Thursday, September 30, 2004



Roberts Rules of Order Refresher

Disorderly words should be taken down by the member who objects to them, or by the secretary, and then read to the member. If he denies them, the assembly shall decide by a vote whether they are his words or not. If a member cannot justify the words he used, and will not suitably apologize for using them, it is the duty of the assembly to act in the case.
 Posted by Hello


Josh Marshall says Bush's motto has become: "It's Not My Fault." Claiming credit for the two things that went right; but attempting to avoid blame for the dozens of things that went wrong. "It's Not My Fault", he says... Posted by Hello


Sometimes the Multi-Millionaire Cheney has concerns about Millionaire Bush: "How can he make money that way?" Posted by Hello

The Politics of Science: Bush and Kerry Battle It Out
by Roddy Scheer
E/The Environmental Magazine

September 29, 2004—Nature, a leading international science periodical, has published written responses from President Bush and challenger John Kerry to questions regarding their respective stands on various scientific issues, including stem cell research, global warming, genetically modified crops and nuclear weapons development. As might be expected, the candidates rarely agreed on what should be done regarding federal policy on most matters of science.

In general, Bush came down on the side of preventing research on new stem cell lines, waiting and seeing regarding global warming, allowing the free market to regulate genetically modified foods, and continuing the development of nuclear weapons. Meanwhile, Kerry wants to lift restrictions on stem cell research, restart international negotiations regarding climate change policy, watch genetically modified foods more closely and stop all nuclear weapons development.

A Key Point in National Service

Tzahal - The Israel Defense Forces (abbr. IDF)

The IDF was established on May 26 1948, by the Provisional Government of the State of Israel. The IDF is an organic part of the people, essentially based on reserve service by the civilian population.

The IDF has proven itself one of the most important factors in effecting the integration of the varied cultural elements of Israel's population. In the early days of the state, the IDF probably had more influence in this respect than any other single element, and today it is on a par with the school system in bringing about national integration.

From its inception, Israel established a system of compulsory military service requiring both men and women of certain ages to report for varying periods of service. The IDF comprise three types of service: conscript service, reserve service and regular service. On conclusion of his or her conscript service, every soldier is assigned to a reserve unit. The IDF is composed of three elements: regular officers and N.C.O.; the standing army - regular officers, N.C.O.s and conscripts; and reserve forces, which can be mobilized at any given time.

Note: America might not need a "Draft"; but it most likely would benefit from compulsory national service by everyone! It's very difficult to become or stay a bigot with others who share your foxhole!


Senator says it's time to consider reviving the draft
All Americans must sacrifice to defend the nation, he says
Helen Dewar, Washington Post
Thursday, April 22, 2004

Washington -- Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Vietnam War veteran and influential member of the Foreign Relations Committee, wants the United States to consider reviving the draft as part of a broader effort to ensure that all Americans "bear some responsibility ... pay some price" in defending the nation's interests.

At a committee hearing Tuesday and in subsequent interviews, the Nebraska Republican said he was not advocating reinstatement of the draft, although he added he was "not so sure that isn't a bad idea."

His main interest, he said, is to ensure that some kind of mandatory national service is considered so "the privileged, the rich," as well as the less affluent, bear the burden of fighting wars of the future.

Hagel said he did not expect to see action on such a bill this year but wanted to spark debate that would "bring some reality to our policy-making" about future military needs. With American armed forces abroad stretched thinner than they have been at any time since Vietnam and with needs likely to continue indefinitely, "this is a steam engine coming right down the track at us," he said.

Appearing with Hagel on NBC's "Today" show, Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware, the ranking Democrat on the foreign relations panel, agreed with Hagel's goal of shared sacrifice and did not rule out a draft. However, Biden said, "I don't think it's necessary now. ... (The) "whole notion of a shared burden is something we should be talking about well beyond the issue of just the draft."

Legislation has been introduced in both houses to revive the draft, which was ended in 1973 as the Vietnam War wound down and subsequently replaced by an all-volunteer army. The bills are sponsored by Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., and Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y. No action has been scheduled on either measure.

Hagel, an independent-minded conservative with a penchant for provocative comments, supported the war in Iraq but has criticized many aspects of the administration's postwar operations. Rarely, however, has he taken on a more controversial subject than the draft.

"My colleagues are running away from this as fast as they can," he said, but "there isn't a one of them who doesn't understand what I'm doing."

President Bush is right that the country is engaged in a long-term war, Hagel said, and the country is "making commitments for future years that we cannot fulfill" in fighting terrorism and trying to rid the world of weapons of mass destruction. Already 40 percent of the ground troops in Iraq come from the National Guard and Reserves, and recruitment and retention will be a problem, he said.

Moreover, he said, all Americans should be asked to "share the sacrifice" of protecting their country. "It's unfair to ask only a few people to bear the burden of fighting and dying."

A mandatory national service requirement for civilian as well as military work could help meet many needs at home while simultaneously providing personnel for the armed forces, Hagel said. Posted by Hello

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

Be Prepared...


Schadenfreude: n. delight in another person's misfortune


[German : Schaden, damage (from Middle High German schade, from Old High German scado) + Freude, joy (from Middle High German vreude, from Old High German frewida, from fr, happy).]
Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

Florida Shenagians 2000 Redux ??

Still Seeking a Fair Florida Vote
Washington Post
By Jimmy Carter
Monday, September 27, 2004; Page A19

After the debacle in Florida four years ago, former president Gerald Ford and I were asked to lead a blue-ribbon commission to recommend changes in the American electoral process. After months of concerted effort by a dedicated and bipartisan group of experts, we presented unanimous recommendations to the president and Congress. The government responded with the Help America Vote Act of October 2002. Unfortunately, however, many of the act's key provisions have not been implemented because of inadequate funding or political disputes.

The disturbing fact is that a repetition of the problems of 2000 now seems likely, even as many other nations are conducting elections that are internationally certified to be transparent, honest and fair. The Carter Center has monitored more than 50 elections, all of them held under contentious, troubled or dangerous conditions. When I describe these activities, either in the United States or in foreign forums, the almost inevitable questions are: "Why don't you observe the election in Florida?" and "How do you explain the serious problems with elections there?"

The answer to the first question is that we can monitor only about five elections each year, and meeting crucial needs in other nations is our top priority. (Our most recent ones were in Venezuela and Indonesia, and the next will be in Mozambique.) A partial answer to the other question is that some basic international requirements for a fair election are missing in Florida.

The most significant of these requirements are:

• A nonpartisan electoral commission or a trusted and nonpartisan official who will be responsible for organizing and conducting the electoral process before, during and after the actual voting takes place. Although rarely perfect in their objectivity, such top administrators are at least subject to public scrutiny and responsible for the integrity of their decisions. Florida voting officials have proved to be highly partisan, brazenly violating a basic need for an unbiased and universally trusted authority to manage all elements of the electoral process.

• Uniformity in voting procedures, so that all citizens, regardless of their social or financial status, have equal assurance that their votes are cast in the same way and will be tabulated with equal accuracy. Modern technology is already in use that makes electronic voting possible, with accurate and almost immediate tabulation and with paper ballot printouts so all voters can have confidence in the integrity of the process. There is no reason these proven techniques, used overseas and in some U.S. states, could not be used in Florida.

It was obvious that in 2000 these basic standards were not met in Florida, and there are disturbing signs that once again, as we prepare for a presidential election, some of the state's leading officials hold strong political biases that prevent necessary reforms.

Four years ago, the top election official, Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris, was also the co-chair of the Bush-Cheney state campaign committee. The same strong bias has become evident in her successor, Glenda Hood, who was a highly partisan elector for George W. Bush in 2000. Several thousand ballots of African Americans were thrown out on technicalities in 2000, and a fumbling attempt has been made recently to disqualify 22,000 African Americans (likely Democrats), but only 61 Hispanics (likely Republicans), as alleged felons.

The top election official has also played a leading role in qualifying Ralph Nader as a candidate, knowing that two-thirds of his votes in the previous election came at the expense of Al Gore. She ordered Nader's name be included on absentee ballots even before the state Supreme Court ruled on the controversial issue.

Florida's governor, Jeb Bush, naturally a strong supporter of his brother, has taken no steps to correct these departures from principles of fair and equal treatment or to prevent them in the future.

It is unconscionable to perpetuate fraudulent or biased electoral practices in any nation. It is especially objectionable among us Americans, who have prided ourselves on setting a global example for pure democracy. With reforms unlikely at this late stage of the election, perhaps the only recourse will be to focus maximum public scrutiny on the suspicious process in Florida.

Former president Carter is chairman of the Carter Center in Atlanta.
<------------------------------------->

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

"...woman said these jobs are going boy, and they a'int coming back..."

Consumer Confidence Falls Again in Sept.
Tue Sep 28, 2004 11:53 AM ET
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By Dena Aubin

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. consumer confidence edged lower again in September after falling in August, as persistent worries about the job market weighed on sentiment, a report on Tuesday said.

The Conference Board, a private forecasting group, said its index of the mood of U.S. consumers fell to 96.8 from a revised 98.7 in August. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a rise to 99.0.

Consumer worries about the labor market have clouded the outlook for consumer spending, which powers two-thirds of the U.S. economy. Soaring oil prices, which crimped spending in the second quarter, pose another threat to economic growth.

"Confidence in the state of the economy is diminished and within that, confidence on job prospects is the biggest factor," said Richard DeKaser, chief economist at National City Corp. "I would guess that the impact of higher oil prices is feeding through as well. The problem with energy prices is that when they rise, there's nowhere to run."

The percentage of consumers surveyed who said jobs were hard to get rose to 28.3 percent from 26.0 percent, while those seeing jobs as plentiful fell to 16.8 percent from 18.4 percent.

"The recent declines in the index were caused primarily by a deterioration in consumers' assessment of employment conditions," Lynn Franco, director of the Conference Board's Consumer Research Center, said. "Soft labor market conditions have clearly taken a toll on consumer confidence."


NOT ON MY WATCH:
American Progress Report
Sept 28, 2004

In her book on genocide, "A Problem From Hell," Samantha Power recounts how President Bush wrote four words in the margins of a memo he received on President Clinton's response to the Rwandan genocide: "Not on my watch." And yet, just a decade after close to a million Rwandans lost their lives as the world stood by, the international response to the unfolding crisis remains "agonizingly slow." And, unfortunately, it is happening on President Bush's watch. As the man who urged Americans to "fight evil" and touts his preference for "action" over deliberation, he has offered not one public speech on Sudan and made no contingency plans, even as the situation "threatens to become one of the most devastating humanitarian disasters of our times." Posted by Hello

Monday, September 27, 2004

Kofi Annan's Interview on the BBC
The War In Iraq Is Illegal

Choice of words matters
By Paul Reynolds
BBC News Online world affairs correspondent

The use of a single word in diplomacy can often mark a significant moment and the UN Secretary General Kofi Annan's use of the word "illegal" about the war in Iraq is one such moment.

He has carefully avoided the word before.

His previous phrasing was to say that the war was "not in conformity with the UN Charter". This was a typical diplomatic phrase designed to get over the meaning, but to avoid directness. It was not exactly a ringing phrase and Mr Annan was content with that.

Now, in a BBC interview, he has been pressed into using the word "illegal" and that is the word which will now be used everywhere to describe his position.

He has not changed his position. But his language has changed and that counts. It is worth noting that he still hedged the word round with references to the UN Charter, but that will be largely ignored.

Diplomacy does not often like directness. Mr Annan is a diplomatic sort of diplomat.
<------------------------------------->
I've indicated that [the Iraq war] was not in conformity with the UN Charter. From our point of view, from the charter point of view, it was illegal
Kofi Annan
UN Secretary General

Annan interview excerpts

BBC: "So you don't think there was legal authority for the war."

Mr Annan: "I have made it clear, I have stated clearly, that it was not in conformity with the UN Charter."

BBC: "It was illegal."

Mr Annan: "Yes, if you wish."

BBC: "It was illegal."

Mr Annan: "Yes, I've indicated that it was not in conformity with the UN Charter. From our point of view, from the charter point of view, it was illegal."

The actual word was wrested from him as the final thing he said. He probably did not intend to say it, but found that he could not avoid it.

So why does he think it illegal?

In the interview, he remarked that Resolution 1441, passed on 8 November 2002, warned Iraq that there would be "serious consequences" if it did not comply with UN demands over its suspected weapons programmes.

Mr Annan said it should have been left to the UN Security Council, in a second resolution, to determine what those consequences were.

The United States and Britain argued they were carrying out the wishes of the Security Council and that their authority was based not just on Resolution 1441, but on previous UN resolutions.

The British Attorney General, Lord Goldsmith, issued a public statement of his outline argument, though he did not publish, or even give the members of the cabinet, his detailed reasoning.

He said the original Resolution 678 from 1990, which allowed for "all necessary means" to end Iraq's occupation of Kuwait and "restore international peace and security" in the region, still applied.

It had been, he said, "revived" by Resolution 687 from 1991, which demanded that Iraq disarm. Since Resolution 1441 stated that Iraq was in breach of Resolution 687, the attorney general argued, there was authority to use force.

For opponents of the Iraq war, the use of the word "illegal" will confirm their arguments in a satisfactory way.

Supporters, including those who might not be wholly convinced by Lord Goldsmith's argument, might rely on the so-called Kosovo defence.

The war by Nato against Serbia over Kosovo in 1999 was not authorised by the UN either, but was viewed by its proponents as a legitimate intervention to protect civilians.


One Reason Women Live Longer Then Men... Posted by Hello

Patriot Act II + 1/2



From American Progress Report: Sept 27th, 2004:

INTELLIGENCE REFORM

Hastert's Political Trickery


A House bill crafted by GOP leaders with no input from Democrats seeks to "graft broadened police powers" onto a plan to reform the nation's intelligence-gathering agencies. The bill, released to House members on Friday, "stands in sharp contrast to the bill passed unanimously [last] week by the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee." Rather than working in the spirit of the bipartisan 9/11 Commission for which the bill is named, GOP leaders crafted the legislation behind closed doors and added several controversial provisions many groups say could endanger Americans' civil liberties. The changes in the House bill, besides potentially threatening the freedom of American citizens, "will present major challenges for House-Senate negotiators trying to agree on a single bill later this year."



POLITICIZING SECURITY: "Ebullient Republicans" all but admitted the provisions had been slipped into the bill as a political trick to bait Democrats into voting against a bill concerned with national security. John Feehery, a spokesman for House Majority leader Dennis Hastert (R-IL), said it would be hard for Democrats to oppose measures aimed at preventing future domestic attacks. "The Democrats got spanked hard on homeland security [in 2002]," Feehery told reporters, referring to the GOP's crass politicization of homeland security issues in 2002 Senate races. "I don't think they want to get spanked again." But some House Republicans were less than thrilled with such politicization. "The bill that I saw … I don't intend to support," said Rep. Ray LaHood (R-IL), who serves on the House Intelligence Committee. LaHood joined Democratic leaders in expressing skepticism the House and Senate would be able to reconcile their differing versions of the bill before Congress adjourns in mid-October. Here's more on how the Republicans have used national security as a political tool.



BROAD NEW POWERS FOR POLICE: The new bill includes broad measures that could do more harm to Americans' civil liberties than to terrorists. The New York City Bill of Rights Defense Council calls the new provisions "some of the most repressive legislation that we've witnessed in recent years…These provisions represent a massive attack on all of our civil liberties, and in particular the rights and liberties of immigrants and members of the Arab, Muslim, and South Asian communities." Among such provisions are measures permitting "warrants against non-citizens even when a target can't be tied directly to a foreign power." The bi-partisan 9/11 Commission, in contrast, called for civil liberties to be strengthened.



PATRIOT ACT: THE SEQUEL: Though it is named for the bipartisan 9/11 Commission, controversial portions of the House bill more closely mimic provisions suggested not by the 9/11 Commission report but which appeared "in a leaked Justice Department memo in January 2003, dubbed by critics 'Patriot II,' after the 2001 USA Patriot Act." That memo, crafted in secret by the Department of Justice and leaked to the public, sought to weaken "many of the checks and balances that remained on government surveillance." According to the ACLU, Patriot II made it easier for the government to initiate surveillance and wiretapping on U.S. citizens, enhanced the government's ability to obtain sensitive information without prior judicial approval and authorized secret arrests in immigration and other cases where the detained person is not criminally charged. One section explicitly expanded the attorney general's authority to authorize electronic surveillance and physical searches without court approval at any time after "Congress authorizes the use of military force."



UNIONS NOT TRUSTED WITH SECURITY: The Washington Post reports a small section buried deep within the new House legislation "would make it easier for the president to exclude unions from representing 'homeland security' employees." No one seems to know "where the proposal came from or why it is needed." The two-paragraph provision "would amend one part of civil service law and repeal a section of the 2002 law that sought to smooth the transition of unionized employees into the new Department of Homeland Security." It would also add "homeland security" to the list of functions that the president can deem exempt from union representation.




Watch Your Back with These Folks !
They Will Do Almost Anything for Their Man !!

Republicans Admit Mailing Campaign Literature Saying Liberals Will Ban the Bible
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK
Published: September 24, 2004

The Republican Party acknowledged yesterday sending mass mailings to residents of two states warning that "liberals" seek to ban the Bible. It said the mailings were part of its effort to mobilize religious voters for President Bush.

The mailings include images of the Bible labeled "banned" and of a gay marriage proposal labeled "allowed." A mailing to Arkansas residents warns: "This will be Arkansas if you don't vote." A similar mailing was sent to West Virginians.

A liberal religious group, the Interfaith Alliance, circulated a copy of the Arkansas mailing to reporters yesterday to publicize it. "What they are doing is despicable,'' said Don Parker, a spokesman for the alliance. "They are playing on people's fears and emotions."

In an e-mail message, Christine Iverson, a spokeswoman for the Republican National Committee, confirmed that the party had sent the mailings.

"When the Massachusetts Supreme Court sanctioned same-sex marriage and people in other states realized they could be compelled to recognize those laws, same-sex marriage became an issue,'' Ms. Iverson said. "These same activist judges also want to remove the words 'under God' from the Pledge of Allegiance."

The mailing is the latest evidence of the emphasis Republicans are putting on motivating conservative Christian voters to vote this fall. But as the appeals become public, they also risk alienating moderate and swing voters.

An editorial on Sept. 22 in The Charleston Gazette in West Virginia, for example, asked, "Holy Moley! Who concocts this gibberish?"

"Most Americans see morality more complexly," the editorial said. "Many think a higher morality is found in Christ's command to help the needy, prevent war and pursue other humanitarian goals. Churchgoers of this sort aren't likely to believe childish allegations that Democrats want to ban the Bible."

In statement, Senator John Edwards, the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, said President Bush "should condemn the practice immediately and tell everyone associated with the campaign to never use tactics like this again."

Matt Foreman, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, called the mailings an ugly contrast to Mr. Bush's public statements. Although the president has called for a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage, he often emphasizes the need for tolerance as well.

"The president takes more or less the high road and his henchman and allies on the right have been let loose to conduct these ugly, divisive smear campaigns," Mr. Foreman said. "It is wedge politics at its worst."

In any event, the Bush campaign appears confident about its religious appeal.

The mailing seeks to appeal to conservative evangelical Protestant pastors and political leaders who say they worry that legal rights for same-sex couples could lead to hate-crimes laws that could be applied against sermons of Bible passages criticizing homosexuality.

Conservative Christian political commentators often cite the case of Ake Green, a minister in Sweden who was jailed in June for a month for a sermon denouncing gays as sinful.

Mr. Parker, of the Interfaith Alliance, said, "I think it is laughable to think that someone could be arrested for reading out loud from the Bible.''

But Richard Land, president of the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, argued, "We have the First Amendment in this country which should protect churches, but there is no question that this is where some people want to go, that reading from the Bible could be hate speech."

Still, Mr. Land questioned the assertion that Democrats might ban the whole Bible. "I wouldn't say it," he said. "I would think that is probably stretching it a bit far."

NPR's Fresh Air Episode: Sept 18th, 2003

Teri Gross's Interview with Salam Pax, the "Bagdad Blogger" is here. He was supposedly hired by the Guardian in late 2003 to write a forthnightly article...which never appeared. So where is Rael?

How Many Ways Must You Hear It Before Seeing It With Your Own Eyes?

An Un-American Way to Campaign
NY Times Editorial
Published: September 25, 2004

President Bush and his surrogates are taking their re-election campaign into dangerous territory. Mr. Bush is running as the man best equipped to keep America safe from terrorists - that was to be expected. We did not, however, anticipate that those on the Bush team would dare to argue that a vote for John Kerry would be a vote for Al Qaeda. Yet that is the message they are delivering - with a repetition that makes it clear this is an organized effort to paint the Democratic candidate as a friend to terrorists.

When Vice President Dick Cheney declared that electing Mr. Kerry would create a danger "that we'll get hit again," his supporters attributed that appalling language to a rhetorical slip. But Mr. Cheney is still delivering that message. Meanwhile, as Dana Milbank detailed so chillingly in The Washington Post yesterday, the House speaker, Dennis Hastert, said recently on television that Al Qaeda would do better under a Kerry presidency, and Senator Orrin Hatch, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, has announced that the terrorists are going to do everything they can between now and November "to try and elect Kerry."

This is despicable politics. It's not just polarizing - it also undermines the efforts of the Justice Department and the Central Intelligence Agency to combat terrorists in America. Every time a member of the Bush administration suggests that Islamic extremists want to stage an attack before the election to sway the results in November, it causes patriotic Americans who do not intend to vote for the president to wonder whether the entire antiterrorism effort has been kidnapped and turned into part of the Bush re-election campaign. The people running the government clearly regard keeping Mr. Bush in office as more important than maintaining a united front on the most important threat to the nation.

Mr. Bush has not disassociated himself from any of this, and in his own campaign speeches he makes an argument that is equally divisive and undemocratic. The president has claimed, over and over, that criticism of the way his administration has conducted the war in Iraq and news stories that suggest the war is not going well endanger American troops and give aid and comfort to the enemy. This week, in his Rose Garden press conference with the interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, Mr. Bush was asked about Mr. Kerry's increasingly pointed remarks on Iraq. "You can embolden an enemy by sending mixed messages," he said, going on to suggest that Mr. Kerry's criticisms dispirit the Iraqi people and American soldiers.

It is fair game for the president to claim that toppling Saddam Hussein was a blow to terrorism, to accuse Mr. Kerry of flip-flopping and to repeat continually that the war in Iraq is going very well, despite all evidence to the contrary. It is absolutely not all right for anyone on his team to suggest that Mr. Kerry is the favored candidate of the terrorists. And at a time when the United States is supposed to be preparing the Iraqi people for a democratic election, it's appalling to hear the chief executive say that loyal opposition gives aid and comfort to the enemy abroad.

The general instinct of Americans is to play fair. That is why, even though terrorists struck the United States during President Bush's watch, the Democrats have not run a campaign that blames him for allowing the World Trade Center and the Pentagon to be attacked. And while the war in Iraq has opened up large swaths of the country to terrorist groups for the first time, any effort by Mr. Kerry to describe the president as the man whom Osama bin Laden wants to keep in power would be instantly denounced by the Republicans as unpatriotic.

We think that anyone who attempts to portray sincere critics as dangerous to the safety of the nation is wrong. It reflects badly on the president's character that in this instance, he's putting his own ambition ahead of the national good.

Offshoring is the issue ! not out-sourcing !!
As Deep Throat Said: "Watch the Money" !!

Foreign Tax Havens Costly to U.S., Study Says
By LYNNLEY BROWNING
NY Times Business Section
Published: September 27, 2004

America's biggest corporations are increasingly funneling profits earned in the United States to tax havens around the globe, depriving the United States Treasury of anywhere from $10 billion to $20 billion in lost tax revenue each year, according to a new study.

The study, to be published today in the trade journal Tax Notes, says that United States multinational corporations shifted $75 billion in domestic profits last year to no-tax and low-tax foreign havens like Bermuda and Ireland.

The study's author, Martin A. Sullivan, said that legal loopholes and tax credits could mean in theory that no taxes are owed to the United States government on the shifted income. But he wrote that the shifting is more likely to result in annual tax losses to federal coffers of $10 billion to $20 billion. He said yesterday that at least some of the transfer probably occurred through questionable tax shelters.

In a related study, published by Tax Notes earlier this month, Mr. Sullivan concluded that that profits reported by American multinational companies from their foreign subsidiaries, and not from their operations based in the United States, soared 68 percent since 1999, to $149 billion last year. The earlier study said that the rise in foreign earnings was not accompanied by any gain in real economic activity in the tax havens, suggesting that multinationals were increasingly using offshore tax shelters to shield earnings.

Mr. Sullivan is a former Treasury Department economist who specialized in international taxation. His study is based on Commerce Department data. His estimates of domestic profit-shifting and the corresponding tax losses are for earnings generated by the United States-based operations of American multinational companies, and not for earnings generated by their foreign subsidiaries in low-tax countries.

Under current United States tax laws, American companies can defer taxes on profits earned offshore as long as those profits are not returned to the United States. An updated study by J. P. Morgan Chase in June 2003 said that $650 billion held offshore by American corporations like Exxon Mobil and General Electric was waiting in accounts to be repatriated to the United States if proposed legislation enacting a highly reduced rate is enacted.


The dwindling coalition which initially consisted of 67 countries supporting OIF in 2003, shrank to 34 countries in March 2004, and by the Fall of 2004, there were only three countries in the world who had more than a thousand troops or paid in $50M or more in financial support for OIF. Over 85% of the US Armed Forces fatalities in Iraq have occured after Pres. Bush declared the "End of Major Operations" in May 2003.
 Posted by Hello

Saturday, September 25, 2004


It's a sad, sad, sight... Posted by Hello

No More La-La Land BS Please !!

‘Staying the Course’ Isn’t an Option
Iraq is probably already lost, says former military-policy planner Mike Turner.

But there are still some smart strategies for Kerry to adopt

WEB-EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY
By Mike Turner
Newsweek
Updated: 5:31 p.m. ET Sept. 24, 2004

Sept. 24 - One of the great mysteries of this election is the inability of John Kerry to challenge George W. Bush on his national-security credentials and to hold his administration accountable for its monumental failure in Iraq. These two issues remain the soft underbelly of the Bush campaign. That the Kerry campaign hasn't effectively exploited them is disheartening. That he's allowed Bush to actually spin them into strengths is mind-boggling. Since the American people seem to be buying the GOP's reality-TV version of events in Iraq, let's take a hard look at the military realities.

From a purely military standpoint, the war in Iraq is an unmitigated disaster. This administration failed to make even a cursory effort at adequately defining the political end state they sought to achieve by removing Saddam Hussein, making it impossible to precisely define long-term military success. That, in turn, makes it impossible to lay out a rational exit strategy for U.S. troops. Like Vietnam, the military is again being asked to clean up the detritus of a failed foreign policy. We are nose-deep in a protracted insurgency, an occupying Christian power in an oil-rich, Arab country. That country is not now and has never been a single nation. A single, unified, democratic Iraq comprised of Kurds, Shiites and Sunnis is a willfully ignorant illusion at best.

Two thirds of America's combat brigades are now tied down in this war which, under present conditions, is categorically unwinnable. Having alienated virtually every major ally who might help, our troops are simply targets. If Bush is re-elected, there are only two possible outcomes in Iraq:

* Four years from now, America will have 5,000 dead servicemen and women and an untold number of dead Iraqis at a cost of about $1 trillion, yet still be no closer to success than we are right now, or
* The U.S. will be gone, and we will witness the birth of a violent breeding ground for Shiite terrorists posing a far greater threat to Americans than a contained Saddam.

To discern the truth about Iraq, Americans must simply look beyond the spin. This war is not some noble endeavor, some great struggle of good against evil as the Bush administration would have us believe. We in the military have heard these grand pronouncements many times before by men who have neither served nor sacrificed. This war is an exercise in colossal stupidity and hubris which has now cost more than 1,000 American military lives, which has empowered Al Qaeda beyond anything those butchers might have engineered on their own and which has diverted America's attention and precious resources from the real threat at the worst possible time. And now, in a supreme act of truly breathtaking gall, this administration insists the only way to fix Iraq is to leave in power the very ones who created the nightmare.

Absent an unequivocal plan from Kerry, the Bush administration's "stay the course" strategy has become the de facto solution. Yet this is a recipe for even greater tragedy, setting the stage for far more crippling attacks on Americans. It means adhering to a plan that may very soon make it impossible for the U.S. to respond to significant threats from elsewhere against its vital strategic interests. The administration's policies are tearing down America's military readiness worldwide, while ignoring the real war on terror.

So what strategies should candidate Kerry propose? The first steps are patently obvious to anyone who has worked even briefly as a military policy planner. First, Americans must understand it is highly probable that Iraq is already lost. Americans must stop believing the never-ending litany of "happy thoughts" spewing forth from the Bush campaign and start thinking about our men and women dying wholesale in Iraq. Having acknowledged that painful reality and the genuine, long-term danger posed to Americans by remaining in Iraq, here are some obvious actions for Kerry to propose at his first debate next week with Bush.

1. Define the political end state. A "free and democratic Iraq" is not a realistic political goal. A loose coalition of Kurdistan (Kurds), a Central Arab Republic (Sunni) and a Southern Arab Republic (Shia) might be. Whatever the goal, the political objective must precede the military objective, and it must be forged by the experts at the State Department, not the Pentagon.

2. Given a precisely defined political objective, the president must obtain an accurate and honest field assessment from our senior military commanders, who must be free to make that assessment without recrimination. These commanders must decide if a military mission supporting the precisely defined political objective is possible and realistic. If it is, we need to enter Iraq with overwhelming military force to achieve success. If our military leaders determine it is not—and I believe that is very likely—we must pull our troops out now. Under Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, a renowned autocrat and micromanager, this type of honest assessment by the military is impossible.

3. We must obtain United Nations mandate for a long-term solution to Iraq. The U.N. may be largely impotent, inefficient and ineffectual, but it has become the basis for legitimizing military operations around the world. Since the case for defending ourselves against a supposedly imminent threat is now dead—if it ever was alive—we must obtain international, political top cover for all future operations.

4. We must obtain the support of our allies for a newly crafted, long-term political solution for the region. This will enable us to share the burden of rebuilding Iraq, though it may require some big sticks and even bigger carrots.

If the Bush administration remains in power, failure in Iraq is a virtual certainty. "Staying the course" during a crisis spiraling rapidly downward will cost thousands of American and Iraqi lives, will continue to sap the operational readiness of this nation's armed forces, and will continue to strengthen Al Qaeda's hand. To paraphrase FDR, it's time to change horses. The one we're on is about to drown.

Retired Air Force Col. Mike Turner is a former military planner who served on the U.S. Central Command planning staff for operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm. Before retiring in 1997, he spent four years as a strategic policy planner for the Joint Chiefs of Staff specializing in Middle East/Africa affairs. He is a 1973 graduate of the U.S. Air Force Academy and a former fighter pilot and air-rescue helicopter pilot.
© 2004 Newsweek, Inc.

Friday, September 24, 2004


The inflation adjusted value of the US minimum wage is now $4.73, the lowest it has ever been. Minimum wage earners make up about 9% of the working population. In 2004 the mimumum wage is 33% of the average hourly wage, the lowest since 1949. It has been eight years since the last minimum wage increase. Gov. Schwarzeneggar vetoed a recent attempt to increase the California minimum wage by 50 cents per hour. Florida has placed an initiative on the 2004 ballot to increase the State mimimum wage by 50 cents per hour. Gov. Bush is opposed.  Posted by Hello

Salary Differential: Workers vs CEO's

Workers, top executives pay gap skyrockets
Detroit Free Press
Dec. 19rh, 2002
By Julie Moran Alterio, and Jerry Gleeson / Westchester (N.Y.) Journal News

A September 2001 study by National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, Mass., compared income of average workers with the average compensation of the country's 100 top CEOs. The figures were adjusted to 1998 dollars.

In 1970, the average full-time worker earned $32,522, according to the National Institute of Pension Administrators. During that same year, average compensation among the top 100 CEOs was $1.25 million, according to Forbes magazine's annual survey, which includes salary, bonus, the value of restricted stock awards and stock options exercised.

In 1999, the average worker's pay had climbed only slightly, to $35,864. The average compensation of the 100 top CEOs had increased more than 2,800 percent, to $37.5 million.

"Executives have experienced huge gains compared to the average pay," said economics professor Emmanuel Saez of University of California at Berkeley, one of the study's authors.

There are a variety of explanations, starting with the drastic drop in taxes on top earners. Back in the 1960s, the top tax rate was above 70 percent, Saez said, making high salaries less attractive. Today, the top rate is 38 percent and is due to drop to 35.

"At a time when tax rates were very high, in some sense paying executives a lot amounted to giving a lot to the government. So corporations were reluctant to do so," Saez said.

Today, a bigger share of the average CEO's compensation comes in forms other than wages.

Workers receive the bulk of their compensation through salary, although many also invest in 401(k) plans and receive modest stock options. That was once true for CEOs as well. In 1970, the top 100 CEOs derived 84.66 percent of their income from salary and just 15.34 percent from stock options and other compensation, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research study.

In 1999, salary accounted for just 9.73 percent of the compensation of top CEOs. Stock options provided 58.52 percent and other compensation accounted for 31.76 percent.

Because corporations can only deduct the first $1 million of CEO pay from their taxes, providing additional compensation in other forms becomes very attractive financially.

Corporate boards have been willing to pony up, but are the CEOs worth the fat paychecks? "My own belief is that they are not, but it's controversial because it's hard to answer that question scientifically," Saez said.

Florida's Efforts on Minimum Wage Increases

Hurrican Jeb Bears Down on Working Poor
American Progress Action
Sept. 24th, 2004

With Floridians still recovering from the economic destruction caused by hurricanes Charlie, Frances and Ivan, Jeb Bush and his corporate allies are determined to make matters even worse for low-income Floridians. Jeb and his big business supporters are working to defeat a November ballot initiative that would raise the minimum wage in Florida by one dollar, to $6.15 an hour for most employees.

If the measure passes, the Florida minimum wage would have a yearly cost-of-living adjustment equal to the inflation rate to ensure that the value of the minimum wage does not erode over time. The front group created by corporations to fight the initiative claims that the modest increase in the minimum wage "would cost businesses billions, lead employers to cut benefits and slow job growth in Florida." The proof? They polled themselves as to what they thought the impact would be.

Real economic analysis, released yesterday by the Center for American Progress and the Political Economy Research Institute, demonstrates that the minimum wage increase would significantly benefit low-income Floridians and have a negligible impact on the state's business community. For more information on the effort to pass the initiative, check out Floridians for All.

BENEFITS TO WORKERS SUBSTANTIAL: For non-tipped hourly workers making minimum wage, the increase would mean an average raise of 7.3 percent. Other workers making up to $7.49 an hour would also receive substantial raises (from 2 to 6 percent), due to employers voluntarily raising wages to maintain a fair, graduated pay scale. This translates into increases in disposable income for low-income Floridians between $500 to $600 per year – allowing them to reduce debt, reduce work hours or purchase a car. The minimum wage increase would benefit 700,000 workers in Florida.

IMPACT ON BUSINESS MINIMAL: The American Progress study concluded that the total cost of the measure to private businesses in Florida would be $406 million. That amount represents just 0.4 percent of the total sales of these businesses, which was $928.7 billion in 2003. A clothing store, for example, could fully cover its increase costs by raising the price of a sweatshirt from $20.00 to $20.01. The tiny increase in costs will also be off-set, at least in part, by productivity gains. Wage increases have shown to lower absenteeism and raise morale. There is no objective evidence that the doomsday scenarios presented by the corporate front groups opposing the initiative – unemployment, relocation and inflation – would occur. John Podesta, CEO of American Progress, notes that after the federal minimum wage was raised in 1996, "over the next four years, 13 million jobs were created." Businesses in low-income neighborhoods will experience substantial increases in sales as the disposable income of residents increases.

MINIMUM WAGE ABYSMALLY LOW: Someone who makes the federal minimum wage of $5.15 – which is also the prevailing rate in Florida – and worked full time for 52 weeks a year would earn just $10,712. That amount is 28 percent below the federal poverty line. Thirty percent of workers who make up to twice the level of the poverty line faced hardships such as missing meals, being evicted from their housing or having their utilities disconnected. In 1968, the minimum wage (adjusted for inflation) was $8.49 – 40 percent higher than it is now. Raising the minimum wage can have a particularly positive impact on minority communities.

OPPOSITION OUT OF TOUCH: Rich McAllister, CEO of the Florida Retail Federation, an organization leading the charge to defeat the initiative, said on a conference call with reporters that "there would never be a good time to raise the minimum wage." McAllister added that "the minimum wage is an artificial number that means nothing." Embarrassed by McAllister's candor, another spokesman for the Florida Retail Federation later claimed that the comments made by the CEO of the organization to the reporter were "Rick's personal opinion" and did not represent the group's position. Small business owners, meanwhile, are more supportive of the initiative. Miami restauranteur Mark Soyka, asked about his thoughts on the initiative, said "my reaction is, from a humane perspective, I don't even know how they make it on $6.15 an hour."

Thursday, September 23, 2004

Enemy Combatants & the US Legal System

Thousands Arrested, Few Convicted in U.S. Terror War
Thu Sep 23, 2004 05:43 PM ET
Reuters
By Caroline Drees, Security Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States has arrested thousands of people on terror charges since Sept. 11, 2001, holding some for years without charge, but has seen one high-profile case after another collapse.

Critics say the government is paying for hasty, politically motivated accusations it cannot prove, while backers argue that the U.S. legal system is simply unsuited for the war on terror.

In the most recent collapse, the military dropped spy charges on Wednesday against Syrian-American airman Ahmad al Halabi, who had faced the death penalty on accusations of aiding and abetting the enemy through espionage at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The Justice Department also said on Wednesday it had agreed to free U.S.-Saudi "enemy combatant" Yaser Esam Hamdi and return him to Saudi Arabia after holding him without charges -- for long stretches incommunicado -- for more than two years.

"I can't remember a time when the government has taken it on the chin as often as this in a single area," said lawyer Eugene Fidell, whose client, Army Chaplain James Yee, was accused in a separate Guantanamo Bay spy case before the military dropped all those charges.

Paul Rosenzweig, a legal expert at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said one reason for the government's legal problems was the difficulty of using evidence gleaned from intelligence work, which is often classified or might only be considered hearsay in court, no matter how good the source.

"Our federal criminal legal system is not set up for terrorists," he said. "Because these are important cases, we're seeing more of the warts. When we look really hard at a really big case, we see that our judicial system is imperfect."

But critics of government arrests and efforts to secure convictions in the war on terror say the problem is not the legal system. They say the crumbling cases prove prosecutors are being overzealous and sometimes sloppy in a bid to show the public they are serious about fighting terrorists.

"At the level of the individual cases ... it probably reflects haste, overreaction, a desire to show how much you're doing and not the usual degree of carefulness you would expect from federal prosecutors," said Joseph Onek, senior counsel of the Constitution Project activist group, who was a senior justice official under President Bill Clinton.

Gerry Spence -- whose Muslim client Brandon Mayfield was held for two weeks as a material witness in the Madrid train bombings before being released with an apology from the FBI -- accused the U.S. government of profiling and failing to do its homework.

"Then when they begin to look at the facts, they find out that what they've done is charged good American citizens with crimes that they are not guilty of," he said.

Critics also say Supreme Court rulings in June that placed the first limits on President Bush's war on terror showed the administration had overstepped its bounds.

"One reason the government hasn't succeeded in its overall strategy is because it was taking a position that was indefensible under U.S. constitutional law," Onek said.

Jay Sekulow, chief counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice -- which filed friend-of-the-court briefs in support of the government in three terrorism cases, including Hamdi's -- said prosecutors were not being hasty, but trying to balance national security needs with legal constraints.

He said the Supreme Court rulings, which said terror suspects could use the U.S. legal system to challenge their confinement, had created major obstacles for prosecutors.

"The chips are stacked against the government. The hurdle is set very high. I think the government is doing the best they can under the situation where they find themselves," he said.

"Caution dictates that if you think you caught someone, or if you caught someone on the field of battle, to just let them go because you can't gather the evidence quick enough could be very dangerous for the country," Sekulow said.


Not exactly a warm welcome was it Mr. Wolfowitz? Posted by Hello


Hue vs Faluja; Tonkin Gulf Resolution vs Resolution 114; Robert McNamara vs Paul Wolfowitz; Nguyen Cao Ky vs Ayad Allawi; Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap vs Abu Musab al-Zarqawi; etc, etc, etc. Posted by Hello

Wednesday, September 22, 2004

Some Things That Are Not Equal

Support for US Troops      Is NOT Equal to:      Support for the Iraq War
Support for Resolution 114      Is NOT Equal to:      Support for the Invasion of Iraq by US Forces
Support for US Troops      Is NOT Equal to:      Support for military-personnel-instigated atrocities at Abu Ghrabi
Support for Pres. Bush      Is NOT Equal to:      Support for the entire Bush Administration agenda
Disapproval of the methods used to implement policy      Is NOT Equal to:      Disapproval of initial policy
Disapproval of the results of policy   Is NOT Equal to:      Disapproval of the initial policy, or implementation methods
Dislike for a Candidate      Is NOT Equal to:      Dislike for everyone who is like the Candidate
Liberators      Are NOT Equal to:      Occupiers
Terrorists      Are NOT Equal to:      Any force that fights asymetrically against a superior force
Scientific Theorums      Are NOT Equal to:       Revealed truths
A Desire for Church - State Separation      Is NOT Equal to:      Atheism, God-lessness, Devil Worship
Disapproval of "enemy combatant" detentions      Is NOT Equal to:       Soft on crime or retributive justice
Black and White      Is NOT Equal to:       Shades of grey
Respect for symbols      Is NOT Equal to:      Acceptance of everything associated with those symbols
Wearing One's Faith On Their Sleeve      Is NOT Equal to:      Practicing the principles of one's Faith
Bearing false witness      Is NOT Equal to:      Spinning truth to attain a higher value or virtue

A Vote Approving the Granting of Power to the President
Is NOT the same as Approving the Use of that Power!!
Or of Blanket Approval of the Strategic and Tactical Processes Devised by the Pentagon

President Bush to Send Iraq Resolution to Congress Today
Remarks by the President in Photo Opportunity with Secretary of State Colin Powell
The Oval Office
Sept. 19, 2002: 9:50 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:
"Good morning. I appreciate our Secretary of State coming by to brief the Vice President and me and Condoleezza Rice about our progress in working with the United Nations, convincing the United Nations Security Council to firmly deal with a threat to world peace.

At the United Nations Security Council it is very important that the members understand that the credibility of the United Nations is at stake, that the Security Council must be firm in its resolve to deal with a truth threat to world peace, and that is Saddam Hussein. That the United Nations Security Council must work with the United States and Britain and other concerned parties to send a clear message that we expect Saddam to disarm. And if the United Nations Security Council won't deal with the problem, the United States and some of our friends will. That's the message the Secretary of State has delivered forcefully.

THE PRESIDENT: I'll be glad to answer a few calls -- answers, starting with Ron.

Q How many of our friends are willing to join the United States in this effort?

THE PRESIDENT: Ron, I think time will tell. I think you're going to see a lot of nations -- that a lot of nations love freedom. They understand the threat. They understand that the credibility of the United Nations is at stake. They heard me loud and clear when I said, either you can be the United Nations, a capable body, a body able to keep the peace, or you can be the League of Nations. And we're confident that people will follow our lead.

Q Sir, the chief weapons inspector is going to be briefing the U.N. Security Council today, and there have already been some reports that, in his talks with the Iraqis, that they're limiting access to certain sites. Are those reports true? And do you think they're trying to --

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I haven't gotten a report from what he intends to say. But let me give you just some general observations. First of all, there are no negotiations to be held with Iraq. They have nothing to negotiate. They're the people who said that they would not have weapons of mass destruction. The negotiations are over. It is up to the U.N. Security Council to lay out resolutions that confirms what Iraq has already agreed to, see.

Secondly, I don't trust Iraq, and neither should the free world. For 11 years, they have deceived the world. They have said, we'll conform to resolutions. They've never conformed to resolutions. They've never conformed to the agreement that they laid out 11 years ago. Sixteen times they've defied Security resolutions.

And so, they -- the burden of proof is -- must be place squarely on their shoulders. But there's no negotiations about whether or not they've been telling the truth or not.

Let's see here -- Mark.

Q Mr. President, are you going to send Congress your proposed resolution today? And are you asking for a blank check, sir?

THE PRESIDENT: I am sending suggested language for a resolution. I want -- I've asked for Congress' support to enable the administration to keep the peace. And we look forward to a good, constructive debate in Congress. I appreciate the fact that the leadership recognizes we've got to move before the elections. I appreciate the strong support we're getting from both Republicans and Democrats, and look forward to working with them.

Q Mr. President, how important is it that that resolution give you an authorization of the use of force?

THE PRESIDENT: That will be part of the resolution, the authorization to use force. If you want to keep the peace, you've got to have the authorization to use force. But it's -- this will be -- this is a chance for Congress to indicate support. It's a chance for Congress to say, we support the administration's ability to keep the peace. That's what this is all about.

Q Will regime change be part of it?

THE PRESIDENT: Yes. That's the policy of the government. "
|======================================================|
Note: According to Pres. Bush, Resolution 114 authorizes 'the use of force to keep the peace', (a neologism which George Orwell spoke of in 1984), which allowed the Bush Administration to assert an absurd syllogism, namely: Congress granted me the authority to use force to make Saddam Hussein disarm, Saddam will not comply with Security Council demands to disarm, thus by authority of the Resolution I am declaring war on Iraq. And the extrapolation that since Congress overwhelming voted to give the President the authority to use force, it thereby approved his election to do so, and approved the manner, timing, preparations, and tactical operations of his strategic plan.

Nothing could be further from reality !...as John Kerry and others have pointed out repeatedly. Failing to see a distinction between the two levels of approval is hard for Non-Bushies to comprehend.

Equally troubling was the laundry list of items contained in Bush's concept of "disarm-ing" which preordained that Saddam would not comply with the legitimate goals of the Security Council resolutions, nor the spurious demands of the Bush Administration.

Tuesday, September 21, 2004

Illegal Corporate Political Contributions:
The Old Fashion Way Leads to Indictments

3 DeLay Aides Facing Charges in Fund Inquiry
NY Times
By GLEN JUSTICE and SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
Published: September 22, 2004

WASHINGTON, Sept. 21 - Three aides who helped run a political action committee created by the House majority leader, Tom DeLay, were indicted by a grand jury in Texas on Tuesday on charges that included raising illegal corporate contributions and funneling them to state candidates during the 2002 elections.

Eight companies were also charged, including Sears Roebuck & Company and Cracker Barrel Old Country Store Inc.

The 32 separate indictments sprang from a two-year investigation by local prosecutors into Texans for a Republican Majority P.A.C., a committee created by Mr. DeLay that spent $1.5 million to help Republicans gain control of the Texas House. The Republicans then used that power to carve Texas into new Congressional districts that political analysts say will bring them at least five new seats in this year's elections.

The charges against the aides come at a time when Mr. DeLay himself is under investigation by the House ethics committee over accusations of improper fund-raising. News of the indictments led to fresh calls for the committee to move forward with its inquiry.

Positive Benefits of Walking Two Plus Miles Per Day for Seniors. (?)

Walking May Protect Against Alzheimer's And Dementia
Healthtalk: Canada
September 21, 2004

Walking can reduce the risk of developing dementia or Alzheimer's disease, according to a new study by a University of Virginia School of Medicine research team.

According to the team, elderly men who are sedentary are twice as likely to to develop Alzheimer's disease compared to men who take part in a daily walk of 2 miles or more per day.

From 1991 to 1993 the researchers analyzed data they collected on 2,257 men between the ages of 71 and 93 participating in the Honolulu-Asia Aging Study. The researchers questioned the men on their daily walking activity. The men were then evaluated for dementia in two follow-up exams in 1994 and 1999.

158 cases of dementia were identified during the follow-up examinations. After allowing for age adjustments, the researchers reported men who walked less than a quarter mile per day were nearly twice as likely to develop dementia or Alzheimer's disease compared with men who walked in excess of two miles per day.

"We now have evidence that regular walking is also associated with benefits that are related to cognitive function later in life," said Dr. Robert D. Abbott, co-author of the study.

The researchers noted that the findings from this study of men in Hawaii are likely to apply to women as well.
The study is published in the September 22 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
<------------------------------------->
Note: Accordingly one could talk also about steps per day which have the advantage of easily being measured with a pedometer. The author of the above article says nothing about a baseline walking distance for seniors. Elsewhere, it has been estimated that seniors in that age bracket average 2500 steps per day. In other studies, a baseline of walking distance or steps has been determined for optimum health benefits.
<------------------------------------->

How Many Steps Per Day?
From Wendy Bumgardner: Your Guide to Walking.

New recommendations from Dr. Catrine Tudor-Locke
How many steps per day are enough? Dr. Catrine Tudor-Locke has been studying pedometer walking and released a new opinion in the January, 2004 issue of "Sports Medicine."

10,000 Steps a Magic Number?

A goal of 10,000 steps per day has become common, based on promotion in Japan by pedometer companies and its adoption by walking clubs. But there was no body of research to back up that number. Numbers as low as 6000 steps a day were shown to be correlated with a lower death rate in men in the Harvard Study.

Many people view 10,000 steps a day as too few for children, yet not achievable by many who are aged, sedentary, or who have chronic diseases. Some suggest instead of using a blanket 10,000 steps per day that instead the goal be based on the individual's baseline plus an increment of steps. For example, a woman who wears a pedometer in her ordinary activities notes that she logs 4000 steps per day. Her goal should be to add the equivalent of a half hour of walking to her day, for example 2000-3000 more steps per day.

New Goals
Based on the best evidence as of the end of 2003, Dr. Catrine Tudor-Locke recommends the following:
Classification of pedometer-determined physical activity in healthy adults:

1) Under 5000 steps/day may be used as a "sedentary lifestyle index"
2) 5,000-7,499 steps/day is typical of daily activity excluding sports/exercise and might be considered "low active."
3) 7,500-9,999 likely includes some exercise or walking (and/or a job that requires more walking) and might be considered "somewhat active."
4) 10,000 steps/day indicates the point that should be used to classify individuals as "active".
5) Individuals who take more than 12,500 steps/day are likely to be classified as "highly active".

Note: So applying the Journal of American Medical Association data to the pedometer/steps format, a 10,000 step program which is roughly equivalent to walking five miles, is two and a half times more time/distance than was shown effective in the dementia study. With an average stride of 31 inches, and a pace of from two to six miles per hour, a suitable walking exercise program which has been shown to be effective in weight control, dementia risk reduction, and overall health risk abatement is easily worked into an hourly exercise program.


Wrong about WMD, wrong about Al Qaeda, wrong about reconstruction, wrong about unilateralism, wrong about tax cuts, wrong about church-state separation, wrong about prescription drug policies, wrong about global warming threat, wrong about unhindered scientific enquiry, wrong about...just wrong period ! Posted by Hello

Transcript of Sen. Kerry's NYU Speech: Sept. 20th, 2004

"I am honored to be here at New York University—one of the great urban universities, not just in New York, but in the world. You have set a high standard for global dialogue and I hope to live up to that tradition today.

This election is about choices. The most important choices a President makes are about protecting America...at home and around the world. A president's first obligation is to make America safer, stronger and truer to our ideals.

Only a few blocks from here, three years ago, the events of September 11 reminded every American of that obligation. That day brought to our shores the defining struggle of our times: the struggle between freedom and radical fundamentalism. And it made clear that our most important task is to fight...and to win...the war on terrorism.

With us today is a remarkable group of women who lost loved ones on September 11th...and whose support I am honored to have. Not only did they suffer an unbearable loss—they helped us learn the lessons of that terrible time by insisting on the creation of the 9/11 Commission. I ask them to stand. And I thank them on behalf of our country—and I pledge to them and to you that I will implement the 9-11 recommendations.

In fighting the war on terrorism, my principles are straight forward. The terrorists are beyond reason. We must destroy them. As president, I will do whatever it takes, as long as it takes, to defeat our enemies. But billions of people around the world yearning for a better life are open to America's ideals. We must reach them.

To win, America must be strong. And America must be smart. The greatest threat we face is the possibility Al Qaeda or other terrorists will get their hands on a nuclear weapon.

To prevent that from happening, we must call on the totality of America's strength. Strong alliances, to help us stop the world's most lethal weapons from falling into the most dangerous hands. A powerful military, transformed to meet the new threats of terrorism and the spread of weapons of mass destruction. And all of America's power—our diplomacy, our intelligence system, our economic power, the appeal of our values—each of which is critical to making America more secure and preventing a new generation of terrorists from emerging.

National security is a central issue in this campaign. We owe it to the American people to have a real debate about the choices President Bush has made and the choices I would make...to fight and win the war on terror.

That means we must have a great honest national debate on Iraq. The President claims it is the centerpiece of his war on terror. In fact, Iraq was a profound diversion from that war and the battle against our greatest enemy, Osama bin Laden and the terrorists. Invading Iraq has created a crisis of historic proportions and, if we do not change course, there is the prospect of a war with no end in sight.

This month, we passed a cruel milestone: more than 1,000 Americans lost in Iraq. Their sacrifice reminds us that Iraq remains, overwhelmingly, an American burden. Nearly 90 percent of the troops—and nearly 90 percent of the casualties—are American. Despite the President's claims, this is not a grand coalition.

Our troops have served with extraordinary bravery, skill and resolve. Their service humbles all of us. When I speak to them...when I look into the eyes of their families, I know this: we owe them the truth about what we have asked them to do...and what is still to be done.

In June, the President declared, "The Iraqi people have their country back." Just last week, he told us: "This country is headed toward democracy...Freedom is on the march."

But the administration's own official intelligence estimate, given to the President last July, tells a very different story.

According to press reports, the intelligence estimate totally contradicts what the President is saying to the American people.

So do the facts on the ground.

Security is deteriorating, for us and for the Iraqis.

42 Americans died in Iraq in June—the month before the handover. But 54 died in July…66 in August...and already 54 halfway through September.

And more than 1,100 Americans were wounded in August—more than in any other month since the invasion.

We are fighting a growing insurgency in an ever widening war-zone. In March, insurgents attacked our forces 700 times. In August, they attacked 2,700 times—a 400% increase.

Falluja…Ramadi...Samarra...even parts of Baghdad—are now "no go zones"...breeding grounds for terrorists who are free to plot and launch attacks against our soldiers. The radical Shi'a cleric, Moktada al-Sadr, who's accused of complicity in the murder of Americans, holds more sway in the suburbs of Baghdad.

Violence against Iraqis...from bombings to kidnappings to intimidation...is on the rise.

Basic living conditions are also deteriorating.

Residents of Baghdad are suffering electricity blackouts lasting up to 14 hours a day.

Raw sewage fills the streets, rising above the hubcaps of our Humvees. Children wade through garbage on their way to school.

Unemployment is over 50 percent. Insurgents are able to find plenty of people willing to take $150 for tossing grenades at passing U.S. convoys.

Yes, there has been some progress, thanks to the extraordinary efforts of our soldiers and civilians in Iraq. Schools, shops and hospitals have been opened. In parts of Iraq, normalcy actually prevails.

But most Iraqis have lost faith in our ability to deliver meaningful improvements to their lives. So they're sitting on the fence...instead of siding with us against the insurgents.

That is the truth. The truth that the Commander in Chief owes to our troops and the American people.

It is never easy to discuss what has gone wrong while our troops are in constant danger. But it's essential if we want to correct our course and do what's right for our troops instead of repeating the same mistakes over and over again.

I know this dilemma first-hand. After serving in war, I returned home to offer my own personal voice of dissent. I did so because I believed strongly that we owed it those risking their lives to speak truth to power. We still do.

Saddam Hussein was a brutal dictator who deserves his own special place in hell. But that was not, in itself, a reason to go to war. The satisfaction we take in his downfall does not hide this fact: we have traded a dictator for a chaos that has left America less secure.

The President has said that he "miscalculated" in Iraq and that it was a "catastrophic success." In fact, the President has made a series of catastrophic decisions...from the beginning...in Iraq. At every fork in the road, he has taken the wrong turn and led us in the wrong direction.

The first and most fundamental mistake was the President's failure to tell the truth to the American people.

He failed to tell the truth about the rationale for going to war. And he failed to tell the truth about the burden this war would impose on our soldiers and our citizens.

By one count, the President offered 23 different rationales for this war. If his purpose was to confuse and mislead the American people, he succeeded.

His two main rationales—weapons of mass destruction and the Al Qaeda/September 11 connection—have been proved false...by the President's own weapons inspectors...and by the 9/11 Commission. Just last week, Secretary of State Powell acknowledged the facts. Only Vice President Cheney still insists that the earth is flat.

The President also failed to level with the American people about what it would take to prevail in Iraq.

He didn't tell us that well over 100,000 troops would be needed, for years, not months. He didn't tell us that he wouldn't take the time to assemble a broad and strong coalition of allies. He didn't tell us that the cost would exceed $200 billion. He didn't tell us that even after paying such a heavy price, success was far from assured.

And America will pay an even heavier price for the President's lack of candor.

At home, the American people are less likely to trust this administration if it needs to summon their support to meet real and pressing threats to our security.

Abroad, other countries will be reluctant to follow America when we seek to rally them against a common menace—as they are today. Our credibility in the world has plummeted.

In the dark days of the Cuban Missile Crisis, President Kennedy sent former Secretary of State Dean Acheson to Europe to build support. Acheson explained the situation to French President de Gaulle. Then he offered to show him highly classified satellite photos, as proof. De Gaulle waved the photos away, saying: "The word of the President of the United States is good enough for me."

How many world leaders have that same trust in America's president, today?

This President's failure to tell the truth to us before the war has been exceeded by fundamental errors of judgment during and after the war.

The President now admits to "miscalculations" in Iraq.

That is one of the greatest understatements in recent American history. His were not the equivalent of accounting errors. They were colossal failures of judgment—and judgment is what we look for in a president.

This is all the more stunning because we're not talking about 20/20 hindsight. Before the war, before he chose to go to war, bi-partisan Congressional hearings...major outside studies...and even some in the administration itself...predicted virtually every problem we now face in Iraq.

This President was in denial. He hitched his wagon to the ideologues who surround him, filtering out those who disagreed, including leaders of his own party and the uniformed military. The result is a long litany of misjudgments with terrible consequences.

The administration told us we'd be greeted as liberators. They were wrong.

They told us not to worry about looting or the sorry state of Iraq's infrastructure. They were wrong.

They told us we had enough troops to provide security and stability, defeat the insurgents, guard the borders and secure the arms depots. They were wrong.

They told us we could rely on exiles like Ahmed Chalabi to build political legitimacy. They were wrong.

They told us we would quickly restore an Iraqi civil service to run the country and a police force and army to secure it. They were wrong.

In Iraq, this administration has consistently over-promised and under-performed. This policy has been plagued by a lack of planning, an absence of candor, arrogance and outright incompetence. And the President has held no one accountable, including himself.

In fact, the only officials who lost their jobs over Iraq were the ones who told the truth.

General Shinseki said it would take several hundred thousand troops to secure Iraq. He was retired. Economic adviser Larry Lindsey said that Iraq would cost as much as $200 billion. He was fired. After the successful entry into Baghdad, George Bush was offered help from the UN—and he rejected it. He even prohibited any nation from participating in reconstruction efforts that wasn't part of the original coalition—pushing reluctant countries even farther away. As we continue to fight this war almost alone, it is hard to estimate how costly that arrogant decision was. Can anyone seriously say this President has handled Iraq in a way that makes us stronger in the war on terrorism?

By any measure, the answer is no. Nuclear dangers have mounted across the globe. The international terrorist club has expanded. Radicalism in the Middle East is on the rise. We have divided our friends and united our enemies. And our standing in the world is at an all time low.

Think about it for a minute. Consider where we were...and where we are. After the events of September 11, we had an opportunity to bring our country and the world together in the struggle against the terrorists. On September 12th, headlines in newspapers abroad declared "we are all Americans now." But through his policy in Iraq, the President squandered that moment and rather than isolating the terrorists, left America isolated from the world.

We now know that Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction and posed no imminent threat to our security. It had not, as the Vice President claimed, "reconstituted nuclear weapons."

The President's policy in Iraq took our attention and resources away from other, more serious threats to America.

Threats like North Korea, which actually has weapons of mass destruction, including a nuclear arsenal, and is building more under this President's watch…

...The emerging nuclear danger from Iran...

...The tons and kilotons of unsecured chemical and nuclear weapons in Russia...

...And the increasing instability in Afghanistan.

Today, warlords again control much of that country, the Taliban is regrouping, opium production is at an all time high and the Al Qaeda leadership still plots and plans, not only there but in 60 other nations. Instead of using U.S. forces, we relied on the warlords to capture Osama bin Laden when he was cornered in the mountains. He slipped away. We then diverted our focus and forces from the hunt for those responsible for September 11th in order invade Iraq.

We know Iraq played no part in September 11 and had no operational ties to Al Qaeda.

The President's policy in Iraq precipitated the very problem he said he was trying to prevent. Secretary of State Powell admits that Iraq was not a magnet for international terrorists before the war. Now it is, and they are operating against our troops. Iraq is becoming a sanctuary for a new generation of terrorists who someday could hit the United States.

We know that while Iraq was a source of friction, it was not previously a source of serious disagreement with our allies in Europe and countries in the Muslim world.

The President's policy in Iraq divided our oldest alliance and sent our standing in the Muslim world into free fall. Three years after 9/11, even in many moderate Muslim countries like Jordan, Morocco and Turkey, Osama bin Laden is more popular than the United States of America.

Let me put it plainly: The President's policy in Iraq has not strengthened our national security. It has weakened it.

Two years ago, Congress was right to give the President the authority to use force to hold Saddam Hussein accountable. This President...any President...would have needed the threat of force to act effectively. This President misused that authority.

The power entrusted to the President gave him a strong hand to play in the international community. The idea was simple. We would get the weapons inspectors back in to verify whether or not Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. And we would convince the world to speak with one voice to Saddam: disarm or be disarmed.

A month before the war, President Bush told the nation: "If we have to act, we will take every precaution that is possible. We will plan carefully. We will act with the full power of the United States military. We will act with allies at our side and we will prevail." He said that military action wasn't "unavoidable."

Instead, the President rushed to war without letting the weapons inspectors finish their work. He went without a broad and deep coalition of allies. He acted without making sure our troops had enough body armor. And he plunged ahead without understanding or preparing for the consequences of the post-war. None of which I would have done.

Yet today, President Bush tells us that he would do everything all over again, the same way. How can he possibly be serious? Is he really saying that if we knew there were no imminent threat, no weapons of mass destruction, no ties to Al Qaeda, the United States should have invaded Iraq? My answer is no—because a Commander-in-Chief's first responsibility is to make a wise and responsible decision to keep America safe.

Now the president, in looking for a new reason, tries to hang his hat on the "capability" to acquire weapons. But that was not the reason given to the nation; it was not the reason Congress voted on; it's not a reason, it's an excuse. Thirty-five to forty countries have greater capability to build a nuclear bomb than Iraq did in 2003. Is President Bush saying we should invade them?

I would have concentrated our power and resources on defeating global terrorism and capturing or killing Osama bin Laden. I would have tightened the noose and continued to pressure and isolate Saddam Hussein—who was weak and getting weaker—so that he would pose no threat to the region or America.

The President's insistence that he would do the same thing all over again in Iraq is a clear warning for the future. And it makes the choice in this election clear: more of the same with President Bush or a new direction that makes our troops and America safer. It is time, at long last, to ask the questions and insist on the answers from the Commander-in-Chief about his serious misjudgments and what they tell us about his administration and the President himself. If George W. Bush is re-elected, he will cling to the same failed policies in Iraq—and he will repeat, somewhere else, the same reckless mistakes that have made America less secure than we can or should be.

In Iraq, we have a mess on our hands. But we cannot throw up our hands. We cannot afford to see Iraq become a permanent source of terror that will endanger America's security for years to come.

All across this country people ask me what we should do now. Every step of the way, from the time I first spoke about this in the Senate, I have set out specific recommendations about how we should and should not proceed. But over and over, when this administration has been presented with a reasonable alternative, they have rejected it and gone their own way. This is stubborn incompetence.

Five months ago, in Fulton, Missouri, I said that the President was close to his last chance to get it right. Every day, this President makes it more difficult to deal with Iraq—harder than it was five months ago, harder than it was a year ago. It is time to recognize what is—and what is not—happening in Iraq today. And we must act with urgency.

Just this weekend, a leading Republican, Chuck Hagel, said we're "in deep trouble in Iraq...it doesn't add up...to a pretty picture [and]...we're going to have to look at a recalibration of our policy." Republican leaders like Dick Lugar and John McCain have offered similar assessments.

We need to turn the page and make a fresh start in Iraq.

First, the President has to get the promised international support so our men and women in uniform don't have to go it alone. It is late; the President must respond by moving this week to gain and regain international support.

Last spring, after too many months of resistance and delay, the President finally went back to the U.N. which passed Resolution 1546. It was the right thing to do—but it was late.

That resolution calls on U.N. members to help in Iraq by providing troops...trainers for Iraq's security forces...a special brigade to protect the U.N. mission...more financial assistance...and real debt relief.

Three months later, not a single country has answered that call. And the president acts as if it doesn't matter.

And of the $13 billion previously pledged to Iraq by other countries, only $1.2 billion has been delivered.

The President should convene a summit meeting of the world's major powers and Iraq's neighbors, this week, in New York, where many leaders will attend the U.N. General Assembly. He should insist that they make good on that U.N. resolution. He should offer potential troop contributors specific, but critical roles, in training Iraqi security personnel and securing Iraq's borders. He should give other countries a stake in Iraq's future by encouraging them to help develop Iraq's oil resources and by letting them bid on contracts instead of locking them out of the reconstruction process.

This will be difficult. I and others have repeatedly recommended this from the very beginning. Delay has made only made it harder. After insulting allies and shredding alliances, this President may not have the trust and confidence to bring others to our side in Iraq. But we cannot hope to succeed unless we rebuild and lead strong alliances so that other nations share the burden with us. That is the only way to succeed.

Second, the President must get serious about training Iraqi security forces.

Last February, Secretary Rumsfeld claimed that more than 210,000 Iraqis were in uniform. Two weeks ago, he admitted that claim was exaggerated by more than 50 percent. Iraq, he said, now has 95,000 trained security forces.

But guess what? Neither number bears any relationship to the truth. For example, just 5,000 Iraqi soldiers have been fully trained, by the administration's own minimal standards. And of the 35,000 police now in uniform, not one has completed a 24-week field-training program. Is it any wonder that Iraqi security forces can't stop the insurgency or provide basic law and order?

The President should urgently expand the security forces training program inside and outside Iraq. He should strengthen the vetting of recruits, double classroom training time, and require follow-on field training. He should recruit thousands of qualified trainers from our allies, especially those who have no troops in Iraq. He should press our NATO allies to open training centers in their countries. And he should stop misleading the American people with phony, inflated numbers.

Third, the President must carry out a reconstruction plan that finally brings tangible benefits to the Iraqi people.

Last week, the administration admitted that its plan was a failure when it asked Congress for permission to radically revise spending priorities in Iraq. It took 17 months for them to understand that security is a priority...17 months to figure out that boosting oil production is critical...17 months to conclude that an Iraqi with a job is less likely to shoot at our soldiers.

One year ago, the administration asked for and received $18 billion to help the Iraqis and relieve the conditions that contribute to the insurgency. Today, less than a $1 billion of those funds have actually been spent. I said at the time that we had to rethink our policies and set standards of accountability. Now we're paying the price.

Now, the President should look at the whole reconstruction package…draw up a list of high visibility, quick impact projects...and cut through the red tape. He should use more Iraqi contractors and workers, instead of big corporations like Halliburton. He should stop paying companies under investigation for fraud or corruption. And he should fire the civilians in the Pentagon responsible for mismanaging the reconstruction effort.

Fourth, the President must take immediate, urgent, essential steps to guarantee the promised elections can be held next year.

Credible elections are key to producing an Iraqi government that enjoys the support of the Iraqi people and an assembly to write a Constitution that yields a viable power sharing arrangement.

Because Iraqis have no experience holding free and fair elections, the President agreed six months ago that the U.N. must play a central role. Yet today, just four months before Iraqis are supposed to go to the polls, the U.N. Secretary General and administration officials themselves say the elections are in grave doubt. Because the security situation is so bad...and because not a single country has offered troops to protect the U.N. elections mission...the U.N. has less than 25 percent of the staff it needs in Iraq to get the job done.

The President should recruit troops from our friends and allies for a U.N. protection force. This won't be easy. But even countries that refused to put boots on the ground in Iraq should still help protect the U.N. We should also intensify the training of Iraqis to manage and guard the polling places that need to be opened. Otherwise, U.S forces would end up bearing those burdens alone.

If the President would move in this direction...if he would bring in more help from other countries to provide resources and forces ...train the Iraqis to provide their own security...develop a reconstruction plan that brings real benefits to the Iraqi people...and take the steps necessary to hold credible elections next year...we could begin to withdraw U.S. forces starting next summer and realistically aim to bring all our troops home within the next four years.

This is what has to be done. This is what I would do as President today. But we cannot afford to wait until January. President Bush owes it to the American people to tell the truth and put Iraq on the right track. Even more, he owes it to our troops and their families, whose sacrifice is a testament to the best of America.

The principles that should guide American policy in Iraq now and in the future are clear: We must make Iraq the world's responsibility, because the world has a stake in the outcome and others should share the burden. We must effectively train Iraqis, because they should be responsible for their own security. We must move forward with reconstruction, because that's essential to stop the spread of terror. And we must help Iraqis achieve a viable government, because it's up to them to run their own country. That's the right way to get the job done and bring our troops home.

On May 1 of last year, President Bush stood in front of a now infamous banner that read "Mission Accomplished." He declared to the American people: "In the battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed." In fact, the worst part of the war was just beginning, with the greatest number of American casualties still to come. The president misled, miscalculated, and mismanaged every aspect of this undertaking and he has made the achievement of our objective—a stable Iraq, secure within its borders, with a representative government, harder to achieve.

In Iraq, this administration's record is filled with bad predictions, inaccurate cost estimates, deceptive statements and errors of judgment of historic proportions.

At every critical juncture in Iraq, and in the war on terrorism, the President has made the wrong choice. I have a plan to make America stronger.

The President often says that in a post 9-11 world, we can't hesitate to act. I agree. But we should not act just for the sake of acting. I believe we have to act wisely and responsibly.

George Bush has no strategy for Iraq. I do.

George Bush has not told the truth to the American people about why we went to war and how the war is going. I have and I will continue to do so.

I believe the invasion of Iraq has made us less secure and weaker in the war against terrorism. I have a plan to fight a smarter, more effective war on terror—and make us safer.

Today, because of George Bush's policy in Iraq, the world is a more dangerous place for America and Americans.

If you share my conviction that we can not go on as we are...that we can make America stronger and safer than it is...then November 2 is your chance to speak...and to be heard. It is not a question of staying the course, but of changing the course.

I'm convinced that with the right leadership, we can create a fresh start and move more effectively to accomplish our goals. Our troops have served with extraordinary courage and commitment. For their sake, and America's sake, we must get this right. We must do everything in our power to complete the mission and make America stronger at home and respected again in the world.

Thank you, God bless you, and God bless the United States of America."

CIA Nominee Porter Goss:
Admits Bush Administration Over-Sold Threat vs Actual Intel

Nominee Says Iraq Threat Was Perhaps Overstated
By DOUGLAS JEHL
NY Times
Published: September 21, 2004

WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 - Representative Porter J. Goss, the nominee to become director of central intelligence, said on Monday that some prewar statements by senior Bush administration officials might well have overstated available intelligence about the threat posed by Iraq.

Under sharp questioning from a Senate Democrat, Mr. Goss, a Republican from Florida, said he agreed that statements by Vice President Dick Cheney and Condoleezza Rice that linked Iraq to the Sept. 11 attacks; to Al Qaeda; and to an active nuclear weapons program appeared to have gone beyond what was spelled out in intelligence reports at the time.

Mr. Goss's concession could fuel Democratic criticisms that Mr. Bush and his advisers overstated the threat posed by Iraq before the war. Democrats failed this year to persuade Republicans to include conclusions related to the administration's use of intelligence in the Senate Intelligence Committee report on Iraq that was completed in July.

Mr. Goss, who headed the House Intelligence Committee, said he did not believe that anyone in the administration had "deliberately mischaracterized or misused intelligence'' preceding the war on Iraq.

But he said that if confirmed as intelligence chief, he would feel an obligation to correct misstatements or misinformation, though he said he might not do so publicly.

"If I were confronted with that kind of a hypothetical, where I felt that a policy maker was getting beyond what the intelligence said, I think I would advise the person involved,'' Mr. Goss said in response to a question from Senator Carl M. Levin, Democrat of Michigan. "I do believe that would be a case that would put me into action, if I were confirmed. Yes, sir.''

Each example on which Mr. Goss commented was raised by Senator Levin. They included a December 2001 statement in which Mr. Cheney said that a meeting in Prague between a Sept. 11 hijacker, Mohammed Atta, and an Iraqi official had been "pretty well-confirmed'' and a separate statement by Ms. Rice in September 2002 saying, first, that aluminum tubes being imported by Iraq "are only really suited for nuclear weapons programs'' and, second, that "we know'' that Iraq provided some training to Al Qaeda in chemical weapons development.

All three of those assertions have since been discredited, and recent reports by the independent Sept. 11 commission and the Senate Intelligence Committee suggested that all three exceeded the intelligence available at the time.

In each case, Mr. Goss cautioned that he did not know what information Mr. Cheney and Ms. Rice had used as the basis for their statements. He said he still believed that Iraq had provided some unspecified training to Al Qaeda, though he declined to elaborate.

But he said of Mr. Cheney's public assertion on Dec. 9, 2001, about Mr. Atta and the meeting with an Iraqi official in Prague, for example: "I don't think it was as well confirmed perhaps as the vice president thought. But I don't know what was in the vice president's mind, and I've certainly never talked with him about this. So I don't know how he came to that conclusion.''

Mr. Goss said that Ms. Rice's Sept. 8, 2002, statement about the aluminum tubes appeared to have been "an exaggeration,'' compared with the findings spelled out in a national intelligence estimate at the same time. He said Ms. Rice's Sept. 25, 2002, statement linking Iraq to training for Al Qaeda, if it were based solely on the evidence that has been made public to date, would have been in a category in which "I would feel obliged to ask the national security adviser what in fact was the basis for that statement.''

Earlier this year, George J. Tenet, then still director of central intelligence, told Congress that he had corrected Bush administration officials, including Mr. Cheney, about several statements, including those linking Mr. Atta to a meeting in Prague.

Mr. Goss, who has spent nearly 16 years in Congress, steered clear of any overt criticism of Mr. Bush or his senior aides. At the same time, he seemed determined to reassure Democrats that he would put partisan politics behind him if confirmed, and he vowed to be an objective, independent and nonpartisan intelligence chief.

The Senate panel set a vote on Mr. Goss's nomination for Tuesday morning. Of the seven Democrats on the panel, only Mr. Levin; John D. Rockefeller IV of West Virginia, the vice chairman; and Ron Wyden of Oregon, attended Monday's session; four of the committee's eight Republicans attended.

That alone suggested that Mr. Goss's nomination was facing little real opposition. Congressional officials from both parties said they expected that Mr. Goss would win an overwhelming majority from the panel, clearing the way for him to win confirmation from the full Senate, possibly as soon as this week. The Senate's Republican leaders have not yet announced the schedule for a debate on the Senate floor.

Monday's hearing, running less than two hours, was less confrontational than a four-and-a-half-hour session last Tuesday. But efforts by Democrats to portray Mr. Goss as a partisan drew protests from Republicans, including Senator Pat Roberts of Kansas, the committee chairman, who accused Democrats of dwelling on the issue for their own partisan purposes.

Iraq War: Yes, or No?

Finally, Kerry Takes a Stand
NY Times Op-Ed
By DAVID BROOKS
Published: September 21, 2004

Yesterday John Kerry came to New York University and did something amazing. He uttered a series of clear, declarative sentences on the subject of Iraq. Many of these sentences directly contradict his past statements on Iraq, but at least you could figure out what he was trying to say.

First, Kerry argued that Iraq was never a serious threat to the United States, that the war was never justified and that Bush's focus on Iraq was a "profound diversion" from the real enemy, Osama bin Laden.

Second, Kerry argued that we are losing the war in Iraq. Casualties are mounting, the insurgency is spreading, and daily life is more miserable.

Third, Kerry argued that in times like this, brave leaders should tell the truth to the American people. Kerry reminded his audience that during Vietnam, he returned home "to offer my own personal voice of dissent," and he's decided to do the same thing now. The parallel is clear: Iraq is the new Vietnam.

Finally, Kerry declared that it is time to get out, beginning next summer. The message is that if Kerry is elected, the entire momentum of U.S. policy will be toward getting American troops out of Iraq as quickly as possible and shifting responsibility for Iraq onto other countries.

The crucial passage in the speech was this one: "The principles that should guide American policy in Iraq now and in the future are clear: we must make Iraq the world's responsibility, because the world has a stake in the outcome and others should share the burden." From a U.S. responsibility, Iraq will become the world's responsibility.

Kerry said the United Nations must play a central role in supervising elections. He said other nations should come in to protect U.N. officials. He called for an international summit meeting this week in New York, where other nations could commit troops and money to Iraq. He said NATO should open training centers for new Iraqi soldiers.

He talked about what other nations could do to help address the situation in Iraq. He did not say what the U.S. should do to defeat the insurgents and stabilize and rebuild Iraq, beyond what Bush is already doing. He did not say the U.S. could fight the insurgents more effectively. He did not have any ideas on how to tame Falluja or handle Moktada al-Sadr. He did not offer any strategy for victory.

But he did, more than at any time in the past year, stake out a clear contrast with Bush.

The president's case is that the world is safer with Saddam out of power, and that we should stay as long as it takes to help Iraqis move to democracy. Kerry's case is that the world would be safer if we'd left Saddam; his emphasis is on untangling the United States from Iraq and shifting attention to more serious threats.

Rhetorically, this was his best foreign policy speech by far (it helps to pick a side). Politically, it was risky. Kerry's new liberal tilt makes him more forceful on the stump, but opens huge vulnerabilities. Does he really want to imply that 1,000 troops died for nothing?

By picking the withdrawal camp, he has assigned himself a clear task. Right now 54 percent of likely voters believe that the U.S. should stay as long as it takes to rebuild Iraq, while 39 percent believe that we should leave as soon as possible. Between now and Nov. 2, Kerry must flip those numbers.

Substantively, of course, Kerry's speech is completely irresponsible. In the first place, there is a 99 percent chance that other nations will not contribute enough troops to significantly decrease the U.S. burden in Iraq. In that case, John Kerry has no Iraq policy. The promise to bring some troops home by summer will be exposed as a Disneyesque fantasy.

More to the point, Kerry is trying to use multilateralism as a gloss for retreat. If "the world" is going to be responsible for defeating Moktada al-Sadr and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, then no one will be responsible for defeating them. The consequences for the people of Iraq and the region will be horrific.

Finally, if the whole war is a mistake, shouldn't we stop fighting tomorrow? What do you say to the last man to die for a "profound diversion"?

But that is what the next few weeks are going to be about. This country has long needed to have a straight up-or-down debate on the war. Now that Kerry has positioned himself as the antiwar candidate, it can.

The Essential Krugman: The Last Deception

Ny Times OP-ED
"The Last Deception"
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: September 21, 2004

It's Ayad Allawi week. President Bush, starting with his address at the U.N. today, will try to present Mr. Allawi - a former Baathist who the BBC reports was chosen as prime minister because he was "equally mistrusted by everyone" - as the leader of a sovereign nation on the path to democracy. If the media play along, Mr. Bush may be able to keep the Iraq disaster under wraps for a few more weeks.

It may well work. In June, when the United States formally transferred sovereignty to Mr. Allawi's government, the media acted as if this empty gesture marked the end of the war. Even though American casualties continued to rise, stories about Iraq dropped off the evening news and the front pages. This gave the public the impression that things were improving and helped Mr. Bush recover in the polls.

Now Mr. Bush hopes that by pretending that Mr. Allawi is a real leader of a real government, he can conceal the fact that he has led America into a major strategic defeat.

That's a stark statement, but it's a view shared by almost all independent military and intelligence experts. Put it this way: it's hard to identify any major urban areas outside Kurdistan where the U.S. and its allies exercise effective control. Insurgents operate freely, even in the heart of Baghdad, while coalition forces, however many battles they win, rule only whatever ground they happen to stand on. And efforts to put an Iraqi face on the occupation are self-defeating: as the example of Mr. Allawi shows, any leader who is too closely associated with America becomes tainted in the eyes of the Iraqi public.

Mr. Bush's insistence that he is nonetheless "pleased with the progress" in Iraq - when his own National Intelligence Estimate echoes the grim views of independent experts - would be funny if the reality weren't so grim. Unfortunately, this is no joke: to the delight of Al Qaeda, America's overstretched armed forces are gradually getting chewed up in a losing struggle.

So what's the answer?

The Bush administration fostered the Iraq insurgency by botching the essential tasks of enlisting allies, rebuilding infrastructure, training and equipping local security forces, and preparing for elections. It's understandable, then, that John Kerry - whose speech yesterday was deadly accurate in its description of Mr. Bush's mistakes - proposes going back and doing the job right.

But I hope that Mr. Kerry won't allow himself to be trapped into trying to fulfill neocon fantasies. If there ever was a chance to turn Iraq into a pro-American beacon of democracy, that chance perished a long time ago.

Can the insurgency be crushed? It's widely believed that in November, a few days after the election, the Bush administration will launch an all-out offensive against insurgent-controlled areas. Such an offensive will, for all practical purposes, be an attempt to conquer Iraq all over again. But unlike Saddam's hapless commanders, the insurgents won't oblige us by taking up positions in the countryside, where they can be blasted by U.S. air power. And grinding urban warfare that leads to heavy American casualties and the death of large numbers of innocent civilians will simply enlarge the ranks of our enemies.

But if the chance to install a pro-American government has been lost, what's the alternative? Scaling back our aims. This means accepting the fact that an Iraqi leader, to have legitimacy, must be able to deliver an end to America's military presence. Unless we want this war to go on forever, we will have to abandon the 14 "enduring bases" the Bush administration has been building.

It also means accepting the likelihood that Iraq will not have a strong central government - and that local leaders will end up with a lot of autonomy. This doesn't have to mean creating havens for hostile forces: remember that for a year after Saddam's fall, moderate Shiite clerics effectively governed large areas of Iraq and kept them relatively peaceful. It was the continuing irritant of the U.S. occupation that empowered radicals like Moktada al-Sadr.

The point is that by winding down America's military presence, while promising aid to those who don't harbor anti-American terrorists and retaliation against those who do, the U.S. can probably leave behind an Iraq that isn't an American ally, but isn't a threat either. And that, at this point, is probably the best we can hope for.

New Shame for the Bush Adminstration Unilateralists

US refuses to back world hunger battle
The Scotsman Evening News
Sept. 21, 2004

The United States faced condemnation today after failing to join more than 100 countries as part of a new campaign to raise an extra $50 billion (£28bn) annually in aid to combat global hunger.

On the eve of the annual gathering of the General Assembly, more than 50 heads of state and government joined a debate at the United Nations that focused on the impact of globalisation and on ways to finance the war against poverty. French President Jacques Chirac called the pledge to take action "unprecedented".

The declaration also urged governments to seriously consider a report prepared for the conference, setting out a series of options for raising money. These included a global tax on financial transactions, a tax on the sale of heavy arms, an international borrowing facility and a scheme for marketing credit cards whose users would donate a small percentage of their charges to the cause.

"The greatest scandal is not that hunger exists but that it persists even when we have the means to eliminate it. It is time to take action," said a declaration signed by 110 nations and adopted at the close of a World Leaders Summit on Hunger held at UN headquarters.

But the US poured cold water on the project, with the leader of the American delegation, agriculture secretary Ann Veneman, dismissing it. "Economic growth is the long-term solution to hunger and poverty," she told the meeting. "Global taxes are inherently undemocratic. Implementation is impossible."

Brazil’s president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva criticised the US for failing to endorse the pledge.

"How many more times will it be necessary to repeat that the most destructive weapon of mass destruction in the world today is poverty?" said Mr Lula. "We must harness globalisation. We must turn it into a positive force."

Mr Chirac predicted the US position could change after the November 2 elections.

"Let’s see when things settle down what their position will be," the French leader said. "However strong the Americans may be, you cannot in the long run emerge victorious by opposing an idea that is backed by 100 countries, creating a new political situation."

Thursday, September 16, 2004


  • No WMD Posted by Hello

  • The Straight Story

    Note: It will soon be a year since Seymour M. Hersh's October 2003 article in The New Yorker appeared, and it is still the best read on the ramp-up to the Iraq War. The first paragraph is quoted below, and confirms the observation by many that the mechanisms of control within the Bush Administration were primarily responsible for the disconnect between what the intelligence community was saying, and what came out of the White House.

    "Since midsummer, the Senate Intelligence Committee has been attempting to solve the biggest mystery of the Iraq war: the disparity between the Bush Administration’s prewar assessment of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction and what has actually been discovered."

    Excerpts: Paul Wolfowitz in a NY Times Article: Sept 16th, 2004

    "The First Draft of Freedom"
    Paul Wolfowitz in the NY TImes
    Sept. 16, 2004

    "Our own Declaration of Independence doesn't speak of elections but rather about the rights of all human beings to certain "inalienable rights," in particular "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." And it is a fundamental principle of our Constitution that citizens cannot be deprived of those rights except by due process of law.

    Elections are properly viewed as a mechanism to hold government accountable, particularly in its most fundamental responsibility of protecting the rights of its individual citizens.

    Accordingly, the rule of law is one of the essential pillars of a democratic society. There are few powers that a democratic state possesses that are as awesome as the power to prosecute its own citizens lawfully. And few things are more threatening to a true democracy than the abuse of that prosecutorial power.

    One of the worst possible ways that power can be abused is to take away the freedom of the press and thereby remove one of the most important mechanisms for ensuring that government respects the rights of its citizens. As Mr. Bambang pointed out in his eloquent pleading before the court in August, the collapse of Indonesia's first brief experience with democracy in the 1950's began with "an attempt to undermine freedom of the domestic press through the criminalization of journalists."
    ...
    Both of the candidates in next Monday's presidential runoff election {in Indonesia}, have expressed concern over this case. One hopes that beyond acquitting Mr. Bambang and his colleagues of any of the criminal charges pressed against them, Indonesia will take steps to ensure that this intimidation of a free press should cease."

    Note: Unfortunately this article seems allegorical at best, or at worst an attempt by Mr. Wolfowitz to paint himself in a light significantly different than his statements during the past several years. Herein he appears to argue against unjustified prosecution of citizens, and governmental hinderances to a free press; yet his statements from earlier this year, and before, project an entirely different orientation.

    9/7/03: "One of the things that is most important for troops facing danger on the front lines is the knowledge that their dedication and sacrifice is appreciated by the people of America."

    6/9/03: "We don't discuss military plans, for good operational reasons. I can assure you that I didn't see these press reports but, if they are as you describe them, they certainly didn't come from me or anybody in my party."

    2/17/02: "There're a lot of options for them, {detainees at Guantanamo}. I think the most important thing right now is to focus on the fact that, first of all, these are dangerous people, and they're still trying to hurt people. They make threats all the time, and we've got to keep them secure.

    Our principal objective is to get whatever information we can get them to give us about networks elsewhere. Then, ultimately, there are decisions about whether, if they are guilty of a crime, is it something to be tried in the United States, or is it something to be tried in another country? If it's in the United States, there're various options for doing that. So we're a long way, I think, from taking these people to trial.

    5/17/04 :"there are some serious issues between us and the Red Cross about Guantanamo...[but] they have nothing to do with the kinds of abuses that we've been hearing about in Iraq."

    10/3/03: “foreign policy decisions cannot be subject to the kind of ‘rule of law’ that we want for our domestic political process.”

    1/31/04: "You have to make decisions based on the intelligence you have, not on the intelligence you can discover later,"

    6/11/02: "He {Jose Padillo} is an enemy combatant. Enemy combatants, whether they are American citizens or not American citizens, are subject to the same provisions of the laws of war."

    7/27/03: "I think people should be a little careful about throwing around words like intelligence failure. It's easy to go around and play this blame game...Well, we always ought to compare what we thought from our intelligence with what we discovered later, and it's a difficult job to do, especially if every time somebody discovers a discrepancy it is described as a "failure"... If people keep treating every intelligence uncertainty as an example of failure I guess we have a problem."

    6/26/03: "Frankly, part of our problem is a lot of the press are afraid to travel very much, so they sit in Baghdad and they publish rumours,'' he told the committee, "and rumours are plentiful.'
    <------------------------------------->


    From Norman Rockwell, entitled "Freedom of Speech". Look at it closely. Is he a Republican? a Democrat? No ! That doesn't matter. What does matter immensely is he is an American, exercising a right granted by our Constitution. Fie on any so-called "leader" who would bash him for his work clothes, the 50'ish audience, or the circulars that brought these people together. He, a man in himself, not money, not political power, not refined good looks, is a powerful symbol of America's strength. To require him to be in suit and tie before speaking is to deny the principles on which this country was founded, and hopefully will continue to be based.  Posted by Hello

    Definition: "Traditional Family Values"

    Our Wordwise expert Mia Stephens, suggests the following definition:

    The serious attempt to define below gives historical info and settles on Schwartz 1992:

    The traditional family model-the husband as breadwinner and the wife as homemaker-makes up only 7% of the families in U. S. society (Duxbury & Higgins, 1991; Nieva, 1988). Changing attitudes toward sanctioned men's and women's roles due to the increase of women in the workforce may have created more similarities in roles for men and women, especially with respect to family responsibilities (Denmark, 1992; Shaw & Burns, 1993).

    Given more contemporary attitudes toward the family in the form of women in careers and acceptance of divorce, one might expect a parallel change in constructs such as individuals' family values. Family values can be defined as desirable and important goals that serve as guiding principles for maintaining one's family (adapted from Schwartz, 1992). Contemporary societal changes might be associated with less adherence to traditional family values in younger generations that have been socialized in a period marked by shifting attitudes toward gender roles.

    No doubt the definition of exactly what these values are will depend on the individual's own views.

    The phrase in a political context it is suggested comes from the 1992 US presidential election, and is attibuted to Dan Quayle's 'Murphy Brown' speech.
    <------------------------------------->


    Go Here For More Photos, and then talk about how well OIF is going !! Posted by Hello

    Wednesday, September 15, 2004

    Trial Lawyers for Truth

    Bush tortures facts on 'trial lawyers'
    Newsday.com
    July 13, 2004


    The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers. No, wait. First let's torture the facts.

    To hear President George W. Bush and his business supporters tell it, a legion of "trial lawyers" - personified by Democratic vice-presidential hopeful John Edwards - is ruining America. They clog the courts with frivolous lawsuits. They drive good doctors out of medicine with outrageous malpractice claims and astronomical insurance premiums. They bring honorable businesses to their knees with big class-action suits that bestow the most benefits on rapacious lawyers.

    All outrages, if true. But are they? Ask John Ashcroft.

    The attorney general keeps a fine set of numbers about civil trials and their outcomes. In April, the Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics published a survey of state cases - most civil lawsuits are brought in state courts - that were decided at trial in 2001, the most recent data available. Cases that end without a trial - 97 percent - aren't included because settlements are often kept private.

    Here's what the Justice Department says:

    The number of civil trials in the nation's 75 largest counties dropped by 47 percent from 1992 to 2001. In jury trials in which the plaintiff was successful, the median award shrank from $65,000 in 1992 to $37,000 in 2001. Winning plaintiffs won punitive damages in only 6 percent of trials - with the median punitive damage award $50,000.

    Not enough to make you, or your lawyer, rich.

    Anyway, the president doesn't worry about the run-of-the-mill car accident case - though 60 percent of tort lawsuits involve automobiles, according to the National Center for State Courts. Nor is he concerned with the mundane slip-and-fall suit (17 percent of cases).

    It's those oversized damage awards and over-the-top class actions that have his dander up.

    But the largest damage award turns out to have been granted not in some liberal bastion but in Bush's home state of Texas. The award was indeed huge - $454 million, reduced to $121 million on appeal. Did this go to a child poisoned by toxic drinking water? No. It went to a Texas company that won a contract dispute with Mexican partners who'd broken a franchise deal.

    And how many class-action suits turned up in the Justice Department's survey of 12,000 concluded trials? One.

    It was against an insurance company that had changed the job classification of its claims representatives to "administrative" personnel - a switch that exempted the company from paying overtime. The employees won $124.5 million in uncompensated overtime and interest, to split among 2,400 workers and their lawyers.

    Now, maybe these folks are greedy. But what would you call the lawyers who cooked up the job-title scam? Campaign contributors, maybe.

    Come to think of it, have you ever heard a politician who is prone to apoplexy over "trial lawyers" also complain about union-busting lawyers? How about tax lawyers? Or HMO lawyers? The Bush administration just sided with these in a crucial Supreme Court case that said patients cannot sue their HMOs, even when the insurance plans deny care that doctors recommend.

    Pity the doctors. They're squeezed between insurance companies that want to hold down their incomes and other insurance companies that want to pump up their malpractice premiums. Premiums have indeed spiraled upward. But the reason isn't only malpractice suits. The nonpartisan General Accounting Office concluded that losses from malpractice claims contributed to the premium hikes - but it couldn't determine "the composition and causes of these losses." We don't know if they stemmed from bad lawsuits or bad doctors.

    The accounting office also found that insurers took in less money from investments in a chronically soft market - and so charged doctors higher premiums to make up the difference.

    There's a mountain of evidence that should get the political case against trial lawyers dismissed. It probably won't. Few arguments are as powerful as a populist-sounding cause backed by the corporate wallet.

    Does Pres. Bush Have An Early Stage of Alzheimers Disease?
    The Author of the Letter Sees: Pre-Senile Dementia

    Letters to the Editor
    Atlantic Monthly: Sept 2004

    {In Reference to An Article in a previous month's AM Edition entitled: When George Meets John}

    "James Fallows's description of John Kerry's debating skills ("When George Meets John," July/August Atlantic) was interesting, but what was most remarkable was Fallows's documentation of President Bush's mostly overlooked changes over the past decade—specifically, "the striking decline in his sentence-by-sentence speaking skills." Fallows points to "speculations that there must be some organic basis for the President's peculiar mode of speech—a learning disability, a reading problem, dyslexia or some other disorder," but correctly concludes, "The main problem with these theories is that through his forties Bush was perfectly articulate."

    I, too, felt that something organic was wrong with President Bush, most probably dyslexia. But I was unaware of what Fallows pointed out so clearly: that Bush's problems have been developing slowly, and that just a decade ago he was an articulate debater, "artful indeed in steering questions and challenges to his desired subjects," who "did not pause before forcing out big words, as he so often does now, or invent mangled new ones." Consider, in contrast, the present: "the informal Q&As he has tried to avoid," "Bush's recent faltering performances," "his unfortunate puzzled-chimp expression when trying to answer questions," "his stalling, defensive pose when put on the spot," "speaking more slowly and less gracefully."

    Not being a professional medical researcher and clinician, Fallows cannot be faulted for not putting two and two together. But he was 100 percent correct in suggesting that Bush's problem cannot be "a learning disability, a reading problem, [or] dyslexia," because patients with those problems have always had them. Slowly developing cognitive deficits, as demonstrated so clearly by the President, can represent only one diagnosis, and that is "presenile dementia"!

    Presenile dementia is best described to nonmedical persons as a fairly typical Alzheimer's situation that develops significantly earlier in life, well before what is usually considered old age. It runs about the same course as typical senile dementias, such as classical Alzheimer's—to incapacitation and, eventually, death, as with President Ronald Reagan, but at a relatively earlier age. President Bush's "mangled" words are a demonstration of what physicians call "confabulation," and are almost specific to the diagnosis of a true dementia. Bush should immediately be given the advantage of a considered professional diagnosis, and started on drugs that offer the possibility of retarding the slow but inexorable course of the disease. "

    Joseph M. Price, M.D.
    Carsonville, Mich.
    <------------------------------------->
    Note: Reading from the description of the stages of the disease one sees some striking parallels.
    Common early symptoms of Alzheimer's are:

    * confusion
    * disturbances in short-term memory
    * problems with attention and spatial orientation
    * personality changes
    * language difficulties
    * unexplained mood swings

    It is important to understand that Alzheimer’s disease does not affect every patient in the same way. The stages listed below represent the general progression of the disease.

    Stage 1: Early in the illness, Alzheimer's patients tend to have less energy and spontaneity, though often no one notices anything unusual. They exhibit minor memory loss and mood swings, and are slow to learn and react. After a while they start to shy away from anything new and prefer the familiar. Memory loss begins to affect job performance. The patient is confused, gets lost easily, and exercises poor judgment.

    Stage 2: In this stage, the Alzheimer's victim can still perform tasks independently, but may need assistance with more complicated activities. Speech and understanding become slower, and patients often lose their train of thought in mid-sentence. They may also get lost while travelling or forget to pay bills. As Alzheimer's victims become aware of this loss of control, they may become depressed, irritable and restless. The individual is clearly becoming disabled. The distant past may be recalled, while recent events are difficult to remember. Advancing Alzheimer's has affected the victim's ability to comprehend where they are, the day and the time. Caregivers must give clear instructions and repeat them often. As the Alzheimer's victims mind continues to slip away, the patient may invent words and not recognize familiar faces.

    Stage 3: During the final stage, patients lose the ability to chew and swallow. The very essence of the person is vanishing. Memory is now very poor and no one is recognizable. Patients lose bowel and bladder control, and eventually need constant care. They become vulnerable to pneumonia, infection and other illnesses. Respiratory problems worsen, particularly when the patient becomes bedridden. This terminal stage eventually leads to death.

    Another Republican Party Slime Campaign !

    Soros lodges formal complaint against Hastert before the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct.
    Sept 14th, 2004
    Talkingpointsmemo.com

    Below is the text of the letter ...

    Dear Members of the Committee:
    I am writing to encourage the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct to create an investigative subcommittee to examine the conduct of Representative Dennis Hastert under House Rule 43, clause 1: "A Member, officer, or employee of the House of Representatives shall conduct himself at all times in a manner which shall reflect creditably on the House of Representatives."

    In an August 23rd radio interview and an August 29th nationally broadcast television interview, Representative Hastert deliberately and repeatedly issued an innuendo – which he cannot substantiate because it is false – that I may have received illegal drug money. The use of such dishonest smear tactics reflects discredit upon the House of Representatives and warrants the investigation of your Committee. The texts of Representative Hastert’s remarks are attached.

    Representative Hastert has attempted to pass off his comments as either a misunderstanding or a disagreement about policy. Both arguments are demonstrably false. Representative Hastert made innuendoes about alleged facts, namely that I might be receiving “drug money” from “drug groups.” That he made and then repeated this smear demonstrates that there is no misunderstanding about the implication of his statements – or their purpose.

    Representative Hastert now seeks to excuse his conduct by saying that this is a disagreement over groups to which I give money. The indisputable fact is that he alleged that I might be receiving “drug money” from “drug groups.” His comments were explicitly about the source of my income, not its use. This slander is invented out of whole cloth. Indeed, the only other examples of this bizarre assertion of which I am aware are the equally irresponsible accusations of the Lyndon LaRouche campaign and organizations, which bear a strong resemblance to Representative Hastert’s remarks. Excerpts of comments from the LaRouche campaign and organizations are attached.

    Representative Hastert has the right to feel strongly about his opinions. He has no right to fling assertions of possible criminal conduct at those with whom he disagrees. This kind of insinuation – that a private United States citizen was in league with drug cartels and may be receiving funds derived from criminal activity – has no place in public discourse. The fact that this profoundly disturbing innuendo was made in the context of criticizing an American citizen’s efforts to participate in the political debate about the future of our country strongly suggests a deliberate effort to use smear tactics, intimidation and falsehoods to silence criticism.

    Representative Hastert has had numerous opportunities to apologize for and retract his remarks. He was explicitly given the opportunity to clarify his remarks during the August 29th interview, and he chose instead to repeat the innuendo. Not only has he declined to apologize, he has made new, false accusations.

    Such conduct brings discredit on the House. It is inconsistent with basic notions of fair play and open debate that are the basis of our Constitutional system, and it is all too reminiscent of the McCarthyite tactics that were used to such scurrilous effect to stifle dissent during one of the darkest periods of recent United States history.

    Members of both political parties have recently decried “the politics of personal destruction.” It is time for the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct to formally declare that smear tactics and innuendo are discrediting our political process and the House of Representatives as an institution by taking appropriate action to investigate and censure Representative Hastert for these outrageous remarks.

    Sincerely,

    George Soros

    Bad Moon Rising Redux

    Note: The Lyrics from Bruce Springsteen's Song.

    I see a bad moon rising
    I see troubles on the way
    I see earthquakes and lightning
    I see bad times today

    Don’t go ’round tonight
    Well, it’s bound to take your life
    There’s a bad moon on the rise

    I hear hurricanes a-blowin’
    I know the end it’s coming soon
    I fear rivers overflowing
    I hear the voice of rage and ruin

    Don’t go ’round tonight
    Well, it’s bound to take your life
    There’s a bad moon on the rise

    Hope you got your things together
    Hope you’re quite prepared to die
    Looks like we’re in for nasty weather
    One eye is taken for an eye

    Don’t go ’round tonight
    Well, it’s bound to take your life
    There’s a bad moon on the rise

    Don’t go ’round tonight
    Well, it’s bound to take your life
    There’s a bad moon on the rise

    If You Are Not There Now, You Will Be...
    "Health care costs are spiraling out of sight at seven times the rate of inflation. 43 million Americans have no health insurance at all. Both of these trends are accelerating. Before long, most small companies may not be able to provide their employees with any health coverage at all. Bush's solution is to give you a tax credit to pay for your own insurance. Well, yeah ... a check from the government. Actually, that's not really correct. If you have the money to pay for insurance you might get to deduct a part of that payment from your taxes. How does that sound to those of you making $5.15 an hour?

    Bush blames frivolous lawsuits for the high cost of health care. This argument deserves to stand up there with that {Iraqi} mushroom cloud bullshit. The real reason is that the American worker is subsidizing the health care of the entire rest of the world because we {currently} have no way of controlling any of those costs.

    If you like the way that things are going, vote for Bush. If you believe that HMOs and pharmaceutical companies should make health care policy vote for Bush. If you trust oil companies, power companies and chemical companies to do the right thing on environmental policy vote for Bush. If you think that massive deficits don't make any difference vote for Bush. If you like the fact that companies have no real oversight and can avoid paying taxes with sham offices overseas vote for Bush.

    The commander-in-chief will stand in front of snappy banners and five billion flags and offer unrealistic enthusiasm, but if you look over you will notice the ground rushing up to meet us as we plummet over the edge!

    If you want a change, vote for Kerry."
    Note: This exerpt came from a nicely done article on counterbias.com. Read the entire article here.

    SP2 Users Are Not Affected.(?)
    How Convenient Is That for MS?

    Major graphics flaw threatens Windows PCs
    Published: September 14, 2004, 1:24 PM PDT
    By Robert Lemos
    Staff Writer, CNET News.com

    Microsoft published on Tuesday a patch for a major security flaw in its software's handling of the JPEG graphics format and urged customers to use a new tool to locate the many applications that are vulnerable.

    The critical flaw has to do with how Microsoft's operating systems and other software process the widely used JPEG image format and could let attackers create an image file that would run a malicious program on a victim's computer as soon as the file is viewed. Because the software giant's Internet Explorer browser is vulnerable, Windows users could fall prey to an attack just by visiting a Web site that has affected images.

    The severity of the flaw had some security experts worried that a virus that exploits the issue may be on the way.

    Tuesday, September 14, 2004

    Nader Did Not Qualify to Be Put On the Ballot Legally
    So, Thanks to Republican Help He Gets On Anyway !


    Florida OK's Nader's Name on Election Ballot
    Mon Sep 13, 2004 06:31 PM ET

    By Jim Loney
    MIAMI (Reuters) - Independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader's name can appear on Florida ballots for the election, despite a court order to the contrary, Florida's elections chief told officials on Monday in a move that could help President Bush in the key swing state.

    The Florida Democratic Party reacted with outrage, calling the move "blatant partisan maneuvering" by Gov. Jeb Bush, the president's younger brother, and vowed to fight it.

    In a memo to Florida's 67 county supervisors of elections, Division of Elections director Dawn Roberts said the uncertainty of Hurricane Ivan, which could hit parts of the state by week's end, forced her to act.
    The action came in an ongoing legal battle over whether Nader should be allowed on the Florida ballot as the Reform Party candidate.

    Nader, an independent nominated by the Reform Party, was a presidential candidate in 2000 when Bush won Florida, and the White House, by 537 votes over then-Vice President Al Gore. Analysts said most of the nearly 98,000 votes Nader got in Florida would have gone to Gore had Nader not been on the ballot.

    Florida Circuit Court Judge Kevin Davey issued a temporary injunction last week preventing the state from putting Nader on the 2004 ballot, siding with a Democratic challenge that the Reform Party did not qualify as a national party under state law.

    A hearing on a permanent injunction is scheduled for Wednesday. But Roberts said Hurricane Ivan, which is headed for Florida's Gulf coast, had raised "a substantial question as to when such a hearing" will be held.
    'PARTISAN MANEUVERING'

    As a result, she said, Florida's Department of State had filed an appeal against the temporary injunction. The appeal application automatically lifts the injunction, allowing the counties to put Nader's name on overseas absentee ballots, which must be mailed by Saturday.

    "I'm in disbelief," said Scott Maddox, chairman of the Florida Democratic Party. "This is blatant partisan maneuvering on the part of Jeb Bush to give his brother a leg up on election day." "They are trying to get ballots printed with Nader's name on them," said Maddox. "I am astounded that Jeb Bush is willing to defy the judiciary to help his brother."

    Maddox said if Nader drew votes away from any candidate it would be Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry. Gov. Bush said he agreed with Roberts' decision.

    "It's up to the judge to determine, based on the law, whether Nader should be on the ballot or not," Bush said. "But while that process goes on, we cannot put ourselves in the position where the ministerial role of the supervisors cannot be fulfilled."

    Maddox noted that Tallahassee, the state capital where Davey sits, is not expected to be directly hit by the hurricane. He said the circuit court could hear the case as scheduled on Wednesday and rule immediately.

    In addition, the case is before the Florida Supreme Court, which could also rule at any time, he said.
     Posted by Hello


    Yeah, talk to us about s*** that really matters! the War in Iraq, the Federal Deficit, Jobs, Health Care & Prescription Drugs, Higher Education, Immigration, etc, etc. What Kerry or Bush did thirty years ago pales in comparison with what they did three years ago !! In three years we've gone from the most respected country on Earth to the most hated, distrusted, and feared. It's past time to do something concrete about that. Give us specifics, not platitudes, or wishful thinking! When, where, how...the why we can discuss and decide at some later date !!· Posted by Hello

    Essential Krugman: Taking on the Myth

    Taking On the Myth
    By PAUL KRUGMAN
    NY Times Op-Ed
    Published: September 14, 2004

    On Sunday, a celebrating crowd gathered around a burning U.S. armored vehicle. Then a helicopter opened fire; a child and a journalist for an Arabic TV news channel were among those killed. Later, the channel repeatedly showed the journalist doubling over and screaming, "I'm dying; I'm dying."

    Such scenes, which enlarge the ranks of our enemies by making America look both weak and brutal, are inevitable in the guerrilla war President Bush got us into. Osama bin Laden must be smiling.

    U.S. news organizations are under constant pressure to report good news from Iraq. In fact, as a Newsweek headline puts it, "It's worse than you think." Attacks on coalition forces are intensifying and getting more effective; no-go zones, which the military prefers to call "insurgent enclaves," are spreading - even in Baghdad. We're losing ground.

    And the losses aren't only in Iraq. Al Qaeda has regrouped. The invasion of Iraq, intended to demonstrate American power, has done just the opposite: nasty regimes around the world feel empowered now that our forces are bogged down. When a Times reporter asked Mr. Bush about North Korea's ongoing nuclear program, "he opened his palms and shrugged."

    Yet many voters still believe that Mr. Bush is doing a good job protecting America.

    If Senator John Kerry really has advisers telling him not to attack Mr. Bush on national security, he should dump them. When Dick Cheney is saying vote Bush or die, responding with speeches about jobs and health care doesn't cut it.

    Mr. Kerry should counterattack by saying that Mr. Bush is endangering the nation by subordinating national security to politics.

    In early 2002 the Bush administration, already focused on Iraq, ignored pleas to commit more forces to Afghanistan. As a result, the Taliban is resurgent, and Osama is still out there.

    In the buildup to the Iraq war, commanders wanted a bigger invasion force to help secure the country. But civilian officials, eager to prove that wars can be fought on the cheap, refused. And that's one main reason our soldiers are still dying in Iraq.

    This past April, U.S. forces, surely acting on White House orders after American television showed gruesome images of dead contractors, attacked Falluja. Lt. Gen. James Conway, the Marine commander on the scene, opposed "attacking out of revenge" but was overruled - and he was overruled again with an equally disastrous decision to call off the attack after it had begun. "Once you commit," General Conway said, "you got to stay committed." But Mr. Bush, faced with the prospect of a casualty toll that would have hurt his approval rating, didn't.

    Can Mr. Kerry, who voted to authorize the Iraq war, criticize it? Yes, by pointing out that he voted only to give Mr. Bush a big stick. Once that stick had forced Saddam to let W.M.D. inspectors back in, there was no need to invade. And Mr. Kerry should keep pounding Mr. Cheney, who is trying to cover for the absence of W.M.D. by lying, yet again, about Saddam's ties to Al Qaeda.

    Some pundits are demanding that Mr. Kerry produce a specific plan for Iraq - a demand they never make of Mr. Bush. Mr. Kerry should turn the tables, and demand to know what - aside from pretending that things are going fine - Mr. Bush intends to do about the spiraling disaster. And Mr. Kerry can ask why anyone should trust a leader who refuses to replace the people who created that disaster because he thinks it's bad politics to admit a mistake.

    Mr. Kerry can argue that he wouldn't have overruled the commanders who had wanted to keep the pressure on Al Qaeda, or dismissed warnings from former Gen. Eric Shinseki, then the Army's chief of staff, that peacekeeping would require a large force. He wouldn't have ignored General Conway's warnings about the dangers of storming into Falluja, or overruled his protests about calling off that assault halfway through.

    On the other hand, he can argue that he would have fired Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy defense secretary who ridiculed General Shinseki. And he would definitely have fired Donald Rumsfeld for the failure to go in with enough troops, the atrocities at Abu Ghraib and more.

    The truth is that Mr. Bush, by politicizing the "war on terror," is putting America at risk. And Mr. Kerry has to say that.

    From today's Hauser Report

    The Supposedly Forged Document

    Remember the Sandy Berger smear? This was the story claiming that President Clinton's National Security Advisor had smuggled incriminating documents out of the National Archives. (Berger was completely cleared.) This was a planned smear - in the works for months - and was used by the Republicans to make the public think that Clinton was responsible for letting the 9/11 attack happen and that "the Democrats" were engaged in a conspiracy to cover up the evidence.

    Well, along similar lines, and listening to Limbaugh just now, I can see that the Right's "Bush Guard memo forgery" is taking shape. The entire Wurlitzer - the Right's media echo chamber that is able to repeat a lie over and over and over until it is the ONLY story in the news - is cranked up and telling the public that CBS has been caught engaging in a smear against Bush using forged documents. Never mind that the document (one document, no plural 's') in question is legit.

    According to Limbaugh:
    One document is said to look like it could have been typed on a modern computer.

    Therefore ALL such documents are forgeries.

    Therefore CBS is intentionally working a smear on Bush.

    Therefore ANY stories about Bush's National Guard service are not to be believed - he served honorably.

    Therefore this proves that CBS (and by extension, ALL mainstream media) is a tool of the "Liberal Elite" and is working hand-in-hand with the Kerry campaign to smear Bush.

    Again, by extension, ANY stories ANYWHERE, EVER about Bush doing ANYTHING bad are Liberal lies.

    Keep in mind that this is not just Limbaugh. In a NY Times Op-Ed this morning William Safire has a piece titled "Those Discredited Memos" (note that he uses the plural...) And it doesn't stop there. It hardly even STARTS there. Today a Google News search for "Bush documents CBS" locates 2,460 stories. (According to reporting from Salon, a Republican PR firm that is also involved with the Swift Boat smear is engaged in driving this story.)

    This also has all the earmarks of typical right-wing smear tactics. It starts with a small, unproven accusation. The Right's Wurlitzer picks up the accusation and amplifies it until pretty much everything else is deflected out of the news. Soon every story on the subject assumes the truth of the original accusation. As soon as each new accusation is refuted - a refutation never even mentioned in the Right's stories - new accusations emerge, leaving the original accusation and refutations behind.

    Within days the accusations are escalating so fast that no one can keep up - by the time one accusation is addressed two or three more appear, which creates a fog that is impossible to cut through. The cumulative accusations -- all assumed to be true in the stories put out by the Right media -- become a general attack on "Liberals" or "Democrats" in general. The entire episode "proves" that the public should dismiss ANY story from the "mainstream" press or any authority figure that previously might be thought of as "responsible."

    And so it goes. Watch your backs!
    <------------------------------------->

    Monday, September 13, 2004

    No End in Sight to the Possibilities of Fraud in the General Election

    Absentee Votes Worry Officials as Nov. 2 Nears
    By MICHAEL MOSS
    NY Times
    Published: September 13, 2004

    As both major political parties intensify their efforts to promote absentee balloting as a way to lock up votes in the presidential race, election officials say they are struggling to cope with coercive tactics and fraudulent vote-gathering involving absentee ballots that have undermined local races across the country.

    Some of those officials say they are worried that the brashness of the schemes and the extent to which critical swing states have allowed party operatives to involve themselves in absentee voting - from handling ballot applications to helping voters fill out their ballots - could taint the general election in November.

    Commissioned Reports = Truth, or Advertising

    Microsoft Adds to Its Anti-Open-Source Arsenal

    Eweek Article
    By Mary Jo Foley, Microsoft Watch
    September 13, 2004

    As its 'Get the Facts' campaign moves into Year 2, Microsoft is set to roll out more commissioned research reports and case studies.

    Microsoft Corp.'s anti-open-source 'Get the Facts' campaign is entering its second year. And Microsoft has no intent to change course. Martin Taylor Microsoft's appointed Linux point man and platform strategist is making the rounds and touting yet another Microsoft-commissioned study that Microsoft is using as 'proof' that Windows surpasses Linux in total cost of ownership, security and reliability.

    Although some press, analysts and customers have, over the past year, criticized Microsoft's campaign to tout studies for which it paid, Microsoft has no intention to back down from this practice, Taylor said.

    'In 2005, our 'Facts' approach won't change an ounce,' Taylor proclaimed. 'Commissioned reports were exactly the right thing to do. We used reputable firms.'

    Note: Yes, both Microsoft and the Bush Administration see the virtue of 'commissioned reports' to provide 'proof' of information that supports their views. How convenient is that? And incidentally, what about violations of "Truth in Advertising" provisions of international law, for which Microsoft was previously reprimanded by a UK watchdog group..

    Political statements are traditionally exempt from Truth in Advertising regulations, (unfortunately); but not commercial interests.

    Opposition Grows to Paperless Voting: "More than a year ago, Rep. Rush Holt, D-N.J., introduced the Voter Confidence and Increased Accessibility Act, which would require all voting machines to produce a voter-verified paper record for use in manual audits by this year's election. A similar bill introduced more recently sets the same requirements for the 2006 election."

    Bob Novak Has An Idea about Revealing Confidential Sources

    Note: Bob Novak, who won't reveal who helped him disclose the identity of an undercover CIA operative, went on CNN Sept 11th, and demanded CBS reveal its confidential sources for the report about Pres. Bush's National Guard service record. The following is the key portion:

    "NOVAK: The -- Margaret, I believe -- I don't know of anybody who changed their opinion. "The Boston Globe" got a new expert who said the thing probably is authentic. In the same story, they went back to the expert that "The Washington Post" had used. He said it isn't authentic. I think it's going to be very interesting to find out if these are forged or phony documents. That's -- as a journalist, I think that's a very interesting story.

    I'd like CBS, at this point, to say where they got these documents from. They didn't get them from a CIA agent. I don't believe there was any laws involved. I don't think we'll have a special prosecutor, if they tell. I think they should say where they got these documents because I thought it was a very poor job of reporting by CBS. Why did CBS not go to the -- to Killian's family and get -- and ask them about it, as ABC did, and got these quotes, and they said they think they're phony documents -- I thought -- I thought that the "60 Minutes" thing by Dan Rather was a -- was a campaign operation, rather than an attempt to get to the bottom of the truth.

    HUNT: Robert Novak, you're saying CBS should reveal its source?

    NOVAK: Yes.

    HUNT: You do? You think reports ought to reveal sources?

    NOVAK: No, no. Wait a minute.

    HUNT: I'm just asking.

    NOVAK: I'm just saying in that case.

    HUNT: Oh.

    NOVAK: I think -- I think it's very important. If this is a phony document, the American -- the people should know about it.

    HUNT: So in some cases, reporters ought to reveal sources.

    NOVAK: Yes.

    HUNT: But not in all cases.

    NOVAK: That's right.
    <------------------------------------->

    Iraq Update from APAF

    IRAQ
    Out Of Control
    From: American Progress Action Fund
    Sept. 13th, 2004

    "The mission in Iraq is far, far from accomplished. A surge in deadly violence this weekend brought the bloodiest day in Iraq in recent months; suicide bombings, mortar fire and fierce battles between insurgents and U.S. and Iraqi security forces, including a firefight between an Iraqi crowd and a U.S. helicopter crew, killed dozens, leaving even more injured. Attacks against U.S. forces now average 87 per day, the worst monthly average, reports Newsweek, "since Bush's flight-suited visit to the USS Abraham Lincoln in May 2003." Casualty figures keep escalating: the U.S. death toll passed 1,000 last week and over 7,000 have been wounded. Secretary of State Colin Powell admitted this weekend, "We did miscalculate the difficulty" of winning the peace in Iraq.

    FALLUJAH FAILINGS: In a significant setback for U.S. efforts in Iraq, Fallujah, one of the nation's biggest cities, is now entirely under the control of rebel insurgents. This weekend, the Iraqi military force put in place in the explosive city by the Marines disbanded. There is strong evidence that many members have been working with insurgents against the U.S. forces that provided them with weapons and paychecks. Last April, the White House withdrew Marine troops from the city, hoping the newly created Brigade would work with the Iraqi government to fight the insurgency. The city quickly fell under the control of the insurgents, as many in the Brigade openly joined the rebel forces against the United States. Today, the city is a safe haven for insurgents, a place to "take refuge, plot attacks and run manufacturing centers for car bombs and other explosives."

    GENERAL DISAGREES WITH APPROACH TO FALLUJAH: Lt. Gen. James Conway, the outgoing U.S. Marine Corps general in charge of western Iraq, said yesterday that he had disagreed with the hasty order that sent his troops to invade Fallujah in April as well as the subsequent decision to withdraw from the city and turn over control to the disloyal Brigade. Conway said the disastrous assault increased tensions while making the region more hostile to U.S. forces: "We felt like we had a method that we wanted to apply to Fallujah, that we ought to probably let the situation settle before we appeared to be attacking out of revenge." Instead, higher ups insisted on the attack, and then demanded troops pull out when the fighting grew fierce. "I would simply say that when you order elements of a Marine division to attack a city, you really need to understand the consequences of that, and not, perhaps, vacillate in the middle of that. Once you commit to do that, you have to stay committed." Marine Col. Jerry Durrant agrees: "The whole Fallujah Brigade thing was a fiasco."

    LIGHTS OUT IN IRAQ: Nineteen months after the invasion of Iraq, the Bush administration has failed to achieve significant reconstruction, contributing to the ongoing frustrations of the Iraqi people. According to Bathsheba Crocker, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, when it comes to economic opportunity, services, and social well-being, "Iraq is actually moving backward." The Los Angeles Times reports the job of restoring electricity to war-torn Iraq is "steeped in errors and misjudgment." Electricity for Iraqis was central to White House reconstruction plans, but today, Iraq's largest source of electricity, the Baiji power plant, "produces less than half the electricity it generated" two years ago. Why is the country still in the dark? Lack of planning, inconsistent leadership and an over-reliance on private contractors. The Bush administration "vastly underestimated the time, money and effort needed to restore the country's power grid." It's indicative of the failures of the entire reconstruction process, still marked by "tainted water supplies, limited sewage treatment and curtailed construction of public buildings." The ongoing failure has dire ramifications for the unstable security situation, producing "a deep reservoir of confusion and anger that feeds the country's deadly insurgency."

    PROBLEMS WITH DEMOCRACY: The increased violence has serious ramifications for the scheduled elections. "We're dealing with a population that hovers between bare tolerance and outright hostility," says a senior U.S. diplomat in Baghdad. "This idea of a functioning democracy here is crazy. We thought that there would be a reprieve after sovereignty, but all hell is breaking loose." The Bush White House is blithely insisting elections will occur in January as planned. Security concerns, however, have left others less confident. Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright stated this weekend on Meet the Press that "It would be lovely if they took place in January, but I sure don't see it." Iraqi officials are also increasingly skeptical. One senior Iraqi official told Newsweek, "I'm convinced that it's not going to happen. It's just not realistic. How is it going to happen?" Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari echoed that thought, saying, "The timetable really depends at the end of the day on the security situation." Some worry that the Bush administration, desperate to avoid the appearance of yet another setback, will stick to the schedule despite ongoing problems. Ghassan Atiyya, director of the independent Iraq Foundation for Development and Democracy, warns, "Badly prepared elections, rather than healing wounds, will open them.""

    While we sympathize with those in the Gulf Coast communities that will soon be affected by Ivan, we are thankful that our friends and families in Florida have been saved from a three-peet. Posted by Hello

    Something Else to Be Concerned About.
    Pathogens in Sea Water

    Note: A short article in the AJC Newspaper on Sunday entitled: "Flesh-eating germs kill Texas dentist" was about a very serious, and potentially deadly bacteria which is usually present in seawater, and can pose serious health issues.
    <------------------------------------->
    The bacteria: vibrio vulnificus is especially prevalent in shellfish, most noteably raw oysters. Persons with a history of liver, or autoimmune diseases are especially at risk, as are those with open cuts/wounds who enter infected seawater, piers, or docks.

    The Centers for Disease Control have online information about this pathogen here.

    Which Suffers Most When A SUV and a Car Collide?
    And How Much Does it Cost to Repair Each?

    Group Warns on SUV - Car Bumper Alignment
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Published: September 12, 2004

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The difference in bumper height between cars and sport utility vehicles leads to costly accident repairs even after low-speed crashes, an insurance group said Sunday.

    Ford Motor Co. vehicles had the lowest repair costs in 10 mph crash tests because their bumpers were most compatible, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety said. Vehicles from Volvo and DaimlerChrysler AG had the highest repair costs.

    The institute wanted to find out what happens when an SUV hit a car from behind and when a car hit an SUV from behind.

    The organization tested five pairs of 2004 and 2005 vehicles, each from the same company: Ford's Taurus sedan and Explorer SUV; Chevrolet's Malibu sedan and TrailBlazer SUV; DaimlerChrysler's Dodge Stratus and Jeep Grand Cherokee; Nissan's Altima sedan and Murano SUV; and Volvo's S40 sedan and XC90 SUV.

    ``We thought that, at a minimum, automakers should be paying attention to the compatibility of the bumpers across their own fleets,'' said Adrian Lund, the institute's chief operating officer.

    Lund said on some vehicles, such as the Dodge Stratus and the Jeep Grand Cherokee, the bumpers passed each other by.

    Ford had the lowest repair cost of $1,256 after the Explorer hit the Taurus -- $555 in parts and labor for the Taurus and $701 for the Explorer. Ford also had the lowest repair cost of $2,608 when the test was reversed and the Taurus hit the Explorer.

    It cost $6,080 to repair the Volvos after the S40 hit the XC90 and $6,129 after the Jeep Grand Cherokee hit the Dodge Stratus. The Nissan vehicles sustained more than $5,000 in damage in both types of crashes, while the Chevrolet vehicles had more than $4,000 in damage in both crashes.

    Lund said there was far more damage, including broken radiators and major leaks that would require the vehicles to be towed, than most people would expect in a 10 mph crash. He also said it was striking that cars could inflict so much damage on SUVs.

    Car bumpers line up reasonably well because federal standards require them to extend from 16 inches to 20 inches from the ground. But no such requirements exist for SUVs, minivans or pickup trucks, so they often have flimsier bumpers or no bumpers at all, Lund said.

    Automakers have promised improvements. Last year, the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, a Washington trade group that represents 10 automakers, announced a voluntary agreement to improve compatibility between vehicles by 2009.


    Protect the Vote
    By BOB HERBERT
    NY Times Op-Ed
    Published: September 13, 2004

    More than 80 percent of the population of Detroit is black. This is very well understood by John Pappageorge, who is white and a Republican state legislator in Michigan. "If we do not suppress the Detroit vote," said Mr. Pappageorge, "we're going to have a tough time in this election."

    Oops! Republicans aren't supposed to actually say they want to suppress black votes. That's so retro. It's so Jim Crow. This is the 21st century, and the thing now is to do the dastardly deed, but never ever acknowledge it.

    That's where our friend Pappageorge went wrong.

    After his startling quote was published several weeks ago in The Detroit Free Press, Mr. Pappageorge, who is 73, apologized and said he certainly never meant to suggest that anything racist or illegal take place. But he reiterated to me in a phone conversation last Friday that he did indeed mean that the vote in Detroit needed to be kept down.

    A lot of other Republicans have similar views about the vote in areas with large African-American populations. Most blacks vote Democratic. If those votes can be suppressed, Republicans benefit. And there is increasing evidence that a big effort to suppress the vote among blacks and some other heavily Democratic voting groups is under way, which is why it is important to keep the following phone number handy:

    1-866-OUR VOTE.

    That's a hot line set up by the Election Protection Coalition, a group that was formed to identify and stamp out attempts to disenfranchise voters, especially in predominantly black and Latino precincts around the country. Posted by Hello

    Sunday, September 12, 2004

    All Hat No Cattle Political Cartoons - You might be a right wing republican if...

    Saturday, September 11, 2004


    $200 Billion, 1,000 Casualities, 6,000 Wounded, Over 30k Iraquis Killed, America Became the Most Feared & Hated Country In The World*, Osama's Network Has Enlarged, There is No End In Sight for the Federal Deficit, Americans Are Politically, Economically, Religiously, and Socially Divided Into Two Hostile Camps, and A Huge Part of It is Due to OIF...The Bush Administration's War of Choice !! Posted by Hello


    Stress Depends On Where You Are in the Food Chain. Posted by Hello

    Will this Yahoo Ever Stop Trying to Pretend there was Linkage??

    TERRORISM – CHENEY HAS NO SHAME:

    The myth that Iraq had a relationship with al Qaeda has been debunked time and time again. That makes no difference to Vice President Dick Cheney, however. Cheney ignored all the evidence once again yesterday and said "that Saddam Hussein had given 'safe harbor' to al Qaeda when he ruled Iraq." Asked to explain this outrageous statement, Cheney's spokeswoman said the vice president in his comments was linking Hussein to Abu Musab Zarqawi, "believed to be behind elements of the insurgency in Iraq."

    No dice. The independent 9/11 Commission, which thoroughly examined all evidence, flatly stated last June that Hussein had no "collaborative relationship" with al Qaeda. Former White House counterterrorism expert Roger Cressey said on 5/12/04, "I think some of the administration's claims of direct links between Zarqawi and al Qaeda as we knew it, frankly, are not true." CIA Director George Tenet testified there was no coordination between Zarqawi and Iraqis, saying, "I did not suggest operational direction and control" of Zarqawi by Iraq. "He thinks of himself as independent." And if the White House truly believes Zarqawi was the link between Saddam and al Qaeda, why did they leave him off the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists list?

    Note: Cheney bases his argument for linkage on the premise that Zarqawi was in Iraq, and thus MUST have had some relationship with Hussein. Unfortunately for Cheney, there is no evidence whatsoever that happened.

    More unfortune for Cheney is the perception around the world that the arrest of a man suspected of being Abu Musab al-Zarqawi on July 29th, 2004 at the Syrian border was intended to play to the US Media, rather than to anything real; in part due to the timing of the release. A sample of the arrested man's DNA was supposedly sent to Bagdad for analysis.

    While the Bush Administration has said nothing about this man, there have been additional appearances by Zarqawi in tapes released on al Jazeera, which seem to show this mystery man is not Zarqawi, and that Zarqawi was alive and active in Faluja as of late August.

    <------------------------------------->

    Al-Zarqawi: America's new bogeyman
    By Roshan Muhammed Salih
    via al Jazeera
    Thursday 01 July 2004, 17:26 Makka Time, 14:26 GMT

    If US intelligence is to be believed, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is the ultimate bad guy. Dangerous, ruthless and elusive, he is one of the most wanted men in the world. Washington has linked al-Zarqawi to al-Qaida and says he is the prime suspect in some of the deadliest attacks of recent years.

    More specifically, US authorities accuse the 38-year-old Jordanian of masterminding a string of spectacular bombings in Iraq. They even increased the bounty on his head on Thursday to $25 million - the same as al-Qaida chief Usama bin Ladin.

    But despite the allegations, little is known about the man himself - and some experts even doubt he is alive.

    Others, meanwhile, have accused the Americans of exaggerating the threat he poses to discredit resistance to their occupation of Iraq. Known to have been born in the suburbs of the Jordanian capital Amman, information about al-Zarqawi's early years is scarce apart from his reputed "piety".

    But what is sure is that around 1990 he travelled to Afghanistan to join other Arabs to fight pro-Soviet forces in the country. Experts speculate it was here that al-Zarqawi imbibed the "Afghan-Arab" spirit of pan-Islamism and the conviction that all Arab regimes were corrupt and un-Islamic.

    "Al-Zarqawi has become ... the perfect bogeyman... He is a foreigner, so it is the perfect way for the Americans to discredit the resistance and say these attacks are not coming from the Iraqi people"

    Paul Rogers, of the UK-based Bradford University's peace studies department, says groups influenced by the Afghan-Arab ideology have four main aims.

    "These groups want to remove American troops from the Gulf," he told Aljazeera.net.

    "They want to overthrow the monarchy in Saudi Arabia which they see as being illegitimate and unworthy of being custodians of the Islamic holy places.

    "They also want a just solution to the Palestine issue, and have a longer-term goal of wanting to see the Arab regimes replaced by some sort of Caliphate."

    After the Russians were defeated in Afghanistan, al-Zarqawi went back to Jordan but was soon arrested after being accused of conspiring to overthrow the monarchy and establish an Islamic state. He spent at least four years in jail and, upon his release, fled the country. Shortly afterwards, Jordan sentenced him to death in absentia for plotting attacks on Israeli and American tourists.

    At this point it is reckoned that al-Zarqawi returned to Afghanistan, where he had several meetings with Usama bin Ladin and fought on his side during the US-led invasion of the country in 2001. It is also alleged he set up a training camp in the western city of Herat, near the border with Iran. Students at his camp reportedly became experts in the manufacture and use of poison gases.

    Al-Zarqawi is then believed to have fled to Iraq in 2001 after losing a leg in a US missile strike on his Afghan base. US officials argue it was at al-Qaida's behest that he moved to Iraq and established links with Ansar al-Islam - a group of Kurdish Islamists.

    There is even speculation that al-Zarqawi was killed during a US attack on an Ansar al-Islam base last year. Arab commentator Abd al-Bari Atwan says it is quite possible that al-Zarqawi is now dead. He told Aljazeera.net: "There is no real proof that he is alive. If he is supposedly moving around freely in Iraq, why haven't Iraqis spoken about him? He can't be that difficult to recognise with his wooden leg."

    The rumours of al-Zarqawi's demise did not stop the Jordanian authorities, though, from accusing him of masterminding and financing the killing of a US official in Amman in October 2002. "If the Americans capture al-Zarqawi, they can claim a great victory and say they have knocked off the head of the organisation and thus rendered the whole network ineffective" He was also named as the brain behind a series of lethal bombings in 2003 from Morocco to Turkey.

    But it is in Iraq that al-Zarqawi is alleged to have been most active. In the run-up to the Iraq war in February 2003, US Secretary of State Colin Powell told the United Nations that al-Zarqawi was an associate of Usama bin Ladin who had sought refuge in Iraq.

    According to Powell, this was a sure sign that Saddam Hussein was courting al-Qaida which, in turn, justified an attack on Iraq. Once again, Bradford University's Rogers casts doubt on the US allegation. "Al-Zarqawi is probably a pretty significant figure but he is being made into this Usama bin Ladin-type symbol, which seems to be a natural thing for the Americans to do. It seems they like to focus on personalities," Rogers said.

    "Al-Zarqawi has become the new superpower, the perfect bogeyman. The Americans are just building him up to mask their failure in Iraq and their inability to maintain law and order. "He is a foreigner, so it is the perfect way for them to discredit the resistance and say these attacks are not coming from the Iraqi people."

    Since last year's US-led invasion of Iraq, al-Zarqawi has been accused of a string of deadly attacks in the country. The assassination of the Shia cleric Ayat Allah Baqir al-Hakim in Najaf was one of the bloodiest attacks in Iraq last year - more than 80 Shia worshippers died. US authorities pinned the blame on al-Zarqawi.

    And in May he is alleged to have been involved in the beheading of a US contractor, Nick Berg, which was shown on a video. A $5 million bounty on al-Zarqawi's head was doubled after US authorities intercepted a letter that they claimed confirmed he was working with al-Qaida to drive the US out of Iraq.

    In it the author accused Iraqi Shias of collaborating with foreign invaders and called for a sectarian conflict in Iraq as a means of undermining the US presence there. The author also claimed to have already undertaken 25 successful attacks against the enemy.

    Arab affairs commentator Abd al-Bari Atwan does not believe the letter was genuine. "There is no real proof that he [al-Zarqawi] is alive. If he is supposedly moving around freely in Iraq why haven't Iraqis spoken about him? He can't be that difficult to recognise with his wooden leg" "I personally think that letter was the product of the intelligence services. Don't forget it was [new Iraqi interim prime minister] Iyad Allawi who distributed the letter to the press.

    "Al-Zarqawi would have had to have been really stupid to send a letter like that which promoted civil war in Iraq."

    Bradford University's Rogers says Washington's fixation with al-Zarqawi is a symptom of its misunderstanding of the threats that it faces. "The Americans like to have a known enemy and they can't think in terms of a coalition and a network which is diffuse.

    "If they capture al-Zarqawi, they can claim a great victory and say they have knocked off the head of the organisation and thus rendered the whole network ineffective." But he added: "These tactics are seriously flawed. Several studies have proved that support for al-Qaida and related groups has increased in the last three years because the amount of attacks have gone up. The US just can't fight their so-called war on terror like this."

    Cheney Needs Help in Keeping it Real !!

    ECONOMY – FORGET UNEMPLOYMENT, WHAT ABOUT EBAY?:

    Vice President Dick Cheney had a novel approach to viewing the economy. "Indicators measure the nation's unemployment rate, consumer spending and other economic milestones, but Vice President Dick Cheney says it misses the hundreds of thousands who make money selling on eBay. 'That's a source that didn't even exist 10 years ago,' Cheney told an audience in Cincinnati on Thursday. 'Four hundred thousand people make some money trading on eBay.'"

    In response, Sen. John Edwards pointed out, "If we only included bake sales and how much money kids make at lemonade stands, this economy would really be cooking."

    Note: And Mr. Cheney...how many of those selling on eBay do it to make a living? or how many obtain pensions, health care, chance for advancement, professional development or enhanced career paths via their eBay sales??

    Friday, September 10, 2004

    Just in Case There Was Any Doubt About Which Blogs are Must Reads for Progressives...

    Note: There are at least two politically oriented blogs online that are must reads for Moderate Democrats, Progressives, and Liberal to Moderate Republicans, and you will see posts from them here on a frequent basis.

    Atrios: At: http://www.atrios.blogspot.com/


    TalkingPointsMemo: At: http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com


    Note: There are many, many others that I read periodically including Alterman, Hauser, and Krugman. I'd read more; but I get so angry at the Junta that I have to stop reading before I start considering extreme measures. There are also several Republican commentators that are ok to read in small doses; but I have not found a worthy Center/Right Blogger that I can go to for a balancing perspective. If you know of one, please let me know.

    A Web Site Devoted to Time Lapse Photography on Ground Zero
    Post 9/11:

    Ground Zero, the Long View
    By SARAH BOXER

    In the fall of 2001 when the dust and ash from the World Trade Center were still in the air, Jim Whitaker, a documentary filmmaker, decided to photograph everything happening at ground zero. By the spring of 2002 three cameras were pointed at the pit, each taking one shot every five minutes, round the clock. Months later, three more cameras were added.

    That was the beginning of Project Rebirth, a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating a historical record of the rebuilding.

    Today www.projectrebirth.org, a Web site produced with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and AOL , opens for public viewing. The site includes links to the architects who are building at ground zero; profiles of 10 people whose lives were altered by Sept. 11; an interview with Kevin Rampe, the president of the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation; the view from a live Web camera at the site; and a timeline that you can click on to watch short movies of milestone events there.

    But the main attraction is the time-lapse photography, showing (on a very tiny screen, 3½ inches by 2½ inches) what the six cameras have been seeing all along. Each camera has a distinctive view and a different reason for being there.

    One camera, on the roof of 30 Vesey Street, at the corner of Church Street, gives a wide view down from the northeast corner of ground zero. The weather comes right at the camera: rain, mist and snow. And the shadows from the buildings nearby often upstage the activity in the pit.

    Another camera is 47 stories up, in the American Express Building at 3 World Financial Center at the northwest corner of the site. It "has an omniscience to it," Mr. Whitaker, the director of Project Rebirth, said.

    So far this camera has provided the most complete view. You can watch the PATH station going up: the girders, the tracks, the first layer, the second layer. And when the Freedom Tower starts to rise, Mr. Whitaker promised, it will look as if the new building were heading right for the camera. As the tower ascends above the lens, the camera will tilt up to watch.

    The camera on the roof of 115 Broadway, the current home of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, is at the southeast corner of ground zero. Because you can see the building's old stone parapets, the pictures from this camera have a nostalgic feel. The snow accumulates and melts on the stonework while the construction unfolds beyond it.

    But the grandest view comes from the southwest corner. Here a Vista Vision camera, the very camera that Cecil B. DeMille used to film "The Ten Commandments," is perched on the ninth floor of the Dow Jones Building, where there is a memorial for Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal reporter abducted and killed in Pakistan in the aftermath of Sept. 11. The picture is crisp and very wide. "You see New York life passing by, cruising by," Mr. Whitaker said. The shots hum with traffic and cloud drift.

    That covers the four corners of the site. What was missing, said Thomas Lappin, the director of photography for Project Rebirth, was a camera at ground level to show "the human scale." So a camera was planted 18 inches off the ground in the graveyard behind St. Paul's Church. Its pictures are filled with tombstones, trees and sky.

    "It's a little reprieve from the full site, the big wound," Mr. Lappin said.

    Another close-up camera was installed on the roof of the firehouse that was closest to the World Trade Center: Engine 10, Ladder 10. Nicknamed "1010," the camera is there partly for symbolic purposes, Mr. Whitaker said, to represent the "heroism of the firehouse." It also shows details well: girders going up, cranes turning crazily round and round and a flag flapping in the foreground.

    That same firehouse perch is now also being shared by a digital Webcam that has just been installed.

    Originally, Mr. Whitaker said, he planned to photograph at ground zero for seven years, but now he thinks he will keep the cameras running for at least 10, at a cost of some $8 million (and this is with the film being donated by Kodak and the processing by Deluxe). He said he was hoping that Project Rebirth would be one of the institutions represented at the World Trade Center site. If it is, he wants to install six screens in one room so that viewers can see the whole building process from all six angles over the course of 20 minutes.

    If not, though, no shot will be lost. Mr. Whitaker, the president of Imagine Entertainment, the movie production company founded by Ron Howard and Brian Grazer, plans to make a documentary with the time-lapse footage. (You can watch a trailer of the movie at the Web site.) And eventually everything that the six cameras have seen, millions of feet of film, he said, will go to the Library of Congress.

    At first Mr. Whitaker approached ground zero with dread and anxiety, he said. But when he saw the pile of rubble visibly diminish in a matter of days, he started feeling more optimistic. He wanted to capture that feeling, he said, and the speed with which the cleanup was taking place. Time-lapse photography was the ticket.

    What is most striking now from the time-lapse view, though, is just how slow the rebuilding has been. The days, the weeks, the snow, the rain, the shadows, the day, the night, the traffic, the seasons all pass. Meanwhile the pit remains. It is the most stable thing in the pictures. And that is the view that has been edited for the Web site. The unedited dailies, Mr. Lappin said, are "incredibly repetitive."

    Not Quite on a Par with Anthrax or Jet Plane Missiles

    14 Governors Receive Mail That's Rigged With Matches
    By FOX BUTTERFIELD
    Published: September 11, 2004

    BOSTON, Sept. 10 - Envelopes containing matches that were rigged to ignite when opened have been received through the mail at the offices of at least 14 state governors in the last two days.

    The mailings, under investigation by the F.B.I. and the Department of Homeland Security, bear a return address that names two inmates at a maximum-security prison in Nevada. But a Nevada corrections official said it was unclear whether they were the actual senders.

    Aides to several governors, including Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, said they had been told by the Federal Bureau of Investigation that the case was being treated as one of domestic terrorism, and Jennifer Meith, a spokeswoman for the Massachusetts Fire Marshal's Office, said that was her understanding as well.

    But spokesmen for the bureau declined to comment on a current investigation, although one of them, Joe Parris, said in Washington, "Cases of this nature are generally handled by the local domestic terrorism squads'' - that is, the joint terrorism task forces set up by the F.B.I. in cities across the country.

    Because of the Nevada connection, the case is being handled by the bureau's office in Las Vegas, Mr. Parris said.

    No one has been injured, although 23 staff members in the office of Gov. Judy Martz of Montana were evacuated on Thursday after one of them opened the envelope sent there. It ignited briefly and then petered out, said Chuck Butler, a spokesman for Governor Martz.

    The envelopes are of a plain white business type. Each of those that have been opened contained a blank piece of paper. Matches were attached in such a way that opening the envelope could cause them to ignite, aides to the governors said. Each bore a return address from the Ely State Prison in eastern Nevada.

    The governors who were sent the envelopes are Democrats and Republicans alike. In addition to Mr. Romney, of Massachusetts, and Ms. Martz, of Montana, they are George E. Pataki of New York, Rick Perry of Texas, Dirk Kempthorne of Idaho, Mike Johanns of Nebraska, Gary Locke of Washington, Olene S. Walker of Utah, Bill Owens of Colorado, Theodore R. Kulongoski of Oregon, Dave Freudenthal of Wyoming, Kenny Guinn of Nevada, Linda Lingle of Hawaii and Janet Napolitano of Arizona.
    <------------------------------------->

    2 - 1 = 4 Again...

    The Dishonesty Thing
    By PAUL KRUGMAN
    NY Times Op-Ed
    Published: September 10, 2004

    It's the dishonesty, stupid. The real issue in the National Guard story isn't what George W. Bush did three decades ago. It's the recent pattern of lies: his assertions that he fulfilled his obligations when he obviously didn't, the White House's repeated claims that it had released all of the relevant documents when it hadn't.

    It's the same pattern of dishonesty, this time involving personal matters that the public can easily understand, that some of us have long seen on policy issues, from global warming to the war in Iraq. On budget matters, which is where I came in, serious analysts now take administration dishonesty for granted.

    It wasn't always that way. Three years ago, those of us who accused the administration of cooking the budget books were ourselves accused, by moderates as well as by Bush loyalists, of being "shrill." These days the coalition of the shrill has widened to include almost every independent budget expert.

    For example, back in February the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities accused the Bush administration of, in effect, playing three-card monte with budget forecasts. It pointed out that the administration's deficit forecast was far above those of independent analysts, and suggested that this exaggeration was deliberate.

    "Overstating the 2004 deficit," the center wrote, "could allow the president to announce significant 'progress' on the deficit in late October - shortly before Election Day - when the Treasury Department announces the final figures."

    Was this a wild accusation from a liberal think tank? No, it's conventional wisdom among experts. Two months ago Stanley Collender, a respected nonpartisan analyst, warned: "At some point over the next few weeks, the Office of Management and Budget will release the administration's midsession budget review and try to convince everyone the federal deficit is falling. Don't believe them."

    He went on to echo the center's analysis. The administration's standard procedure, he said, is to initially issue an unrealistically high deficit forecast, which is "politically motivated or just plain bad." Then, when the actual number comes in below the forecast, officials declare that the deficit is falling, even though it's higher than the previous year's deficit.

    Goldman Sachs says the same. Last month one of its analysts wrote that "the Office of Management and Budget has perfected the art of underpromising and overperforming in terms of its near-term budget deficit forecasts. This creates the impression that the deficit is narrowing when, in fact, it will be up sharply."

    In other words, many reputable analysts think that the Bush administration routinely fakes even its short-term budget forecasts for the purposes of political spin. And the fakery in its long-term forecasts is much worse.

    The administration claims to have a plan to cut the deficit in half over the next five years. But even Bruce Bartlett, a longtime tax-cut advocate, points out that "projections showing deficits falling assume that Bush's tax cuts expire on schedule." But Mr. Bush wants those tax cuts made permanent. That is, the administration has a "plan" to reduce the deficit that depends on Congress's not passing its own legislation.

    Sounding definitely shrill, Mr. Bartlett says that "anyone who thinks we can overcome our fiscal mess without higher taxes is in denial." Far from backing down on his tax cuts, however, Mr. Bush is proposing to push the budget much deeper into the red with privatization programs that purport to offer something for nothing.

    As Newsweek's Allan Sloan writes, "The president didn't exactly burden us with details about paying for all this. It's great marketing: show your audience the goodies but not the price tag. It's like going to the supermarket, picking out your stuff and taking it home without stopping at the checkout line to pay. The bill? That will come later."

    Longtime readers will remember that that's exactly what I said, shrilly, about Mr. Bush's proposals during the 2000 campaign. Once again, he's running on the claim that 2 - 1 = 4.

    So what's the real plan? Some not usually shrill people think that Mr. Bush will simply refuse to face reality until it comes crashing in: Paul Volcker, the former Federal Reserve chairman, says there's a 75 percent chance of a financial crisis in the next five years.

    Nobody knows what Mr. Bush would really do about taxes and spending in a second term. What we do know is that on this, as on many matters, he won't tell the truth.

    Thursday, September 09, 2004

    What Did the Bush Administration Have to Say About Those That Left?
    And What have We Heard From Them Since They Left???

    Note: There have been a few prominent voices of former Bush Administration officials who have spoken, and written about their time in office; but there seem to be two distinct trends detectable in the status of the departees. Either they left to join/rejoin a company that was involved in the exact field where they worked for the adminstration as a regulator; or they retired. Those going into corporate entities usually were hired by the companies as lobbyists, not for technical, R&D, or administration positions.

    Surveying the list of some who left, a few wrote books critical of the Administration, and were in the News daily for a short time; but are almost invisible after the first flurry of departure activity and the release of their books. See if you can envision the present situation of some of the departees:


    Paul O'Neill: Treasury Secretary
    Chrisie Todd Whitman: EPA Director
    Richard A. Clark:: Senior Adviser/Counter Terrorism
    Ari Fleischer: Press Secretary
    Thomas White: Secretary of the Army
    Rosario Marin: US Treasurer
    John Yoo: Deputy in the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC)
    Lawrence Lindsey:
    Glenn Hubbard:
    Mitch Daniels: Budget Director
    Bradford Berenson: Associate White House Counsel
    Brett Kavanaugh: Associate White House Counsel
    H. Chris Bartolumucci: Associate White House Counsel
    Greg Thielmann: State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research
    Roger Cressey: Counter Terrorism Assistant at the National Security Council
    Flynt Leverett: Specialist in Middle East issues at the National Security Council
    Ken Pollack: CIA analyst and Iraq expert
    Thomas A. Scully: HHS Director of the Medicare Office
    Max Boot: senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations
    John DiIulio: former director of the Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.
    George Tenet: CIA Director
    Rand Beers:Anti-Terror Administrator at NSC
    James Capretta: Office of Management & Budget
    Jack Howard: Legislative Affairs
    Robert Marsh: Legislative Affairs
    Elizabeth Blackburn: Council on BioEthics
    William May: Council on BioEthics
    WIlliam Hansen: Deputy Secretary of Education
    Robert Jordan: Ambassador to Saudia Arabia
    Wendy Sherman: Assist. Secretary for Legislative Affairs
    Jay Bybee: Asst. Attorney General
    Jack Goldsmith: Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC)

    After Almost a Year Of Rampage In Darfur by the Arab-Muslim Dominated Sudanese Government, Only An Idiot Would Fail To See Their Crimes As Genocide

    09 Sep 2004, 15:44 UTC
    Voice of America: Colin Powell
    U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell says genocide has taken place -- and may still be occurring -- in Sudan's western Darfur region

    Mr. Powell told a Senate panel Thursday the Sudanese government and pro-government militia have carried out murders, rapes, and other assaults against black Africans in Darfur.

    He said the violence amounts to genocide because the perpetrators intended to destroy a group of people in whole or in part -- the official definition of genocide under the 1948 Geneva Convention.

    "The evidence leads the United States to the conclusion, that genocide has occurred and may still be occurring in Darfur. We believe the evidence corroborate the specific intent of the perpertrators to destroy a group in whole or in part," says Mr. Powell.

    That convention allows signatories to call on the United Nations to take action to prevent genocide. Mr. Powell said the United States was calling for a full U.N. investigation, with, in his words, "a view to ensuring accountability."

    Mr. Powell said the United States concluded genocide was occurring after interviewing more than 1,000 Sudanese refugees in neighboring Chad.

    Note: Of course saying it is different than seeing it. Both the UN and the US have been loathe to call it genocide since that requires action by the UN, rather than the feeble efforts which have thus far been attempted solely by African Peace Keeping Forces which have proved to be in-effective in dealing with the crisis.

    The majority Arab-Muslim government in Khartoum is actively working to eradicate the Dar-fur Black-Muslim subsistence farmers in West Sudan, which has thus far caused at least a million refugees to have crossed the border into neighboring Chad to escape the rampage.

    As Jerry Fowler pointed out in his article: "In Sudan, Staring Genocide in the Face" on June 6th. 2004:

    When asked why their villages were attacked and burned, most of the refugees said it was because of their black skin. They believe that the Khartoum-based government of President Omar Hassan Bashir wants to give their land to his Janjaweed allies who, like him, are Arab. Members of the Zaghawa, Masalit, Fur and other black African tribes will simply have to go. Like the Janjaweed, the Darfurians are Muslims. But culturally and ethnically they retain an African identity, of which they are proud. They also tend to be more settled than the nomadic Janjaweed. Racism undoubtedly does play a part in Bashir's support of the Janjaweed, as the blacks are seen as inferior.

    Ironically, the prospects for peace in southern Sudan also contribute to the conflict. Fearing that an end to the generation-long rebellion in southern Sudan will divide access to the country's resources between the ruling elite in Khartoum and the southerners and condemn Darfur to permanent second-class status, some Darfurians launched an armed rebellion in early 2003. Khartoum responded by unleashing the Janjaweed and its own military on the black African civilian population. The result was what a team of U.N. investigators last month called a "reign of terror."

    All of which is ample evidence to prove again, that genocide and war are two sides of the same coin: an attempt by one group to appropriate the land and assets of another group by force. Those who start wars and genocide are not motivated by a desire to pacify a group, as much as it is to decimate, destroy, and control the assets of another group. This holds true for "The War on Drugs", "The War on Terrorism", "The War In Iraq", etc, etc. Whether this principle is universally true or not really doesn't matter, as the Muslim insurgency makes abundantly clear in the Middle East. Wars are the dark side of our species' hunter-gatherer heritage.

    A Detailed Review of Lt. Bush's Guard Service Demonstates He Not Only Was AWOL; but That He Has Attempted to Cover It Up for Thirty Years, While Also Attempting to Imply He Served With Honor When It is Plain He Did Not !

    Stung!



    A swarm of new media stories on young George W. Bush's dereliction of
    duty pops his heroic-leadership bubble.


    By Eric Boehlert @ Salon.com


    Sept. 9, 2004

    On Feb. 13, as controversy swirled around President Bush's
    service in the Texas Air National Guard during the Vietnam War, the White House
    released more than 400 pages of documents on the press corps, proving, it
    claimed, that Bush had served honorably and fulfilled his commitment. The sudden
    rush of records, often redundant, jumbled and out of chronological order,
    generally left reporters baffled. From Bush's point of view, the document dump
    was a political success, as the controversy cooled and the paper trail ran dry.


    In retrospect, it's doubtful that even White House aides understood all the
    information embedded in the records, specifically the payroll documents. It's
    also unlikely they realized how damaging the information could be when read in
    the proper context. Seven months later, the document dump is coming back to
    haunt the White House, thanks to researcher Paul Lukasiak, who has spent that
    time closely examining the paperwork, and more important, analyzing U.S.
    statutory law, Department of Defense regulations, and Air Force policies and
    procedures of the 1960s and 1970s. As a result, Lukasiak arrived at the
    overwhelming conclusion that not only did Bush walk away from his final two
    years of military obligation, coming dangerously close to desertion, but he
    attempted to cover up his absenteeism through swindle and fraud.


    Lukasiak's findings, detailed on his Web site the AWOL Project, have since been
    bolstered and augmented by independent research by the Boston Globe and the
    Associated Press. On Wednesday, CBS News reported what may be among the most
    damaging details yet: that Bush's squadron commander, the late Col. Jerry
    Killian, complained he was being pressured by higher-ups to give Bush a
    favorable evaluation after he suspended him from flying for failure to take his
    annual physical exam. Titled "CYA," Killian's memo concluded, "I'm having
    trouble running interference and doing my job."


    But for the last several months, Lukasiak has practically had the AWOL story
    to himself, as the mainstream media mostly seemed silenced by the big February
    document release, the daunting task of decoding military personnel records, and
    the repeated refrain from the Bush White House that the president was honorably
    discharged. Among the three most compelling conclusions reached by Lukasiak in
    his new, meticulous research, are:



    Bush's request to transfer to an Alabama Guard unit in 1972, in order to
    work on the Senate campaign of a family friend, Lukasiak found, was not designed to be temporary, but
    rather was Bush's attempt to sever ties completely with the Texas Air National
    Guard and find a new, permanent unit in Alabama for which he was ineligible,
    where he wouldn't have to do any training during his final two years. His
    superiors in Texas essentially covered for Bush's getaway. 


    However, the Air
    Reserve Personnel Center (ARPC) in Denver, Colo., which had final say, uncovered
    the attempted scam, put an end to it, and admonished Bush's superiors for
    endorsing Bush's bogus request. (The CBS News report shows that the locals were
    chafing at interference from "higher-ups" presumably connected to the powerful
    Bush family.) In the interim, Bush simply ignored his weekend duties for nearly
    six straight months, not bothering to show up at military units in either
    Alabama or Texas.


    • The White House has conceded that Bush missed some required weekend training
      drills, but insists Bush promptly made up those drills and earned enough annual
      credits for an honorable discharge. In fact, based on the procedures in
      place at the time requiring that makeup dates be completed within 15 days before
      or 30 days after the date of the drill missed, between half and two-thirds of
      the points credited to Bush for substitute training were fraudulent. Some of the
      points credited to Bush were "earned" nine weeks beyond the date of the missed
      drill. According to Air Force policy, Bush could not have received permission
      for substitute training that far outside the accepted parameters. The evidence
      is also overwhelming that Bush failed to get authorization for substitute
      training in advance, suggesting the points were awarded by the Texas Air
      National Guard retroactively and without any supporting paperwork. The
      fraudulent points are key, because without them Bush would have fallen far short
      of meeting his annual obligation, which meant he should have been transferred to
      active duty for 24 months and made eligible for service in Vietnam.
    • On Oct. 1, 1973, Bush received an honorable discharge from the Texas Air
      National Guard in order to move to Boston and attend Harvard Business School,
      where he was still obligated to find a unit in Massachusetts to fulfill his
      remaining nine months of duty, or face being placed on active duty. Once again,
      Bush made no such effort. But the Air Force in Denver, acting retroactively, in
      effect overturned Bush's honorable discharge and placed him on "Inactive Status"
      effective Sept. 15, 1973. When Bush left Texas, his personnel file was sent to
      Denver for review. The ARPC quickly realized Bush had failed to take a required
      physical exam, his Texas superior could not account for his whereabouts covering
      nearly a 12-month period, and because of absenteeism Bush had failed to
      "satisfactorily participate" as a member of the Texas Air National Guard. Bush's
      "Inactive Status" meant his relationship with the Air Force (and the Guard) was
      severed and he was therefore eligible for the draft.

      Soon afterward, large gaps began appearing in Bush's paper trail. Lukasiak
      concludes that only last-minute intervention, likely from Bush's local Houston
      draft board, saved him from active duty, as well as finally securing his
      honorable discharge, removing his "Inactive Status." Ironically, that means
      strings were pulled to get Bush out of the Guard in 1973, just as they were
      pulled to get him enrolled in 1968.


      The AWOL Project's conclusions are bound to give Dan Bartlett concern. The
      White House director of communications has served as Bush's point person over
      the last five years regarding inquiries about National Guard service. Dating
      back to the 2000 campaign and right up to this day, Bartlett has routinely
      changed his stories regarding Bush's service depending on what information was
      available to the public. As more and more documents trickle out and it becomes
      increasingly obvious Bush received wildly favorable treatment during his Guard
      days while doing his best to skirt his duties, Bartlett is left trying to stake
      out explanations that haven't already been discredited. And those options are
      shrinking.


      Bartlett's latest flip-flop surrounds Bush's failure to locate a new Guard
      unit and fulfill his duty while attending Harvard Business School. In 1999,
      Bartlett said Bush had reported for duty at a Massachusetts Guard unit as
      required. This week Bartlett conceded to the Boston Globe he must have
      "misspoke," because it's clear Bush made no effort whatsoever to serve out his
      term while living in Boston. That answer is reminiscent of Bartlett's response
      during the 2000 campaign when asked about Bush's failure to take a required
      military physical in 1972: "As he was not flying, there was no reason for him to
      take a flight physical exam." But that response is directly contradicted by the
      Air Force Specialty Code, which required a physical regardless of flight status.


      On Wednesday, Bartlett told CBS News, in response to Jerry Killian's memos,
      "It's impossible to read the mind of a dead man." He then reverted to his usual
      refrain: "The official files tell the facts," Bartlett said. "And the facts are
      President Bush served. He served honorably. And that's why he was honorably
      discharged."


      The shifting explanations and obfuscations coming from the White House are
      one reason why the Guard story remains dangerous for Bush. The controversy,
      after all, is not merely about how he received a million dollars' worth of free
      pilot training and then stiffed the government when it came time to pay it back
      in service. It's also about how, for the last decade, Bush and his advisors have
      done everything possible to distort, if not erase, the truth about Bush's
      service record in order to advance his political career.


      The detailed research from Lukasiak, a Philadelphia caterer, deals strictly
      with the contents of Bush's military service documents, particularly those after
      April 1972, when Bush decided -- on his own -- to stop flying. But what's
      fascinating is that when recent news reports from Salon, the Associated Press,
      CBS and the Boston Globe are layered on top of the AWOL Project research, they
      fit together almost seamlessly, revealing a vivid portrait of Bush as a young
      man who evaded his military service.


    • Last week Salon reported that in late 1972 George H.W. Bush
      phoned a longtime Bush family confidant in Alabama, Jimmy Allison, to ask if
      there was room on the local campaign he was managing for Bush's troublesome son
      George, or "Georgie" as he was called. "The impression I had was that Georgie
      was raising a lot of hell in Houston, getting in trouble and embarrassing the
      family, and they just really wanted to get him out of Houston and under Jimmy's
      wing," Linda Allison, his widow, told Salon. "After about a month I asked Jimmy
      what was Georgie's job, because I couldn't figure it out. I never saw him do
      anything," said Allison. Asked if she'd ever seen Bush in a uniform, Allison
      said: "Good lord, no. I had no idea that the National Guard was involved in his
      life in any way."
    • This week a new advocacy group calling itself Texans for Truth announced
      that it will air a television commercial featuring a former Alabama National
      Guard pilot who insists he never saw Bush in 1972 at the small Guard unit at
      Dannelly Air National Guard base in Montgomery, where the president claims he
      served. The pilot, Bob Mintz, has told a consistent tale. In February, he told
      the Memphis Flyer newspaper: "There's no way we wouldn't have noticed a strange
      rooster in the henhouse, especially since we were looking for him." Mintz was
      referring to the news on the base that somebody from Texas with political
      influence was coming to train with the unit. "I was looking for him,"
      Mintz said.
    • On Wednesday night, on CBS's "60 Minutes," in an interview with Dan Rather,
      former Texas Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes went public for the first time about how he
      pulled strings to get the young Bush a coveted slot, at the height of the
      Vietnam War, in the Texas Air National Guard. "I've thought about it an awful
      lot and you walk through the Vietnam memorial, particularly at night like I did
      a few months ago and, I tell you, ... reflecting back, I'm very sorry about it,
      but you know, it happened and it was because of my ambition, my youth and my
      lack of understanding. But it happened and it's not ... something I'm
      necessarily proud of."

      CBS also reported on four documents from the personal files of Col. Jerry
      Killian, Bush's squadron commander. One memo ordered Bush to take "an annual
      physical examination" -- an order he refused. CBS reports: "On August 1, 1972,
      Col. Killian grounded Lt. Bush for failure to perform to U.S. Air Force/Texas
      Air National Guard standards and for failure to take his annual physical as
      ordered. A year after Lt. Bush's suspension from flying, Killian was asked to
      write another assessment. Killian's memo, titled 'CYA,' reads he is being
      pressured by higher-ups to give the young pilot a favorable yearly evaluation;
      to, in effect, sugarcoat his review. He refuses, saying, 'I'm having trouble
      running interference and doing my job.'"


    • This week, the A.P. reported that a thorough analysis of Bush's military
      documents indicates obvious gaps in his service along with equally gratuitous
      gaps in his paperwork. Specifically missing are: "A report from the Texas Air
      National Guard to Bush's local draft board certifying that Bush remained in good
      standing." "Records of a required investigation into why Bush lost flight
      status." "A written acknowledgment from Bush that he had received the orders
      grounding him." "Reports of formal counseling sessions Bush was required to have
      after missing more than three training sessions." "A signed statement from Bush
      acknowledging he could be called to active duty if he did not promptly transfer
      to another guard unit after leaving Texas."
    • In February of this year, Salon interviewed Bill Burkett, a
      retired lieutenant colonel in the Texas National Guard, who claims he observed
      aides to Bush going through his military file in 1997 to remove any embarrassing
      information, tossing documents in the trash, allegedly the types of documents
      that might help answer many of the unanswered questions surrounding Bush's Guard
      service. "Activities occurred in order to, in my opinion, inappropriately build
      a false image of the governor's military service," Burkett told Salon. Burkett
      first went public with his accusations in 1998 and has told the same story
      consistently for six years.
    • Also last February, Salon reported that Bush's mysterious decision in the
      spring of 1972 to stop flying and subsequently refuse to take a physical exam
      came at the same time the Air Force announced its Medical Service Drug Abuse
      Testing Program, which meant random drug testing for pilots, including
      Guardsmen.

      Meanwhile, the White House has not been able to produce anything or anybody
      with any credibility to contradict the growing body of evidence that suggests
      Bush deliberately walked away from his duties and that Bush and his handlers
      continue to lie about his military service. Retired Lt. Col. John Calhoun was
      the one witness who was brought forward this year to back up Bush's story that
      he actually showed up in Alabama. He recalled seeing Bush at training sessions
      between "eight to ten times from May to October 1972." Yet not even Bush's own
      payroll records suggest he did drills in Alabama at the time Calhoun allegedly
      spotted him. (Amazingly, ABC News on Wednesday used Calhoun as a credible
      witness to bolster Bush's account, despite the fact that the dates Calhoun cites
      don't even match up with Bush's.)


      There's also no paper trail to support Bush's claim that he completed any
      service after 1972. As Lukasiak notes, each substitute training Bush completed,
      and there were many, should have generated authorized AF Form 40a's: "All told,
      Bush performed 'substitute training' on at least 20 days. Thus there should be,
      at the very least, 20 AF Form 40a's with the name of the officer who authorized
      the training in advance, the name and signature of the officer who supervised
      the training, and Bush's own signature." But not one such form exists.


      A similar absence of information surrounds Bush's dubious explanation of his
      attempted transfer to Alabama. The move should have generated a small mountain
      of paperwork. Under normal circumstances, 10 steps are required to transfer:


      1) The Guardsman announces that he will need to relocate.


      2) His personnel officer explains the relocation policies and procedures to
      him.


      3) The Guardsman signs an acknowledgment that he has received the relocation
      counseling.


      4) The personnel officer gives the Guardsman a certification of satisfactory
      participation, which he will need to get approval for a transfer.


      5) The Guardsman locates an appropriate Ready Reserve position with a new
      unit, and submits a "Transfer Request Form" (Form 1288) and a new "Ready Reserve
      Service Agreement (Form 1644), along with the certification of satisfactory
      participation, to the "receiving unit."


      6) The receiving unit "indorses" the request on the back of the Form 1288,
      and provides the Guardsman with certification that an appropriate position is
      available in that unit.


      7) The Guardsman gives Form 1288, Form 1644, the certification of an
      appropriate position, and a letter of resignation to his current unit commander.


      8) The unit commander indorses the request, and forwards it to the state
      adjutant general.


      9) The adjutant general approves the request, and discharges the Guardsman
      from the Air National Guard to the Air Force Reserves.


      10) The Air Force Reserves assigns the former Guardsman to his new unit.


      In Bush's case, according to Lukasiak's research, "There is no statement of
      counseling, no certification of satisfactory performance, no certification of a
      suitable vacancy, no letter of resignation, no discharge papers, no discharge
      orders, and no reassignment orders."


      There are also indications that Bush -- unwilling to fly, take a physical or
      report for duty -- was trying to mislead Guard officials with his transfer
      application. When asked for his permanent address, Bush listed the P.O. box for
      the Alabama campaign headquarters he worked for temporarily. When asked to note
      his Air Force Specialty Code, Bush wrote down 1125B, the designation for F-89 or
      F-94 pilots. At the time of his transfer request, both of these planes had been
      retired from service in all components of the Air Force, including the Guard and
      Reserves. Bush's accurate code was 1125D, designing an F-102 pilot. At the time,
      F-102 planes were still very much in use. It was an error Bush made more than
      once on the application. Lukasiak writes: "The odds of Bush being able to scam
      his way into a non-training unit [in Alabama] would be enhanced if his specific
      skill set was one which was no longer useful to the Air Force."


      In May 1972, Bush was informed that the unit in Alabama he requested was
      clearly unsuitable for a pilot of his stature, yet he pressed on, and his Texas
      superiors endorsed the transfer request and submitted it. But the Denver
      headquarters caught the scam and rejected it. The Texas chief of military
      personnel sent a curt warning to Bush's unit about the clearly bogus request:
      "Attention is invited to basic communication."


      Lukasiak's work has created a storm in the blogosphere. (He's also a Salon
      Table Talk member, and an
      active thread is devoted to his research.) He makes no secret of his
      conviction that Bush used his family connections to evade the draft. The AWOL
      Project concludes: "Bush simply blew off his last two years of required service,
      and was able to get away with it because he came from a politically influential
      family. There is no other explanation for Bush's records. None."


      Of course none of that stopped Bush from hyping his military service as he
      launched his political career. In 1978, during an unsuccessful run for Congress
      in west Texas, Bush produced campaign literature that claimed he had served "in
      the US Air Force and the Texas Air National Guard." In 1999, when asked by an
      A.P. reporter why Bush had claimed to have served specifically with the U.S. Air
      Force when he'd only been in the National Guard, Bush spokeswoman Karen Hughes
      insisted the claim was accurate because when Bush attended flight school for the
      Air National Guard he was considered to be on active duty for the Air Force.
      That was plainly false, as the A.P. noted, citing Air Force policy, which stated
      Guardsmen are never considered to be members of the Air Force active duty.


      Just four years after escaping his military obligations, Bush was already
      trying to rewrite his military record for political gain. Bush said he strongly
      supported the Vietnam War, obscuring how he spent several years, after securing
      a safe spot in the National Guard, evading his military obligation. Now
      President Bush orders Guardsmen and Reservists to shoulder an unprecedented load
      -- physically, financially and emotionally -- in the war in Iraq. As new
      information at last begins to emerge about what he really did, Bush and his
      aides are still at work covering up the record. His ultimate war is with the
      truth about his past.


    And More Nastiness from another Republican Office Seeker

    Obama says voters, God should judge him
    THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -- Democratic Senatorial Candidate Barack Obama, responding to Republican Alan Keyes' claim that Jesus would not vote for Obama in the U.S. Senate race, said Wednesday he will let God judge whether he is a good Christian and Illinois voters judge whether he would make a good senator.

    "I don't concern myself too much with Mr. Keyes' judgment on either matter," Obama said.

    Keyes has said Obama's support of abortion rights means Jesus could not vote for him. He singled out Obama's opposition to a state Senate bill that supporters said would have protected any fetuses that survived an attempted abortion; critics said the bill was a political stunt that could have restricted access to all abortions.

    "Christ would not vote for Barack Obama because Barack Obama has voted to behave in a way that it is inconceivable for Christ to have behaved," said Keyes, who opposes abortion even when the pregnancy is a result of rape or incest.

    During a campaign stop, Obama said he does not question Keyes' religious beliefs and Keyes should give him the same consideration.

    "I will leave Mr. Keyes to the theological speculations. My job is to focus on the issues that voters care about - jobs, health care, education," Obama said. He added, "I'm not running to be the minister of Illinois. I'm running to be its United States senator."

    He said until a fetus can survive on its own, the issue of abortion is an ethical and religious choice that should be made by the mother.
    <------------------------------------->
    Note: It certainly appears that several Republican candidates cannot resist making personal attacks against anyone who does not acquiese to the practices, policies, opinions, or religious orientation of the current administration. As has been said by others, "...if you cannot run on your record, you run down your opponent".

    Wednesday, September 08, 2004

    Nasty, Short, Brutish, Uncivil, and Flagrantly Deceptive:
    Just Another Republican VP Attack Dog

    A Disgraceful Campaign Speech
    NY Times Editorial
    Published: September 9, 2004

    There are some things a presidential campaign should steer clear of, through innate good taste, prudence or just a sensible fear of a voter backlash. We'd have thought that both the Kerry and Bush camps would instinctively know that it would be appalling to suggest that terrorists were rooting for one side or another in this race.

    But Vice President Dick Cheney seemed to breach that unspoken barrier this week in Des Moines. If John Kerry was elected president, Mr. Cheney warned the crowd, "the danger is that we'll get hit again." In a long, rather rambling statement, he said the United States might then fall back into a "pre-9/11 mind-set" that "these terrorist attacks are just criminal acts."

    At the very best, Mr. Cheney was speaking loosely and carelessly about the area in this campaign that deserves the most careful and serious discussion. It sounds to us more likely that he stepped across a line that the Bush campaign team had flirted with throughout its convention, telling his audience that re-electing the president would be the only way to stay safe from another attack.

    There is a danger that we'll be hit again no matter who is elected president this November, as President Bush himself has said on many occasions. The danger might be a bit less if the current administration had chosen to spend less on tax cuts for the wealthy and more on protecting our ports, securing nuclear materials in Russia and establishing an enforceable immigration policy that would keep better track of people who enter the country from abroad.

    Immigration and homeland security strategies are policy fights, fair game for a political campaign. What's totally unacceptable is to tell the American people that the mere act of voting for your opponent opens the door to a terrorist attack. For Mr. Cheney to suggest that is flat wrong. There was a time in this country when elected officials knew how to separate the position from the person. The American people, we're sure, would like to return to it.

    War...what is it good for?

    A Mythic Reality
    By PAUL KRUGMAN
    NY Times Op-Ed
    Published: September 7, 2004

    The best book I've read about America after 9/11 isn't about either America or 9/11. It's "War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning," an essay on the psychology of war by Chris Hedges, a veteran war correspondent. Better than any poll analysis or focus group, it explains why President Bush, despite policy failures at home and abroad, is ahead in the polls.

    War, Mr. Hedges says, plays to some fundamental urges. "Lurking beneath the surface of every society, including ours," he says, "is the passionate yearning for a nationalist cause that exalts us, the kind that war alone is able to deliver." When war psychology takes hold, the public believes, temporarily, in a "mythic reality" in which our nation is purely good, our enemies are purely evil, and anyone who isn't our ally is our enemy.

    This state of mind works greatly to the benefit of those in power.

    One striking part of the book describes Argentina's reaction to the 1982 Falklands war. Gen. Leopoldo Galtieri, the leader of the country's military junta, cynically launched that war to distract the public from the failure of his economic policies. It worked: "The junta, which had been on the verge of collapse" just before the war, "instantly became the saviors of the country."

    The point is that once war psychology takes hold, the public desperately wants to believe in its leadership, and ascribes heroic qualities to even the least deserving ruler. National adulation for the junta ended only after a humiliating military defeat.

    George W. Bush isn't General Galtieri: America really was attacked on 9/11, and any president would have followed up with a counterstrike against the Taliban. Yet the Bush administration, like the Argentine junta, derived enormous political benefit from the impulse of a nation at war to rally around its leader.

    Another president might have refrained from exploiting that surge of support for partisan gain; Mr. Bush didn't.

    And his administration has sought to perpetuate the war psychology that makes such exploitation possible.

    Step by step, the fight against Al Qaeda became a universal "war on terror," then a confrontation with the "axis of evil," then a war against all evil everywhere. Nobody knows where it all ends.

    What is clear is that whenever political debate turns to Mr. Bush's actual record in office, his popularity sinks. Only by doing whatever it takes to change the subject to the war on terror - not to what he's actually doing about terrorist threats, but to his "leadership," whatever that means - can he get a bump in the polls.

    Last week's convention made it clear that Mr. Bush intends to use what's left of his heroic image to win the election, and early polls suggest that the strategy may be working. What can John Kerry do?

    Campaigning exclusively on domestic issues won't work. Mr. Bush must be held to account for his dismal record on jobs, health care and the environment. But as Mr. Hedges writes, when war psychology makes a public yearn to believe in its leaders, "there is little that logic or fact or truth can do to alter the experience."

    To win, the Kerry campaign has to convince a significant number of voters that the self-proclaimed "war president" isn't an effective war leader - he only plays one on TV.

    This charge has the virtue of being true. It's hard to find a nonpartisan national security analyst with a good word for the Bush administration's foreign policy. Iraq, in particular, is a slow-motion disaster brought on by wishful thinking, cronyism and epic incompetence.

    If I were running the Kerry campaign, I'd remind people frequently about Mr. Bush's flight-suit photo-op, when he declared the end of major combat. In fact, the war goes on unabated. News coverage of Iraq dropped off sharply after the supposed transfer of sovereignty on June 28, but as many American soldiers have died since the transfer as in the original invasion.

    And I'd point out that while Mr. Bush spared no effort preparing for his carrier landing - he even received underwater survival training in the White House pool - he didn't prepare for things that actually mattered, like securing and rebuilding Iraq after Baghdad fell.

    Will it work? I don't know. But to win, Mr. Kerry must try to puncture the myth that Mr. Bush's handlers have so assiduously created.

    Senator John Kerry, the Democratic presidential nominee, said in a statement, "Only George W. Bush could celebrate over a record budget deficit."

    Deficit Analysis and Bush Differ
    By EDMUND L. ANDREWS

    WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 - Even if the United States saved billions of dollars by withdrawing all troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, President Bush would still be unlikely to fulfill his promise to reduce the federal budget deficit by half within five years, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said Tuesday.

    In the final independent assessment of Mr. Bush's fiscal policies before the November election, the Congressional agency predicted that, if no existing laws changed, the federal deficit would see a much smaller decline, to $312 billion in 2009 from a record of $422 billion in 2004.

    Vice President Dick Cheney, campaigning in Des Moines, said the report's projected deficit for the current year was about $56 billion less than earlier predicted.

    "That's a direct result of economic growth that came about as a result of the tax changes that the president put through, and the Congress supported," Mr. Cheney said.

    Senator John Kerry, the Democratic presidential nominee, said in a statement, "Only George W. Bush could celebrate over a record budget deficit."

    Over the next 10 years, the budget office said, the federal debt could swell by $4.9 trillion and climb rapidly after that as the nation's baby boomers start to draw Social Security and Medicare.

    If Mr. Bush persuades Congress to make his tax cuts permanent, the federal deficit will increase to about $500 billion in 2009. The new estimate is the first time the Congressional agency has projected that Mr. Bush will probably fail to achieve his goal of reducing the deficit by half in five years.

    Deficits have soared under Mr. Bush, who took office when the budget had a surplus of more than $150 billion and is now presiding over the second record deficit in a row.

    Measured as a percentage of the total economy, which most economists prefer, the deficit would reach 3.6 percent of the gross domestic product this year - high, but not as big a percentage as the deficits of the 1980's and early 1990's.

    But this new report is sobering because Congressional analysts reached their conclusions even when they used extremely optimistic assumptions about war costs in Iraq and robust economic growth over the next few years.

    "The message is that you cannot grow your way out of this," said Douglas J. Holtz-Eakin, director of the Congressional Budget Office.

    If anything, Congressional analysts were more optimistic than the White House or Wall Street about economic growth, predicting that the economy would grow by 4.5 percent this year and 4.1 percent in 2005.

    The budget office also estimated the fiscal outlook with three different assumptions about the course of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, including the possibility that no new money would be needed after this year.

    Stripping out all war costs for the two countries after this year, congressional analysts estimated, the federal government would save $536 billion over the next five years. But making Mr. Bush's tax cuts permanent, one of the president's top priorities, would cost $549 billion through 2009 and $2.2 trillion through 2014.

    The office also took note of the cost to the Treasury of fixing the Alternative Minimum Tax, a set of rules that were originally designed to stop people from taking excessive advantage of loopholes. Because the tax is not adjusted for inflation, it is expected to lead to higher taxes for millions of families by the end of the decade. Republicans and Democrats agree they do not want that to happen, but the cost of preventing it would add more than $400 billion to the debt by the end of 2014.

    Democrats said the report showed that Mr. Bush, with his tax cuts and spending policies, had been reckless in transforming a record surplus to a record deficit, just a few years before retiring baby-boomers start to drive up Social Security and Medicare entitlement costs by tens of billions of dollars a year.

    "When the Bush administration took office in 2001, C.B.O. projected a $397 billion surplus for 2004," said Representative John M. Spratt Jr. of South Carolina, the senior Democrat on the House Budget Committee. "Under the fiscal policies of this administration, the bottom line of the budget has worsened by $819 billion in 2004 alone."

    Republicans countered by saying that the federal deficit this year would be smaller, and tax revenues would be higher, than either the administration or the Congressional Budget Office predicted in January and February. "This report underscores that our policies are working to create a stronger economy, more jobs and a lower deficit," said Representative Jim Nussle, Republican of Iowa and chairman of the House Budget Committee.

    Chad Kolton, a spokesman for the White House Office of Management and Budget, said the main difference between administration and Congressional estimates stemmed from differences in plans to restrain spending on discretionary programs - those that are not part of mandatory programs like Social Security and Medicare or part of the government's debt obligations.

    "We have very reasonable estimates for growth," Mr. Kolton said. "If spending control is maintained, we can cut the deficit in half over the next five years."

    But the Congressional Budget Office's assumptions about discretionary spending were at least as conservative as those of the White House. Congressional analysts assumed that discretionary spending would rise at the rate of inflation, which is running slightly above 2 percent a year. The White House has said it will hold all discretionary spending, including defense spending, to a 4 percent increase each year.

    In presenting the latest projections today, Mr. Holtz-Eakin expressed greater concern about the long-term fiscal problems that begin when baby boomers start to retire.

    The first impact, Mr. Holtz-Eakin said, will be that the nation's labor force and the overall economy will grow more slowly. The more dramatic impact will be a sharp rise in outlays for entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare.

    Both Mr. Bush and Mr. Kerry have promised to cut the budget deficit in half over the next four or five years. But many budget analysts say that five-year goals simply distract attention from much bigger fiscal problems that are expected in the years that immediately follow.

    Several of Mr. Bush's tax cuts do not take full effect until 2010. The new Medicare prescription drug program, which is now expected to cost $534 billion over 10 years, will not really get under way until 2006 and will become more expensive each year after that as the number of elderly beneficiaries rises.

    More Bush National Guard Records Show Six Month Gap


    George Bush's National Guard Records Solidify Six-Month Gap

    Once again the Pentagon released another set of records from George W. Bush's military file. The White House had previously insisted that everything had been released yet this is the second occasion in which more documents suddenly appeared as a result of a lawsuit from the Associated Press.

    The newly released documents show Bush's flight records during his time served in the Texas Air National Guard. The documents show a six month gap in service that coincides with his pay records. The White House argues that the president was serving in the Alabama National Guard at the time yet no one can recall ever seeing the young Bush at the time.

    A new group funded by MoveOn.org, Texans for Truth, is currently running an ad featuring former LtCol. Robert Mintz who served in George Bush's supposed unit within the Alabama National Guard. Mintz states that neither he nor his friends had ever laid eyes upon Bush during that time.

    Additionally, it has been revealed that Bush failed to show for a significant drill in which his skills as a pilot were required. Less importantly, the documents show that Bush was a mediocre performer, ranking 22 out of 53 during his flight training.

    Several days ago, Ben Barnes, former Lt. Governor of Texas stated that one of his greatest regrets was helping the children of "rich" supporters avoid fighting in Vietnam. One of those young men that he boosted into the Texas Air National Guard was George W. Bush.

    In addition to the above, a new book by Kitty Kelley alleges that while John Kerry took gunfire on the rivers of Vietnam, George Bush took bathroom breaks to snort lines of cocaine during his service in the Texas Air National Guard. The book, The Family: The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty, is to be released later this month.

    Although George Bush had seen a modest boost in the polls following the RNC convention, it is evident that the lead will be short lived as bad news is flowing from every issue this week.

    Tuesday, September 07, 2004

    The Washington Monthly has a section entitled: What If Bush Wins
    Predictions on the likely consequences of a second term for President Bush.
    Sixteen Authors Offer their Outlooks.

    Saturday, September 04, 2004

    Note: President Josiah Bartlett made a comment in a Second Year episode along the lines of: 'the complexities of this are staggering. There is no way 82% of the population can have a reasoned opinion on the subject."

    I point this out after seeing a recent poll of likely voters by TIme Magazine, which has Bush ahead by eleven points: 52% to 41%. Yet a similar poll taken at the beginning of August showed Kerry ahead by six points. Almost gets me to think there should be mandatory testing of voters to evaluate their suitability to the task of electing Americas political representatives. Also, that the Conventions should be held on the same week, or certainly limited to within a restrained time frame with a maximal spread between the conventions and the general election.

    Maybe the prohibition of alcohol sales on election day still points to a real problem, and in the age of electronic media saturation the electorate may need a reasonable separation period to avoid being swept up in unreasoned political emotions.

    "As speakers at the GOP convention trumpet Bush administration successes in the war on terrorism, an NBC News analysis of Islamic terrorism since Sept. 11, 2001, shows that attacks are on the rise worldwide — dramatically.

    Of the roughly 2,929 terrorism-related deaths around the world since the attacks on New York and Washington, the NBC News analysis shows 58 percent of them — 1,709 — have occurred this year.

    In the past 10 days, in fact, the number of dead has risen by 142 people in places as diverse as Russia, Afghanistan, Iraq and Israel. On Tuesday, the number of civilians killed by terrorists totaled 38 — 10 at a subway entrance bombing in Moscow, 16 in a bus bombing in Israel and 12 Nepalese executed in Iraq.

    Moreover, the level of sophistication is increasing. Terrorism experts point in particular to the attacks apparently carried out by Chechen rebels during that 10-day period. The rebels, whose top military commanders have been Arabs, are operating at a whole different level."
    NBC News
    September 2nd, 2004
    <====================>
    Note: Unfortunately we must now add to these numbers: "in the past ten day...", the number of dead has risen by over 500 people, at least 150 of these being children.

    Suicide bombing gaining new converts, expert says
    Militants see no other solutions to despair
    The Globe and Mail
    By MICHAEL VALPY
    Saturday, August 7, 2004 - Page A6

    GENEVA PARK, ONT. -- Suicide bombers are rational, sane human beings whose choice to end their lives as they kill others is considered perfectly normal in the societies they grow up in, says a U.S. psychiatrist who worked for the CIA.

    Jerrold Post has put together personality profiles for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency for more than 20 years and spoken to scores of accused Palestinian and al-Qaeda terrorists. In an interview yesterday, he said that the appeal of suicide bombing is broadening.

    The practice was once limited to very young men, a huge percentage of them teenagers.

    "Now women, mothers, have joined this pathway, and middle-aged men, a 43-year-old father. I see it as a trend," he said.

    Dr. Post spoke yesterday at the Couchiching Institute on Public Affairs annual conference, held north of Toronto. This year's theme is "God's Back with a Vengeance: Religion, Pluralism and the Secular State."

    He said his colleagues have given up asking people why they join their militant organizations to become suicide bombers. "Because we would get these weird looks: 'Why do we join? Everybody is joining. It's only the weird individuals who don't join,' " he said. "This is troubling to hear and understand."

    Asked to explain why it has happened, Dr. Post responded with a single word: "Despair."

    He said suicide bombers are people who see no other solution for the forces they see arrayed against them, no other way of avenging their family's losses.

    "I think one has to look to the despair that they are experiencing. . . . These are not deviant, psychologically disturbed individuals. Every one of them I've talked to has made perfect sense," he said.

    "Terrorists groups, in fact, carefully screen those who want to join -- people are lined up to join these groups -- and they do not allow emotionally disturbed people to join. They'd be a security risk."

    He said that before "the broadening and deepening" appeal of suicide bombing took root, the profile of a suicide bomber was that of a man aged 17 to 22 -- an "uneducated, unmarried, unemployed and unformed youth looking forward to a life of despair.

    "At the forefront of revolutions are youth, always. It's part of the psychological imperative of youth to overthrow the parental generation and become adults on their own and, when there is a corrupt authority internationally, that becomes a surrogate for the parent that they need to overthrow," he said.

    "Youthful energy is very idealizing and very demonizing."

    Dr. Post said the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist hijackers fit a different paradigm. They were older, comparatively well-educated men from middle-class backgrounds, who subordinated their personalities to a destructive charismatic organization and its leader.

    "To use this metaphor of a war on terrorism is nonsense. It implies a winner and a loser and a surrender ceremony at the end of it. We need to be struggling . . . for hearts and minds," he said. "You can't win this war with smart bombs and missiles.

    "We have abdicated the arena of ideas and values."

    John F. Kennedy: Address to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association: September 12th 1960

    "While the so-called religious issue is necessarily and properly the chief topic here tonight, I want to emphasize from the outset that I believe that we have far more critical issues in the 1960 campaign. And they are not religious issues -- for war and hunger and ignorance and despair know no religious barrier.

    But because I am a Catholic, and no Catholic has ever been elected President, the real issues in this campaign have been obscured -- perhaps deliberately, in some quarters less responsible than this. So it is apparently necessary for me to state once again -- not what kind of church I believe in, for that should be important only to me -- but what kind of America I believe in.

    I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute; where no Catholic prelate would tell the President -- should he be Catholic -- how to act, and no Protestant minister would tell his parishioners for whom to vote; where no church or church school is granted any public funds or political preference, and where no man is denied public office merely because his religion differs from the President who might appoint him, or the people who might elect him.

    I believe in an America that is officially neither Catholic, Protestant nor Jewish; where no public official either requests or accept instructions on public policy from the Pope, the National Council of Churches or any other ecclesiastical source; where no religious body seeks to impose its will directly or indirectly upon the general populace or the public acts of its officials, and where religious liberty is so indivisible that an act against one church is treated as an act against all.

    Finally, I believe in an America where religious intolerance will someday end -- where all men and all churches are treated as equals, where every man has the same right to attend or not to attend the church of his choice, where there is no Catholic vote, no anti-Catholic vote, no bloc voting of any kind, and where Catholics, Protestants, and Jews, at both the lay and the pastoral levels, will refrain from those attitudes of disdain and division which have so often marred their works in the past, and promote instead the American ideal of brotherhood.

    That is the kind of America in which I believe. And it represents the kind of Presidency in which I believe, a great office that must be neither humbled by making it the instrument of any religious group nor tarnished by arbitrarily withholding its occupancy from the members of any one religious group. I believe in a President whose views on religion are his own private affair, neither imposed upon him by the nation, nor imposed by the nation upon him* [sic] as a condition to holding that office.

    I would not look with favor upon a President working to subvert the first amendment's guarantees of religious liberty. Nor would our system of checks and balances permit him to do so. And neither do I look with favor upon those who would work to subvert Article VI of the Constitution by requiring a religious test, even by indirection. For if they disagree with that safeguard, they should be out openly working to repeal it.

    I want a Chief Executive whose public acts are responsible to all and obligated to none, who can attend any ceremony, service, or dinner his office may appropriately require of him to fulfill; and whose fulfillment of his Presidential office is not limited or conditioned by any religious oath, ritual, or obligation.

    And in fact this is the kind of America for which our forefathers did when they fled here to escape religious test oaths that denied office to members of less favored churches -- when they fought for the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom -- and when they fought at the shrine I visited today, the Alamo. For side by side with Bowie and Crockett died Fuentes, and McCafferty, and Bailey, and Badillo, and Carey -- but no one knows whether they were Catholics or not. For there was no religious test there.

    I ask you tonight to follow in that tradition -- to judge me on the basis of 14 years in the Congress, on my declared stands against an Ambassador to the Vatican, against unconstitutional aid to parochial schools, and against any boycott of the public schools -- which I attended myself.

    But let me say, with respect to other countries, that I am wholly opposed to the State being used by any religious group, Catholic or Protestant, to compel, prohibit, or prosecute the free exercise of any other religion. And that goes for any persecution, at any time, by anyone, in any country. And I hope that you and I condemn with equal fervor those nations which deny their Presidency to Protestants, and those which deny it to Catholics.

    But let me stress again that these are my views.
    For contrary to common newspaper usage, I am not the Catholic candidate for President.
    I am the Democratic Party's candidate for President who happens also to be a Catholic.

    I do not speak for my church on public matters; and the church does not speak for me. Whatever issue may come before me as President, if I should be elected, on birth control, divorce, censorship, gambling or any other subject, I will make my decision in accordance with these views -- in accordance with what my conscience tells me to be in the national interest, and without regard to outside religious pressure or dictates. And no power or threat of punishment could cause me to decide otherwise.

    But if the time should ever come -- and I do not concede any conflict to be remotely possible -- when my office would require me to either violate my conscience or violate the national interest, then I would resign the office; and I hope any conscientious public servant would do likewise.

    But I do not intend to apologize for these views to my critics of either Catholic or Protestant faith; nor do I intend to disavow either my views or my church in order to win this election.

    If I should lose on the real issues, I shall return to my seat in the Senate, satisfied that I'd tried my best and was fairly judged.

    But if this election is decided on the basis that 40 million Americans lost their chance of being President on the day they were baptized, then it is the whole nation that will be the loser, in the eyes of Catholics and non-Catholics around the world, in the eyes of history, and in the eyes of our own people.

    But if, on the other hand, I should win this election, then I shall devote every effort of mind and spirit to fulfilling the oath of the Presidency -- practically identical, I might add, with the oath I have taken for 14 years in the Congress. For without reservation, I can, "solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution -- so help me God.

    Rational, educated and prosperous: just your average suicide bomber
    By Deborah Smith, Science Editor
    May 14, 2004

    Suicide bombers are not all poor, uneducated, religious fanatics or madmen, as many people believe.

    Research on the social and psychological background of terrorists show they tend to be more prosperous and better educated than most in their societies, and no more religious or irrational than the average person.

    A study of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad suicide terrorists from the late 1980s to 2003 found only 13 per cent were from a poor background, compared with 32 per cent of the Palestinian population in general, according to a New Scientist report.

    Suicide bombers were also three times more likely to have gone on to higher education than the general population, Claude Berrebi, an economist at Princeton University in the US, found.

    Ariel Merare, a psychologist at Tel Aviv University in Israel, said he had changed his view that most suicide bombers were mentally ill after studying the background of every suicide bomber in the Middle East since 1983.
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    "In the majority you find none of the risk factors normally associated with suicide, such as mood disorders or schizophrenia, substance abuse or a history of attempted suicide," he said.

    Robert Pape, a political scientist at the University of Chicago who studied 188 suicide attacks worldwide between 1980 to 2001, said the phenomenon had increased in that period not because of religious fundamentalism but because terrorists had learnt the strategy worked.

    He said the leading perpetrators of suicide terrorism were the Tamil Tigers, a Marxist-Leninist group. Its members were from a Hindu background but were hostile to religion.

    The experts said resistance groups tended to adopt suicide tactics when they were losing political ground to rival groups, and used psychological techniques to ensure recruits went through with the act.

    A sense of duty to a brotherhood was the most important way rational people could be persuaded to kill themselves, said Scott Atran, an anthropologist at the University of Michigan.

    From a Prepared Speech Given at the Convention::

    "When I say that the contest is a contest between Democracy on the one hand and plutocracy on the other I do not mean to say that all our opponents have deliberately chosen to give to organized wealth a predominating influence in the affairs of the Government, but I do assert that on the important issues of the day the Republican party is dominated by those influences which constantly tend to substitute the worship of mammon for the protection of the rights of man."

    The maxim of Jefferson, “equal rights to all and special privileges to none,” and the doctrine of Lincoln that this should be a government “of the people, by the people and for the people,” are being disregarded and the instrumentalities of government are being used to advance the interests of those who are in a position to secure favors from the Government.

    The Democratic party is not making war upon the honest acquisition of wealth; it has no desire to discourage industry, economy and thrift. On the contrary, it gives to every citizen the greatest possible stimulus to honest toil when it promises him protection in the enjoyment of the proceeds of his labor. Property rights are most secure when human rights are most respected. Democracy strives for civilization in which every member of society will share according to his merits.

    "Republicans who used to boast that the Republican party was paying off the national debt are now looking for reasons to support a perpetual and increasing debt."

    "For a time Republican leaders were inclined to deny to opponents the right to criticize the {ires} policies of the administration, but upon investigation they found that both Lincoln and Clay asserted and exercised the right to criticize a President during the progress of the Mexican war."

    "Instead of meeting the issue boldly and submitting a clear and positive plan for dealing with the {Iraqi} question, the Republican convention adopted a platform the larger part of which was devoted to boasting and self-congratulation."

    {Iraq} does not need any encouragement from Americans now living. Our whole history has been an encouragement not only to the {Iraqis}, but to all who are denied a voice in their own government. If the republicans are prepared to censure all who have used language calculated to make the {Iraqis} hate foreign domination, let them condemn the speech of Patrick Henry. When he uttered that passionate appeal, "Give me liberty or give me death," he expressed a sentiment which still echoes in the hearts of men.

    Let them censure Jefferson; of all the statesmen of history none have used words so offensive to those who would hold their fellows in political bondage. Let them censure Washington, who declared that the colonists must choose between liberty and slavery. Or, if the statute of limitations has run again the sins of Henry and Jefferson and Washington, let them censure Lincoln, whose Gettysburg speech will be quoted in defense of popular government when the present advocates of force and conquest are forgotten.

    Some one has said that a truth once spoken, can never be recalled. It goes on and on, and no one can set a limit to its ever-widening influence. But if it were possible to obliterate every word written or spoken in defense of the principles set forth in the Declaration of Independence, a war of conquest would still leave its legacy of perpetual hatred, for it was God himself who placed in every human heart the love of liberty. He never made a race of people so low in the scale of civilization or intelligence that it would welcome a foreign master.

    Those who would have this Nation enter upon a career of empire must consider, not only the effect of imperialism on the {Iraqis}, but they must also calculate its effects upon our own nation. We cannot repudiate the principle of self-government in {Iraq} without weakening that principle here.

    Lincoln said that the safety of this Nation was not in its fleets, its armies, or its forts, but in the spirit which prizes liberty as the heritage of all men, in all lands, everywhere, and he warned his countrymen that they could not destroy this spirit without planting the seeds of despotism at their own doors.

    Even now we are beginning to see the paralyzing influence of imperialism. Heretofore this Nation has been prompt to express its sympathy with those who were fighting for civil liberty. While our sphere of activity has been limited to the Western Hemisphere, our sympathies have not been bounded by the seas. We have felt it due to ourselves and to the world, as well as to those who were struggling for the right to govern themselves, to proclaim the interest which our people have, from the date of their own independence, felt in every contest between human rights and arbitrary power.

    If this nation surrenders its belief in the universal application of the principles set forth in the Declaration of Independence, it will lose the prestige and influence which it has enjoyed among the nations as an exponent of popular government.

    Our opponents, conscious of the weakness of their cause, seek to confuse imperialism with expansion, and have even dared to claim Jefferson as a supporter of their policy. Jefferson spoke so freely and used language with such precision that no one can be ignorant of his views. On one occasion he declared: "If there be one principle more deeply rooted than any other in the mind of every American, it is that we should have nothing to do with conquest." And again he said: "Conquest is not in our principles; it is inconsistent with our government."

    If we have an imperial policy we must have a great standing army as its natural and necessary complement. That a large permanent increase in our regular army is intended by Republican leaders is not a matter of conjecture, but a matter of fact. If such an army is demanded when an imperial policy is contemplated, but not openly avowed, what -may be expected if the people encourage the Republican party by indorsing its policy at the polls?

    A large standing army is not only a pecuniary burden to the people and, if accompanied by compulsory service, a constant source of irritation, but it is ever a menace to a Republican form of government.

    The army is the personification of force, and militarism will inevitably change the ideals of the people and turn the thoughts of our young men from the arts of peace to the science of war. The Government which relies for its defense upon its citizens is more likely to be just than one which has at call a large body of professional soldiers.

    There is no place in our system of government for the deposit of arbitrary and irresponsible power. That the leaders of a great party should claim for any president or congress the right to treat millions of people as mere "possessions" and deal with them unrestrained by the constitution or the bill of rights shows how far we have already departed from the ancient landmarks and indicates what may be expected if this nation deliberately enters upon a career of empire.

    But duty is not an argument; it is a conclusion. To ascertain what our duty is, in any emergency, we must apply well settled and generally accepted principles. It is our duty to avoid stealing, no matter whether the thing to be stolen is of great or little value. It is our duty to avoid killing a human being, no matter where the human being lives or to what race or class he belongs.

    Every one recognizes the obligation imposed upon individuals to observe both the human and the moral law, but as some deny the application of those laws to nations, it may not be out of place to quote the opinions of others. Jefferson, than whom there is no higher political authority, said:

    "I know of but one code of morality for men, whether acting singly or collectively."

    Franklin, whose learning, wisdom and virtue are a part of the priceless legacy bequeathed to use from the revolutionary days, expressed the same idea in even stronger language when he said:

    "Justice is strictly due between neighbor nations as between neighbor citizens. A highwayman is as much a robber when he plunders in a gang as when single; and the nation that makes an unjust war is only a great gang."

    Many may dare to do in crowds what they would not dare to do as individuals, but the moral character of an act is not determined by the number of those who join it. Force can defend a right, but force has never yet created a right.

    A poet has described the terror which overcame a soldier who in the midst of the battle discovered that he had slain his brother. It is written "All ye are brethren." Let us hope for the coming day when human life -- which when once destroyed cannot be restored -- will be so sacred that it will never be taken except when necessary to punish a crime already committed, or to prevent a crime about to be committed.

    It is said that we have assumed before the world obligations which make it necessary for us to permanently maintain a government in {Iraq}. I reply first, that the highest obligation of this nation is to be true to itself. No obligation to any particular nations, or to all the nations combined, can require the abandonment of our theory of government, and the substitution of doctrines against which our whole national life has been a protest. It is argued by some that the {Iraqis} are incapable of self-government and that, therefore, we owe it to the world to take control of them.

    "It is the doctrine of thrones that man is too ignorant to govern himself. Their partisans assert his incapacity in reference to all nations; if they cannot command universal assent to the proposition, it is then demanded to particular nations; and our pride and our presumption too often make converts of us. I contend that it is to arraign the disposition of Providence himself to suppose that he has created beings incapable of governing themselves, and to be trampled on by kings. Self-government is the natural government of man."

    Clay was right. There are degrees of proficiency in the art of self-government, but it is a reflection upon the Creator to say that he denied to any people the capacity for self-government. Once admit that some people are capable of self-government and that others are not and that the capable people have a right to seize upon and govern the incapable, and you make force -- brute force -- the only foundation of government and invite the reign of a despot.

    Republicans ask, "Shall we haul down the flag that floats over our dead in {Iraq}?" The same question might have been asked, when the American flag floated over Chapultepec and waved over the dead who fell there; but the tourist who visits the City of Mexico finds there a national cemetery owned by the United States and cared for by an American citizen. Our flag still floats over our dead, but when the treaty with Mexico was signed American authority withdrew to the Rio Grande, and I venture the opinion that during the last fifty years the people of Mexico have made more progress under the stimulus of independence and self-government than they would have made under a carpet-bag government held in place by bayonets. The United States and Mexico, friendly republics, are each stronger and happier than they would have been had the former been cursed and the latter crushed by an imperialistic policy disguised as "benevolent assimilation."

    “Can we not govern colonies?” we are asked. The question is not what we can do, but what we ought to do. This nation can do whatever it desires to do, but it must accept responsibility for what it does. If the Constitution stands in the way, the people can amend the Constitution. I repeat, the nation can do whatever it desires to do, but it cannot avoid the natural and legitimate results of it own conduct.

    The young man upon reaching his majority can do what he pleases. He can disregard the teachings of his parents; he can trample upon all that he has been taught to consider sacred; he can disobey the laws of the State, the laws of society and the laws of God. He can stamp failure upon his life and make his very existence a curse to his fellow men, and he can bring his father and mother in sorrow to the grave; but he cannot annul the sentence, “The wages of sin is death.”

    And so with the nation. It is of age and it can do what it pleases; it can spurn the traditions of the past; it can repudiate the principles upon which the nation rests; it can employ force instead of reason; it can substitute might for right; it can conquer weaker people; it can exploit their lands, appropriate their property and kill their people; but it cannot repeal the moral law or escape the punishment decreed for the violation of human rights.

    "Would we tread in the paths of tyranny,
    Nor reckon the tyrant's cost?
    Who taketh another's liberty
    His freedom is also lost.
    Would we win as the strong have ever won,
    Make ready to pay the debt,
    For the God who reigned over Babylon
    Is the God who is reigning yet."

    Some argue that American rule in {Iraq} will result in the better education of the {Iraquis}. Be not deceived. If we expect to maintain a colonial policy, we shall not find it to our advantage to educate the people. The educated {Iraqi} are now in revolt against us, and the most ignorant ones have made the least resistance to our domination. If we are to govern them without their consent and give them no voice in determining the taxes which they must pay, we dare not educate them, lest they learn to read the Declaration of Independence and Constitution of the United States and mock us for our inconsistency.

    It is sufficient answer to the first argument to say that for more than a century this nation has been a world power. For ten decades it has been the most potent influence in the world. Not only has it been a world power, but it has done more to shape the politics of the human race than all the other nations of the world combined. Because our Declaration of Independence was promulgated others have been promulgated. Because the patriots of 1776 fought for liberty other have fought for it. Because our Constitution was adopted other constitutions have been adopted.

    The growth of the principle of self-government, planted on American soil, has been the overshadowing political fact of the nineteenth century. It has made this nation conspicuous among the nations and given it a place in history such as no other nation has ever enjoyed. Nothing has been able to check the onward march of this idea. I am not willing that this nation shall cast aside the omnipotent weapon of truth to seize again the weapons of physical warfare. I would not exchange the glory of this Republic for the glory of all empires that have risen and fallen since time began.

    The permanent chairman of the last Republican Nation Convention presented the pecuniary argument in all its baldness when he said:

    “We make no hypocritical pretense of being interested in {Iraq} solely on account of others. While we regard the welfare of those people as a sacred trust, we regard the welfare of American people first. We see our duty to ourselves as well as to others. We believe in trade expansion. By every legitimate means within the province of government and constitution we mean to stimulate the expansion of our trade and open new markets.”

    This is the commercial argument. It is based upon the theory that war can be rightly waged for pecuniary advantage, and that it is profitable to purchase trade by force and violence. Franklin denied both of these propositions. When Lord Howe asserted that the acts of Parliament which brought on the Revolution were necessary to prevent American trade from passing into foreign channels, Franklin replied:

    "To me it seems that neither the obtaining nor retaining of any trade, howsoever valuable, is an object for which men may justly spill each other's blood; that the true and sure means of extending and securing commerce are the goodness and cheapness of commodities, and that the profits of no trade can ever be equal to the expense of compelling it and holding it by fleets and armies. I consider this war against us, therefore, as both unjust and unwise."

    I place the philosophy of Franklin against the sordid doctrine of those who would put a price upon the head of an American soldier and justify a war of conquest upon the ground that it will pay. The democratic party is in favor of the expansion of trade. It would extend our trade by every legitimate and peaceful means; but it is not willing to make merchandise of human blood.

    It is not necessary to own people in order to trade with them. We carry on trade today with every part of the world, and our commerce has expanded more rapidly than the commerce of any European empire. We do not own Japan or China, but we trade with their people. We have not absorbed the republics of Central and South America, but we trade with them. It has not been necessary to have any political connection with Canada or the nations of Europe in order to trade with them. Trade cannot be permanently profitable unless it is voluntary.

    When trade is secured by force, the cost of securing it and retaining it must be taken out of the profits and the profits are never large enough to cover the expense. Such a system would never be defended but for the fact that the expense is borne by all the people, while the profits are enjoyed by a few.

    Imperialism would be profitable to the army contractors; it would be profitable to the ship owners, who would carry live soldiers to {Iraq} and bring dead soldiers back; it would be profitable to those who would seize upon the franchises, and it would be profitable to the officials whose salaries would be fixed here and paid over there; but to the farmer, to the laboring man and to the vast majority of those engaged in other occupations it would bring expenditure without return and risk without reward.

    Farmers and laboring men have, as a rule, small incomes and under systems which place the tax upon consumption pay much more than their fair share of the expenses of government. Thus the very people who receive least benefit from imperialism will be injured most by the military burdens which accompany it.

    In addition to the evils which he and the farmer share in common, the laboring man will be the first to suffer if oriental subjects seek work in the United States; the first to suffer if American capital leaves our shores to employ oriental labor in the Philippines to supply the trade of China and Japan; the first to suffer from the violence which the military spirit arouses and the first to suffer when the methods of imperialism are applied to our own government.

    It is not strange, therefore, that the labor organizations have been quick to note the approach of these dangers and prompt to protest against both militarism and imperialism.

    The pecuniary argument, the more effective with certain classes, is not likely to be used so often or presented with so much enthusiasm as the religious argument. The religious argument varies in positiveness from a passive belief that Providence delivered the {Iraquis} into our hands, for their good and our glory, to the exultation of the minister who said that we ought to “thrash the natives (Iraqis) until they understand who we are,” and that “every bullet sent, every cannon shot and every flag waved means righteousness.”

    We cannot approve of this doctrine in one place unless we are willing to apply it everywhere. If there is poison in the blood of the hand it will ultimately reach the heat. It is equally true that forcible Christianity, if planted under the American flag in the far-away Orient, will sooner or later be transplanted upon American soil.

    If true Christianity consists in carrying out in our daily lives the teachings of Christ, who will say that we are commanded to civilize with dynamite and proselyte with the sword? He who would declare the divine will must prove his authority either by Holy Writ or by evidence of a special dispensation.

    Imperialism finds no warrant in the Bible. The command, “Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature,” has no Gatling gun attachment. When Jesus visited a village of Samaria and the people refused to receive him, some of the disciples suggested that fire should be called down from Heaven to avenge the insult; but the Master rebuked them and said: “Ye know not what manner of spirit ye are of; for the Son of Man is not come to destroy men’s lives, but to save them.” Suppose he had said: “We will thrash them until they understand who we are,” how different would have been the history of Christianity! Compare, if you will, the swaggering, bullying, brutal doctrine of imperialism with the golden rule and the commandment, “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.”

    Love not force, was the weapon of the Nazarene; sacrifice for others, not the exploitation of them, was His method of reaching the human heart. A missionary recently told me that the Stars and Stripes once saved his life because his assailant recognized our flag as a flag that had no blood upon it.

    Let it be known that our missionaries are seeking souls instead of sovereignty; let be it known that instead of being the advance guard of conquering armies, they are going forth to help and uplift, having their loins girt about with the truth and their feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace, wearing the breastplate of righteousness and carrying the sword of the spirit; let it be known that they are citizens of a nation which respects the rights of the citizens of other nations as carefully as it protects the rights of its own citizens, and the welcome given to our missionaries will be more cordial than the welcome extended to the missionaries of any other nation.

    Better a thousand times that our flag in the Orient give way to a flag representing the idea of self-government than that the flag of this Republic should become the flag of an empire.

    A European protectorate often results in the plundering of the ward by the guardian. An American protectorate gives to the nation protected the advantage of our strength, without making it he victim of our greed. For three-quarters of a century the Monroe doctrine has been a shield to neighboring republics and yet it has imposed no pecuniary burden upon us.

    When our opponents are unable to defend their position by argument they fall back upon the assertion that is destiny, and insist that we must submit to it, no matter how much it violates our moral percepts and our principles of government. This is a complacent philosophy. It obliterates the distinction between right and wrong and makes individuals and nations the helpless victims of circumstance.

    Destiny is the subterfuge of the invertebrate, who, lacking the courage to oppose error, seeks some plausible excuse for supporting it. Washington said that the destiny of the republican form of government was deeply, if not finally, staked on the experiment entrusted to the American people. How different Washington’s definition of destiny from the Republican definition!

    The Republicans say that this nation is in the hands of destiny; Washington believed that not only the destiny of our own nation but the destiny of the republican form of government throughout the world was intrusted to American hands.

    Immeasurable responsibility!

    The destiny of this Republic is in the hands of its own people, and upon the success of the experiment here rests the hope of humanity. No exterior force can disturb this Republic, and no foreign influence should be permitted to change its course. What the future has in store for this nation no one has authority to declare, but each individual has his own idea of the nation’s mission, and he owes it to his country as well as to himself to contribute as best he may to the fulfillment of that mission.

    Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Committee: I can never fully discharge the debt of gratitude which I owe to my countrymen for the honors which they have so generously bestowed upon me; but, sirs, whether it be my lot to occupy the high office for which the convention has named me, or to spend the remainder of my days in private life, it shall be my constant ambition and my controlling purpose to aid in realizing the high ideals of those whose wisdom and courage and sacrifices brought the Republic into existence.

    I can conceive of a national destiny surpassing the glories of the present and the past -- a destiny which meets the responsibility of today and measures up to the possibilities of the future. Behold a republic, resting securely upon the foundation stones quarried by revolutionary patriots from the mountain of eternal truth -- a republic applying in practice and proclaiming to the world the self-evident propositions that all men are created equal; that they are endowed with inalienable rights; that governments are instituted among men to secure these rights, and that governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.

    Behold a republic in which civil and religion liberty stimulate all to earnest endeavor and in which the law restrains every hand uplifted for a neighbor's injury -- a republic in which every citizen is a sovereign, but in which no one cares to wear a crown. Behold a republic standing erect while empires all around are bowed beneath the weight of their own armaments -- a republic whose flag is loved while other flags are only feared. Behold a republic increasing in population, in wealth, in strength and in influence, solving the problems of civilization and hastening the coming of an universal brotherhood -- a republic which shakes thrones and dissolves aristocracies by its silent example and gives light and inspiration to those who sit in darkness.

    Behold a republic gradually but surely becoming the supreme moral factor in the world's progress and the accepted arbiter of the world's disputes -- a republic whose history, like the path of the just, "is as the shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect day."

    Note: This address was delivered by WIlliam Jennings Bryant on April 8th, 1908 and the editor has taken the liberty of substituting Iraqi for the The Phillippines.

    Note: During the 2004 Conventions speakers used select words to address certain particulars. For example, the most frequently used key words for Pres. Bush were: We, Our, America, and You, which were almost exactly the same word frequency used by Sen. Kerry.

    Decending from that, the most frequently used words by Pataki, Miller, and Guiliani were: "Bush", "President", and "We". Some noteworthy variances were: Miller's low usage of "We", and "Our", (perhaps showing he was not associating himself with the people in the audience). Also Kerry and Guilini used the word: "World" many more times than any of the others.

    Certain words were simply not spoken: Pataki is the only one who said "Bin Laden". Other words were seldom used: "Social Security", "Women", "Jobs", (except by Kerry), "Faith", where Kerry mentioned it eight times, and Bush only once. The word "Economy" was not mentioned once by either, Miller, Guilini, or McCain. The word: "He", referring to either Bush or Kerry by the Speaker, was used frequently by all, except Kerry. "Iraq" was also seldom used by any of the speakers, with Bush's saying the word eleven times, to Kerry's four times.

    -Results obtained using: Version 1.5.5.6 of WordMetry from Findsolution Workshop

    Separation of Church and State: A Detailed Primer

    Note: One of the most comprehensive online sources for information on this vital issue is here.

    Now if only the participants in the discussion would approach the matter with the breath of knowledge shown here, a lot of the vitriolic nonsense could be avoided. Unfortunately a significant portion of Christian fundamentalist commentators appears to have no interest in nuances, interpretations, or the historial record; but rather seem intent only on "flaming" those who have a more secular perspective of the role of Religion to the State.

    More of "They just don't get it!"

    Heads in the Sand
    By BOB HERBERT
    NY Times Op-Ed
    Published: September 3, 2004

    When asked this week on CNN how long the U.S. military is likely to remain in Iraq, Senator John McCain replied "probably" 10 or 20 years. "That's not so bad," he said, adding, "We've been in Korea for 50 years. We've been in West Germany for 50 years."

    Reporters have come to expect candor from Senator McCain, and in this case he didn't disappoint. But there weren't any speakers mounting the podium at the Republican National Convention to hammer home the message that G.I.'s would be in Iraq for a decade or two.

    That's not the understanding most Americans had when this wretched war was sold to them, and it's not the view most Americans hold now.

    If Senator McCain is correct (and the belief in official Washington is that he is), then boys and girls who are 5 or 10 years old now will get their chance in 2015 or 2020 to strap on the Kevlar and engage the Iraqi "insurgents" who, like the indigenous forces we fought in Vietnam, will never accept the occupation of their country by America.

    Marcina Hale, a protester who came to New York this week from suburban Westport, Conn., said she has two teenage boys and that Iraq "is not a war that I'm willing to send my sons to." As the years pass and the casualties mount, that sentiment will only grow.

    The truth is always the first casualty of politics. But there was a bigger disconnect than usual between the bizarre, hermetically sealed perspective that was on display in Madison Square Garden this week and the daunting events unfolding without respite in the real world.

    Iraq is a mess. While the cartoonish Arnold Schwarzenegger was drawing huge laughs in the Garden and making cracks about economic "girlie men," reports were emerging about the gruesome murder of 12 Nepalese hostages who had traveled to Iraq less than two weeks earlier in search of work.

    At the same time, an effort to disarm insurgents in the militant Baghdad slum of Sadr City collapsed, and the death toll among American forces in Iraq continued its relentless climb toward 1,000.

    The Los Angeles Times noted yesterday that a report by the respected Royal Institute of International Affairs in London has concluded that Iraq will be lucky if it avoids a breakup and civil war. The often-stated U.S. goal of a full-fledged Iraqi democracy is beyond unlikely.

    In Afghanistan, a legitimate front in the so-called war against terror, much of the country remains in the hands of warlords, and the opium trade is flourishing. Experts believe substantial amounts of money from that trade is flowing to terrorist groups.

    In Israel, 16 people were killed by suicide bombers who blew themselves up on a pair of crowded buses on Tuesday. In Russia, a series of horrific terror attacks, in the air and on the ground, have cast a pall across the country.

    Despite all the macho posturing and self-congratulating at the Republican convention, the wave of terror that's been unleashed on the world is only growing. The American-led war in Iraq is feeding that wave, causing it to swell rather than ebb.

    Any serious person who looked around the world this week would have to wonder what the delegates at the G.O.P. convention were so happy about.

    The Republican conventioneers spent the entire week reminding America that we were attacked on Sept. 11, 2001. But interestingly, there was hardly a mention by name of those actually responsible for the attacks - Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda.

    Discussions about the nation's real enemies were taboo. We don't know where they are or what they're up to. The over-the-top venom of some of the speakers and delegates was reserved not for Osama, but for a couple of mild-mannered guys named John.

    What Americans desperately need is a serious, honest discussion of where we go from here. If we're going to be in Iraq for 10 or 20 more years, the policy makers should say so, and tell us what that will cost in money and human treasure. The violence associated with such a long-term occupation is guaranteed to be appalling.

    Vietnam tore this nation apart. As we've seen in this campaign, the wounds have yet to heal. Incredibly, we're now traveling a similarly tragic road in Iraq.

    Friday, September 03, 2004

    Update on Kerry's "Shrinking Middle Class" -- Still Shrinking in 2003 We said his claim was based on stale numbers. Now some fresh statistics support what he said.

    September 1, 2004
    FactCheck.org
    Modified: September 1, 2004

    In our Aug. 3 article , "Kerry's Dubious Economics," we said Kerry based his claim that "our great middle class is shrinking" on some pretty stale numbers. We said his statement "may well be untrue" because it was based on 2002 figures and didn't account for recent economic growth. Now fresh numbers are available -- and Kerry's statement is looking more accurate.

    Kerry's other economic statements remain at least as dubious as we reported. Recent figures show inflation-adjusted hourly earnings actually went up in July just as Kerry was announcing that "wages are falling," for example.

    However, Kerry's description of a declining middle class is supported by new Census Bureau figures showing median household income failed to grow in 2003. And a look at income-distribution tables shows the decline that took place in middle-income households in 2001 and 2002, which we previously reported, may well have continued in 2003.
    Analysis

    On Aug. 26 the Census Bureau released its annual survey of income in the US. These more up-to-date figures show that Kerry may well have been correct when he said the middle class is shrinking, using present tense.

    There's no standard definition of "middle class," so we looked at households with pre-tax income of between $25,000 and $75,000 -- a group occupying roughly the middle half of the Census income distribution tables. As we noted before, that group grew smaller during the economic recession of 2001 and the initially slow recovery of 2002. Now the new Census figures indicate it continued to decline in 2003, and while this time some of the middle group were moving up , a larger portion were moving down

    Results Matter !!

    Medicare premiums to rise 17 percent in 2005, largest ever
    Friday, September 3, 2004

    BY MARK SHERMAN
    ASSOCIATED PRESS

    WASHINGTON - Medicare premiums for doctor visits will rise 17 percent next year, the largest increase in the program's 40-year history, the Bush administration said Friday.

    Note: President Bush has said several times: "...not on my watch" in reference to terrorism, economic stagnation, corporate crime, setbacks in the Israeli-Palestinian situation, etc, etc, yet more bad news comes every day from almost every angle, whether one looks at the economy, job losses, fundamentalist extremism, worldwide condemnation of Americas actions in the Middle East, the Federal Budget Deficits, US Military readiness, Medicare and Medicaid funding problems, perscription drugs pricing and availability, on and on.

    Does this man not see the problems? If he has not been able to do anything about them in four years why should he still be considered for re-election as CEO for another four years? Would stockholders or corporate America accept this kind of performance from a CEO of any other company? Also remember in the 2000 Campaign, Pres. Bush used every opportunity to speak of his "business experience", and how he would run the country from a "business perspective".

    What seems to be keeping him in the running is the electorates fear, fear of the unknown, fear that without him things would be worse, and the fear that having supported him in the past, these same supporters would have to admit to themselves that they made a mistake in selecting him in 2000.

    Get over it folks! He is a failure as CEO, and should be replaced. If the electorate needs someone to bolster their faith, strenghten traditional family values, and work toward universal human rights and the dignity of mankind, then I suggest they take themselves to religious and social agencies that actually work in these fields, and not mearly expend their meager efforts in lazily assigning political blame onto those who do their work in these areas but are not in accord with Bush's principles, practices, and allied methods. Bush himself said: "Results matter". Yes, they absolutely do !

    Thursday, September 02, 2004

    Comparing the performance of the daughters at the Convention

    "A comparison of Vanessa and Alexandra to Jenna and Barbara is like an
    exaggerated comparison of Kerry to Bush. Stable to flighty, smart to flip,
    prepared to not. Perhaps I should not be harsh on them, but if you were to
    go on the daughters alone, Kerry would win by 10 points."

    Courtesy of The West Coast Correspondent

    Wednesday, September 01, 2004

    Continuing the Literary Allusions in re: G.W. Bush

    Note: Kristof likens GW to King Henry V of England:

    "The most common literary allusion to President Bush is Shakespeare's Prince Hal, the hard-drinking, wild-living young man who sobers up, reforms and emerges as the great English warrior King Henry V.

    So, as the Republicans once again crown Mr. Bush as their nominee, I decided to seek lessons from an expert on King Henry who is also one of the shrewdest analysts of current American politics and international affairs. That's right: Shakespeare. I went to Ashland for my annual pilgrimage to the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, then started thinking about what Shakespeare might say if he were speaking at the Republican convention this week.

    The paramount lesson in Shakespeare's plays is that the world is full of nuances and uncertainties, and that leaders self-destruct when they are too rigid, too sure of themselves or - Mr. President, lend me your ears - too intoxicated by moral clarity.

    You see Shakespeare's passion for nuance in the way he portrays Henry V himself (you also see his prurience, for "Henry V" is Shakespeare's most obscene play, laced with X-rated double-entendres that make it an attractive introduction to the Bard for teenagers).

    Shakespeare admires Henry, who, like Mr. Bush, is strong, decisive and funny to be around, as well as a victor in overseas battles that help soothe doubts about his legitimacy. Thus for several hundred years, the play "Henry V" was regarded as a celebration of Henry's invasions of France, and for that reason George Bernard Shaw and other liberal critics recoiled from it.

    Yet beginning in the 20th century, critics began to see another subtext in "Henry V": an unblinking examination of the brutality and inevitable excesses of war, even depicting the Abu Ghraib scandal of the 15th century: Henry's order to murder French prisoners at Agincourt. Shakespeare's play can be seen as scorning the empty-headed jingoism that inflicts so much suffering as the ruler wraps himself in the flag. As Shakespeare writes in "Henry V" about wars of choice:

    "But if the cause be not good, the king himself hath a heavy reckoning to make when all those legs and arms and heads chopped off in a battle shall join together at the latter day and cry all 'We died at such and such a place,' some swearing, some crying for a surgeon, some upon their wives left poor behind them, some upon the debts they owe, some upon their children rawly left. I am afeared there are few die well that die in a battle."

    A related lesson for Mr. Bush, if he has time to read Shakespeare, is the inevitability of intelligence failures. In just about every play, characters put their faith in information that turns out to be catastrophically untrue. Lear believes his elder daughters; Romeo believes that Juliet is dead; Othello believes Iago's lies.

    Shakespeare begins "Henry IV, Part 2," with the character of Rumor (who could today be played by Ahmad Chalabi), and he shows how kings get in trouble by relying on partial truths or flattery spun by sycophants like Goneril Tenet and Regan Wolfowitz.

    "All these figures in Shakespeare suffer from hubris, and that's what W. is suffering from," says Kenneth Albers, a veteran Shakespearean actor who is playing Lear in Ashland.

    Indeed, the only person who seems to provide Shakespeare's kings with sound advice is the court fool, who cannot be punished for saying unpalatable truths because jesting is his job. I urge Mr. Bush to appoint a White House fool.

    Shakespeare is warning us against rash actions on the basis of flawed intelligence. Hamlet is sometimes seen as an indictment of indecision, but his "to be or not to be" soliloquy is a careful examination of the pros and cons of immediate action - a measured approach that Mr. Bush might have emulated before the Iraq war.

    Instead, Mr. Bush emulates Coriolanus, a well-meaning Roman general and aristocrat whose war against barbarians leads to an early victory but who then proves so inflexible and intemperate that tragedy befalls him and his people.

    Unless Mr. Bush learns to see nuance and act less rashly, he will be the Coriolanus of our age: a strong and decisive leader, imbued with great talent and initially celebrated for his leadership in a crisis, who ultimately fails himself and his nation because of his rigidity, superficiality and arrogance.

    Politics is the Second Oldest Profession and Bears Lots of Resemblence to the First

    In 1992 Sen. Zill Miller gave the keynote speech to the DNC.

    ...and today he gave the Wednesday Evening Keynote at the RNC.

    In 1992 Miller spoke against the Republican Party and George H. Bush who he said "just doesn't get it" with respect to jobs, healthcare, hope, taxes, and the needs of ordinary Americans. Tonight he was alloted fifteen minutes to address the gathering, and used it to promote three main themes: 1. He "knows" (and approves of) the character of G.W. Bush; 2. He chastises Sen. Kerry for voting against the development or funding for military systems; 3. And since his children are more important to him than anything else, and he considers G.W. Bush to be a better choice as President for his childrens sake, he came to the RNC to say so.

    One wonders why Miller does not join the Republican party if he is so unenamored of the current Democratic Party. He and many other Georgia Republicans, including the current Governor, formerly were members of the the Democratic party for most of their political lives. Perhaps he realizes that were he to formally change parties, he would probably not even be selected as a delegate to the convention, let alone be invited to give a keynote address. If there is one thing politicians like Miller don't like, it's to be viewed as a politician without resolve.



    Word of the Day: Resolute

    resolute: \Res"o*lute\ (r?z"?-l?t), a. [Cf. F. r['e]solu. The L. resolutus (p. p. of resolvere) means, relaxed, enervated, effeminate. See Resolve, v. t. & i.] 1. Having a decided purpose; determined; resolved; fixed in a determination; hence, bold; firm; steady.

    Note: As applied to Pres. Bush, (and to the other Chicken Hawks by extention courtesy of David Brooks), the most logical way I see of viewing their resolve is highly reminiscent of Don Quichote de la Mancha, especially when confronted with the windmills.
    <------------------------------------->
    Courtesy of Titus Rivas

    The French word "donquichottery" refers to the novel "Don Quijote (original spelling: Quixote) de La Mancha" by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra. The dictionary explains Donquichottery as: an unpractical-idealist course of action, and of course it is derived from the dreamy chivalrous ideals of this first real romance novel hero.

    It's interesting to determine when Cervantes wrote his book. This was the 17th century: the renaissance had passed and the Middle Ages were ancient history. Just like many people nowadays like to watch series based on the novels of for instance Jane Austen, and later have "even started" reading her books, in 17th century Spain chivalry novels were very popular. These were epic tales, in which the high-strung ideals of the caballeros were glorified, including courtly love and the honorary code of the knights. During Cervantes' time the chivalry novels were a way of escaping the much more prosaic and banal reality of every day.

    One of the most famous layers, of course, is Don Quichote's fascination with chivalry novels, which goes much further than the more usual private idolization. Quichote is one of the first "wannabes" in world literature. He identifies himself to a mad degree with the figures from his "libros de caballeria" and completely loses sight of reality. His ideals aren't just difficult to attain in practice, but in his case they are totally free from the sober correction of reality. With that, the tale that is mostly comical is finally also a tragic romance. Only on his deathbed does Don Quichote see how foolish he was in mixing up ideal and reality.

    Opposite the tragic-comedian - and thereby for the readers the most sympathetic - figure of Don Quichote, Cervantes places his just as attractive sidekick Sancho Panza; a fat, dedicated little and very hedonistic peasant (Panza = paunch). Mostly typical for Sancho are especially the countless proverb he bandies about. He represents a common cliché-wisdom that would in fact be of more use than the donquichottery of his master.

    Our ideals are said to be illusory and in fact unattainable. Instead of chasing them, it would be better to resign ourselves like a Sancho Panza and to reach compromises that wouldn't affect social reality in any real sense.

    Don Quichote will never realize his ideals. He can only maintain his delusion that he is fighting for an attainable cause, or either he can wake up. But is this the right way to look at idealists in our current context? There are plenty of thinkers and groups who use valid arguments to fight the paternalistic ridiculing of a struggle for social alternatives.

    Within the framework of this Passion-project I think it's time for a breakthrough of the "quichottisation" of alternative viewpoints. Instead of the archetype of Don Quichote, who is a caricature of ancient knights, we could for instance go back to an even older archetype. For instance that of King Arthur who fights injustice with his knights of the round table (an image by the way that has been monopolized from an ultra right-wing corner for too long) from a sort of sacred, passionate understanding of right and wrong. A feeling that deserves more respect than the amused compassion that Don Quichote receives.
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    Bush and the “H” Word
    By James P. Pinkerton | Thursday, December 19, 2002

    President Bush takes great pride in his command of historical dynamics. He does so in the sense that history has a direction, even a mission. But what the world wonders about is whether he has truly been reading history — or merely relying on his cue cards. James Pinkerton, who served the first President Bush in the White House as an intellectual guru, presents his answer.

    For President Bush to be a true history buff would require evidence of a feeling on his part that history has a pattern — and that it offers up precedents and parallels, as well as cautions.

    Clio, the Greek Muse of history, offers a sad lesson to all humans: The highest hopes can lead to — indeed provoke — chain reactions which ultimately lead to the deepest debacles. Self-glorifying kings, emperors and presidents have learned such a lesson — but only after surveying the ruins of their dreams and domains.

    The greatest value of history is the practical lessons it teaches — not the poetry it provides.

    Wise leaders study those examples, striving to avoid those mistakes. Which brings us to George W. Bush. It’s too soon to see how history will judge him — but it’s easy to see how he misjudges history.

    To be sure, he likes to throw around the “H” word a lot. In his speech to Congress on September 20, 2001, he declared that all those terrorists who attacked the United States nine days before will follow the “path all the way to where it ends — in history's unmarked grave of discarded lies.”

    In a similar vein, he told the United Nations on November 10, 2001, that “history will record our response — and judge, or justify, every nation in this hall.”

    And at West Point on June 1, 2002 he said to the cheering graduates, “West Point classes are also commissioned by history — to take part in a great new calling for their country.”

    That all sounds great, in its oozy-woozy Hegelianism — that is, deterministic view of the world. But the greatest value of history is the practical lessons it teaches — not the poetry it provides. And so if one misapprehends history, one is likely to make policy mistakes, too.

    Let’s examine some of the problems arising when President Bush misstates the historical record. For example, just recently when he spoke in Bucharest on November 23, 2002, he welcomed Romanians into alliance with NATO — and, more to the point, with the United States.

    It’s too soon to see how history will judge George W. Bush — but it’s easy to see how he misjudges history.

    He started by praising them for their “moral clarity,” thus conveniently neglecting the salient historical fact that Romania is one of the least reconstructed of the Soviet-bloc countries.

    New York City-based Freedom House, for example, gave the Balkan country a “not free” rating for two years after the Ceaucescu regime was overthrown — and a “partially free” rating for five years after that.

    Mr. Bush’s statement glossed over the fact that the country holds a mottled political record. That not only undercuts any “moral clarity” — but also any clear lesson that Bush sought to draw from that record.

    But maybe George Bush didn’t know that record. He didn’t seem to, as he plowed through his speech, pushing reams of weighty words toward his audience: “The people of Romania understand that aggressive dictators cannot be appeased — or ignored. They must always be opposed.”

    History will judge. But those who don’t learn its teachings will be judged most harshly.

    And so, he concluded, Romania should join the United States in the struggle against the likes of Saddam Hussein.

    But the lesson of the Cold War for Romanians was just the opposite. They eventually prevailed against totalitarianism through internal rebellion, not external invasion.

    With that experience in mind, the Romanians might look back at their own history — and remember how they were badly bloodied in World War I and badly defeated in World War II.

    Given those painful experiences, they may well conclude that multilateralism — being part of the European Union and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization — is a much better route to freedom and security than more war.

    It was the English writer Alexander Pope who warned us to either drink deep from history, or drink not at all — because, he wrote, “a little learning is a dangerous thing.”

    The lesson of the Cold War for Romanians was that they could prevail against totalitarianism through internal rebellion — not external invasion.

    Had President Bush been better read in history — as opposed to being merely cue-carded — he might have hesitated before he declared in 2001 that he would get Osama Bin Laden “dead or alive.”

    That was a good “Texasism” — but it was a poor plan for statecraft. After all, history abounds with rebels and freedom fighters who could not be caught, from Robin Hood to Ho Chi Minh.

    Now, with Bin Laden still on the loose, critics can say that Mr. Bush might feel compelled to go after Iraq because at least he can occupy Baghdad. Where’s the caution from the annals of history? Once again, there’s no guarantee that he can actually bring Saddam Hussein to the bar of international justice.

    That’s why wise leaders, who know that Clio can be hard to please, shy away from sweeping black-and-white pronouncements. They have learned in their dealings with human affairs that ambiguity can be as good a tool as clarity.

    But the incumbent President of the United States of America may not be worried. To him, things are simple. History is rhetorical garnish, not intellectual meat.

    But all Americans will have to live with the consequences of his actions, actions which will be a chapter in some future syllabus. And so history will judge. But those who don’t learn its teachings will be judged most harshly.