, but noticeable: invitations to traditional camping and fishing trips not issued; letters ignored; cold and brusque treatment when we do get together. A decided lack of communication and a clear sense of rejection.

And it's too plain why: I and my fellow "Saddam-loving" liberals are all traitors. They know, because Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter and everyone else out there has told them so. Indeed, these right-wing "transmitters" have been pounding it into their heads for years now, and it's reaching fruition. I don't really blame my friends for this, though of course I deeply resent their willingness to adopt such beliefs. It is a very hurtful thing, and it may take years to recover, if at all. But I'm trying to be patient, knowing that eventually they will come around. Mostly I blame the Limbaughs and the Coulters, as well as the so-called "intellectual conservatives" who have given the meme cover by, if nothing else, refusing to denounce it, and in many cases actively furthering it (see, e.g., Instapundit's reference to antiwar liberals as "objectively pro-Saddam").

But I no longer much trust in the moral strength of my conservative friends. Whereas once I believed that the basic decency of average, mainstream conservatives was more than an adequate bulwark against the possibility of right-wing fascism from ever manifesting itself, I have been forced to conclude that, when swept along by the combination of a movement and the fearmongering of public officials, they are as susceptible to doing the wrong thing as their ancestors were in 1942, when they shipped off 110,000 Japanese Americans to concentration camps.
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As the Leftcoaster says:

We’ll see fiscal restraint return after the 2004 election, when Bush, if he survives election through the help of Diebold and Sequoia, will savagely go after nondefense discretionary spending, using his own deficits as a pretext for slashing spending, once the election is behind him and no more votes need to be bought. By then though, the structural imbalance between revenues and expenses will be so large that Bush will be leaving his successor with a nearly unsolvable problem, thereby doing exactly what he said he wouldn’t do: passing responsibility on to his successor to fix his mess.

Well, yeah, would you expect anything less more of Bush?
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Republican Senator Feinstein Votes for Medicare

 

From Counterspin (emphasis added):

WHO SOLD OUT OUR SENIORS?: Here's the list of the spineless Democrats from yesterday's Medicare vote.

Baucus, Mont.; Breaux, La.; Carper, Del.; Conrad, N.D.; Dorgan, N.D.; Feinstein, Calif.; Landrieu, La.; Lincoln, Ark.; Miller, Ga.; Nelson, Neb.; Wyden, Ore. The usual suspects, mixed with some surprises. Particularly Di Fi, Carper and Ron Wyden.

Who were the Republicans that voted against the bill? John McCain and Chuck Hagel.

Jim Jeffords voted FOR it.
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Action, Action, Action

 

Groperzenneger's initial, proposed budget cuts were released today. As an employee at a major hospital, Left is Right is particularly dismayed with these:

It would impose a 10 percent reduction on the rates paid to physicians and others who treat Medi-Cal patients, the state's version of Medicaid. That's on top of a 5 percent cut in this year's budget. The Legislature last summer rejected the deeper cut. The provider rate cut would save $152 million this year, and $443 million in the fiscal year that starts next July. Schwarzenegger also would cut state payments to long-term care facilities that increased the salaries and benefits of caregivers.

His proposal calls for elimination of a number of services offered to developmentally disabled people through regional centers. These include camping, social and recreational activities, and non-medical therapy such as music, art and equestrian programs.

In what's likely to be one of the more controversial proposals, the governor would put a cap on caseloads in various health and social service programs and establish waiting lists. Healthy Families, a fast-growing health care program for children in low-income families, drug assistance for AIDS patients, the regional centers and several other programs would be subject to the caseload limit. This action would require the Legislature to suspend the Lanterman Act, which entitles developmentally disabled people to services.

Lawmakers said Monday that they have seen many of the elements before. "This past year, the Legislature had an extensive debate about Medi-Cal and developmental services and decided in a bipartisan manner not to make those reductions," said Assemblyman Keith Richman, R-Northridge. "I don't see a lot of new stuff in here," said Assemblywoman Jenny Oropeza, D-Long Beach, chair of the Assembly Budget Committee. "It's ugly stuff. ... I sure don't see the waste, fraud and abuse they said they'd root out." California already has the lowest Medi-Cal provider rates in the nation, which has made it difficult for some recipients to find doctors.

These days it just doesn't pay to be poor. Plus, today's proposed cuts are only one-seventh of what's needed. Time for a revolution, yes?
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From the Center on American Progress:

Speaking about the concept of free speech in London last week, President Bush declared, "They now have that right in Baghdad , as well."

And here's the proof:

That may come as a surprise to journalists in Iraq , however, especially those at the Arab-language television network al Arabiya, which was shut down by the U.S.-appointed Iraqi Governing Council yesterday with U.S. Civil Administrator Paul Bremer's blessing. The move, which was "sharply criticized by media watchdog groups," was just the latest in a long line of censorship of the Iraqi press. A "recent State Department poll in Iraq found the two Arabic-language networks [al Arabiya and al-Jazeera] were far more trusted than the U.S. channel" that the government has set up in Iraq . The governing council also warned any other media from "incitement," saying the council would go after any media outlet, including the BBC and CNN. In September, the American Prospect reported that, "as criticism of his authority appeared in Iraqi media...Bremer placed controls on [Iraqi Media Network] content and clamped down on the independent media in Iraq , closing down some Iraqi-run newspapers and radio and television stations."

Oops!
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The NY Times rails against Bush's unleashing of Congressional spending:

Congress nearly always engages in pork-barrel spending as it leaves town for the holidays, usually to feather the nests of special interest groups responsible for the perpetuation of careers on Capitol Hill. But this year's end-of-session binge has gone way beyond pork, saddling the country with long-term obligations of mammoth proportions and inviting censure not only from the usual good-government types but also from economists who genuinely fear for the future of the economy. The Wall Street investment bank Goldman Sachs, not given to hyperbole, warned in its most recent newsletter that the "U.S. budget is out of control." This sentiment was echoed by the bipartisan Concord Coalition, which monitors federal spending, and which called 2003 "the most irresponsible year ever" in terms of fiscal discipline.

This spending comes courtesy of a Republican Congress and White House. Though the Republicans are historically the party of budget restraint and smaller government, these Republicans have presided over an orgy of tax cuts and benefit increases that, according to the Concord group, will not only boost this year's projected deficit but also add as much as $800 billion to the national debt over the next 10 years. The damage will be even greater in the following decade. Among the more prominent items are $400 billion for Medicare (this page supported the new prescription drug benefit), $300 billion in tax cuts and $22 billion in new veterans' benefits. If the energy bill had passed, which fortunately did not happen, that would have added another $23 billion to $30 billion in tax cuts, plus perhaps twice that much in newly authorized programs. And all of this comes on top of three consecutive tax cuts totaling more than $1.7 trillion over the next decade.

President Bush must share responsibility. He speaks of fiscal restraint when he is on the road, but back home in Washington he seems content to let Congress do its thing. So far he has not threatened to veto a single bill because of its cost. Warren Rudman, a former senator and moderate Republican who helped found the Concord group, noted that the word "tomorrow" — as in "there is no tomorrow" — no longer exists in the Congressional vocabulary. That goes for the White House as well.
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An entertaining review of Kucinich's foray into the world of dating.

And here's MoveOn.org's latest TV ad about Bush's job-loss program.
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November 24, 2003
 

We couldn't let this gem from Eric Alterman pass unseen:

GEORGE BUSH’S MORASS

The budget is out of control, we are causing a trade war with Europe, the world is united in hating us, and militants in Afghanistan and Iraq are murdering our soldiers while cheering crowds mutilate their bodies.

Was this all part of a plan or are Bush and Cheney making it up as they go along? And who ever would have thought we would have so soon reached the point that suicide bombers could murder 14 people in Baghdad and two more via a missile launch, and the Washington Post would think it worthy only p. A23?
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Suck it Up, or Tax

 

Sacramento Bee Columnist Daniel Weintraub, who writes California Insider explains...

A bond is not a tax
A number of readers have written me suggesting that the Schwarzenegger deficit bond amounts to a tax increase. Aside from whether the bond is a good idea or a bad idea, it is simply not accurate to call it a tax increase. The bond represents a spending commitment locked in over the term of repayment. If the debt service is $1 billion a year for 30 years, that's $1 billion each year that won't be available to spend on current programs and services. Taxpayers wouldn't be paying more. They just wouldn't be getting as much in return for what they are paying. Some of the confusion may stem from the fact that local school bonds do come with tax increases attached. When you vote for a local school bond, you are voting to raise your property taxes by the amount needed to retire the bond over time. The same does not apply to state general obligation bonds. They are spending commitments, not tax increases.

Wel, now, that's so comforting to know. When the bond payments come due, Californians can either suck it up and accept fewer government services, or.... RAISE TAXES. Six of one....
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One more reason why revolution is in order:

The conservative leadership in Congress now also routinely excludes members of the minority, and even moderates in their own party, from conference committees. For example the conference committee on the energy bill, to which 58 members of Congress were formally appointed, actually consisted of private negotiations between just four members: Senator Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) and Congressman Billy Tauzin (R-La.), and Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Representative Bill Thomas (R-Calif.) on the tax portions of the bill. When the Senate passed a version of the energy legislation that was not to the liking of Senator Domenici, he bluntly declared, “I will rewrite the bill.” While a couple of members of the minority party were permitted to participate in committee negotiations over the Medicare legislation, those who did not see eye to eye with conservative leaders – including Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) – were excluded. The product of these secret conference negotiations – typically hundreds, if not thousands of pages long – is then sent to each chamber, often with 24-hours or less to review, for a straight up-or-down vote without prospect of amendments. Instead of providing meaningful time for amendments and debate on either bill, conservatives spent 40-hours demogaguing the issue of judicial confirmations – even though President Bush has had 98 percent of his nominees approved. The result has been not just the effective exclusion of the minority party (and the millions of citizens they represent) from any role in the legislation but also a series of poorly crafted, incoherent bills that are packed with provisions geared toward special interests at the expense of the public good.

Beyond being excluded from legislative negotiations, members of the minority party face punitive retribution for taking opposing positions. In a dramatic departure from the bipartisan tradition of the appropriations committee, members of the House who voted against the education and health spending bill this summer saw funding for roads, clinics and other important projects for their home districts removed from subsequent versions of the legislation. The decision will especially hurt the poor because members opposing the bill came from 42 of the 50 poorest congressional districts. Opponents of the bill believed that the measure would have given short shrift to schools and other key priorities at a time when billions are being squandered on tax cuts for the very wealthy. It used to be that voting your conscience was praised in Congress – now it is punished.

To make matters worse, the White House recently announced that it will no longer answer basic information requests from the minority party– even requests that relate to understanding how taxpayer money is spent.
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Terrific News

 

From the LA Times:

Teamsters to Stop Work at Grocery Distribution Centers
November 24, 2003 - From Associated Press
The Teamsters union said today it will stop delivering groceries to three Southern California grocery chains after striking grocery clerks moved to expand their picket lines to at least nine regional distribution centers. The move effectively shuts off supplies to Vons, Ralphs and Albertsons stores during the critical Thanksgiving shopping week. The measure was called a "silver bullet" by Jim Santangelo, president of the Teamsters Joint Council 42 in El Monte.

"If this doesn't end it nothing will," Santangelo said of the labor dispute involving grocery clerks at area Vons, Albertsons and Ralphs stores that began on Oct. 11. Pickets had previously been set up at three distribution centers and Teamsters have refused to cross picket lines at individual stores, forcing management and non-striking workers to unload trucks. Grocery clerks called a strike Oct. 11 against Vons stores and were immediately locked out of their jobs at Alberstons and Ralphs locations as well. Clerks and the three supermarket chains resumed talks Saturday as a busload of supporters distributed coupons for free Thanksgiving turkeys to boost morale on the picket lines.

A federal negotiator was overseeing the talks, but there were no indications of an agreement. Union and supermarket officials were barred from commenting about the negotiations.

This should do it. Expect the strike to end VERY soon. In the meantime, continue supporting all those fringe grocery stores, like Trader Joe's, Stater Bros., or any local ones that really try to provide a service that's good for the customers and the employees.
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LA Weekly on Kucinich

 

LA Weekly analyzed Kucinich's campaign. Snippet:

A lot of mainstream commentators — particularly TV’s chattering heads — have made fun of Kucinich for proposing the creation of a federal Department of Peace. Well, the first president to do so was John F. Kennedy, who created the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (abolished under Bill Clinton) to fight weapons proliferation and serve as a counterweight think tank to the Pentagon’s expansionist-policy propagandists. As more American men and women come home from Iraq in body bags, the notion of once again having a federal agency to seek nonviolent ways of resolving the mushrooming number of international and regional conflicts — like those between nuke powers India and Pakistan, not to mention North Korea — doesn’t seem so silly.

Kucinich is, in fact, an ambulant index of the progressive agenda. He’s the only presidential candidate to have voted against the civil-liberties-shredding PATRIOT Act, which he would like to see repealed. In fact, he offers the strongest defense of constitutionally protected rights of any candidate, proclaiming: “We cannot justify widespread wiretaps and Internet surveillance without judicial supervision, let alone with it. We cannot justify secret searches without a warrant. We cannot justify giving the attorney general the ability to designate domestic terror groups. We cannot justify giving the FBI total access to any type of data that may exist in any system anywhere, such as medical records and financial records. We cannot justify giving the CIA the ability to target people in this country for intelligence surveillance. We cannot justify a government that takes from the people our right to privacy and then assumes for its own operations a right to total secrecy.”

The Des Moines Register also has a nice article about Dennis.
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Diebold Detail

 

Why-War? has a treasure chest of e-mails and memos, available through links, of everything Diebold.
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Der Spiegel has a fascinating cover story: "Operation Holy Tuesday - The two chief planners of September 11th have confessed, and the records of their interrogations can now be used to paint a precise picture of the events leading up to the terrorist attack. Their statements also reveal how Osama Bin Laden personally selected the suicide pilots from Hamburg." Snippet:

To the investigators, it is now apparent that the apocalypse in New York only became possible because three threads gradually converged in the mountains of Kandahar. The first thread was the obsession of Sheik Mohammed's clan, the members of which deeply detest the United States. The second was the power that fanatic Osama Bin Laden held over an entire army of religious fanatics with paramilitary training. The third and final thread was the blind willingness to become martyrs within a group of Muslims from Hamburg-Harburg, men who wanted nothing more fervently than to die in the war against the infidels.

The history of September 11th began as a private war on a gray Friday in the spring of 1993 - with the first bombing attack on the World Trade Center. On February 26, 1993, Ramsi Ahmed Yussuf, a nephew of Sheik Mohammed, detonated a powerful bomb in the underground parking garage of the WTC. The bomb contained about 600 kilograms of highly explosive nitroglycerin hidden in a white delivery van parked on the B 2 parking level. The explosion ripped a 200-by-100-foot crater into the building's foundation, killing six people. The towers shook. But they did not fall.

When he was arrested years later, Yussuf, a bearded, brooding, introverted man with enormous ears, was still enthralled by the brilliant design of his bomb. In 1995, investigators transported him by helicopter to the New York FBI office, and when the twin towers came into view, Yussuf said: "If I had had more money and time to build a bigger bomb, the towers would no longer be standing."

And as if he were practically yearning for the paradise he had been promised, Yussuf asked the FBI officials whether his execution would be carried out without delay once he had been sentenced to death.

Again and again, it became apparent just how deeply entrenched the hate was within the clan of the Mohammeds. Sheik Mohammed's older brother Sahid also became a member of Al Qaeda, and another brother lost his life fighting alongside the Mujaheddin in their battle with the Soviets. And according to the FBI, "KSM," US investigators' internal abbreviation for the name of Sheik Mohammed, was already involved in the first attack on the World Trade Center in 1993, acting as one of the masterminds who raised the money to buy the explosives.
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November 23, 2003
 
"Numerous politicians have seized absolute power and muzzled the press. Never in history has the press seized absolute power and muzzled the politicians."
David Brinkley

Bush will be re-elected in 2004. Mark my words.
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The Democratic Leaderless-ship

 

LeftCoaster nicely summarizes the horrendous failures of the Democratic Leadership, the latest one being the Medicare bill. Snippets:

....the White House and Rove have been working quietly behind the scenes to fashion success at any cost on both the drug and energy bills, with lobbyists and members of Congress. For those of us, myself included, who believe that intraparty problems within the GOP in getting individual bills passed will cause problems for Bush, we must realize that when push comes to shove, Rove and Bush will do whatever is necessary to get legislation through at the end of the session to deliver an outcome that can be packaged as a victory, so it can be used in the upcoming election. In this White House, that can mean giving carte blanche to businesses and industries in exchange for large campaign contributions for measures that will do nothing to curb drug costs or reduce our reliance on foreign energy. It even means that congressional rules can be stretched or broken when necessary to get the votes that are needed.
....
Yet even though the GOP had been meeting with the AARP for months to see what could be done to get their support for the final bill, it seemed to catch the Democrats off guard when the AARP capitulated and supported the bill. And the Democrats’ response to the bill has been to oppose the bill outright for its long-term damage to Medicare. The GOP concedes that this approach will fail because voters aren’t able to grasp such complex reasons why the bill will damage Medicare.

In case you still have your head in the Fox/CNN/ABC/NBC/CBS sandbox, please note that the Democratic Leadership is supporting the best interests of big business, not its constituents.

It's time for a revolution.
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The Arnie Puppet

 

Left I found this gem of an Arnold quote:

"The Republicans have a choice: It is the recovery bonds, or it is raising taxes. That's a choice. It's up to them. I am only going to make cuts to a certain point. I'm not going to cut dog food for blind people."

It's brief, simple quotes like this that speak volumes about how the Ultra-Right fails in respecting the basic rights of those financially less fortunate. It hasn't taken long to figure out that Perle and the Neocons have their hand up Groperzenegger's ass all the way to his mouth. Arnold, the action, action, action neocon.

On the bright side, blind Calfornians are ecstatic that they will be able to continue with their Alpo diets. And I guess so is Purina/Nestle, maker of Alpo. Someone should research into how much $ Nestle contributed to the recall election. I would, but I'm busy waiting for Arnold's next action action action.
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More on Grocery Workers Strike

 

Calpundit reprinted a letter from Barbara Maynard, the chief spokesperson for UFCW Locals 770 and 1442, the grocery workers unions in the Los Angeles area, regarding the grocery workers on strike. Snippet:

If this was about "contributing a little to their healthcare" there would be no strike. The employer proposal that led to this strike put so little money on the table that, in addition to the premium pickup of $5 to $15 a week, workers’ health benefits under their insurance plan would have to be cut 50% (which means that health care costs would be shifted onto the workers outside their insurance plan, meaning out of their own pocket). If the workers want to get the same insurance plan, it would cost them $95 a week or nearly $5,000 a year. THAT IS 25% OF THE AVERAGE WORKER'S SALARY. Is that what "everybody " pays out of pocket on a percentage basis? Hardly....

The fact is that most of these workers — at an average annual gross income of $20,000 — live paycheck to paycheck and earn their healthcare. If the cost to the worker is too high, experience has shown that workers "opt out" of insurance and roll the dice by becoming uninsured.

The bottom line regarding health care is that when a worker lives paycheck to paycheck she can only get her healthcare one of two ways: earn it or get it from the taxpayer. The answer as a taxpayer is clear to me: I would rather people earn their healthcare than get it from me as a taxpayer. What about you?

The companies have proposed to pay all new hires — and the stores have about 1/3 turnover each year, which means that there are a lot of new hires — $3 to $4 an hour less than the current employees. What does this mean? This means that new hires will be making Wal-Mart wages, which means that anybody with kids will be eligible for food stamps and taxpayer subsidized health care...

I hear a lot about these employees being “overpaid.” Did you know that the average hourly wage in the stores is $12.97? Did you know that 70% of the workforce is part time with the average number of hours worked per week just 30? That’s slightly more than $20k a year...hardly a big wage.
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Ambien

 

This from the Washington Post, and brought to our attention by Abstract Dynamics:

Powell's Chemical Equation

Powell described his killer schedule in an interview Thursday with Abdul Rahman Al-Rashed, a reporter for a London-based Saudi newspaper. "So do you use sleeping tablets to organize yourself?" Al-Rashed asked.

"Yes. Well, I wouldn't call them that," Powell said. "They're a wonderful medication -- not medication. How would you call it? They're called Ambien, which is very good. You don't use Ambien? Everybody here uses Ambien."

Really? Some folks across the river may conclude that explains a lot.
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From American Samizdat:

There is a history of the government in power misleading the people for the governments ends. Project Northwoods, never acted on, is frightening for its open contempt of Democracy and human life. is one many people are unaware of. The Tonkin Gulf incident is more widely known but not widely enough. Do you here its treachery debated when our less aware friends talk about the necessity of the Viet Nam war? The USS Liberty, had it been sunk after its 2 hour multi-pronged attack by Israeli forces would have had the US embroiled in the Middle east conflict of 1967; who could believe our allies the Israelis did it, of course the Egyptians would wear the blame. With many prior warnings ignored, regular air defense procedures ignored, a president seemingly unfazed by the news- well you get the 9/11 picture. Judge for yourself. The present administration sure isn't cooperating with the current investigation. Do you remember the Bush "trifecta" joke? He may have won his trifecta on an inside bet. Think for yourself. Search out truth.
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November 21, 2003
 
Anarchy Xero: Winding the Iraq Deathwatch
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It's time to grow up and get real about drug laws (intro):

Abandoning the 'Drug-Free America' Myth By Glenn Backes, Drug Policy Alliance
November 19, 2003

Rush Limbaugh is addicted to OxyContin. Arnold Schwarzenegger smoked pot and consumed anabolic steroids. Most Americans enjoy a daily cup of coffee. The fact is, this country is filled with drugs – prescription, over-the-counter, illegal and otherwise. The drug warriors have been promising for decades to make America drug-free. Billions of dollars have been spent and hundreds of thousands of people are locked up. Yet drugs are as prevalent and easy-to-get as ever.

It's time for a new approach. First off, let's abandon the "drug-free" myth. Clinging to this impossible goal clouds our common sense and perverts our policy priorities. Instead, we should focus on implementing new drug policies that are fiscally responsible and have the goal of keeping Americans safe and healthy.

Drug treatment, for example, works better than prison in helping to stop the cycle of addiction. Just ask Rush. Or Noelle Bush. Or Cindy McCain (John's wife). Unfortunately, half of Americans who need treatment cannot get it. Instead they are taken away from their families and locked in a jail cell for crimes committed primarily against themselves. Those who struggle every day with addiction need help, not a drug charge on their record that could ruin their future chances for jobs, school loans, or public housing.

If cats can have catnip, then...
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PARKING-SPACE INVADER

 

As a Prius owner I've heard that these were on the way. Right now they're only sold in Japan.
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THE BASIC LAWS OF HUMAN STUPIDITY

 

This is for the loving and lovely Mrs. Left is Right, who seems more understanding and tolerant of S.P. than I can ever be.

The Basic Laws of Human Stupidity, by Carlo M. Cipolla:

Always and inevitably everyone underestimates the number of stupid individuals in circulation.

The probability that a certain person will be stupid is independent of any other characteristic of that person.

A stupid person is a person who causes losses to another person or to a group of persons while himself deriving no gain and even possibly incurring losses.

Non-stupid people always underestimate the damaging power of stupid individuals. In particular non-stupid people constantly forget that at all times and places and under any circumstances to deal and/or associate with stupid people always turns out to be a costly mistake.

A stupid person is the most dangerous type of person. (Corrolary: A stupid person is more dangerous than a bandit.)

HERE is the source.
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A.A.R.P. is C.R.A.P.

 

Left is Right turned the big five-oh this year. As one reminder of the approaching inevitibility of the hereafter, L is R received several invitations from AARP to become a member. Thinking that it would help in the denial of the inevitible, the membership forms were fed into the shredder (using the trashcan just wouldn't act as sufficient denial).

But now, as the cozy relationship bteween AARP management and the GOP suddenly becomes a public revelation, L is R has a legitimate reason to tell AARP where to put its membership offers. Apparently many other potential and current members have done the same. You can, too, HERE.
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Survey: Your Foreign Policy Beliefs

 

Where do you stand on today's foreign policy issues? Take this 12-question survey and find out how your beliefs compare with others'.
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AN APOLOGY

 

In "AN APOLOGY TO YOUNGER AMERICANS", Sam Smith lists many of the customs and behaviors developed by the bay boom generation, or the "generation as consisting of anyone who reached 40 after Watergate and who was at least 40 on September 11, 2001". Here are a few of his apologies:

I apologize for Bopal and Three Mile Island and, in advance, for all the biological, chemical or nuclear disasters that will occur thanks to economic rapaciousness and without the slightest help from a terrorist.

I am profoundly embarrassed by the way we destroyed the public school system of our country.

I regret that we got the Muslim world so mad at us and that we couldn't come up with any better solution than to get it madder.

I apologize for any inconvenience, such as prison time, that may have occurred as a result of criminalizing the use of marijuana while keeping legal the far more dangerous drugs we enjoyed such as vodka and Marlboros.

I would like to say how sad I am about your increased likelihood of getting skin cancer because of the environmental changes we created in the atmosphere.

I apologize for managerial revolutions, mission statements, synergy, cutting edges, proactive and world class entrepreneurs, strategic planning, bottom lines, and exit interviews.

I am truly sorry we could make no greater contribution to philosophy than the justification of greed in the guise of free market economics, the sanctification of imperialism in the name of nation building, and the notion that it takes only 12 steps to solve all your problems.

I regret that you are now regarded as a potential terrorist, addict, or sexual predator more often than you are considered a valued citizen.

I am truly sorry for what we have done to childhood, including over-scheduling it, replacing Kermit with Barney, teaching children excessive fear and absurd competitiveness, diagnosing them into drug dependency, and punishing them for drawing 'inappropriate' pictures in the margins of their textbooks.

Thanks to ddjango for the lead.

Mr Smith also tells us how the candidates should be handling the hateful rhetoric spewing from the Neocon Right.
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Galpin Drives Car Dealers to Nirvana

 

From ArnoldWatch.org:

$50/hour for Elvis Impersonator but $42,400 for Terminator
by:Jamie Court, author of Corporateering and Doug Heller
We’ve seen all kinds of celebrity impersonators show up at car dealerships for a grand opening or end-of-year sale. But to get the real deal, you need to do something special. And guess what: the car dealership where Arnold celebrated his car tax repeal today just happens to be owned by H.F. and Jane Boeckmann, who contributed $52,400 to Arnold. Of course, $52K for Arnold’s appearance is a great deal considering the advertising that Galpin Motors will get on drive time radio and the evening news.

The auto dealer lobby - the fourth biggest contributor to TeamArnold - is also angling for a big celebrity endorsement of their proposed November ballot initiative, which guts the law against deceptive marketing. The Unfair Competition Law in dealers’ sights is the consumer’s best safeguard against predatory financing and bait and switches that are all too common on car lots. Talk about a car tax!

Damn. I bought a car once from Galpin Motors.
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"DECEPTION BY OMISSION"

 

Charley Cropley, ND, wonders why people think Dennis Kucinich is "unelectable". Read his essay. Snippet:

Dennis Kucinich is the leading political spokesperson for the movements for global peace, environmental protection, economic justice, social justice, living wages, universal health care and education. Any other democratic candidate would be more acceptable to corporate America than Dennis Kucinich. In comparison to Dennis, all the other "electable" candidates pale in the scope of reform they offer. The business of global war, environmental destruction and economic terrorism will carry on undisturbed under their presidencies.

His exclusion from coverage by major media is precisely because he is supremely electable. Dennis Kucinich is the single greatest threat to George Bush. He is the one candidate who -- when he is heard -- appeals to the intelligence, compassion and goodness of America. There is no one else even in his league. Listen to him and judge for yourself. You cannot understand who this man is through the media. Get a video and watch him. He will stir your heart to believe again in the possibility that our nation can change -- profoundly. You will feel the opportunity to make a difference in our government that had previously seemed impossible to you. You will want to get involved, and you would, except for one thing: you know he's "not electable."
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FRIDAY FUN

 

View Any Location from Above (see your house from space)
Cures for Hiccups
"Doctor Who" Animated Episodes
Quilt Index
Dr. Zebra (a lighter side of medicine)
Twisted Questions
Truth of Fiction
Drums (play them online)
Tornado Safe Beds
Panda Cam (live from the San Diego Zoo)
Living La Vida Sumo (short video)
100 Scariest Movie Scenes of All Time
History of Michael Jackson's Face
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November 20, 2003

International Guard Troops?

 

From the NY Times:

WASHINGTON, Nov. 19 — Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld ordered an additional 15,000 Reserve and National Guard troops on Wednesday to prepare for the possibility of yearlong duty in Iraq or Kuwait, rounding out a plan to rotate American forces in the region by next spring. Combined with alert warnings and deployment orders approved two weeks ago, Mr. Rumsfeld's decision brings to 58,000 the total number of Reserve and National Guard troops who have been alerted for possible service in the Persian Gulf region early next year.

Would someone PLEASE explain to me why we are using National Guard troops overseas?
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November 19, 2003
 

Bush's speech today at Whitehall Palace, London. Good speech. It's tragic that he doesn't believe a word of what he says.
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Molly

 

Some snippets from Molly Ivin's most recent (11/13/03) column:

Here's the problem in a nutshell: Just a few weeks ago, the Bush administration set out to persuade us all that the glass in Iraq is not half-empty, it is half-full. And indeed, this may be so, but that's a conclusion that depends on one's point of view. But the one thing we do know without regard to point of view, politics, spin or public relations is that the number of attacks against American troops have been steadily increasing from 20 to 25 to 30 a day.
....
Here's what I think is the real problem. It's not so much that the number of attacks on Americans per day in Iraq has been creeping up. It's that after these successful attacks on convoys, choppers or patrols, hundreds of Iraqis gather around the smoking results and cheer. Call me alarmist, but I think that's a bad sign. I suspect they do not like being occupied by a foreign power. They do not seem to think our intentions are benevolent.
....
So, here's the Bush administration with this sudden new emphasis on us getting the hell out of there. If you think I am going to disagree or make fun of them for doing such a 180, you are sadly mistaken. We have seen the 180 many times before with Bush, usually when reality intrudes on ideology.

Bug out before the election next year, that's fine by me. I don't like seeing Americans killed by people we thought we had gone to help. I suspect this is the ultimate no-win situation -- the sooner we're out, the better. I do hold a grudge against all those folks in the administration who convinced most Americans that his war was a dandy idea. There was no nuclear weapons program. There were no weapons of mass destruction. Saddam Hussein had no ties to Al Qaeda, and if anyone sees an outbreak of peace and democracy in Middle East, let me know.

I don't think the Bush administration lied to us about Iraq. I think it's worse than that. I think they fooled themselves. I think they were conned by Ahmad Chalabi. I think they indulged in wishful thinking to a point of near criminality. I think they decided anyone who didn't agree with them was an enemy, anti-American, disloyal. In other words, I think they're criminally stupid.

Criminals, yes. Stupid, definitely not, Molly.
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The First Casualty of the California Recall: the DMV

 

California DMV chief Steve Gourley was fired yesterday by Governor Groperzenegger. Why? ArnoldWatch has the reason:

...Gourley gained a reputation for policing and cracking down on car dealerships – including the nation’s largest, AutoNation, Inc. Guess what: the car dealers were among the largest contributors to Arnold.

Insiders say that the firing of Gourley was handed down in a less than friendly manner from Arnold appointee Sunne McPeak, the new Secretary of Business, Transportation and Housing. Apparently, the DMV director, who was known as an enforcer by the auto industry, was told to clear out by the end of the day. Not even a thank-you from McPeak, who, like Gourley, was herself a Davis appointee (to the power authority). So after surviving Arnold’s Ax, it was handed to her to whack Gourley.

So when you go to buy that new car just remember that Arnold has kicked the enforcer off the beat.

The other 49 states are soon going to get very jealous that California has its own Bush in sheep's clothing.
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THIS is a must-read for 9-11 conspiracy theorists. It doesn't answer any questions as to how Bush was complicit in the 9-11 attack, but it does help us focus the debate.
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The Mirror of London interviewed Bush today. Well, not really. But if they had...
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Diamonds or Expensive Blue Glass?

 

Concerned Women for America give ten reasons "Why Homosexual 'Marriage' is Wrong":

Homosexuals are seeking a special right. They already have the same right to marry the rest of us have-the right to marry a person of the opposite sex. Limiting marriage to one man and one woman doesn't discriminate on the basis of sex or sexual orientation.

It denies the self-evident truth of nature that male and female bodies are designed for and complement each other. Opposite-sex marriage is the natural means by which the human race reproduces.

Granting same-sex couples a license to marry will not create true marriage. Neither two men nor two women can become one flesh. Licensing the unnatural does not make it natural. It would be a state-sanctioned counterfeit, a sham and a fraud. A licensed electrician cannot produce power by taping two same-sex plugs together. Homosexual sex is dangerous and destructive to the human body and powerless for human reproduction.

Homosexual marriage will always be an abomination to God regardless of whether a clergyman performs the ceremony. When God calls something unholy, man cannot make it holy or bless it.

Homosexual marriage is as wrong as giving a man a license to marry his mother or daughter or sister or a group.

Homosexual marriage will harm children by denying them the love and nurture of a mom and dad. The only "procreation" homosexuals can engage in requires that a third party must be brought into the relationship.

Granting a marriage license to homosexuals because they engage in sex is as illogical as granting a medical license to a barber because he wears a white coat or a law license to a salesman because he carries a briefcase. Real doctors, lawyers and the public would suffer as a result of licensing the unqualified and granting them rights, benefits and responsibilities as if they were qualified.

Homosexual marriage will devalue your marriage. A license to marry is a legal document by which government will treat same-sex marriage as if it were equal to the real thing. A license speaks for the government and will tell society that government says the marriages are equal. Any time a lesser thing is made equal to a greater, the greater is devalued. For example:

If the Smithsonian Museum displays a hunk of polished blue glass next to the Hope Diamond with a sign that says, "These are of equal value," and treats them as if they were, the Hope Diamond is devalued in the public's eye. The government says it's just expensive blue glass. The history and mystery are lost too.

If an employer uses a robot as an employee and treats the robot the same way it treats human employees, human employees are devalued. By doing so, the employer says, "A robot can do your job, you're no better." What will you and the public think of your job and you?

If the government issues a license to babysitters that grants them the same rights, protections and responsibilities as a child's parents, parenthood is devalued. The government says parents are just babysitters.

If government grants professional licenses to just anybody, every profession and qualified professional is devalued. The government says an uneducated panhandler can do brain surgery.

The assumption by many is that marriage is just two people with a license who have sex and wear rings. Homosexuals do that?why not give them the license? Engaging in sex doesn't equal marriage. Adults involved in incest have sex too; should government call it marriage and license them? Certainly not.

The biggest problem we have in getting people, especially younger ones, to understand why marriage is devalued by the existence of a counterfeit is that much of the public does not value marriage at all. Adultery is no big deal. No- fault divorce is tolerated. Absentee fathers and mothers devalue marriage. Unmarried pregnancies are common. Fornication is "normal." When we make the case against homosexual marriage, we need to speak against these other problems that devalue marriage too. As we acknowledge these problems we can emphasize that legalizing homosexual marriage will compound the problems, not solve or lessen them.

So... homosexuals are unnatural, incestuous barbers with an M.D., salesmen with a law degree, robots made out of blue glass, babysitters who beg and do brain surgery, and unmarried, pregnant, conterfeit, aldulterous fornicators. Wow. I surely don't want one of those living next door.

It's difficult to even begin to comment on this hideous defamation of a significant portion of our population, so I won't.

It's time for revolution.
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Just in Time for Thanksgiving

 

They've got to be kidding...
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Armageddon Simplified

 

Posted this before, but here it is again: The End of the World.
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Those of you who think that Bush's escalating Iraqi exit plans, directed toward a successful re-election, will result in such a power vacuum that Saddam Hussein will easily regain at least partial control, raise your hands.
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AARP Caves

 

A big puzzle this week was why the AARP endorsed the Medicare bill currently in Congress. Center for American Progress solves part of the mystery:

AARP'S MOTIVATIONS: The American Association of Retired Persons this week endorsed the Medicare bill, raising questions about why the organization would ignore its previous conditions. A look into the organization's business practices, though, offers some perspective. As reported by many news organizations, AARP receives about $100 million annually in health insurance sales – something sure to be enriched with the new bill. In a 2/19/02 Newsday article, critics even suggested that "AARP's substantial profits from the sales of Medigap and other insurance policies, drug company advertising in its magazines and investment schemes conflict with its interests on behalf of seniors." At that time, AARP President William Novelli, who also wrote the laudatory preface to Newt Gingrich's book on health care, "acknowledged complaints from members that AARP had been too timid in the political battles to defend Medicare." Having embraced the bill, the group will use some of that health insurance/drug industry revenue to finance a $7 million ad campaign to support the Medicare legislation.

Yes, even to the detriment of its own membership, AARP succumbs to the big buck. Time for a revolution.
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Here is a well-written, simple and effective letter to the Juneau Times in support of Kucinich's candidacy:

Web posted Wednesday, November 19, 2003
My Turn: Why I support Kucinich for president
By CAROL ANDERSON

I 'm working on the Dennis Kucinich for President campaign because he is the only candidate who has a broad and generous enough vision to bring the United States back on track. Under both Republican and Democratic administrations we have become a nation bent on dominating the world militarily and economically, with diminishing regard for the health, education and prosperity of our own citizens. A Kucinich presidency would end excessive military spending and use the money to provide for the domestic needs of our people. Under Kucinich we would rejoin the world community as a peaceful partner by turning the reconstruction of Iraq over to the U.N., by joining the International Criminal Court, and by ratifying treaties that eliminate land mines and biological, chemical and nuclear weapons.

What drew me to Kucinich in the first place was his unwavering opposition to the war in Iraq. He is the only presidential candidate who voted against the Patriot Act and against the Iraq war. While other Democratic candidates say they regretfully voted for $87 million to continue funding the war, Kucinich voted against the appropriation in keeping with his conviction that we must turn away from military thinking and spending. He has promised to repeal the Patriot Act and to create a Department of Peace and Nonviolence once he is elected. Our country and the world desperately need him as a leader.

Last week I read with horror an article of international importance buried on the third page of our newspaper. It revealed that the Senate has passed a $401.3 billion defense bill that eliminates a long-standing ban on low-yield nuclear weapons research and authorizes $15 million more for research into the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator. As president, Kucinich would not tolerate this. He has pledged to reduce nuclear proliferation, decrease the risk of nuclear war and renew the ABM treaty that Bush opted out of. Kucinich has already introduced legislation to ban weapons from space. I think the world will be a safer and more stable place once he is elected president.

The more that I learn about Kucinich and his beliefs, the more I admire him and the stronger my support for his candidacy grows. Kucinich believes that a person's access to higher education should not be based on their parents' economic situation. He will use money diverted from the military to fund free education from preschool through college level for all.

Kucinich wants to do what's good for the U.S. and what's good for the rest of the world at the same time. He will repeal NAFTA and withdraw from the World Trade Organization to end the excessive power of multinational corporations with their focus on profit over workers' rights and environmental protections. I respect him greatly for working to keep and create jobs with a living wage in our country and for deploring the practice of moving U.S. factories to countries with cheap labor, no unions, and lax environmental and safety regulations.

Everything Kucinich stands for makes such good sense for our country. He will ratify the Kyoto protocol on global warming, require the labeling of genetically engineered food, protect a woman's right to choose, secure equal rights for gays and lesbians, prevent the privatization of Social Security, make Social Security benefits begin at 65, strengthen environmental laws, promote the development of alternative energy, and develop a progressive tax structure that eliminates tax breaks for the wealthy.

He has a great vision for the United States and will make us into a country we can all once again be proud of. You can learn more about Dennis Kucinich at www.kucinich.us.

• Carol Anderson is a member of Juneau Kucinich for President campaign.

All you Kucinich supporters out there, let's start e-mailing the editors of our local papers with these types of letters. As Bush has proven, if you repeat something often enough, people start believing (and in the case of Dennis K., it's believing the truth).
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November 18, 2003

The Moron Factor

 

To paraphrase Eric Alterman... "8% of Americans Give Up Being Morons"

A new USA TODAY/Gallup Poll of 1,004 adults finds that 52% ''never respected'' Limbaugh and still don't, while 26% respected him and still do, despite drug abuse. Eight percent said they lost respect; 13% had no opinion.

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Apparently Bush plans to reactivate the draft after his re-election. (See "Strategic Goals") Lots of comments about this HERE.

And if you haven't seen THIS yet, stop eveything and watch it. It's a 6-minute interview of Wesley Clark on, of all things, Fox News. Watch Clark hold his own.

Finally, Bush still living in Middle Ages.
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Some state's future governor?

Also, THIS is cute.
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So, the first thing Arnold want to do is repeal the car tax, thus reducing funding to special education and health care by $4 billion. He's beeen playing governor for almost two days now and has already started the "screw the lower class" program with a bang. I think we've waited far, far too long: let's begin the recall process. Paulo has more...
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And now, for something totally new..... ArnoldWatch:

Actors may lie for a living, but as governor, Arnold’s words must ring true. ArnoldWatch will hold Governor Schwarzenegger accountable to his own promises and make certain that there is some truth in advertising.
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Guy Andrew Hall at Rooks Rant has posted his views for why "I'm Still Not Anti-War". Snippet:

I have believed, and still believe, that invading Iraq was a requirement for the war on terror. Why? Because of our troops in Saudi Arabia. Their presence there to protect our interests in the region was the impetus for the creation of Al Qaeda in the first place. As long as Saddam was in power in Iraq, we were going to have troops in Saudi Arabia. Therefore, Al Qaeda was going to have recruitment propaganda at their disposal. The only way to rectify this situation was by removing Saddam. It was (and still is) a fundamental requirement for the war on terrorism to be successful.

I disagree with Guy's most basic rationales, but he brings up good points for debate. Join the discussion HERE.
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November 17, 2003

Wal-Mart 101A

 

Bill Connolly found THIS article on Fast Company. If you still cannot decide whether or not Wal-Mart is the store where Satan shops, this will most assuredly convince you. If you still shop there after reading this article, then you have no soul and will be doomed to eternal damnation (which shouldn't matter since you have no soul, I guess). Snippet:

Wal-Mart has also lulled shoppers into ignoring the difference between the price of something and the cost. Its unending focus on price underscores something that Americans are only starting to realize about globalization: Ever-cheaper prices have consequences. Says Steve Dobbins, president of thread maker Carolina Mills: "We want clean air, clear water, good living conditions, the best health care in the world--yet we aren't willing to pay for anything manufactured under those restrictions."

Warning: It's a looooooong article.

UPDATE (11/18/03): This e-mail was sent in response:

Founded criticism of Wal-Mart (of which there is plenty) is certainly fair and deserves wide dissemination. Ham-handed criticism of those who shop there (as sarcastic or ironic as you intended your words to be) is *not* fair to most folks who shop there.

I shop at Wal-Mart quite simply because I can't afford to shop anywhere else for many things Wal-Mart carries (yes, I live in a small town). I can't afford to shop anywhere else because I haven't got a raise in two years, and I haven't got a raise because my boss knows I can't quit. I can't quit simply because the only places hiring these days are Wal-Mart and nearby casino, both of which pay only slightly less than my current salary. The 'take-it-or-leave-it because we know you can't find better' attitude is shared among most employers near my home, because Wal-Mart has set the (low) standard for employee salaries and benefits.

I agree, if I had choices about where to shop (for starters, by earning more than $18K a year for a family of three), I would be due some needling for choosing Wal-Mart. But as I pointed out, for many of us, Wal-Mart isn't a matter of choice. And we certainly don't deserve the derision you're too comfortable doling out.

Furthermore, shame on you for reprinting the transparent blame-shifting quoted in Fast Company. "We want clean air, clear water, good living conditions, the best health care in the world--yet we aren't willing to pay for anything manufactured under those restrictions," says a corporate honcho. Well, when half of the country earns less than $30K a year, we simply can't afford things manufactured under those conditions. It's a circuitous chicken-and-egg argument that the majority of Americans simply don't have the means to rectify.

Those who do have the means and choose to shift blame are the real culprits here, not poor people who barely earn enough to keep the power on and food on the table.

Thanks for your time.

Jeff Z. [last name edited out]
Sylva, North Carolina
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Simple but Effective?

 

Here's a concise letter-to-the-editor of a small-town newspaper in Kentucky:

Monday November 17, 2003
Dennis Kucinich deserves consideration
Dear Editor:

I am writing to express my concern with the media's lack of equal coverage of the candidates for the 2004 presidential race. It seems that Dean, Lieberman, and Clark are the only candidates getting any attention. However, I have found that Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich has the most poignant and thorough platform of the bunch.

It is unfortunate that a public servant of his magnitude (he was the mayor of Cleveland at age 31) does not receive more press. His Web site, www.kucinich.us, clearly states his views on nearly every possible topic of current debate. His administration will support family farms and small business, universal health care, full social security benefits at 65, and the repeal of the Bill of Rights-violating Patriot Act.

Dennis Kucinich is a real American hero and derserves our consideration as the next president of the United States.

Nicholas Holmes
Danville

Copyright The Advocate-Messenger 2003

Is this what we should be doing with our time instead of blogging??
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Bill's Altruistic Response

 

Bill, who runs Thoughts on the Eve of the Apocalypse, sent in this response to Left is Right's recent post, Altruism is Out of Focus:

Hi Mike,

I had trouble using your commenting system (it kept cutting me off at 1000 characters), so I figured I'd email you my brief, unorganized response to your post:

I'm a little late on commenting here, but I wanted to thank you for the post. You articulate well the thoughts and frustrations I've been grappling with recently, as well.

Obviously, blogs are not going to change the world on their own. First of all, this is a medium dominated by privilege, and blog voices only reach a fraction of the populace, be they in the US or elsewhere.

What I ultimately desire from my meager effort at blogging is for my readers to feel encouraged to investigate stuff on their own and do something about it, either by speaking up, sharing what they've found with others, or by doing something requiring more of a commitment. My goal is to share a sort of critical spirit that I hope others find contagious.

The world is not going to change over night. As much as I'd like to see some sort of revolution, we should not give up doing what we're doing. Victories are probably not going to come with some swift blow to the system, but rather with the continued efforts of people that can draw out new strategies for confronting the injustices they see everyday. For
this process to have any chance of succeeding, networking is crucial. And blogging is a great way of accomplishing this.

Could we and should we take things beyond the blogs? Of course. But above all, we need to keep our eye on the ball, criticize ourselves and others where it’s warranted, and work to change the things that we find wrong with the world, however we can. There’s no science to this.

Thanks again for the post.

Bill
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November 16, 2003
 

Back from the dead (found by DKos).
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November 14, 2003

President O'Reilly?

 

Bill O'Reilly on his possible future run for the Presidency (emphasis mine)

The prize would be the White House, but "the country's not interested in an independent candidacy. Maybe in 10 years they will be, but right now, you have 50 percent of Americans who don't know anything - they're totally disengaged from the process, the 'Mall People.' They don't know anything, don't watch the news or listen to radio or read the newspapers. The other 50 percent - and there was a recent poll on this - are a third crazy left and third crazy right and third in the middle. So the pie you're going for is a very narrow pie." Yeah, maybe he "could mobilize a certain number of independent thinkers who think, 'This guy could be a ... Teddy Roosevelt kind of guy, who could come in and clean up the garbage...'" but "I'm not a vanity player, I'm not gonna go out like Al Sharpton, to get on 'Saturday Night Live' to run for president, so unless I'm convinced I could pull it off, I wouldn't do it."

As insulting as that statement is, I can't disagree with it (although I wouldn't be caught saying it in the press). Why? How else do you explain 50% of the people still supporting Bush's Iraq policies, and 70% or so believing Sadam H. orchestrated 9-11? You tell me.
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FRIDAY FUN

 

Bad Ideas
Ultimate List of Stupid Names
Grover's Dark Side
Worst Album Covers Ever
Bossholes (yep, just like it sounds)

GAMES
Rubber Faces (How artistic are you?)
Catapult
40 Headaches (This site gives them to you)
Dreems (click different parts of the picture)
Moovl (what a blast!)
Faeriewars (sick, hilarious game; be sure to use those kittens!)
Jet snowmobiling
Conkers
CryptRaider
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November 13, 2003

Journalists Under Increased Pressure by US Forces in Iraq

 

This is not good (snippets):

NOVEMBER 13, 2003 - U.S. Troops Said to Be More Hostile With Reporters
Military Works to Cut Down on Incidents in Iraq
By Slobodan Lekic, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- (AP) With casualties mounting in Iraq, jumpy U.S. soldiers are becoming more aggressive in their treatment of journalists covering the conflict. Media people have been detained, news equipment has been confiscated, and some journalists have suffered verbal and physical abuse while trying to report on events. Although the number of incidents involving soldiers and journalists is difficult to gauge, anecdotal evidence suggests it has risen sharply the past two months.

In October, the Belgium-based International Federation of Journalists, which includes unions representing 500,000 journalists in more than 100 countries, complained of increased harassment of reporters, including beatings of some, since the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime.
...
But as coalition forces come under increasing pressure from guerrilla attacks -- 37 American soldiers have died so far in November -- signs of stress are evident. A number of journalists, particularly Iraqis and other Arabs working for foreign media organizations, say they are now routinely threatened at gunpoint if they try to film the aftermath of guerrilla attacks. Some have been arrested and held for short periods.
...
Source: Editor & Publisher Online
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And Then...'s entry in the New Blog Showcase is Late Night With Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist
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Found this:
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Ann Coulter's Sense of Humor

 

Sometimes Ann C. can be pretty funny, in a warped sort of fashion (snippet; emphasis mine):

Remove Dennis Kucinich's feeding tube!
Posted: November 13, 2003 1:00 a.m. Eastern © 2003 Universal Press Syndicate

In the current battle over whether to remove the feeding tube from Florida woman Terri Schiavo, the basic positions are:

She is in a permanent vegetative state; no she's not.
She is unconscious and does not react to stimuli; yes she does.
She will never get any better; yes she will.
She would not have wanted to be kept on a feeding tube; you don't know that.

The only thing everyone seems to agree on is that the husband is creepy. Terri's parents are fighting like mad to keep Terri alive. The husband, Michael Schiavo, is living with another woman with whom he has one child and is expecting another. Yet he has mounted a monumental crusade to have Terri's feeding tube removed.

Terri is not brain-dead and requires no extraordinary means to be kept alive. She is breathing, her heart is pumping, her organs are functioning. All she needs is food and water. (Of course, all three are technically true of Kate Moss, too.) But her husband wants to starve her to death. As Larry King asked him, why not "walk away"?

That is the eternal mystery of this case. Assuming everything Michael says about Terri is true – she has no consciousness, she will never recover, and she would not want to live with feeding tubes – well, then, she's not in pain, bored, angry or upset. Dennis Kucinich has been in a persistent vegetative state for 20 years – how about not feeding him? Why is Michael Schiavo so obsessed with pulling Terri's feeding tube? Why can't he just walk away?

There are so many things wrong with her reasoning, just in this small snippet from her article, it would take the rest of my life to mend the errors. However, I wanted to point out that Kucinich must be entering the big time level of politics if Ann the Slimeslut is taking the time to comment on his lifestyle. Way to go, Dennis!
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November 12, 2003

Kucinich Shines on NPR

 

Dennis Kucinich on today's Talk of the Nation on NPR. Be sure to listen to it; you need either RealAudio or Windows Media Player.

It's always so enlightening to hear him succinctly and definitively state his views, assumptions and beliefs. They are very specific, very consistent in a unifying manner, and do not sound like he's trying to please everyone, unlike all the other candidates' platforms. He's the only candidate that makes you feel like you know for sure what you're getting. He's the only candidate who sounds like he thinks people can make decisions about their own destiny and that they just need the support (socially and financially) to do so, that government doesn't need to intrusively tell people how to run their lives. (Of course some people do need such assistance, but that's beside the point.)

If he can ever break out of that 1-3% poll standing, he's got a chance to make something out of this election. Everyone who like him says they would vote for him if they didn't feel like they were wasting their vote. Well, you won't be wasting your vote in the primaries if you checked off the Kucinich box, so Left is Right says go for it!
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Uh oh

 

Did Kucinich allow a no-no? Snippet from In These Times:

Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.) got a letter the other day from the Illinois chair of the Dennis Kucinich for President campaign. In These Times got a copy of the letter, too—after all, it was an open letter intending to provoke controversy over Jackson’s decision to endorse Howard Dean.

Lance Del Goebel, depicting Dean as Bush’s immoral collaborator, wrote, “Will you, Congressman Jackson, be explaining to your constituents that they should support Howard Dean because of the project undertaken by Texas Governor George Bush and Vermont Governor Howard Dean to dump Vermont’s toxic waste on the poor Hispanic town of Sierra Blanca, Texas?”

I wonder several things, including, did Kucinich know about and endorse this letter, and, if so, why would he allow something that is more divisive than informative to emanate from his campaign staff? If he didn't know, what will he do about Del Goebel?
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Bush Beats Democratic Candidates' Appeal

 

This is one reason why Bush will win next year:

Voters are evenly divided between Bush and a generic Democrat, but the president retains a significant lead over all of the actual candidates for the Democratic nomination. (See p.5 for further analysis.) The gap between support for a generic Democratic candidate and support for actual candidates reflects a lack of familiarity with many of the Democrats as much as a lack of appeal on their part. A good portion of the advantage Bush has in the individual match-ups comes from voters who expressed no preference between the president's reelection and a Democratic victory.

Of the voters who were undecided on the generic ballot (16% of all registered voters), roughly four-in-ten (42%) say they would favor Bush when his name is placed against the current Democratic candidates, while just 27% favor one of the Democrats. There are no significant differences in the appeal of the five leading candidates ­ Ret. Gen. Wesley Clark, former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, Gephardt, Kerry and Lieberman among these voters.

From a recent Pew Research Center poll, "The 2004 Political Landscape"
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Cojones

 

Found this article in Mother Jones, describing Kucinich giving a fundraising speech at the L.A. home of actor James Cromwell. Snippet:

In the study, Dennis Kucinich calmly feeds a Los Angeles Times reporter his positions. He is five feet seven, about 135 pounds, and swaddled in a suit that looks like something grabbed off the rack at a discount store and intended for a larger man. His 56-year-old face looks boyish, his hair cropped rather than shaped. He seems a miniature candidate out of scale and out of place among the perfect bodies and faces (well, not completely out of place since Shirley MacLaine is his daughter's godmother). Finally, the wine and trays of food disappear, the crowd drifts into the rows of chairs, and Kucinich takes the podium.

At first, as he says his anti-war position "arises from a vision that views the world holistically," the audience listens listlessly as the heat bakes the yard. Then suddenly Kucinich's knuckles hit the podium like a drumroll as he says he will "cause the U.S. to work toward total nuclear disarmament.... Fear has led this country to pass a law that attacks numerous provisions of the Bill of Rights. Fear is leading this country to a kind of paralysis," and now his voice grows louder and louder and overwhelms the crowd wedged in among the roses. He shouts that he wants to "call this nation to a higher calling!" And the small man in the ill-fitting suit suddenly grows large and becomes some no-neck Teamster on a loading dock exhorting the working stiffs to the cause. The wind chimes softly toll on the perfect patio behind the perfect house with all the perfect bodies listening intently.

He ends his talk in eight minutes flat -- always he ends in eight minutes flat. He uses no notes, never falters. He never skips his points: bring the troops home now, cut the Defense budget by 15 percent, found a Department of Peace, withdraw from NAFTA and WTO, cancel the tax cut, fully fund health insurance, sign the Kyoto Accords and the land-mine treaty. And always, take back our country. He plays off the word "fear" as if it were a chord in a blues song.

He began sounding like someone in a high-school speech class, then became a union rabble-rouser, then soared into some ghostly presence of Huey Long, and now he is walking through the crowd with the smile and grace of Phil Donahue. Their eyes say this is too good to be true, too good to ever win the nomination much less the presidency. Hector Elizondo (Chicago Hope, Tortilla Soup) confides that Kucinich can't win but "he's got big cojones."

Dennis Kucinich, totally engaged, totally exact in his answers, seems somewhere else. He always seems somewhere else, some place that is hard and cold and where the roses never bloom. And he always seems alone.

"Dennis has always believed in himself more than most people around him," says Tim Hagen, a Democrat who grew up in Kucinich's ward and lost the Ohio gubernatorial election in 2002. "He's been on a crusade his whole life. He's always fashioned himself as the darling of the left. You'd have to drive a stake through his heart to get him out of the business. He has a borderline messianic point of view. There's been a constant theme in his public life -- rallying against the establishment. The only avenue for him to feel he was somebody was in political life."

Even if Bush had cojones, he wouldn't know where to find them. Cojones... that's one big difference between Kucinich and everyone else in this race (except maybe for Clark).
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November 11, 2003
 

Enough with this "Bush refuses to attend the funerals of soldiers killed in Iraq" crap.

Honestly, would you want that asshole present at your son's or daughter's funeral? Thank god he has the decency NOT to attend.
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November 10, 2003
 

Praise be to George Soros!
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Ornicus sez:

The record is unmistakable: George W. Bush's presidency has been an unmitigated disaster from nearly the day he took office, and it has compounded exponentially with every week the man occupies it. Even if he is defeated in 2004, Americans will be paying the price for his spectacularly misbegotten ascension to the nation's highest office at one of the most critical junctures in history for years, perhaps even generations, to come. Which makes the thought of him winning election for the first time, thereby handing him another four years in which to deepen the problems beyond the point of recovery, even more chilling.

I think "chilling" is the most understated word in the entire essay.
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Note to wife: Please DON'T take me to Anaheim Memorial Medical Center if I start clutching my chest.

Toddler Pulled from Fullerton Pool Pronounced Dead, Later Found Breathing
FULLERTON (AP) 11.9.03, 9:40am -- A little girl revived nearly two hours after she was believed to have drowned in her family's swimming pool remained in critical condition Saturday, officials said. Twenty-month-old Mackayala Jespersen was responding to sound and touch, said Children's Hospital of Orange County spokeswoman Denise Almazan.

The toddler's mother found her floating face down in the pool early Friday, police Sgt. Sean Fares said. Police believe she had been in the chilly water for about 10 minutes. Mackayala was rushed to Anaheim Memorial Medical Center after police officers and paramedics failed to revive her. Doctors there pronounced her dead at 10:06 a.m., an hour after her mother had called 911. Forty minutes later, police Detective Mike Kendrick was investigating her death when he noticed her chest billowing up and down, as though she were breathing. He summoned doctors, who revived her. She was later transferred to Children's Hospital of Orange County.

UPDATE 11/12/03:

ORANGE, California (AP) -- Brain scans of a toddler revived two hours after she was believed to have drowned showed no serious problems, a doctor said.

I'm sure the only reason the child survived was because the pool was not heated at the time.
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Another one of those things-are-getting-worse-because-things-are-getting-better quotes:

L. Paul Bremer, the coalition's chief administrator in Iraq, warned that the coalition should expect intensified attacks in coming months. "We're going to have increased attacks and increased terrorism because the terrorists can see the reconstruction dynamic is moving in our direction," Bremer was quoted as saying in The Times newspaper of London. "It will be more of a problem in the months ahead unless the intelligence gets better."

Intelligence IS lacking, especially at the White House.
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Want a chance to marry Dennis Kucinich and possibly become the next First Lady? Then go HERE
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November 9, 2003

GORE

 

The American Constitution Society today hosted Al Gore who spoke about all things Bush. HERE is the text of the speech and HERE is the video, courtesy of the co-sponsor, MoveOn.org.
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Prominent Republicans claim that the Bush Administration never said that Iraq's WMD were an imminent threat to the U.S. Josh Marchall corrects those lies.
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"Wounds of War"

 

This article from today's L.A. Times should be required reading of all registered voters. A tour of Walter Reed Army Hospital and some of the staff makes a sobering summary of the real Iraq war from an American perspective. Since the Bush government will not allow photo journalism of the facilities, this is the next best thing. Here are a few snippets:

As the U.S.-led coalition forces battle an increasingly fierce insurgency in Iraq, the military's medical system is waging its own war — and Walter Reed, its premier medical center, is in the thick of it. The world-renowned teaching and research hospital, which opened in 1909, has treated presidents and senators. Since World War I, Walter Reed has been a crucial, and often a long-term, stop for the most seriously wounded in war. Last week, more than a dozen survivors of the Chinook helicopter shot down by insurgents in Iraq Nov. 2 were carried in on stretchers. They entered a hospital transformed over the last seven months by the first big wave of combat casualties since the Vietnam War. Since April, when the first casualties began arriving, more than 1,875 have been treated at Walter Reed, an average of about 10 a day, 300 a month. On any given day during that time, the hospital has had about 50 inpatients and 180 outpatients from the war.


"The number is big to me now, bigger than anything I've seen since Vietnam," said Jim Mayer, 57, who lost both legs in that war and now volunteers at the hospital several days a week helping amputees. "When we see each other here, me and the other volunteers, our line to each other is, 'They just keep coming and coming.' " In Ward 57, orthopedic surgeons work day and night. In the physical therapy rooms, young men missing limbs lie side by side and head to toe on mats, lifting weights. Hospital staffers come in on their days off, bringing pizza to the wounded soldiers, taking those who are well enough out to the movies.


"I don't think this is going to go away," said Army Major Gen. Kevin C. Kiley, an obstetrician and gynecologist by training who is commander of the hospital. "Our people are pedaling as hard and fast as they can. We can do this for a long time. But at some point, if there's no letup, the casualty demand will have to start affecting what Walter Reed is."


The staff at Walter Reed, with responsibility for the majority of the seriously wounded, has tried to address potential problems before they arise. When they had trouble getting timely information from their counterparts in Germany on the number and type of casualties being flown to Walter Reed, it sent over its own nurse to report back. Meanwhile, doctors have been known to schedule the multiple surgeries of patients who have become friends on staggered schedules so the patient who is in better shape on a given day can console the other. "The whole hospital is on a war footing and emotionally involved," said Kiley, the commanding officer. "The broader challenge is how do you keep the battle tempo up for a long period of time." As casualties continue to mount in Iraq, the bulletin board at Walter Reed's physical therapy unit long ago ran out of room. "This is like 1%" of the Iraq casualties who passed through the hospital, said Hannah, one of the physical therapists. "If we had a picture of everyone, it would take up a whole wall."

Note: One-time registration is needed to access L.A. Times articles.
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November 7, 2003

FRIDAY FUN

 

Japanese Animation
The Monkey Shakespeare Simulator
Holy Bellbottoms, Batman! (1971 Sears Catalog with comments)
Especially for my son, Will
End of the World (some language)
Church Sign Generator (create your own pastor's message)
Hot Dogs
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Kucinich showed a sense of humor "during the first joint forum of the primary campaign in New Hampshire" (snippet):

Kucinich, who is divorced, stole the most laughs of the night when he was asked to define the role for the candidate’s “first lady, first man or first partner.”

“As a bachelor, I get to fantasize about my first lady. Maybe Fox (TV) wants to sponsor a national contest or something,” he cracked. A divorced father of a 21-year-old daughter, Kucinich then ran down that criteria for the perfect partner that brought the house down. “I would certainly want a dynamic, outspoken woman who was fearless in her desire for peace in the world and for universal, single-payer health care in a full employment economy,” he said. “If you are out there, call me.”

Deadpanned Kerry: “That is the first presidential personal ad I have ever seen.”
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November 6, 2003

Europe Says U.S. Is Dangerous

 

From The Daily Star (snippets):

European opinions on Israel are a wake-up call for all of us

It is not so surprising, according to a public opinion poll commissioned by the European Union and released Monday, that Europeans ranked Israel as the greatest threat to peace in the world (59 percent of respondents). Neither is it surprising that the next two ranked countries were Iran and North Korea (53 percent each). More noteworthy is that the United States shared that second place with Iran and North Korea, also at 53 percent.

There is scope here for serious analysis of recent global political trends, and also much ammunition for simplistic, knee-jerk reactions from both Americans and Europeans. My own sense, after discussions this week with Europeans, Americans and Middle Easterners in Paris and London, is that these poll results should be treated as a sobering wake-up call by all concerned. They should prompt us to understand the polarization that has brought us to this situation where the two countries that see themselves as the fountainheads of democracy, peace, and prosperity in the Middle East (the US and Israel) are perceived in Europe as the No. 1 and 2 threats to world peace.
...
The message is very clear because it is so frequently and clearly expressed: the world respects American values and domestic practices, but dislikes the way that the US uses its power around the world. The same applies to Israel and its behavior: The world generally admires Israel’s feats in nation-building, human ingenuity, and economic productivity and prosperity, but strongly rejects Israel’s colonial, often racist, policies towards the Palestinians. The US and Israel, like all countries, do good and bad things. This dichotomy explicitly challenges and negates the more simplistic, one-dimensional approach to the world that American and Israeli leaders try to foist on us: that you are with us or against us, that you love or hate Jews, that you are tolerant or racist, that you accept or reject freedom, and other such black-and-white, cartoon-like worldviews ­ views that are more reflective of the relationship between Popeye and Bluto than between hundreds of millions of human beings who live in real time and real history. This is a grossly inaccurate description of how the world works and how decent people feel about the US, Israel, and any other country.
...
I hope these European poll findings elicit a more rational and reflective response in the US and Israel than has been the case to date. But I also hope they get the serious attention of people in the Arab-Islamic world, because there is also a wake-up call for us in this poll: Eight of the top 14 countries that Europeans perceived as threats to world peace were from the Arab-Islamic world (Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Somalia). The US and Israel are a real problem for the world, but so are many Arab and Islamic societies. It’s time to talk, folks, preferably without foreign soldiers, candy bags, or local tyrants. Rami G. Khouri is the executive editor of The Daily Star
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Kucinich Looking for Dean Castaways

 

From the San Jose Mercury News:

Posted on Thu, Nov. 06, 2003
Kucinich Hopes to Get Ex-Dean Supporters - SHARON THEIMER - Associated Press

WASHINGTON - Calling the doctor out, Democratic presidential hopeful Dennis Kucinich is hoping to capitalize on the possibility that rival Howard Dean will skip public financing.The Ohio congressman urged those who backed Dean because they thought he'd take the federal funds to support Kucinich instead. He announced the creation of a new Web site, "The Dr. is Out," aimed at attracting former Dean supporters. Kucinich released a statement criticizing Dean, noting a March story by The Associated Press in which Dean committed to accepting public financing and said he would make it a campaign issue if other Democratic hopefuls opted out of the system.

"I'm making it an issue now," Kucinich said. "Dr. Dean may feel that he can drag his supporters into agreeing with his preconceived decision because in the end he believes they have no other place to go. Well, he's wrong. Our campaign is reaching out to them." Dean is polling his supporters on whether he should join President Bush and skip public financing and the spending limits that come with it. Those who accept government money for the primaries get a government match of up to $250 for each contribution, up to a total of about $18.7 million, and are limited to about $45 million in spending.
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Iraq Welcomes Soldiers from Poland

 

From Reuters:

Polish Major Killed in Iraq, Bush Democracy Call
Thu November 6, 2003 04:53 PM ET - By Andrew Gray

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Guerrillas shot and killed a Polish army officer south of Baghdad on Thursday, the first soldier to die from a multi-national division set up to relieve the pressure on U.S. forces trying to stabilize Iraq.
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Schools in Chaos

 

From Center for American Progress:

EDUCATION - KIDS LEFT BEHIND: CBS News reports that while communities want to improve education for kids, there's just no money to comply with President Bush's No Child Left Behind plan. "To make the grade under the new national guidelines, public schools in this country must meet specific criteria in 18 categories. If they fall short in just one, they are classified as failing and stand to lose Federal funding. That pressure to improve is believed to have been behind recent scandals in places like New York City and Houston, where educators were caught falsifying student records in order to boost schools' scores." But some just don't have the resources to comply. "A report in Illinois, for example, shows 44% of schools there don't meet federal standards. That leaves parents with nowhere to turn...It's not that Chicago public schools refuse to comply...The school district says it simply cannot comply. More than a quarter million children in this city alone were eligible for transfer, but the schools only had room for only about 1,000 of them."

This is really getting out of control. The Democratic candidates need to discuss this issue more during the debates.
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November 5, 2003

Go Home

 

The Iraqis demand that the American soldiers go home.
The majority of Americans pray for American soldiers to come home.
Nearly all U.S. soldiers stationed in Iraq desperately want to go home.
99% of the the world insists that American soldiers go home.

So, who wants American soldiers to remain in Iraq?

The Bush Administration and the no-bid contractors they hired.

That's it. No one else.

Then for whom are our young soldiers, our sons and daughters, getting slaughtered and maimed?

Not for Iraqis. Not for Americans. Not for the Army. Not for the rest of the world.

But for The Bush Administration and the no-bid contractors they hired.

That's it. No one else.

Do the rest of us really care enough to get off our fat asses and do something about it?














Apparently not.



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Kucinich moves up to 2nd

 

HERE is an interesting poll (spotlighted by ddjangowire) on the Army Times website. It shows Kucinich as getting the second-highest number of "votes" among Democrats. Since this poll can be accessed by web surfers, the accuracy is highly questionable. But it's fun, anyway.
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From today's Center for American Progress:

RUMSFELD RESORTS BACK TO CONNECTING IRAQ AND 9/11: At his daily Pentagon briefing Monday, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld was asked why the mission in Iraq is vital to American interests? He answered: "The reason it seems to me, one only has to go back and think about September 11th where we lost 3,000 innocent men, women and children and hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars." He was then asked "Has [the war] still been worth the cost in your opinion?" Rumsfeld answered: "Well, think back what 9/11 cost us. September 11th cost us 3,000 lives and hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars. That's what it cost the American people and it seems to me that free people have to be free...And the only way to deal with terrorists is to take the battle to them, so I do think it's worth it." Of course, President Bush last month admitted that Saddam had no connection to 9/11, refuting claims by his own Vice President and members of his Administration. And while Condoleezza Rice claimed on 9/16/03, “We have never claimed that Saddam Hussein ... had either direction or control of 9/11" - the fact remains that the subtle and fear-mongering hints like Rumsfeld's continue unabated.
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November 4, 2003
 
Left is Right reached 10,000 hits today!
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This Just In: Dennis Interviewed Today!

 


Read today's interview with Dennis Kucinich by The Concord Monitor and washingtonpost.com. Snippet:

Washington, D.C.: Mr. Kucinich, you have called for the immediate removal of American forces from Iraq. If that was the case -- if American soldiers were immediately withdrawn -- how would Iraq be rebuilt? How would security, tenuous at best with American troops present, be maintained? And how would we avoid Iraq falling into the hands of religious extremists like the ones who control Iran?

Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich : It is imperative that the USA get out of Iraq. It was wrong to go in. It is wrong to stay in. We must go to the United Nations with a new resolution which represents a shift in US policy, a resolution which signals that the US is ready to rejoin the world community in the cause of securing Iraq and in helping to create greater security across the globe. That resolution, which can be accessed on my website at www.kucinich.us calls for the UN to handle all the oil assets of Iraq on behalf of the Iraqi people, without any privatization of oil assets. Next the UN would handle all the contracts in Iraq. No more sweetheart deals for the likes of Halliburton. No more no-bid contracts for political contributors. And the UN should be charged with developing new governance in Iraq so that the Iraqi people can move toward self-determination. This resolution would enable the UN to be brought back into the picture. Currently the UN is stepping back from Iraq. We must re-engage the UN. We must reach out to the world community. My exit strategy (and I am the only candidate for President, including the incumbent, who has offered such a plan) would enable the UN to gain support from member nations who would then commit troops to enable the rotation of UN troops into Iraq and the rotation of US troops out of Iraq. My plan, if immediately brought to the UN would enable our troops to be home by the beginning of the New Year. Unless this country makes a shift in policy, we will end up with more deaths of US servicemen and servicewomen, more chaos in Iraq and more separation from the world community. The time to take a new direction is now.
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Great review of the Daily Show and its implications for the progressive movement.
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"I still want to be the candidate for guys with Confederate flags in their pickup trucks."

 

Liberal Oasis did a good job today expanding on Dean's recent "Confederate Flag" comments. Go read it. Maybe if Dean stops dissing his fellow candidates so much, he would attract more progressive-leaning Democrats.
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The COMMENTS function by Blogextra seems to be on a break. Please feel free to e-mail your comments, which I'll post.
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Kucinich in N.H.

 

Kucinich speaks in New Hampshire on child care, a Department of Peace, and universal health care:

Kucinich would create Department of Peace - By Jack Loftus - jloftus@seacoastonline.com
DURHAM - Congressman Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, spoke at the University of New Hampshire Monday afternoon as part of the Every Child Matters Presidential Primary Forums. The forums, led by anchorman and political director Scott Spradling of WMUR-TV 9 and Every Child Matters President Michael Petit, asked the same six questions asked in the previous seven forums, which focused on issues including health care, child abuse and after-school care. An energetic and outspoken Kucinich was frequently applauded as he detailed a platform that he labeled more specific than his opponents.

The center of the Kucinich plan for the presidency was the cabinet-level Department of Peace, which, if created, would address directly the domestic- abuse problems within the homes of Americans. "Child abuse constitutes a national tragedy," Kucinich said, adding he plans to work on prevention rather than punishment while challenging old attitudes still present within society. The idea of peace is something we want in our own homes," he said. Internationally, Kucinich said the Department of Peace would meet with the nations of the world to address issues of violence before they begin to percolate.

One of the six questions asked of all the candidates attending the forums addressed the popular issue of universal health care for American children, and the projected price for such a plan. "My plan would have employers paying 7.7 percent (of an employee’s health care), and they would not be at the mercy of insurance companies," Kucinich said. According to Kucinich, employers are paying 8.2 percent of their revenues to supply coverage for their employees, with the remainder of the funding coming from the federal government. "We’re at a period now when we can’t afford to be sick and we can’t afford to be well," he said. Kucinich pledged to take health care away from the for-profit system that exists now and replace it with a Medicare that covers everything and would cost the same as the previous system. "As long as health care is a business the people will never have what they need," Kucinich said. "Every child will be covered as well as their parents."

Rounding out the major issues of the forum was a question of education and the funding of higher education institutions. "Education is central to my life," said Kucinich, a member of the House Education Committee. Kucinich pledged a change of priorities in the U.S. as president when he promised to achieve the goal of universal education. "My presidency will be about taking a new direction; it will be a whole new approach for Americans," Kucinich said. "We will move away from fear toward hope, away from despair toward optimism, and from war toward peace."
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November 3, 2003

Using Reagan to Our Advantage

 

Here's something you can do. CBS is going to air a miniseries about Ronald Reagan that has apparently upset the Right (even before airing). In fact, the Right is starting a campaign to Boycott the show:

STEP ONE - Join the battle by signing up for our email alert that will tell you which companies advertise on the CBS series. Shortly after the anti-Reagan smear on conservatives airs, we will send you an email alert with the names and contact information for the companies that funded this Left-wing attack. The email will tell you everything you need to know to send emails, faxes, or place phone calls to these companies to inform them you will not purchase their products for 30 days to protest their complicity in smearing patriotic Americans.

STEP TWO - Email your friends, and urge them to join our campaign. This is entirely a grass-roots effort; there is no fancy budget behind it. The power of email and the Web is all we have, and all we need, to humble Hateful Hollywood. Send an email to every sensible, fair-minded American you know asking them to visit this website to support this campaign.

STEP THREE - Watch one of the other TV networks during the Reagan Smear mini-series. This series is scheduled to air during the all-important time in television known as Sweeps Weeks. The money CBS makes on all its advertising, for all its shows, for the next six months will largely be determined by how many viewers they get during Sweeps Weeks. By watching a CBS competitor during their Smear Series, you multiply your power, as the other networks will look more attractive to advertisers than CBS. Of course, remember to remind your friends to do the same. Also, if you happen to know anyone who keeps track of the TV shows they watch for Neilsen ratings or other TV rating systems, ASK THEM NOT TO WATCH THE ANTI-REAGAN SMEAR. These "special" TV viewers control tens of millions of dollars based on what shows they watch. If you convince a single Neilsen Family to watch something other than the Reagan Smear, you literally have cost CBS millions of dollars. Not bad for placing a phone call to a friend.

There was a step four, but it involved the usual Right-wing school-bully tactic of revenge. So here's what we can do:

Step One: Go ahead and join their e-mail alert in order to receive the info they're going to distribute about the show's sponsors.

Step Two: Do e-mail your friends too, but ask them to watch the show.

Step Three: Here's where you change course: Watch the show! And 'if you happen to know anyone who keeps track of the TV shows they watch for Neilsen ratings or other TV rating systems", be sure they watch too!

If you're really energetic, e-mail the sponsors (from the list obtained in step one), thanking them for supporting the series.

Let's do it for the Gipper!

UPDATE:

CBS Is Said to Cancel Reagan Mini-Series
By JIM RUTENBERG and BILL CARTER - Published: November 4, 2003

Under pressure from Republican and conservative groups, CBS is expected to announce as early as today that it is canceling its plans to run a two-part mini-series in November deconstructing the Ronald Reagan presidency, two people close to the decision said last night. They said the film would most likely instead be handed over to CBS's pay-cable sibling, Showtime. The announcement would perhaps the first time a major broadcast network has ever removed a completed project from its schedule because of political pressure and under the threat of an advertising boycott.

Those gosh-darned Republicans. Now they insist on taking away our fun, too!
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Gumption

 

Really, what more can you ask of your President than to make a decision and stick to it?

Bush vows no retreat from Iraq
03.11.2003 - 20:15 - By Dean Yates

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Faced with a mounting military and civilian death toll and stiffening guerrilla resistance, President George W. Bush has vowed that the United States will not run from its "vital" mission in Iraq. Within hours of Bush's pledge in a speech in Alabama on Monday, a large explosion echoed across Baghdad, followed by mortar fire near the headquarters of the U.S.-led administration in Iraq. The president's comments were his first since 16 American soldiers were killed when guerrillas shot down their CH-47 Chinook helicopter on Sunday in the worst single attack since the American invasion on March 20.

"The enemy in Iraq believes America will run. That's why they're willing to kill innocent civilians, relief workers, coalition troops. America will never run," Bush said, despite falling approval ratings in the United States. "The mission in Iraq is vital," Bush added. But he did not refer to the downing of the helicopter or three other deaths which made Sunday the second worst day overall for the Americans of the conflict. A further 21 U.S. soldiers were wounded. At least 250 U.S. soldiers have been killed by hostile fire since the invasion. The number of Iraqis killed since March is in the thousands and steadily climbing.

Just imagine how much better the world would be if Bush used the same stubborness and fortitude that he has shown these past three years, but applied to GOOD decisions and GOOD policies.

You know, I always say, when a person behaves badly, I always blame the parents, the ones who taught the morals and values. So, shame on you, Barbara and George Sr.
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Question: Could Things Have Been Any Worse Than They Are?

 

From: Center For American Progress:

This weekend marked the six-month anniversary of President Bush's aircraft carrier declaration that "major combat operations in Iraq have ended." It was also the deadliest day in post-war Iraq, with 16 U.S. soldiers dying and 20 wounded in one fatal attack . As the NYT Magazine cover story says, the lack of clear planning by the White House is now taking a deadly toll: “It is becoming painfully clear that the American plan - if it can even be dignified with the name - for dealing with postwar Iraq was flawed in its conception and ineptly carried out.” The story reports “what was probably bound to be a difficult aftermath to the war was made far more difficult by blinkered vision and overoptimistic assumptions on the part of the war's greatest partisans within the Bush administration.” The WP reports that, for his part, President Bush “largely ignored the death toll in Iraq” this weekend “referring specifically to Iraq only once in four speeches totaling 72 minutes.” He did say, "When I came into office, morale in the U.S. military was beginning to suffer, so we increased the defense budget" - but that ignored the fact that recent polls show Bush's unilateralist foreign policy has driven down troop morale to alarmingly low levels. Reuters reports ”the triumphal post-war glow in which President Bush once taunted Iraqi militants by saying 'bring them on' has faded” as Iraqi civil Administrator Paul Bremer told CNN this weekend that the situation “is getting worse.” He said, “We've seen a much more sophisticated use of improvised explosive devices against coalition forces.” Last week USA Today reported that Bush said “attacks in Iraq are a reaction to progress” (Bush: “The more successful we are on the ground, the more these killers will react”), strangely saying more terrorism is a sign of success in Iraq. But as Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) said, “When there's a rocket attack on the Rashid Hotel when the deputy Defense [secretary] is there, it is not a sign that we're winning. 'Duhhh,' as my kids say.”

Answer: Yes, things could have been worse: The fourth hijacked airliner could have hit the Capitol Building (the intended target) rather than a field in Pennsylvania. God only knows how "we" would have responded then. Probably would have gone "nucular" with Congress' backing.
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Ethics Live!

 

How sad it is that the following story is exceptional enough to make the news, rather than the rule.

High school quarterback asks that disputed pass be dropped from record books Friday, October 31, 2003 - (10-31) 11:40 PST SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) --

A high school quarterback has asked officials to erase his record-setting pass because his coach had made a deal with the opposing team to let him complete it. Nate Haasis' Springfield Southeast High School team let Cahokia High School score a touchdown late in Saturday's game, which Cahokia won 42-20. In exchange, Cahokia made no effort to keep Haasis from completing a 37-yard pass that gave him a record. In post-game comments Saturday, both coaches acknowledged arranging the deal during a time-out. The completion gave Haasis 5,006 yards for his career, setting a new record for the Central State Eight Conference and making him one of 12 Illinois high school quarterbacks to pass for more than 5,000 yards.

But in a letter to the president of the conference, Haasis asked that the pass be stricken from the record books. "While I admittedly would like to have passed the record, as I think most high school quarterbacks would, I am requesting that the Central State Eight does not include this pass in the record books," Haasis wrote. Haasis said the yardage he passed for in his career "required a lot of cooperation and hard work from my teammates. I do not wish to diminish the accomplishments that were made in the last three years."

The conference is expected to approve Haasis' request at its monthly meeting Wednesday.

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November 1, 2003

Iraq = Vietnam?

 

Richard Cohen epitomizes the mindset of the Right:

Finally, where Iraq is really different from Vietnam: There can be no premature, chaotic and shameful withdrawal. In the end, Vietnam didn't matter. Iraq does.

Let's see. The situation is already premature (preemptive invasion), chaotic and shameful. Withdrawal won't create that situation, just finalize it. Vietnam didn't matter? VIETNAM DIDN'T MATTER? Let's see Mr. Cohen say that in front of a couple dozen disabled Vietnam vets. I'm sure he'd receive a warm round of applause.

We the people DID learn our lesson in Vietnam. Unfortunately those in the Bush Administration were AWOL from that bloodbath (except Mr. Massacre, a.k.a. Colin Powell) or suffer any personal or financial hardship as a result, so the American public now reaps the products of BushCo's failure to learn.
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NYC Beware

 

Ted Rall explains how New York City could get bloody and out-of-control at the Republican National Convention next September (snippets):

Activists are talking, some with barely hidden glee, about the possibility of violence. "It'll be Chicago 1968," a well-connected progressive leader predicts, referring to the "Days of Rage" riots during that year's Democratic National Convention. "Things are gonna burn, people are gonna die." Harsh new NYPD tactics, like using horses to trample protesters, could throw gas on an already combustible situation. "Angry protesters have claimed police are meeting [antiwar] demonstrations with new heights of repressiveness, amounting to a pattern of unfounded arrests and abuses," reports The Village Voice.

Both sides are itching for a fight. "If they think New York City will welcome them with open arms, or even tolerate them dancing on the graves of the WTC victims, they are in for a very rude awakening," "Seraphiel" posted to the TalkLeft.com website. "I hope it is a remake of the '68 convention in Chicago and the fabulous NYPD, this time, get to break some left-wing heads like grapes," a Bush supporter named "David" retorted.

As much as I relish the idea of a million angry Americans turning the tawdry Necropublican National Convention into a Seattle WTO-style fiasco, the potential for mayhem is terrifying. As a Manhattanite, I hope that the Republicans will seriously consider moving their convention somewhere else. New York, wounded by the dot-com crash and 9/11 (the latter injury exacerbated when Bush welched on the money he promised to help the city rebuild), continues to suffer from widespread unemployment. The risk of convention-related terrorist attacks should be reason enough to not hold it in a city that paid the highest price on 9/11. A revival of 1968, with cops fouling their batons with the blood of young people, wouldn't do anyone--left or right--any good.

Riots would make everyone look bad--New York, the GOP and the demonstrators. The resulting property damage could exceed the cost that would be involved in moving the convention to another city--a price that the well-funded Bush campaign can easily afford.

As much as one might think that rioting during the convention will make the Republicans appear out of control and a bad choice in the election, riots really make everyone look like idiots. This is not a good idea for the Democrats. They should stay away and let the Republicans make fools of themselves, which they already started by deciding to hold this thing using 9-11 as the "theme". Unfortunately the anger and frustration in the political center and left are at unparallel levels and we are now, at this point, skirting spontaneous combustion.
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Are We Betraying Ourselves?

 

Mary Riddell of The Observer comments on the failure of the anti-war movement (snippet):

Those of us who opposed the war can claim that we were more right than we thought. There were no WMDs, no nuclear programme, no legal case and no link with al-Qaeda, until Bush and Blair invited them along. And yet the anti-war movement, whatever its stake on prescience, has proved a depressingly negative force, too. The populist spirit that politicised a generation and illuminated mass marches has curdled into pessimism and posturing. It may be excessive to hope that a peace movement can save a single Iraqi life. But it might show better that it mourned, or even noticed.
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Toxic OJ

 

All this time thinking Florida orange juice is good for you, and now THIS.
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Well the weight of the world is FALLING
And on my back I've been CRAWLING
The state of affairs is APPALLING
And the 6 o'clock news keeps CALLING

Well I've been trying to see the world through their eyes
Where black is white and day is night
Left is Right
Left is Right
Left is Right, For me

Well negotiations keep STALLING
The United Nations keeps CALLING
The Skeletons you're HAULING
Won't hold when you're FALLING

Put your head in the sand and you'll never know
What's waiting for you in the depths below (below)
Don't believe everything that you read
Take what you want and keep what you need

TWISTED NIXON



CHICK HEARN, THANKS SO MUCH FOR ALL THE MEMORIES.

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