The Sideshow

Archive for May 2004

Main
Check box to open new browser windows for links.


Monday, 31 May 2004

Max versus the Three Stooges

I never did like P.J. O'Rourke. I thought maybe it was a girl thing, but I just couldn't read him without getting bored and annoyed. For a while, O'Rourke served the role of the Three Stooges here in that respect, since the Stooges themselves have no appeal to my partner, who was not exposed to them growing up.

Now Max exposes me to more of what must be humor from O'Rourke since otherwise it sounds too dim even for him:

Fascism, however, is a pointless ideology -- the graps (sic) of power for power's sake. The fight against fascism seems like Dad's war, Granddad's war. Fascism should be out of date in the purposeful, task-oriented world of today. Never mind Slobodan Milosevic, Vladimir Putin, Yasir Arafat, Somali warlords, Charles Taylor, China's politburo, the Saudi royal family, murderous Hutu rabble, and New Gringrich's career arc. . . . Fascists do bad things just to be bad. . . .
We have forwarded this vital information to our intelligence agencies. It should be a boon to the search for Islamo-fascists. The key is that, otherwise lacking in distinguishing features, the way you can find these miscreants is by looking for the bad people. Those over whom hovers the Shadow of Evil.

Ironically, it is just this contentless depiction of fascism that is itself a feature of fascist discourse. It is the invocation of an enemy other that serves as an all-purpose justification for the invasion of the month, or for domestic repression.

Sorry Charlie, a jingoist cannot be an anti-fascist, and World War II is not about 9-11.

(The other two stooges are the guy who quoted O'Rourke approvingly and of course the one and only Christopher Hitchens.)
23:40 BST

What I saw


Cuddly Cthulu

Ellen Kushner interviewed Neil Gaiman on NPR's Sound & Spirit. You can read the transcript or listen with RealPlayer. (via)

Our dangerous distance between the private and the commons

Nathan Newman reviews Control Room, about the network that gave the best coverage of the Iraq invasion and occupation - Al Jazeera. He also discusses lies and No Child Left Behind, more reasons you need civil liberties - even in a war zone, and the different branches of conservatism.
22:20 BST


Notes & quotes

Some people we link to went to the big blogger bash in Denver and apparently had way too much to drink. In a massive outbreak of dual personality, Gary Farber has written about it, twice in the same post. It's a bit silly, and I can't escape the feeling he has insulted my cosmic twin sister. (Jeralyn, here is the post you need to read.)

In a post that my cosmic twin sister is bound to like better, Gary approvingly cites an article about Sheriff Bill Masters, who has had it with the War on Some Drugs:

Every year, Masters and Sam Shoen attend Marquis's parole hearing, determined to see that he serves every day of his sentence until his mandatory release date. For Masters, one of the most outrageous aspects of the case is that Marquis was out on parole at the time of Eva's murder. He'd been charged with ten counts of sexual assault in New Mexico but pleaded to one count and served only nine years. What kind of country lets rapists go free, he wondered, because its prisons are overloaded with drug offenders?
Seth Finkelstein has been egoscanning and, like most of us, enjoys seeing himself quoted. Here's a quote that amused me, too:
[On Ralph Nader] Seth Finkelstein offers a nice comment on the claim that Gore ran a lousy campaign, the major reason he lost: Each individual straw heaped on a camel's back can say, "Who me? Wasn't me. I'm just one straw! What sort of a big strong camel is this, if he can't deal with one more straw on his back? The solution is to get a better camel!" ...
Seth is a smart guy. I've known him on the net for what must be close to a decade, now, and I still want to meet him.

Michael Kinsley, in an article in Time, says:

Stamping some issue as controversial can be a substitute for thinking it through. In the case of embryonic-stem-cell research, thinking it through does not require further study or commissions of experts. This is one you can feel free to try at home. In fact, thinking it through is a moral obligation, especially if you are on the side of the argument that wants to stop or slow this research.
Of course, you could say that about a lot of issues, and you'd be right.

Time is also finally looking at the awkward relationship between Cheney and Haliburton; everybody tried to brush it off, but they really can't do that anymore. It's corruption, dammit, just like we kept telling them. (via)

Charlie is cheered by the news that research has indicted the necktie as a hazardous element in a doctor's wardrobe.
17:19 BST


Bits

Bush may not be Harry Truman.

Who signs Nader petitions?

Pundit Pap: Bush Presidency Jumps the Shark.

Cocktaildoll.com (via)

"The U.S. government - 'we make spammers look like small potatoes.'"

A bug
15:30 BST


Sunday, 30 May 2004

Blogtopia
Yes! Skippy invented that word!

The Whiskey Bar is open again and serving up some excellent stuff - and a banquet of metaphor:

I must confess that I spent a good part of my week off feasting at the schadenfreude buffet - and many good things to eat and drink did I find there, including such delicacies as skewered neocon, fricasseed Judith Miller, fried huevos de Sanchez (and you know I'm not talking about eggs), Republicans on the half shell (or in Denny Hastert's case, on the half wit) and, last but certainly not least, Shrub-a-la-road, smothered in Max Factor.
Not just food metaphors, either:
It's almost as if the mainstream media abruptly awoke from a coma and realized their doctors had been slipping them sedatives and going through their wallets. Even useless tools like Chris Mathews seem to have light bulbs dimly flickering over their heads. Suddenly, the outrages the left side of the blogosphere has been screaming about for months - the crimes, the corruption, and, above all, the sheer incompetence of the "war effort" - are being splashed all over the tube. For the first time since I started Whiskey Bar, I've actually felt redundant. So for once I was content to sit back and take it all in, savoring the details of each new poll, chortling over each pathetic media mea culpa (culminating in the New Pravda's hilariously understated "editor's note") and gleefully watching the pus ooze from each new infarction in the tissue of lies that is the Bush administration.
Whoa.

"For the first time ever in my life, I had someone threaten to kill me tonight." Via The Left End of the Dial, where James is talking about Eliminationist Rhetoric.

Travis and David Neiwert are both talking about Osama's support for Bush. David has some strong language about the way the righties have been pushing the "A vote for Kerry is a vote for terrorism" meme.

Susan at Suburban Guerrilla explains why a certain type of disaster relief program encourages disaster.

"I made a personal appeal to John Edwards to support gay marriage."
23:52 BST


Pot, Kettle, etc.

Epicycle links to two articles at Ars Technica, one on ClearPlay film censoring technology and this one:

Also at Ars, an article on the Pirate Act, a new set of legislation aimed at criminalizing various acts of online piracy. Although the media and the RIAA always refer to file sharing as "theft" or "stealing," in the majority of cases copyright infringement is actually a civil issue and not a criminal one. The Pirate Act would change this, though, and in fact would mean that the government (and therefore the taxpayer!) would foot the bill for copyright prosecutions - as well as bringing the increased fines and longer prison sentences that the RIAA et al. so fervently wish for. All in all, it sounds like an extremely dangerous development for civil liberties. The EFF are mounting a campaign against the proposed legislation, fortunately, and as usual they are well worth supporting.
The idea of the RIAA trying to call anyone else pirates still has me steamed. But you knew that.
18:42 BST

Readers' lettuce

Sumana Harihareswara writes with a clarification of the Salon offer:

Just so you know, Salon's offer only applies to active-duty military personnel. I'm not familiar enough with the US military to know the extent to which that limits the offer.

"...all active-duty military personnel. If you are currently serving in the U.S. military and have a .mil e-mail address, send us your name and address and we will give you a free one-year Salon Premium subscription. If you are one of the active-duty GIs already receiving Salon Premium, we will extend your subscription for a year free of charge.

To take advantage of this offer just send an e-mail to [this address] with your first and last name and e-mail address and we'll create your Salon Premium subscription. Please note that we'll only be able to create Premium subscriptions for .mil e-mail addresses.

[Link]

Thanks for publicizing the offer. I'm proud of it.

Oh, I think it's a very good thing, thanks for doing it.

Richard Bensam has some thoughts about Disney's attempt to shut down Michael Moore's movie:

This may be in the category of old news, but some friends were talking about the Michael Moore / Disney flap last night and I had a minor "lightbulb" moment.

Here in New York City, the tv stations have been showing an endless spate of commercials promoting tourism in Orlando...not just Disney, but also the Universal parks, Sea World, and all the other tourist attractions. This is purely anecdotal and subjective, but it really seems like the volume of ad buys for Orlando tourism has increased. I only noticed this because I particularly dislike Orlando and got annoyed at hearing it plugged every few minutes.

Then I turned up an interesting factoid. As Mayor Bloomberg pointed out during his appearance before the 9/11 Commission, the funds which New York City receives from the Department of Homeland Security come out to $5.87 per capita, and this is wildly disproportionate to other metropolitan centers. But Orlando, Florida receives $47.14 per person from the same source...eight times as much money for a city which is probably not at eight times the risk of NYC. I'll grant that it IS a potential target and I don't like to think about the prospect of a terrorist attack on Disney World; I know people who work there.

Thing is, though...aside from the PR stance that these funds are earmarked for security and emergency services, any money coming into state coffers from the federal government will ease any other state budget shortfalls, and means that state money is free to be spent elsewhere. Say, on promoting Florida tourism? So I kinda feel New York is getting shafted so Orlando can run tv ads telling us to visit there.

I haven't looked into what sort of tax breaks and/or kickbacks Disney might receive from Governor Bush, but no one could argue that there isn't a huge opportunity there for collusion and favoritism. It doesn't require trusting everything Michael Moore says to see that there's strong motive for Disney to favor the Bushes. The burden of proof should be on those who claim otherwise; who say that Disney is capable of being disinterested and nonpartisan in such circumstances. Simple logic says otherwise.

I mean, if I drop a bowling ball out my window, I don't need to prove in advance it will hit the pavement...but someone who claims it will just float there unsupported and never touch ground is going to have to demonstrate some means by which that could possibly happen before I'm gonna believe it.

Lorri doesn't doubt Al Qaeda's support for Bush:
I agree that Al Qaeda wants Bush to be reelected, but not for the reasons you gave. What's the goal of Al Qaeda? To see our country demolished. They must be jumping with joy at the division they see among us right now. But if Kerry is elected, and especially if he's elected by a wide enough margin to prevent any credible claim of a miscount, there's a chance that this country might get "back on track," do something right in the international arena, and not disintegrate into civil war at home. Therefore, it's more in the interest of AQ to see Kerry lose. If I were Kerry's people, I would give high priority to security. He may be under no actual threat, but hey, if I can think of something bad, I'm sure the people whose job it is to think these things up can think of something bad, too. Although I think, unfortunately, *any* home-turf terrorist attack would be enough to give our "great war leader" Bush the extra points he needs to be reelected.
I certainly agree that the divisiveness Bush has caused can only be good news for Al Qaeda. And it's rather a bad joke to hear the administration talk about how "they hate our freedoms" and then proceed to eliminate as many of our freedoms as they can. If they really believe AQ hates our freedoms, it's hard not to wonder this: Whose side is Bush on, anyway?
16:38 BST

The reactions

I wondered how the establishment would deal with Al Gore's speech. It wouldn't surprise me to know that that speech was the real cause of the sudden emergence of John Ashcroft to announce another unlikely terror alert. The RNC was ready with claims that Gore had "lost it", "gone off the deep end", descended into "ranting", and so on. The predictable phony psychoanalysis was, of course, available from Krauthammer, who declared that, "it looks as if Al Gore has gone off his lithium again," as The Daily Howler and Media Matters report.

Atrios has already pointed up the only other talking point the RNC has - it's Clinton and Gore's fault. They're claiming Gore has amnesia. They seem to have forgotten that 9/11 occurred on Bush's watch.

The Blogosphere was likewise predictable. Lefty bloggers each had their own ways of characterizing the speech - ranging from, "too little, too late," "Where was this guy in 2000?" and "I wish Gore had showed this much passion back in 2000" - still recriminations for Gore's campaign even amidst the praise - to wistfulness and pained regret at the realization of how much better off we would be if Gore were in the White House instead of that other guy. Many were openly moved and others apparently charmed that Gore "spanked" the Bushies. Some just thanked god for Al Gore.

In contrast, the right side of the Blogosphere was pretty much in lock-step with the RNC talking points: He's lost it. He was anti-American and full of rage. He was frothing-at-the-mouth. He was crazy. And (this is getting so original) he has officially lost it. He has careened off the rails. In other words, they had nothing to say.
13:19 BST


How it's not like Vietnam

Jack Beatty in History's Fools, in The Atlantic:

In the larger context of the Cold War, Vietnam made a kind of sense. In the context of the struggle against Islamist terrorism, Iraq is an act of self-sabotage.
Via Bartcop
02:50 BST

Saturday, 29 May 2004

Places to be, things to see

Bill Scher is at an undisclosed location somewhere so Air America's Sam Seder is sitting in at LiberalOasis and doing an amazingly good impression of Bill, looking at the spin on Kerry's position and why, as usual, you shouldn't believe it.

Iain Coleman says he has found, "the most convincingly feasible exit strategy from Iraq that I have seen to date."

Chart of gasoline prices since 1980

The stupidest thing Steve Gillard has seen all week

From Bad Attitudes: As reported in today's Washington Post, the Bush administration is notifying federal agencies to plan for budget cuts should Bush win election in November.

Kulture Kops

Salon interview with John Kerry

Torture! What is it good for? (Absolutely nothing!)

30% off the top.

Economics is a "values" issue.

Bruce Lee paperdoll (via)

A joke.
13:21 BST


Friday, 28 May 2004

RIP

I just discovered Wanda's weblog, Just Breathe, and with it the news that Dave Dellinger has died. Dellinger always looked a little bit out of place among the rest of the Chicago Eight, but he never lost his committment to peace.
18:59 BST


Who Osama supports

Atrios quotes this little outrage from CNN:

[Kelli] ARENA: Neither John Kerry nor the president has said troops pulled out of Iraq any time soon. But there is some speculation that al Qaeda believes it has a better chance of winning in Iraq if John Kerry is in the White House.

BEN VENZKE, INTELCENTER: Al Qaeda feels that Bush is, even despite casualties, right or wrong for staying there is going to stay much longer than possibly what they might hope a Democratic administration would.

One wonders what such suppositions are based on. How do they know what "Al Qaeda feels"? Where is that intelligence coming from?

I haven't said much about this because, frankly, I don't see any mileage in it, but let me say for the record that when Al Qaeda announces that they'd prefer Bush to win the election, I don't necessarily believe they are being facetious. For one thing, they tend not to lie very much about their beliefs and plans, and for another they already know from experience that when they tell the truth about what they are up to, no one in the administration pays any attention. They provided an announcement on the radio that they were going to make a big hit on us in 2001 and left more breadcrumbs than Hansel and Gretel, and no one followed it up. Their MO isn't lying, it's open boastfulness. Why should they lie? Is it going to make a difference?

And it makes sense. The administration that allowed them to commit the enormity of 9/11 already looks more friendly to them than some administration that wouldn't. You only have to read the papers to know that in terms of things that might stop real terrorism, no real changes have been made. Indeed, John Ashcroft is far too busy chasing porn and hookers and trying to turn America into a more Talibanish kind of place. Plus, the administration actually did the one thing we know Osama wanted - pulled out of Saudi Arabia. Then they opened up Iraq for the religious extremists and terrorists. What more could they have asked for? Meanwhile, George Bush is the poster boy for Al Qaeda recruitment, and everyone knows it. Kerry just doesn't hold the potential to reap such benefits for Osama's children.

So, yes, I think it's quite possible that the Islamist crazies really do want Bush to win in November because Bush has done them more good than anyone could have been expected to do. And they may feel perfectly free to say so publicly, because they know that Americans are going to react just the way they have - by treating it as a transparent lie, and assuming that they really fear Bush. But they have no reason to fear Bush; Bush is their fairy godfather.

Atrios recommends we let CNN know what we think of the way this "speculation" is being aired:

There you go. We're fighting al Qaeda in Iraq and they think John Kerry is a wimp.

Atlanta:
404-827-1500

Washington:
202-898-7900

You can communicate your thoughts to Ms. Arena personally at: kelli.arena@turner.com

And in an update he says:
You can now send your emails to Eason Jordan at Eason.Jordan@turner.com. He's CNN's chief news executive.
You might ask them when they are planning to discuss the speculation that the terrorists really do want Bush to stay in the White House, 'cause he's been their sugar daddy.
18:20 BST

War on kids

The thing about being a kid is that they are constantly getting you to write and draw things, put your thoughts on paper.

And there you are, maybe just trying to get through the day, or maybe taking them at their word and thinking surely they are smart enough to know the difference between the thoughts that pass through your head - things you don't express normally - and the things you actually do. Taking them at their word that they are just teaching you how to draw or write or whatever, and maybe trying to show some spark, some talent, some willingness, something. I mean, it's school, and you're a kid, and no one listens to what you say, anyway. So it turns out that an important component of the war on kids is the war on art. Hey, look, Jeralyn says another kid wrote a poem:

The California Supreme Court heard oral arguments today in a case in which a 15 year old student was convicted and spent 100 days in juvenile hall for writing a violent poem. Sample phrases:
"For I can be the next kid to bring guns to kill students at school." Another reads: "For I am Dark, Destructive & Dangerous."
You might, if you are the mother of this boy, be a bit worried about those dark thoughts, but a lot of teenagers have dark thoughts - sometimes downright murderous thoughts - and never act on them. And, maybe, you'd want your kid to get counselling if he wrote a poem like that, but he's not the one who is deranged if this happens:
What law was George T. convicted of?
The law in question, usually invoked in domestic violence cases, carries a maximum one-year term for criminal threats that convey an "immediate prospect of execution." The lower courts found that this threat met that definition, a decision the boy's attorney argued was unfounded.
The court actually believed that this poem presented "an immediate prospect of execution"? Where do these people get their ideas?

So, the first thing we're teaching kids is that when it comes to self-expression, don't do it.

And also, "Don't trust us when we tell you it's safe to be honest with us."

Gee, I wonder why so many kids hate being a kid. Grown-ups are always trying shut you up, betray you, tell you not to have fun, tell you things that aren't even true and are frequently worse than useless. Like those stupid drug ads:

The Government plans to spend $145 million this year on anti-drug ads. A new study shows they don't work. They may even prompt some kids to start experimenting with drugs.
[...]
Three of every four students reported the ads sparked thoughts that ran counter to the ads' message, the study showed. "For example, in response to ads linking drug use to the war on terror, the most frequent unanticipated thoughts were that marijuana should be legalized, the war on drugs has been ineffective, and that marijuana users should grow their own," said Czyzewska.
These kids are clearly smarter than their elders. No wonder everyone wants to shut them up.

Well, I hated being a kid, even back in the Good Old Days, and I wasn't even black. What if you are, though? TChris knows:

It's amazing that a school district couldn't arrive at this conclusion without the help of a panel appointed by the district superintendent.
Security officers in the Kent School District, the target of complaints over the discipline of black students, should no longer handcuff students or carry firearms, batons, tasers or pepper spray, a panel has recommended.
The recommendation came after the Seattle chapter of the NAACP filed several claims against the district alleging that teachers and security guards used excessive force to discipline black students.
Not that anyone is planning to pay attention to this recommendation, you understand. Yes, that's right, treat kids like criminals early so they start off feeling like outsiders. That'll really help them feel like a part of the community.

My god what a bunch of idiots. And just look where it leads.

(In other news, and in case you forgot: They knew.)
17:00 BST


Things I saw

Salon is offering free subscriptions to anyone in the military.

The most watched video list at C-Span has Gore's speech at the top. (The crowd went wild. It's kind of breathtaking to see someone in Gore's position use that kind of language, isn't it?) The third item listed, by the way, is Greg Palast on Washington Journal.

Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 from BitTorrent - for free, from 3 July. [Er, this is supposed to be a gag. Don't ask me why.]

Trent Lott says there's nothing wrong with torture.

Paul Krugman says now that the press is less enthusiastic about whitewashing Bush, he might be in trouble - if it lasts.

LNS says the networks did Bush a favor by not airing his speech.

Charles Pierce goes to Ahmad Chalabi's yard sale. (via)

Body as Billboard
13:32 BST


Thursday, 27 May 2004

Axis of Eve

"There is something so liberating and exciting about it, you've got to try it out," she said recently as she fidgeted, fully clothed, on the couch in her friend Tasha's Manhattan apartment. "I was teaching a class on imperialism, " she continued, "and I was delivering all this material that was kind of new and upsetting, and everyone was getting all worked up and upset, and I was getting all worked up and upset, and all of a sudden, all I wanted to do was flash my underwear! It was crazy," she said with a throaty giggle.

That's because she wasn't wearing just any panties. Elizabeth is part of Axis of Eve, a fledgling group of rabble-rousing feminists and anti-war activists who have taken to flashing their undies as a form of political dissent. The Eves, as they call themselves, are on a mission to sex up protest. They take to the streets wearing "protest panties" which come emblazoned with anti-Dubya double-entendres like "Expose Bush," "Lick Bush," "Give Bush the Finger" and "Drill Bush Not Oil." When the Eves flash them at rallies, the effect is somewhere between a 1970s' love-in and George Bush's worst, frat- addled nightmare of a panty raid gone awry.

(via)
17:22 BST

More Al Gore

I can't help it, he just said it so well:

Moreover, the administration has also set up the men and women of our own armed forces for payback the next time they are held as prisoners. And for that, this administration should pay a very high price. One of the most tragic consequences of these official crimes is that it will be very hard for any of us as Americans - at least for a very long time - to effectively stand up for human rights elsewhere and criticize other governments, when our policies have resulted in our soldiers behaving so monstrously. This administration has shamed America and deeply damaged the cause of freedom and human rights everywhere, thus undermining the core message of America to the world.

President Bush offered a brief and half-hearted apology to the Arab world - but he should apologize to the American people for abandoning the Geneva Conventions. He also owes an apology to the U.S. Army for cavalierly sending them into harm's way while ignoring the best advice of their commanders. Perhaps most importantly of all, he should apologize to all those men and women throughout our world who have held the ideal of the United States of America as a shining goal, to inspire their hopeful efforts to bring about justice under a rule of law in their own lands. Of course, the problem with all these legitimate requests is that a sincere apology requires an admission of error, a willingness to accept responsibility and to hold people accountable. And President Bush is not only unwilling to acknowledge error. He has thus far been unwilling to hold anyone in his administration accountable for the worst strategic and military miscalculations and mistakes in the history of the United States of America.

He is willing only to apologize for the alleged erratic behavior of a few low-ranking enlisted people, who he is scapegoating for his policy fiasco.

In December of 2000, even though I strongly disagreed with the decision by the U.S. Supreme Court to order a halt to the counting of legally cast ballots, I saw it as my duty to reaffirm my own strong belief that we are a nation of laws and not only accept the decision, but do what I could to prevent efforts to delegitimize George Bush as he took the oath of office as president.

I did not at that moment imagine that Bush would, in the presidency that ensued, demonstrate utter contempt for the rule of law and work at every turn to frustrate accountability...

Every now and then I think about writing a post called, "Al woke up. It had all been a dream." It's still the autumn of 2000, and he knows this was not just a dream. He's not the only one, it turns out. Over breakfast, Tipper says, "I had the most awful nightmare last night...." He hears that a number of times during the day. Bill Clinton calls him and says, "Al, this isn't just any election. I had this dream...."

And Ted Koppel, Tim Russert, and Dan Rather, shaken by the picture of their own culpability, try to assure themselves that faced with the same choices they would not let themselves be pushed into the same laxity of professionalism, and resolve to live up to a higher standard. Michael Kelly realizes he's been playing a stupid and dangerous game and that it's time to grow-up and take his responsibilities seriously.

And four years later, the Republicans have their convention in Atlanta, and then the Democrats have their convention in New York. Gore has turned out to be a far better president than I had imagined. We may not know what changed him, but we know that somehow he has become the president we'd always hoped for. On the eve of the election, we drink a toast to the man who we know will be re-elected in a landslide, as we gaze out over the city from the restaurant at the top of the tower.
16:11 BST


Filling the ticket

Elton Beard's Shorter David Ignatius:

The best way to unite the country is to elect a president and vice president who agree on nearly nothing.
It's astonishing to me that there are actually Democrats who think McCain is in any way a viable choice for a Democratic VP. He may not be as far out in Loonyland as the bulk of the Republican leadership, but that doesn't mean he's our guy. He's actually a staunch conservative, and that's not what we need right now. He's also the head of the Arizona Bush campaign and has publicly stated that Bush should be returned to the White House. His reputation for integrity is only by comparison; he's not as wonderful as the buzz paints him, he's just a whole lot better than the gang of maniacs and liars that currently controls his party.

And anyway, what Kerry really needs is someone who will help promote the kind of liberal ideas that appeal to real working people - including the real working people who don't yet realize why they should be voting Democratic.

I think that guy is John Edwards. Wesley Clark is nice, sure, and if he wants to add his voice to the campaign that would be neat, but Edwards is the guy who has really developed a program to address the real policy needs of our country, and crowds seem to love him. Skippy thinks Edwards is the people's choice, too - although he is not from the liberal end of the party, he has a liberal understanding of the value of people who work for a living, he is engaging and thoughtful and energetic, and he seems to have a real grasp of what needs to be done. Skippy also notes that even Howard Fineman is saying Edwards is polling well.

Bear in mind that the VP candidate doesn't have to be the only guy who helps campaign for the ticket. Some Democrats have already shown a willingness to come out strong as critics of the current administration. Those who have done so should be rewarded (as Atrios keeps reminding us); those who have not should be encouraged to do so. People like Joe Biden should be spanked for being more of a hindrance than a help.

And McCain's criticisms of Bush are actually much more powerful coming from him as a Republican Bush-campaigner than if he switched parties. (Let's not forget what the Republicans did to Jeffords when he switched, eh?) I like him right where he is, thank you.
14:51 BST


Entertainment

Aljazeera has reported on this years PU-litzer awards from Norman Solomon at FAIR: The worst US media performances.

In Salon, the wonderful Eric Boehlert talks about Rush's forced conscripts: American Forces Radio fires a daily barrage of Rush Limbaugh at its million uniformed listeners. So why are liberals kept off the military's airwaves?

We don't get The Practice here anymore, so we missed this excursion into political criticism.

DCCC TV with Republican Survivor.
13:50 BST


The man we elected

I've been reading Al Gore's speech, and it's so good and so strong he's covered my entire range of adjectives and several of my favorite nouns. At first I was thinking, "I could have written that," and then I realized, no, it's better than what I would have written. No punches pulled, it's all there. I hear C-SPAN 1 is going to air it in a few hours (Wednesday night, 10:00 PM Eastern Time) and I hope I can stay awake for it.

George W. Bush promised us a foreign policy with humility. Instead, he has brought us humiliation in the eyes of the world.

He promised to "restore honor and integrity to the White House." Instead, he has brought deep dishonor to our country and built a durable reputation as the most dishonest President since Richard Nixon.

Honor? He decided not to honor the Geneva Convention. Just as he would not honor the United Nations, international treaties, the opinions of our allies, the role of Congress and the courts, or what Jefferson described as "a decent respect for the opinion of mankind." He did not honor the advice, experience and judgment of our military leaders in designing his invasion of Iraq. And now he will not honor our fallen dead by attending any funerals or even by permitting photos of their flag-draped coffins.

How did we get from September 12th , 2001, when a leading French newspaper ran a giant headline with the words "We Are All Americans Now" and when we had the good will and empathy of all the world -- to the horror that we all felt in witnessing the pictures of torture in Abu Ghraib.

Just about had me in tears.

If only we had a man like Gore in the White House....
00:10 BST


Wednesday, 26 May 2004

On the web

According to the blurb for a Salon article I haven't read yet: National Review pundits do battle over Bush's Iraq speech; Podhoretz says soldiers like Sivitz and England deserve their own torture. Plus: Hitchens tags Michael Moore the ultimate ugly American. Yeah, of course; after all, whatever Sivitz and England did, at least they didn't torture the right-wingers by being a liberal who gets air-time.

Media Matters for America was horrified to learn that our tax dollars are paying for Rush Limbaugh to be piped-in for the listening pleasure of our people in Iraq, and cries foul. An open letter to Rumsfeld says: As you know, Mr. Limbaugh's commentary is broadcast on American Forces Radio to nearly 1 million U.S. troops, stationed in more than 1,000 outlets, in more than 175 countries and U.S territories, including Iraq. According to a May 26 article on Salon.com, the radio network was established "to improve troop morale by giving service members a 'touch of home' with American programs overseas." It is abhorrent that the American taxpayer is paying to broadcast what is in effect pro-torture propaganda to American troops. I ask you to consider removing Mr. Limbaugh from the radio network to protect our troops from these reckless and dangerous messages.

At the newly-revamped (and faster-loading) Blah3: Since we're re-naming Abu Ga-Rape...., crybabies, and conservatives to be proud of.
23:48 BST


Blogosphere

At Through the Looking Glass, Charles Dodgson found Stanley Fish making the remarkable suggestion in the NYT that academics should stay out of politics. Well, I suppose this had to come along as soon as the righties had convinced themselves that academe is just a hot-bed of liberals. Check out the graphic he found, too. (Oh, yeah, it's still not funny.)

Mac Thomason at War Liberal and Max Blumenthal (whose weblog I just discovered via Atrios - and it's good stuff) have more examples of the latest in right-wing efforts to keep the judiciary from, you know, upholding the Constitution. Law school must be easier than I thought if these nutters managed to get through. (Max is also one of many to mention that Al Gore was scheduled to give another big speech about Iraq last night. I can barely wait to see whether the media is still going to try to pretend he is nuts or just ignore it altogether.) Read the whole page for many more exciting things - like where else the Bush administration is getting it's help, and how Britain's libel laws are being used to prevent the publication of Unger's House of Bush, House of Saud here.

Atrios is absolutely right: Mea culpas are all very well but if the NYT really wants some credibility they need to do a lot more house-cleaning. Or do they only fire black journalists (who fail to lead the country into unjustified war)?

And speaking of the NYT, check this post at Body and Soul: This morning's New York Times brings us a sad and fantastic (definition 2c) tale of how the election in Florida was accidentally stolen and African American voters disenfranchised by sheer coincidence. [...] See, when they purged the voting rolls of "felons" in Florida, they had no idea that the people kept from voting would be disproportionately African American. Nobody but a conspiracy nut or an illiterate would come to the conclusion that it was intentional.

David Yaseen says he has a stupid observation.
19:07 BST


News & analysis

Rehnquist orders study after Scalia flap: Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist has ordered a study of federal judicial ethics, a move that follows intense criticism of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia for taking a hunting trip with his friend, Vice President Dick Cheney.

The Daily Howler has completed it's latest series, a four-parter on how the press corps snoozed on the road to Iraq. It's gross misconduct, but they have their excuses all ready.

If you've missed the story of how the people sent to Iraq by the White House to run the country were chosen not for their expertise (they had none) but for the fact that their rTsumTs were posted on the Heritage Foundation site, Nick Confessore has the gist at Tapped. He's also got something on the little K Street war between Dick Armey and Tom DeLay and a look at how Fox gets it's fair and balanced voices, and recommends this interview with Bill Moyers, who is retiring from PBS. And Matt wonders why the Bush-supporters seem to think that having their dear leader give a speech is all that's necessary to fix things.

The more I look at this picture from Salon, the more it cracks me up. (And then there's this, from Drudge.)
13:17 BST


Bushnotes

A few reactions to the speech:

Approximately Perfect does the newspaper round-up.

No one at Salon was impressed.

Fake Plastic News explains what he said in terms even Bush could understand.

In any case, I don't think that speech is going to help this.

He's got a grab-bag full of campaign lies, so we'll see how that works.
00:20 BST


Tuesday, 25 May 2004

Notepad

I hear Bush bravely came out against beheadings last night. What a hero.

Another way for the FCC to restrict our freedom of speech?

Bush's priorities

Triumph of the Will & Grace
18:44 BST


Altercation digest

Alterman claims his correspondents rendered him irrelevant, and declared a Slacker Monday.

From "SSG Van":

I am not stealing any thunder from our Officer Corps, we have some really awesome leaders, but an LT doesn't have years of experience, that Staff Sergeant did. He took an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States, and he failed. Bored, pissed off, or God forbid, following orders, he had a moral obligation to do the right thing. Just like it's always preached, the hard right over the easy wrong. He had control over his men, and was with them, constantly. If stuff was ordered that wasn't right, he had the power and the right to say no. If they told him to do it anyway, he could have refused and had it taken care of further up the chain of command. Same situation Bateman was talking about, refusing an unlawful order. That Staff Sargeant is the direct link where the metal hits the meat and he failed the Corps of Non Commissioned Officers. There is another saying you may or may not be familiar with, that the Corps of Non Commissioned Officers is the backbone of the Army. That NCO lacked any backbone. He needs to fry for dishonoring everyone of us.
It's hard not to share that feeling. "Just following orders" is not a legitimate excuse in the US military. While we recognize the difficulty of refusing an order in the field, the fact is that American soldiers are legally obliged to do so in the face of an illegal command - and torture is unequivocally illegal under US law, no matter where that order is made. (And, contrary to this administration's famous weaseling, the Geneva Conventions are clear that any captured combatant is entitled to GC protections at least until a tribunal is held to determine their status.) Simple morality is one reason, and the inefficiency of torture is another, but there's another reason why even "evil" nations were prepared to sign on to the Geneva Conventions, as Tim Wilkins reminds us:
I cannot imagine anything that would be adequate punishment for anyone who would offer or accept the advice that America should not abide by the Geneva Conventions, or not listen to the ICRC about prisoner abuse. Let me explain my thoughts.

My only uncle, Major James V. Wilkins, was a USMC-Reserve fighter-bomber pilot in Korea. He was shot down during a bombing attack in the first months of the Korean War. He was badly injured parachuting from his plane, and was captured. He was tortured both physically and psychologically, and forbidden any communication with his family for most of four years. Many, if not most, of those imprisoned with him died in captivity.

After his release, he told us that one of the few things that kept him sane and alive in horrific conditions was receiving some of the packages sent to him by the family through the ICRC, and infrequent inspections of his prison camps by the ICRC, which pressured the North Koreans to comply with the Geneva Conventions.

He, along with the others who came home, only returned to us because of the influence of the ICRC and international pressure. He was proud to know that no U.S. prisoner could ever have been treated as savagely as he was.

What sort of "quaint" punishment would be appropriate for those traitors who would advise the country to weasel out of the Geneva Conventions, and thus put our soldiers forever at risk of torture, abuse and worse?

The practical safeguards the Geneva Conventions and the International Red Cross provide to our military personnel are vital, and it is simply astonishing that we ever had an administration that would so easily dismiss them, let alone that Bush's lawyer would actually put it on paper that it was all a bunch of old-fashioned rubbish. Quaint? To try to prevent the torture of your own people? Quaint for an administration that invokes morality at every turn to advocate torture of others? What kind of people are they?

Maybe "Old retired Navy guy" Nicholas Pisano is trying to answer that question:

If the political rhetoric in the wake of 9-11 and through both the Afghanistan and Iraq invasions is any indication, the Baby Boom belief system seems to be that our birthright as Americans makes us omniscient when it comes to dealing with the rest of the world. That this comes at a time when we seem to have little concern for domestic democratic processes, republican institutions or the social and economic welfare of our fellow citizens is hypocritical and an indication that our elites possess a hubris that is about ready to set us up for a big fall--as if Vietnam wasn't bad enough. That these elites have learned to take advantage of their own tremendous self-righteous and self-serving miscalculations and scandals to further erode civil institutions and democratic virtues is even more galling and perhaps an indication to anyone paying attention (including Stupid) that it may be time for the public to bring democracy back to the United States and concentrate on applying our own principles and living up to our own promises at home.
This may be a good description of the administration and their supporters, but I don't think you can hang this on "baby-boomers". These guys were never much like the rest of us.

The column finishes out with Jim Dwyer's pocket bio of Sy Hersh's career highlights, a downright classy consideration of The Sopranos as an exploration of loyalty and morality, and a few final words for Tony Randall. Good stuff.
14:30 BST


Media

Is the press soft on Bush?

A joint project by the Pew Research Center and the Project for Excellence in Journalism reveals a darkly pessimistic view of the profession among its own members, often echoing the criticisms of the public at large.

The 55 percent of national journalists, and 37 percent of local ones, who see the media as soft on Bush may well be reflecting their own views of the president. At national outlets, 34 percent describe themselves as liberal, 54 percent as moderate and 7 percent as conservative. (The local split was 23-61-12.) Nearly 7 in 10 of the liberal national journalists criticized the Bush coverage.

Via Pandagon.
13:13 BST

Stuff I saw

Helen Thomas: Message To Kerry: Time To Protest War Again

Thom Hartmann: Liberal Talk Radio - Let The Water Cooler Wars Begin

More blood from a stone

Suicide economy

Enron Tapes Hint Chiefs Knew About Power Ploys (via)

What Hunter Thompson said.

And congrats to Oliver Willis for joining David Brock at Media Matters for America
01:07 BST


Monday, 24 May 2004

Things to read

PNH has three short posts up with links to articles that he says tell us about Our Future. You should check them out.

Last week Jim Henley responded to the alleged discovery of an alleged actual chemical weapon in Iraq with a point-by-point explanation of why it doesn't change anything. This is the sort of thing that should be kept on file in case any more of this stuff turns up.

From the Borowitz report: PHOTOS SHOW BUSH WEARING HOOD WHILE PLANNING WAR
Senators Demand Explanation

(Thanks to Steve Smith for the tip.)
21:37 BST


Monday morning leftovers

Time travel - 1954 to 1963 in less than a year.

For Crying Out Loud, It Worked Against HITLER, Dude!

Congratulations to Michael Moore on winning the Palme D'Or.

Unfreep the Pelosi poll, says Skippy, who also says you can download Eric Idle's "The FCC Song" here for free.

Roger Ailes produces the illustrated "The Way We Were", with pictures like this one. (via)

In praise of John Brunner. [And speaking of SF, the Hugo short fiction nominees are up online to read, now. (via)]

Cooking by numbers
14:01 BST


Sunday, 23 May 2004

Neo-conned

Josh has all the straight dope, of course, but my pick for the topic is Teresa Nielsen Hayden and her merry gang of commenters on the story of The Mouse That Played "Let's you and him fight." If Iran really did manage to scam the US into invading Iraq they have pulled off a masterful sting that is tremendous pay-back for the way we embroiled them in a war with Iraq not so long ago.

And it was easy for them, because it was what the Bushistas wanted to do anyway. Only a mark who was detached from reality in truly Nabokovian dimensions could have fallen for it, but hey, it turns out we weren't misunderestimating Bush after all!

And anyway, I'm sure it must be Clinton's fault - even though the neocons haven't yet figured out how to "prove" it, yet. (Well, they don't call him "Slick Willie" for nothin', eh?)

Those who have figured out it's FUBAR but can't quite bring themselves to blame Bush think Rummy's head is the only one that has to roll, but I think Skimble, referring to another aspect of the Iraq story, has it right:

Terror alert level: Ignored. Fred Kaplan in Slate correctly focuses on the aspect of the White House culpability story that is being drowned out by the disgusting spectacles of Abu Ghraib and Nick Berg: the deliberate negligence of Zarqawi:
It's a tossup which is more disturbing: a president who passes up the chance to kill a top-level enemy in the war on terrorism for the sake of pursuing a reckless diversion in Iraq-or a president who leaves a government's most profound decision, the choice of war or peace, to his aides.
The "failure of leadership" meme that Taguba made public last week has the shape of a much larger theme that applies to the entire Bush White House.
I'm sure the administration will go through it's entire wardrobe of excuses and distractions to try to make us forget to look for the man behind the curtain and all that (did they kill Hubble because that would find him?), but since even several members of the Washington press corpse have started to get the feeling something could be wrong, bits and pieces are leaking into the public consciousness. As Josh observes, even The Candidate Himself is making dark jokes:
Kerry told reporters in front of cameras, 'Did the training wheels fall off?'
I pushed a button for whatever tape was in the deck and somehow this song just seemed so relevant:
Take a look at the Lawman
Beating up the wrong guy
Oh man! Wonder if he'll ever know
He's in the best selling show
Is there life on Mars?
[Skimble also has a round-up of Berg video conspiracy theories, the latest on Skilling, Lay, Baxter, and the Enron heist in California, and more "potential felons" to be removed from the Florida voting rolls.]

Update: Gary Farber says it was crack cocaine. (And thank you for changing the colors, Gary, it's a relief.)
16:20 BST


Support America

Terry Jones says so:

Tony Blair tells us that we should do everything we can to support America. And I agree. I think we should repudiate those who inflict harm on Americans, we should shun those who bring America itself into disrepute and we should denounce those who threaten the freedom and democracy that are synonymous with being American.

That is why Tony's recent announcement that he wishes to stand shoulder to shoulder with George Bush is so puzzling. It's difficult to think of anyone who has inflicted more harm on Americans than their current president.

I sure can't think of anyone.
01:43 BST

Saturday, 22 May 2004

Lookin' around


No good under a tee-shirt, I bet.

I learned on Air America that "evangelist" is an anagram of "evil agents".

Thanks to Owen Boswarva for a heads-up on Barbara Ehrenreich's reaction to Abu Ghraib. (I didn't have this reaction. Even leaving Margaret Thatcher aside, we should know this from our own experience - I mean, we went to highschool with other women, and it wasn't all nice.)

Armageddon Christians breaking the law.

Josh Marshall:
We know Chalabi leaked, but who leaked to Chalabi?
Democratic candidate dogged by full-time Republican stalker.

Via Atrios:
Hawks Eating Crow by Eric Alterman at The Nation.
Excellent take-down of Andrew Sullivan by Juan Cole, and it's more than a mere Gotcha!
20:50 BST


From the invaluable Smirking Chimp

From Alexander Bolton at The Hill, Who let bin Ladens leave U.S.? Bush refuses to answer 9/11 commission's queries: The Bush administration has refused to answer repeated requests from the Sept. 11 commission about who authorized flights of Saudi Arabian citizens, including members of Osama bin Laden's family, from the United States immediately after the attacks of 2001.

Molly Ivins: 'How fascism starts': It's pretty easy to get to the point where you don't want to hear any more about Abu Ghraib prison and what went on there. But there are some really good reasons why Americans should take a look at why this happened.

From Steven Thomma at Knight Ridder Newspapers, Once-solid Republican Southwest in play for presidential election.
15:15 BST


Fixing the vote

They're voting in committee about voter-verified ballots for their voting machines in Fairfax County. GOTV is looking at who makes those machines:

Advanced Voting Solutions is the new name of another voting company, Shoup Voting Solutions. Their current top management, Howard Van Pelt and Larry Ensminger, were executives for Diebold-Global until last year. Officers of Shoup Voting Machine Co. were indicted for allegedly bribing politicians in Tampa, Florida in 1971, according to the San Francisco Business Times. Ransom Shoup was convicted in 1979 of conspiracy and obstruction of justice related to an FBI inquiry into a lever machine-counted election in Philadelphia. Shoup got a three-year suspended sentence. Meanwhile, Philadelphia has bought new voting machines from Danaher-Guardian, which appears to only sell voting machines formerly known as the "Shouptronic."
Uh oh.
12:52 BST

Friday, 21 May 2004

Class of '84 passes the torch

Jon Stewart's Commencement Address:

But it has always been a dream of mine to receive a doctorate and to know that today, without putting in any effort, I will. It's incredibly gratifying. Thank you. That's very nice of you, I appreciate it.
[...]
Lets talk about the real world for a moment. We had been discussing it earlier, and I.I wanted to bring this up to you earlier about the real world, and this is I guess as good a time as any. I don't really know to put this, so I'll be blunt. We broke it.

Please don't be mad. I know we were supposed to bequeath to the next generation a world better than the one we were handed. So, sorry.

(via)
19:15 BST

Read this now

Frank Rich on Fahrenheit 9/11, Beautiful minds and ugly truths

Wasn't it just weeks ago that we were debating whether we should see the coffins of the American dead and whether Ted Koppel should read their names on "Nightline"? In "Fahrenheit 9/11," we see the actual dying, of American troops and Iraqi civilians alike, with all the ripped flesh and spilled guts that the violence of war entails. We also see some of the 4,000-plus American casualties: those troops hidden away in clinics at Walter Reed and at Blanchfield Army Community Hospital in Fort Campbell, Kentucky, where they try to cope with nerve damage and multiple severed limbs. They are not silent. They talk about their pain and their morphine, and they talk about betrayal. "I was a Republican for quite a few years," one soldier says with an almost innocent air of bafflement, "and for some reason they conduct business in a very dishonest way."
[...]
Speaking of America's volunteer army, Moore concludes: "They serve so that we don't have to. They offer to give up their lives so that we can be free. It is, remarkably, their gift to us. And all they ask for in return is that we never send them into harm's way unless it is absolutely necessary. Will they ever trust us again?"
I didn't expect Rich to be won over easily, and I don't think he was. I want a DVD of this thing as soon as it's available, just like Atrios does.
18:40 BST

Are you better off than you were four years ago?

The Democrats are now officially asking the big question, with charts and graphs and a floor speech by Tom Daschle:

So we felt it was appropriate that we have some analysis of our circumstances today in the year 2004. Are we better off than we were in 2000? Are we better off in education today than we were back then, having passed but not funded the No Child Left Behind Act? Are we better off with our own national security and homeland security today than we were in 2000? Are we better off in our fiscal policy, our economic policy? Are we better off with regard to crime statistics? Are we better off with infrastructure? Where is it that we are better off?

I dare say no one could possibly say we are better off.

I kind of liked this:
We have heard a lot about the death tax, the so-called death tax, which is the estate tax paid by some who have large property transfers from one generation to the next. I do not hear my Republican colleagues talk about the birth tax.

There is now a birth tax of more than $20,000 because of fiscal irresponsibility and mismanagement. That birth tax is paid not just by people who inherit but by every single American child when they are born.

I wonder if they can get that meme off the ground.
18:04 BST

Hot media news

I was hoping I would never have to ask this question again: Is that supposed to be funny?

The Poor Man learns science from talk radio.

Eric Alterman with a news flash: Thirty-seven years after its anticipated release, an all-new studio recording of SMiLE - often referred to as the most famous unreleased album in history - will be made available worldwide by Nonesuch Records on September 28, 2004. SMiLE will be produced by Brian Wilson and will feature the ten-member band that has supported him on tour over the past five years, augmented by The Stockholm Strings and Horns.

Less is Moore in subdued, effective '9/11', says Roger Ebert.

No Wizard Left Behind: Harry Potter and Left Behind are more alike than you might think. (Via Slacktivist)

Mr. Pierce reports on Mr. Christ's appearance with Mr. Russert.

Ruben Bolling scoops Washington Post!
16:30 BST


More real journalism

In honor of the release of the third edition of The Best Democracy Money Can Buy, Buzzflash interviews Greg Palast again:

I have a new chapter called "Oil Slick Jim, the Third Ring, and One Million Missing Ballots," and a whole bunch of new stories. The big story is that there were over a million missing ballots from African-American voters across the U.S. in the 2000 election -- even this kind of knocked me out.

I've been working with the statisticians from the U.S. Civil Rights Commission and Harvard Law School. In the year 2000, 1.9 million votes were cast and not counted across this country -- 1.9 million votes. And of those 1.9 million votes, about a million were cast by African-Americans. This investigation was conducted by Harvard and the Civil Rights Commission, and I grabbed the material. There's a 1965 Voting Rights Act that gave black people the right to vote, but not the right to have their votes counted.
[...]
For example, in black counties in Florida where paper ballots were used, if you made a mistake on a ballot -- a single wrong mark -- your ballot was thrown out and your vote wasn't counted. If you voted in predominantly white counties, and you made a wrong mark, your ballot was handed back to you. You were given a fresh ballot, and told to vote again and told how to correct your mistake. How about that?
[...]
Oh, it gets better, because the trick of this apartheid "spoilage rate" -- that's the technical term -- the trick to lose a million votes or make them disappear is to keep radically changing the system. Because what happens is that technicians fix the systems. In Florida, they fixed the problem with the paper ballots, and, therefore, they had to throw out the paper ballots. For example, the blackest county in Florida is Gadston. One in eight voters -- one in eight voters! -- had their ballots thrown out in the blackest county in Florida. It had the worst spoilage rating, and they knew it. They knew that there was going to be this problem with their ballots in advance.

Democrats had warned election officials and warned Katherine Harris and Jeb Bush that this was going to happen, in advance of the election, and nothing was done. After the election, it was fixed. And in 2002, there were basically no spoiled ballots in Gadston. So now that black people have their votes counted in Gadston, they've now been ordered to switch them over to computers. Because the system currently works -- it's been fixed -- and that can't stand.

There is, of course, a whole lot more to Palast than just the election story - although boy is that a big story - but you may recognize this feeling:
BuzzFlash: You were one of, if not the first, to cover the relationship between Bush and the House of Saud. Since then, several books have been released about these two powerful families and their history of money and oil contracts. I think you can take credit for people talking about this.

Greg Palast: I'm laughing. You know why? I write all this stuff way in advance or broadcast them on BBC television and write them in the Guardian newspapers. And then I'm called a conspiracy nut. So the definition of a conspiracy nut is someone who reports the news a year before The New York Times.

Greg talks more conspiracy nuttery in this interview - and, remember, he's got the documentation.
13:54 BST

Indecent exposure

Sidney Blumenthal, on The religious warrior of Abu Ghraib: Boykin was recommended to his position by his record in the elite Delta forces: he was a commander in the failed effort to rescue US hostages in Iran, had tracked drug lord Pablo Escobar in Colombia, had advised the gas attack on barricaded cultists at Waco, Texas, and had lost 18 men in Somalia trying to capture a warlord in the notorious Black Hawk Down fiasco of 1993.

Krugman on The Wastrel Son: He was a stock character in 19th-century fiction: the wastrel son who runs up gambling debts in the belief that his wealthy family, concerned for its prestige, will have no choice but to pay off his creditors. In the novels such characters always come to a bad end. Either they bring ruin to their families, or they eventually find themselves disowned.

Skippy wonders if it's payback time in Washington.

Reuters, NBC Staff Abused by U.S. Troops in Iraq: U.S. forces beat three Iraqis working for Reuters and subjected them to sexual and religious taunts and humiliation during their detention last January in a military camp near Falluja, the three said Tuesday.
12:33 BST


Peche a la frog

Here's a couple of headlines from Reuters:

Democrats Demand Payback of Illegal Medicare Videos: "Republicans should not be robbing Medicare to pay for political ads," said Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. The fake public service announcements were "justified" on the grounds of a requirement to inform the public, but they weren't actually informative; their main content seemed to be that, gosh, George W. Bush sure is nice to us!

Catholic Leader Open to Hearing from Lawmakers. (That was the version I found at Google News, but I liked this headline from the Salon AP wire: House Democrats issue warning to Church.) No mention of how they really ought to lose their religious exemption status if they've become an arm of the RNC.

From Jane's: Marching valiantly into the quagmire: According to the report, secret discussions may be under way concerning the Polish-commanded south-central multinational military division. There has been continuous speculation that the Poles, one of the biggest contingents in the Coalition force, will withdraw. (Thanks to 56K.)

From Arthur Silber: Log Cabin Republicans still stupid. (via)

From Gallimaufry: Free speech/free thought: Briefly, in March 2003, a young girl in an Albuquerque high school wrote a poem critical of the Bush administration. The principal and "a school military liaison" accused her of being un-American. They fired the girl's teacher and ordered the girl's mother to destroy her poetry.
01:24 BST


Thursday, 20 May 2004

Real journalism

Scott Rosenberg reminds readers that - as I was saying earlier - Salon has some real independent reporting going on, with its very own non-embedded reporter in Iraq, Phillip Robertson, reporting from outside the Green Zone.
16:09 BST


Quick check

The War on Terror: Victims Turning Perpetrators: Commencement Address to the Columbia School of International & Public Affairs, by George Soros.

Josh Marshall gives Safire a much-deserved drubbing. And man, is he right. How does he get away with this stuff? (And by the way, Bill, Hillary still hasn't been indicted, so where's that apology?) Also see: Shorter William Safire at the usual venue.

Washpost: U.S. Faces Growing Fears of Failure

Channel 4's 100 Greatest Movie Stars. Gregory Peck isn't on this list, so it bites. (However, I watched the end of the show, and it was kinda neat, and they're showing it again this weekend, in case you're interested.)
12:40 BST


His finger on the pulse

I went out and enjoyed the sunshine and did a meeting and talked to friends and stuff like that. When I came back I checked Eschaton and was frankly amazed at what the wingers have been up to.

Here, it's obvious that Glenn Reynolds isn't even vaguely interested in defending freedom anymore, as Roy Edroso has discovered. It seems there's too much free speech around lately, what with the press failing to worship the administration as perfectly as they were doing two years ago. This is exactly what Arthur Silber predicted. I didn't, but he knows them better than I do. Oh, yeah, I expected it from Bush and Ashcroft and all, but I really thought old Glenn was a more honest edition. Well, okay, not lately, but still....

But then Atrios points to a post at Off the Kuff noting that the Texas Comptroller is trying to rescind the Unitarian Universalists' tax exempt status on the grounds that they aren't a real religion.

Oh, yeah, and the internment of the Japanese was a great idea, apparently.

On the bright side, both Business Week and the voters (by wide margins) think the Catholic clergy who've been saying Kerry shouldn't be given communion are wrong - and that includes Catholics.

Atrios' real job is about to go away, so really, if you have any, you should give him money. We've got a big election coming up, we need this guy.
01:54 BST


Wednesday, 19 May 2004

Blogcheck

Even the cops supported Kamala Harris when she ran for district attorney promising not to seek the death penalty for any case. So now she's sticking to that promise, and a lot of people are unhappy - including Senators Feinstein and Boxer, and especially the cops.

Anne Zook had a deep bout of heavy peevishness yesterday. "No, no, no," she says, to a whole bunch of propositions. And that was after her depressing look at desegregation and resegregation.

Did the Justice Department Lie to the Supreme Court?

Jim Capozzola ran a poll of his readers' most admired Republican. God, you people are easy. (My most admired Republicans were not on the list. But then, they aren't in Congress anymore, either.) Jim also interprets Nick Berg's last words.
13:10 BST


Things to read

Gene Lyons: "It's a betrayal of everything it means to be an American."

Joe Conason wants to know why the NYT has so many good things to say about the RNC's scumbag-for-hire.

Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 wows Cannes: While inescapably a partisan and flatly polemical work, Fahrenheit 9/11 makes its case meticulously and convincingly, and uses all of the pop cultural rhetorical methods that have made the director not only the most popular documentary maker of his generation, but one of the most prominent American figures lashing out against the Bush administration: He knows how to talk in the language of TV.

Donna Shalala says, "One of the greatest challenges facing our country is getting affordable, accessible and stable healthcare coverage for all Americans." She also says politics should be put aside - but this is what politics is really about. (via)

Atrocities in Iraq: 'I killed innocent people for our government': Q: The reports said the cars were loaded with explosives. In all the incidents did you find that to be the case?
A: Never. Not once. There were no secondary explosions.

02:18 BST


Tuesday, 18 May 2004

Swine

From TalkLeft: I'm still having trouble (in spite of everything) believing that this is really happening:

The U.S. is suing Greenpeace over an 1872 law. Trial began today. We've written about the background of the case and criticized the Government for it several times--calling it an example of the Justice Dept.'s "out of control prosecution policy" and warning that:
If successful, will have an extreme chilling effect on the right of all protest groups to aggressively exercise their First Amendment rights.
I feel so safe, in these perilous times, knowing that the government is protecting me from for-godssakes Greenpeace, 'cause I was really being kept up nights, cowering and fear and all, about the danger they pose to us.
23:33 BST

Tony Randall

I saw him once on Cavette, and he was asked how he managed to keep looking so young for so long. He said he'd been taught, "Don't eat anything that won't spoil, and eat it before it do." He gave a great interview.

And, as always, Mark Evanier has his own recollections of a fine actor.
20:51 BST


Sermon from New York

From In These Times, Kurt Vonnegut foresees Cold Turkey:

How about Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, the Beatitudes?

Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the Earth.

Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.

Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God.

And so on.

Not exactly planks in a Republican platform. Not exactly Donald Rumsfeld or Dick Cheney stuff.

For some reason, the most vocal Christians among us never mention the Beatitudes. But, often with tears in their eyes, they demand that the Ten Commandments be posted in public buildings. And of course that's Moses, not Jesus. I haven't heard one of them demand that the Sermon on the Mount, the Beatitudes, be posted anywhere.

"Blessed are the merciful" in a courtroom? "Blessed are the peacemakers" in the Pentagon? Give me a break!

Via King of Zembla
20:32 BST

Stuff I saw

Well, it's kinda cute.

And they wonder why I call them dupes: A voice from the hallway said, "That must be the stupidest thing Pete McCutchen has ever posted on rec.arts.sf.fandom." I thought: That's going some - this is the guy who previously announced that racism in America is over. But this is pretty dumb.

Interesting catch by Hesiod: Anybody else notice the title and thrust of this English language Al-Jazeera story? "Bloggers doubt Berg execution video".

Children raised badly should not be given the keys to the White House.

Again: Marijuana is not addictive. And, as even Harry Anslinger admitted, it wasn't a "gateway drug" until it was made illegal.

Outrage report.

Hesiod reports again on the Bush league: An Ohio manufacturing plant that George W. Bush used last year as a backdrop to show how his economic policies were working...has shut down.

Homophobic parish to waste money
00:40 BST


Monday, 17 May 2004

Editor's notebook

I tend to veer between assuming my readers know what I'm talking about - and therefore using sloppy phrases that short-hand rather than explaining - and over-explaining and repeating things to make sure they do know what I'm talking about. Someday I will find the perfect balance and become the greatest writer in the world. In the meantime:

Dear Avedon Carol:

Thank you for your time.

May I ask why you say that the Brock and Boehlert articles are worth reading even though they are at Salon? I am just wondering why the fact that an article is at Salon makes it less worth reading.

I enjoy your site and the service you provide.

Sumana Harihareswara

Disclosure: My very polite reader is customer service representative for Salon and of course has more than a passing interest in what appears to be a criticism of their content.

But, sloppy me, I wasn't talking about content at all. In fact - and I should say this more often - I think Salon is A Good Thing, which is why I link to it so often, despite the fact that, yes, you have to sit through what are sometimes fairly annoying commercials. But they actually spend money on original reporting and it has to come from somewhere since people like me (and you too, I'll wager) just can't afford to subscribe to every good thing they see on the web.

For those who never click on these links, an explanation: If you want to read Salon these days, you can click on their "Free Day Pass", sit through whatever the current sponsor's message is, and then read the whole of Salon for free for the next 18 hours. Most of the ads aren't really all that much of a hassle (and I say this as someone who is on dial-up), and sometimes they are downright illuminating. (The one I hate the most is the Salon house ad, which makes me click through several frames telling me that they will give me Free Stuff if I subscribe. The car ad was fun, though.)

At the other end of the spectrum, Gary Farber wrote:

Also, links to a site that most people won't link to because it requires one to sit around for many minutes while it cycles through ads are not the best possible link. Particularly when they are are from AP, and, literally, available from thousands of other sites, say, via, Google News. Linking to Salon in such a case suggests that you can't be bothered to spare a minute, but want us to waste five or six minutes instead. Not a good message, I murmur.
The impatient Mr. Farber knows what I mean about Salon ads, but didn't notice that the post he refers to contained links to two different versions of the AP story, and that I was actually making note of the fact that one version was clipped. I had checked a second site for the sake of redundancy; it wasn't necessary to follow that link at all.

I do find it irritating, however, that Gary is suggesting to me that most (responsible?) "people" won't link to Salon because of the ads and that somehow I should feel obliged not to do so. While it's true that there are numerous other sources for AP wire stories, it's also true that Salon has some pretty good content from time to time. In fact, Salon is one of the few places where original reporting is still developed without quite as many corporate hooks hamstringing reporters. That's the sort of thing that should be rewarded, not punished.

In other editorial news, Tim Porter at First Draft has a list of must reads on the subject that I will check out now that it's surftime.
19:10 BST


RIAA must be Republicans

Moses Avalon discovers a little discrepancy:

When speaking this month to a representative from Soundscan, the company that provides much of the data for the Billboard Top 200 Chart, I learned things that would contradict reported statements by the RIAA. Mainly that US labels have had a significant reduction in sales over the past three years. Cary Sherman, president of the RIAA, responded personally, put his rebuttals on the record and in the process exposed intriguing insight into the way the RIAA calculates "losses."

Soundscan is a service owned by Nielsen, the company that computes TV ratings. Soundscan uses the barcodes on CDs to register sales at record stores. The correlated data contributes to the Billboard chart listings, as well as much of the market research that record companies use to determine which artists are worth keeping under contract.
[...]

- For the first quarter of 2003 Soundscan registered 147,000,000 records sold.

- For the 1st quarter of 2004 Soundscan will report 160,000,000 records sold.

That's 13,000,000 more units, almost a 10% increase in sales since last year. He also confessed that 1st quarter "album sales" (as opposed to overall sales) had increased 9.4% since 2003.

What gives? Didn't Cary Sherman recently attest to the "fact" that there was a "7% decrease in revenue since last year." (This quote was taken from Mr. Sherman's speech to Financial Times Media at a Broadcasting Conference in London.) And didn't he name piracy/file-sharing as the main reason? Yes, according to more than one source. ([link])

So, I asked the Soundscan rep, who would only speak to me if I didn't use his name, "Would you disagree with what the RIAA is implying?"

"I would NEVER disagree with the RIAA," he said.

Of course he wouldn't; the RIAA is, after all, arguably Soundscan's biggest sycophant. But he did do the most amazing thing; he proceeded to explain the rational that would allow both of these seemingly inconsistent realities to exist in the same universe, "The RIAA reports a sale as a unit SHIPPED to record stores. Whereas Soundscan reports units sold [to the consumer] at the point of purchase. So, you're talking about apples and oranges."

Aha! So there's actually greater efficiency - orders and shipments are more closely reflecting actual sales figures (which, among other things, means fewer returns). But as far as the retail consumer is concerned, this is irrelevant; whatever else you, oh retail consumer, are doing, whether it involves file-sharing or taping or anything else, you're still buying more music, and the industry is getting more money from you.

Something Avalon's article doesn't tell you is that this was bound to happen anyway, since methods for accurately accounting for what is actually sold over the counter have been slowly tightening up over the last 20 years. Because, for most of my lifetime, the chart position for a recording was based not on actual sales figures, but on guesswork from surveys of counter personnel. Those perceptions were often highly inaccurate - a fact that wasn't understood until some traders started to adopt Soundscan. Nowadays, the process for retailers can take the real sales figures into account, whereas once upon a time their orders were based on biased assumptions rather than real sales data.

But in order to cry poor, the record companies give you a figure that doesn't reflect actual sales at all.

Why are sales up? It might have nothing to do with file-sharing; this, too, might be a result of the fact that stores are more likely to order the recordings people seem to be buying.

There are alternative explanations, of course, and one could be that file-sharing helps promote the music. But there is no evidence that file-sharing is hurting sales.

All the RIAA's whining and prosecutions are there to try to get legislators to vote them more free money for something they do not deliver, just as they did by imposing a tape tax that pays not into the public treasury but into the recording industry - and is not delivered to the creators whose royalties the RIAA claims to be defending, either. If everyone suddenly understood that the industry is taking in more money rather than less, and that file-sharing is not in fact hurting their sales (and neither did taping), their line to all that free money will dry up.

And then, who knows, maybe people will begin to start talking more seriously about the way the industry rips off performers by failing to properly remunerate them.

(Via Epicycle)
14:22 BST


More news and views

American Stranger is having a party at the new, improved Blah3 - and he says the pi±ata is Bush. He also supplies a link to this video clip of the curiously interrupted interview of Colin Powell by Tim Russert. Hm.

I don't know what I said to inspire it, but Lawrence Krubner is asking some helpful questions about the usefulness of compromise in government.

Corporate Political Censorship Runs Wild. Disney, Sinclair, and: The most shocking act of blatant political censorship has been on the Internet by Yahoo. Yahoo has canceled the email account and Yahoo discussion groups of Florida Democratic radio talk show host Andy Johnson. This was done without good reason or advance notice. The action keeps him from having access to all his emails or addresses. It cripples his radio show. All his contact information has essentially been seized by Yahoo!

Holes Appearing In Berg Murder Story - collected questions.
01:30 BST


Sunday, 16 May 2004

By their works you shall know them

Here's a piece of your Sunday morning sermon from The National Catholic Reporter:

Is John Kerry a good Catholic?
ByJoan Chittister, OSB

Pope Leo XIII, in his encyclical "Rerum Novarum," clearly thought Catholic morality had to do with establishing balance between capital and labor. John Kerry supports increasing the minimum wage and indexing it to inflation. That's a very Catholic position.

Pius XI wrote that being a good Catholic involved working against financial monopolies that restrict enterprise. Kerry intends to stop the offshore banking that hides corporate profits from the tax rolls and shrinks the revenue needed to provide public goods and services. That's a very Catholic position.

Pius XII wrote that the right of private property is a lesser right than the rights of all to the goods of the earth. John Kerry promotes legislation designed to support U.S. farmers, the reunification of immigrant families and the restoration of benefits for legal immigrants. Those are very Catholic positions.

John XXIII condemned sexism, the arms race and systemic poverty. John Kerry opposes the wage gap that now exists between men and women workers. He supports arms control and non-proliferation measures. He supports welfare programs. Those are very Catholic positions.

Paul VI taught that social justice includes the obligation of rich nations to honor the rights of poor nations. Kerry has denounced the policies of unilateralism and preemptive war. He promises to renew U.S. alliances around the world so we are seen as an international partner not a bully. Those are very Catholic positions.

The 1971 bishops document on "Justice in the World" called social sin as immoral as personal sin. Kerry sponsored legislation to stop the arms trade to nations that are undemocratic. He worked to create the UN genocide tribunal in Cambodia. Those are very Catholic positions.

John Paul II, in his encyclicals calls for the transformation of structures that oppress the poor in capitalist countries. Kerry has spoken out against racial profiling. He supports the restoration of affirmative action. He has pledged himself to restore civil liberties, lost during the Ashcroft era, to the United States itself. Those are very Catholic positions.

And all of them -- along with subsidized housing programs, educational supports, minimum wage proposals, child-care credits and anti-capital punishment propositions -- are essentially, fundamentally and profoundly pro-life positions.

Can Catholics vote for him in good conscience? If "good conscience" has something to do with upholding the highest ideals of the faith and its commitment to all human life, they can.

Or you can go directly to source and note that Kerry's positions seem a lot more consistent with the teachings of Jesus than do those of George Bush, making him not just a good Catholic, but a much more convincing Christian.

(Which reminds me, I've now re-posted the first five of my DNO articles at Avedon's other weblog, the most recent one being It's the Christianity, Stupid.)
14:00 BST


Saturday, 15 May 2004

Things I learned at the pub


Credit: Fortean Times / Paul Taylor
Much thanks to FT for allowing me to post this.

At the pub we talk about the news, the TV documentaries, and the weird stuff scattered in the atmosphere. Like more reasons to be extremely grateful for the National Health Service.

And I recently learned that all European royalty is really German, even Phil the Greek, who is Danish. And the Romanoffs, who are Prussian. And Catherine the Great, after whom they made a law that women couldn't be in charge anymore.

I also learned about Nazi families. I learned that Hitler had two nephews who ended up in the United States and who appear to be the last of his line. They changed their name, of course, and have vowed that the line dies with them, to avoid any future unpleasantness (like having an heir turn out to decide to be the new Führer).

Which reminded me of an earlier evening at the pub when I learned about a man who was a rather impressive hero who saved many Jews in Germany. His name was Albert Goering, and he loathed the Nazis, but fortunately his brother was very fond of him and so Albert managed to get away with a lot, even getting Hermann to sign documents to rescue Jews. There's a lovely anecdote about Albert one day coming upon a scene in which a bunch of Nazis decided to humiliate some Jews by making them get down on their knees and scrub the street. As soon as he realized what was going on, he also got down and started scrubbing with them. The Nazis knew who he was and couldn't do anything to stop him - but they also couldn't let him keep scrubbing the street, either, so they let the Jews stop.

Kind of an inspiring guy, really.
23:50 BST


Stuff to see

Kevin Drum has a nice little graph showing the progress of Bush's poll numbers.

Creepy parallels

Carnival of Crime Watchers

Josh Marshall on Bush as his own yes-man

Todd Gitlin: It's an ancient dream of empire-builders to unify the world, but George W. Bush's way of being a uniter, not a divider, is surprising and unique-he's united the world against himself.

Atrios' Saturday morning headline says that Al Neuharth of USA Today says Bush should go: As a former combat infantryman in World War II, I've always believed we must fully support our troops. Reluctantly, I now believe the best way to support troops in Iraq is to bring them home, starting with the "hand-over" on June 30. [...]Maybe Bush should take a cue from a fellow Texan, former president Lyndon Baines Johnson, who also had some cowboy characteristics. Lyndon, of course, declined to run for a second term.

Write your own propaganda.
23:01 BST


Headline in my dreams
Lieberman resigns from Senate; cites "blogswell of outrage"

Washington, DC (MB)-- Shocking political observers across the nation, Joseph Lieberman (D in name only- CT) resigned his seat in the U.S. Senate yesterday. "I am deeply saddened by the blogosphere's reaction to my remarks in the Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on Friday," Lieberman said in a prepared statement. "I have long looked upon blogs as a vital resource in our fair nation, challenging our official media from a wide variety of political positions and giving voice to ordinary American citizens in every walk of life. I know that if I have lost the support of bloggers, I have lost the support of the people. I have therefore decided not to serve out my term of office between now and 2006. To do so under these circumstances, I feel, would make a mockery of democracy itself. I thank the good people of Connecticut for allowing me to serve as their representative for these past sixteen years, and I look forward, as I remarked in my October 2000 debate with Dick Cheney, to rejoining the private sector."
[...]
Sources close to Lieberman pointed specifically to remarks by Washington-based reporter Joshua Micah Marshall, as well as to the website of an obscure literature professor in central Pennsylvania. "Apparently this guy had an ordinary little blog that got about seven or eight hundred visitors a day," one aide said, "and then he puts up this thing on Lieberman, and before he knows it, he has something like ten thousand hits in twelve hours. For the Senator, I think that was the tipping point- we took one look at the traffic stats at michaelberube.com and we knew it was time to throw in the towel."

Don't ya just wish.
20:16 BST

Paranoia report

Mark Perkel enters into tin-foil hat territory - or is it? Do the terrorists shop at the same trendy furniture store that was the source of the fine decor at Abu Ghraib prison? You be the judge.
14:11 BST


Conservative dictionary

Supremes decline to stop gay marriage:

The Supreme Court refused Friday to block Massachusetts from allowing gay marriages beginning Monday, removing the last legal impediment to what will be the nation's first state-sanctioned same-sex weddings.
[...]
Mathew Staver, president and general counsel of the Florida-based Liberty Counsel, which sought the stay, said he was disappointed by the ruling.
Liberty Counsel. I just love conservative names for things. Up is down, war is peace, freedom is slavery, and liberty is not letting other people get married. You gotta love their...originality.
13:33 BST

Friday, 14 May 2004

At Altercation

Pierce today has a good encapsulation of the media landscape:

Elsewhere, McCain grilled that Cambone character to a fine medium-well. He walked out on the revolting Senator Jim Imhofe (R-Plankton). Then, on Tuesday night, talking with Ted Koppel, he single-handedly redeemed Nightline, which otherwise spent the week looking down from a very great height upon The Shark. On Tuesday, McCain was preceded by a filmed report that seemed designed as an apologia for the indiscretion of reading all those dead people's names last week. It was all about how the murder of Nick Berg had put the prisoner scandal into perspective, and how Pat Roberts had read the dispatch in close to real time in the hearing room, and some more raving from Imhofe, and a lot of ends-justifying-means thumb-sucking. (Which was followed up the next night by a show on the theme "How Much Torture Should We Allow?" which included a package in which the views of Michael Ignatieff were paired off with those of the producer of Fox's "24." Nice.) Then McCain came on and threw a bucket of cold water on the whole parade, arguing that torture is, pretty much, well, torture, no matter under which flag it is inflicted.
And could this letter be from our girl?
Name: Media Whores Online
Hometown: ?
After saying he wouldn't attend his daughters' college graduations because he didn't want people to have to go through security, Junior will be doing at least 3 commencement speeches.
Yesterday Eric reported that Tom Friedman has withdrawn his support for the administration on Iraq - and Max Boot says Rumsfeld has to go. Well, it's a start, eh?

And Eric said:

The only thing that prevents me from asking how this war could possibly have gone any worse is the fact that every time you think that what you've just heard about this administration is the worst possible outcome, they always manage to outdo themselves. It's amazing, really, and one has to exercise tremendous self-discipline to avoid giving into despair, particularly given how little of these basic truths make it through the SCLM. Once again, it proves Philip Roth's oft-repeated observation that the most vivid novelist's imagination is no match for reality, though that is hardly much comfort.
His quote of the day came from "The communist Financial Times": He is not up to the job. This is not a moral judgment, but a practical one. The world is too complex and dangerous for the pious simplicities and arrogant unilateralism of George W. Bush.

And there's too many links to check them all now but they all look interesting, especially the one to his article about David Horowitz. And speaking of crackpots, I'm honestly not sure if this letter is supposed to be parody, although seeing some of the things the right-wingers have been writing, it's really not unrepresentative:

Name: Rob Braswell
Hometown: Salisbury, NC
I find it interesting that you show your leftist bias so brazenly. THere has been no proof of torture by American soldiers at Abu Ghurib prison. Oh mercy! A few criminals had to take their clothes off and were humiliated for a while, call out Amnesty International, call out the Peace Corps, call out Ralph Nader and Heck, call out Hugh Hefner, doesn't he publish Playgirl,which is basically all these photos equal. Where is the outrage at the exponentially greater scandal, the Food for oil doozy that is blowing the lid off the UN and its totally corrupt ways of doing business. Yet John Kerry is UN this and UN that, when now we see that the top UN officials were making millions off the misery of the Iraqi people, and whoa, wonder of all wonders, good ol' Hans Blix' name shows up as