More on Helmet-Head

John at Blogenlust posts a reminder that in October of 2003, Condi was charged with managing the post-war efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan.

So, 15 months ago, after expressing dissatisfaction with the progress in Iraq, Bush appoints Rice to oversee, among other things, counterterrorism and political affairs in Iraq so that he can have more control over, and be more accountable for, events there. Mission Accomplished, indeed! (Note to Democrats: This would have been a nice thing to mention during the election.)
This adds a particularly interesting context to an exchange she had with Senator Joe Biden during her confirmation hearing (keenly spotted by Jill at Brilliant at Breakfast):
Biden: Do you think we had adequate forces?

Rice: I wouldn't presume to give the President advice.
Okay, well, here’s the problem, Condi. You’re the National Security Adviser, soon to be the Secretary of State. In either cabinet position, your primary job responsibility is to serve as an advisor to the President, particularly this president, who has repeatedly noted that he surrounds himself with people on whose advice he depends almost exclusively.

How can someone be fit to hold a position the requirements of which she either doesn’t understand or is unwilling to acknowledge under oath?

This woman makes me sick. Aside from her irrelevant expertise on the former Soviet Republic, what, exactly, are her qualifications? Nuzzling?



She has been an abject failure as a National Security Advisor. That her confirmation was all but a done deal before the hearing even began makes me feel ill. And unsafe. I mean, if another PDB came along warning of a potential attack, how can we be assured that Condi would be willing to take appropriate action? After all, she wouldn’t presume to give the President advice.

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Yeesh

David Corn has the goods on the shocking ass-licking the normally admirable Diane Feinstein gave to Condi yesterday:

Feinstein told the committee all about Rice's brilliant childhood. Rice played piano at the age of three. She read by the time she was five years old. Her father called her "Little Star." She attended Stanford University, Feinstein's alma mater. Feinstein cited Papa Bush's appraisal of Rice: "she knows what she is talking about." Rice, she noted, was the first woman and first African-American to be named provost of Stanford. She was good with students. And once as a child, she stood outside the White House and supposedly told her father, "I'm barred out of there now because of the color my skin. But one day, I'll be in that house."

This was all nonsense. Should people care about the personal story of a woman who has enabled Bush to bamboozle a nation?
Go read the rest. Good stuff.

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Maybe, Maybe Not

As we know, Senator Barbara Boxer was the only one with balls enough to hand Cuntaleeza her ass, but I regained a little respect for Kerry when I read this:

Rice seemed headed for easy confirmation by the Senate as President Bush's
choice to be the country's top diplomat. She did have a tense exchange with Sen.
Barbara Boxer, D-Calif. — Rice repeatedly asked the senator not to question her
truthfulness — but former presidential nominee John Kerry D-Mass., was the only
member of the Foreign Relations Committee who told her she might not win his
vote.


But still - she "might not" win his vote? I'm sure she's real worried. Why is it too much to ask Democrats to do something revolutionary and NOT confirm the bitch?

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Condi Gets Boxed!

Barbara Boxer went to town on Condi Rice today. It was awesome.

Crooks and Liars has the video of their most heated exchange here. A complete transcript is here. (Both links via AMERICAblog.)

Is it too early to start making my Boxer in '08 signs?

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No-Account Leadership

In a recent Washington Post interview, President Bush was asked why no one has been held accountable, “either through firings or demotions, for what some people see as mistakes or misjudgments” about the postwar process. Bush answered:

Well, we had an accountability moment, and that's called the 2004 election. And the American people listened to different assessments made about what was taking place in Iraq, and they looked at the two candidates, and chose me, for which I'm grateful.
Ever the artful dodger when it comes to tough inquiries, Bush did not, in fact, answer the question that was asked. Instead of acknowledging that he was being directly challenged on his management skills, he used it as an opportunity to once again reassert his alleged mandate—this time invoking it as a bulwark against accusations of wrong-doing. No longer can he be questioned; the American people have condoned his every decision by reelecting him.

Though the most obvious problem with this assertion is the almost equal number of people who voted against him, which should have handily squashed any notion that he was provided with immunity, the more infuriating issue is his insistence on refusing to hold accountable any of his inner circle, particularly in light of his willingness to blame anyone and everyone else for anything possible. (If you think I’m exaggerating, type “Bush blames” into Yahoo, and see the number of hits you get, all stories about the president blaming one group or another for various failings for which he is reluctant to accept responsibility.) He is eminently willing to hold accountable anyone who has no direct connection to himself, but the closer you get to him, the less likely you are to be on the receiving end of an accusatorily pointed finger.

Bush flatly refuses to hold himself accountable for anything (even though he is clearly capable of recognizing the role of president as a buck-stops-here position, having blamed Clinton for a plethora of problems, starting with his “inherited recession”), and because he sees his cabinet and advisors as extensions of himself, they, too, are immune from accountability, lest it be traced back to him. A lack of guilt by association.

What he fails or refuses to acknowledge is that in voting him in as President, the American people imbued him with the right and the responsibility to hold accountable those who make decisions that are bad for America. Elections are not meant to be, as the president clearly believes, simply referendums on amnesty for all past transgressions. The problem is, this election, that’s exactly what it turned out to be, because the man who was elected has chosen to interpret it thusly. And he generously extends the perk to those who surround him.

Despite his claim to the contrary, President Bush was not granted the authority to run wild with his pack of loyal lapdogs, impervious to criticism or complaint. Accountability in government does not peak in a single moment, as he would have us believe, but should instead be an ongoing process as policies unfold. Unfortunately, it doesn’t appear as though our blameless leader will be doling out anything but accolades for the foreseeable future.

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That's One Fancy Horse You Got There, Cowboy

Wow.

The president's hand-crafted limousine is longer, wider and taller than the production model, and it is equipped with state-of-the-art protection and communication systems.
It’s interesting that you go to war with the army you have, but you go to the inauguration with a brand-new limousine with state-of-the-art protection. Do you think he’s forgotten that the troops’ vehicles don’t have armor, or he just doesn’t care?

Personally, I’d bet the ranch (and free brush-clearing services for a year) that it’s actually both.

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Social Insecurity

Looks like it's Social Security Day here at S.S. S.S. asked me, as her resident economic expert, to do a piece from a financial planner's standpoint addressing why we should fight for Social Security. I may overlap with her earlier post a little, but here goes anyway…

It seems as though the Bush Administration’s main rationale for a switch to private retirement accounts is that they will give us ordinary folks more access to the large returns offered by the stock market. That they will also grant us greater exposure to the merciless vicissitudes of the equity markets is a fact that they conveniently gloss over. They way they tell it, you simply cannot lose, and only an idiot would turn down the opportunity they’re offering. In fact, why on earth did we bother inventing this whole Social Security malarkey in the first place?

Well, here are a few reasons:

Social Security is idiot proof: it requires no special knowledge or financial savvy; you hold down a job, you pay into the program and you receive your benefits.

It is completely risk free, unless of course, you count the risk of some idiot republican being elected and dismantling the program.

It is mandatory, so no matter how profligate and irresponsible your behavior, something will be there for you upon retirement.

The Bush plan, on the other hand, possesses none of these qualities. Investing in the equity markets requires at least a modicum of financial knowledge, and is risky even for the experienced financial professional. A bear market while you are on the cusp of retirement will be devastating, and will force you to either delay retirement, or start making withdrawals from your nest egg at the least advantageous time.

I also wonder how many low-income people will actually be in a position to take advantage of the program, or even want to. Effectively what will happen is that the social security deduction on your pay check will disappear, and you will be given the freedom to stow away more dollars in tax sheltered accounts. Right now you can sock away $4,000 per year in your IRA ($4,500 if you’re over the age of 50), and under the Bush plan this number would increase. Terrific for people who have large incomes and want to hide as much of it as possible from the taxman, meaningless for those of us living pay check to pay check. If you could not afford to put $4,000 in your IRA this year, what difference would it make if next year you could put away a maximum of $40,000? Sure, your pay check is a little fatter, and you could take out the money previously set aside for Social Security and increase your IRA contribution, but little Johnny needs new shoes and your credit card payments are killing you, so screw it, you can worry about retirement later.

As far as I can tell, the most likely outcome of the Bush plan will be this: rich people will get to keep even more money out of reach of the IRS, middle and low income families will take that social security money and spend it on big screen TVs and SUVs, and then rely entirely on their shitty 401(k)'s for retirement. Net result: lots of impoverished old folks come 2030, or in other words, back to square one.

Oh, and we mustn’t forget that in the mean time, all the poor suckers who’ve been paying into Social Security for 20 or 30 years will suffer reduced benefits, since the money that was supposed to pay for their retirement will now be getting diverted to private retirement accounts.

I’ll leave questions about the political whys and wherefores of the Bush Administration to others, but from the viewpoint of a financial planner the Bush Plan sucks. Although, I suppose it does have the potential to increase my commission income considerably.

Oh okay, now I get it – PARTY ON!!!

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Oh, So Now They Like Darwin...

The Bush administration’s primary argument for Social Security reform is an impending fiscal crisis, but behind the (disputed) economic motivation, there lies an ideological impetus that drives the entirety of the president’s grand vision of an “Ownership Society.” Stephen Moore, the author of Bullish on Bush: How George W. Bush’s Ownership Society Will Make America Stronger, describes the intent to reform Social Security by privatizing accounts as a fundamental shift “from an entitlement society to an ownership society.”

In the Bushies lexicon, ownership is good, and there’s no dirtier word than entitlement. Social Security is a particular bailiwick among supporters of the proposed Ownership Society, as benefits decrease in proportion to earnings as earnings themselves increase. Simply stated, the poorer you are, the better a deal Social Security is for you. Conservatives never finish that thought, though, and here’s the rub—Social Security payments are no equalizer. Giving proportionately higher benefits to the lower tiers of earners is often the only thing keeping them from falling below the poverty line:

About half of Americans also have private pension plans, but for two-thirds of the elderly, Social Security supplies the majority of day-to-day income. For the poorest 20 percent, about seven million, Social Security is all they have. Even those figures understate the program's importance. According to an agency publication, ''Income of the Population 55 or Older: 2000,'' 8 percent of elderly beneficiaries were poor, but a startling 48 percent would have been below the poverty line had they not been receiving Social Security. Charles Blahous, the White House point man on Social Security, publicly criticized this calculation as ''mindless,'' and the Social Security agency no longer computes the figure. (Link)
Well, perhaps not “mindless” as much as “damningly contrary to the picture we’re trying to paint here.”

If the president has his way, that picture will be of a political landscape marked with the sign: Every man for himself. (Quite a peculiar position for a man whose entire life has been dictated by inherited privilege and family connections, one might dryly note, but that is a discussion for another day.) And it is, to be sure, not an unexplored position by the legions of Conservatives advocating the dismantling of Social Security who came before him. There is a sense among these privileged men that one gets what one deserves in life, and, looking at them, wishing them a fate as ugly as their politics, sometimes one can only hope that they are right—the pricks. But fate, or luck, is a very different thing than hard work, and they’re happy to tell you that they believe with a little hard work, anyone can be a productive member of their magnificent Ownership Society.

Now, I don’t want to get into a whole Marxist discussion about the means of production here, but what these insufferable, fatcat, classist wankers seem never to grasp is that if you want to live in a capitalist society that gives you the opportunity to get insanely rich, then we can’t all be wealthy. And if you want to be the kind of person who doesn’t pump your own gas, or make your own sandwiches, or clean your own house, or manicure your own fingernails, or drain your own dog’s anal pouches, then there are going to have to be people who fill all those jobs. Most of them are professional, hard-working people who put in at least 40 hours a week, or more, and even still, many of them won’t earn enough money to save as much as they’ll need in their retirement—especially when they’re not being compelled to put money into private accounts (that will likely earn half what Social Security would have for them), since paying the babysitter and their out-of-pocket healthcare costs always seems more pressing.

People who honorably dedicate their time, energy, and talents to jobs that might not pay well are indeed entitled to something—to not have worked their whole lives only to find themselves poverty-stricken in old age. I don’t think that’s asking for much, in exchange of a lifetime of providing able-bodied service to their chosen vocation.

They’re entitled to that much, and I think we are all obligated to provide it. It’s called a social conscience, and I know the concept isn’t all that popular in the Beltway, but maybe someone could give the Prez a heads-up and see if maybe it doesn’t sound to him kind of like the compassion junk his favorite philosopher was always yapping about.

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Don’t Know What You’ve Got Until It’s (Almost) Gone

One of the only things about Social Security that people on both sides of the argument can likely agree on is that much of the program remains a mystery to the American public (which is, of course, what the administration is counting on). To that end, I want to recommend Roger Lowenstein’s Jan. 16 article in the NY Times. It’s long, and you need to register to read it, but it’s well worth the effort. This is perhaps the best summary and analysis of the situation I’ve read, and it’s bolstered with some interesting history as well. Check this out:

[Social security’s] future was already very much in doubt. Conservatives claimed it would bankrupt the nation, and independent critics argued that the way it was financed amounted to ''financial hocus-pocus,'' as one editorial in The New York Times put it.
The year? 1938. The Social Security Act was three years old. Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? They’re just as wrong now as they were then. The strength of Lowenstein’s article is in bringing Social Security to life—explaining exactly for what it is we’re fighting, and why it’s worth fighting for.

More on social security later…

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Trackback

Rook might just get me using Trackback yet....

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Democratic Round-up: Signs of Life

Dare I say that the Dems are starting to vaguely resemble an opposition party...?

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid on judicial nominees:

"We have approved for the president of the United States 204 judges the last four years," he said. "We've turned down 10. Even in modern math, that's a pretty good deal."

He said the 10 who did not get a vote in 2004 "were rightfully turned down." The White House announced last month that Bush would renominate them.

Asked whether the filibusters would be repeated in the new congressional session, Reid said: "Well, I don't know, unless something's changed, and I don't think a thing in the world has changed. The background of these men and women that he brought forward, the 10 that we turned down, should have been turned down, and we'll turn them down again."

Reid was reminded of Frist's threat to invoke a "nuclear option," which would let the majority in the 100-member Senate stop a filibuster with 51 votes rather than the current 60.

"If they want to carry that through, it's a short-term victory for them, because they're not going to be in the majority forever," he said. "We're going to be in the majority. That's the way history is. And I think that they would rue the day they did that."

Senator John Kerry on the election results:

"Voting machines were distributed in uneven ways. In Democratic districts, it took people four, five, eleven hours to vote, while Republicans (went) through in 10 minutes — same voting machines, same process, our America," he said.

In his comments, Kerry also compared the democracy-building efforts in Iraq with voting in the U.S., saying that Americans had their names purged from voting lists and were kept from casting ballots.

"In a nation which is willing to spend several hundred million dollars in Iraq to bring them democracy, we cannot tolerate that too many people here in America were denied that democracy," Kerry said.

Fmr. Gov. Howard Dean on running for DNC chair:

"If I get this position, I'm not running for president in 2008," the former Vermont governor said after he joined six other contenders in suburban St. Louis trying to win over party officials from 13 Midwestern states for the DNC leadership job.

[…]

Dean noted, "I'm not a very Zen person, but I have recognized since the presidential election that actually the way to get power is to give it away, to give people power in their home states to do the things that have to be done and to trust people."

Senator Byron Dorgan on the FCC-ordered probe of the Armstrong Williams scandal:

Sens. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., asked the Government Accountability Office to investigate whether the Education Department's payment to Williams violated a ban on propaganda — and, if so, to determine who should be held accountable.

"There are real questions whether this is a real expenditure," Dorgan said in an interview. "This has all the makings of political payola."
[…]

In the GAO request, Dorgan and Wyden also asked for a government-wide review of any payments to journalists, commentators or talk show hosts to promote the administration's policies.

Reps. Henry Waxman and John Conyers on their request for a congressional investigation into long Election Day lines:

In a letter to the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, the lawmakers said one nonpartisan voter hot line received nearly 1,400 reports of "excessively long lines" from 32 states, including the battleground states of Ohio, Florida, Arizona, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

[…]

"While it seems most Americans endured this wait where possible, it is clear that in some cases citizens left the polling places without having voted when personal responsibilities or health concerns made waiting exceedingly difficult," the letter said.

Rep. Jane Harman on the delay of the release of report on an internal CIA investigation into pre-Sept. 11 failures:

In an interview, Harman said the report was substantially completed in July. Before the November elections, she said, CIA Director Porter Goss told her it would be completed within a couple of weeks.

"I am baffled by this," Harman said. "It is a congressionally requested report. It should have been there in the summer."

While Harman made clear she was not alleging that anyone is interfering, "what I fear is that as time goes by there may be some attempts to interfere," she said.

[…]

Harman said her aides contacted the inspector general's office Friday and were told the report may be more than six weeks away. Among hang-ups, people who are named in the report have been invited to comment, but there are delays because some are overseas, Harman said.

"They have e-mail and computers," she added. "I don't think it's that hard to find people."

Others in Congress have also questioned the pace of the review. Sen. Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, the top Democrat on the Senate's intelligence panel, wrote Goss in the fall about the report's progress and "the appearance that the inspector general's independence is being infringed."
The CIA declined to comment Thursday and Friday.

Senator Ted Kennedy on the Iraq War:

Iraq is "clearly is George Bush's Vietnam," said Kennedy, speaking on CBS's "Face The Nation" program.

[…]

According to Kennedy, Iraq "is a disaster because it's the a result of blunder after blunder after blunder. And it is George Bush's Vietnam," he insisted.

It has "absolutely been a mistake that we went into Iraq, instead of following (September 11 mastermind) Osama bin Laden," said Kennedy.

Further mistakes included not having enough troops for post-war operations, disbanding the Iraqi army, having single source contracts to groups like the politically connected Halliburton, the prisoner abuse scandals at Abu Ghraib, and the US refusal to accept offers by other countries such as Egypt to assist in training Iraqi forces, said Kennedy .

"Finally they have been unable to make up a plan -- they're making it up day by day. Until Iraqis are going to fight for their own country we are going to have a very, very dangerous situation," said Kennedy.

[…]

"Ultimately, we have to ask ourselves this very basic question. And that is, is the face of the United States part of the liberation and security and the stability in that country, or are we a force that is perceived to be expanding the kind of uncertainty and savagery and revolution that's taking place there?" he asked.

And Senator Kennedy once again on Democrats’ future:

We cannot move our party or our nation forward under pale colors and timid voices," said Kennedy, who has served 42 years in the Senate. "We cannot become Republican clones. If we do, we will lose again, and deserve to lose.

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Bush on Gays

He loathes you.

[Feb. 04] President Bush endorsed a constitutional amendment Tuesday that would restrict marriage to two people of the opposite sex…
He loathes you not.
[Sunday] The president said there is no reason to press for the amendment because so many senators are convinced that the Defense of Marriage Act -- which says states that outlaw same-sex unions do not have to recognize such marriages conducted outside their borders -- is sufficient. "Senators have made it clear that so long as DOMA is deemed constitutional, nothing will happen. I'd take their admonition seriously. . . . Until that changes, nothing will happen in the Senate."
He loathes you.
[Monday] The White House sought on Sunday to reassure conservatives that President Bush would work hard on behalf of a proposed constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage, backtracking from remarks Mr. Bush made in an interview suggesting that he would not press the Senate to vote on the amendment this year.

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Dear WaPo: Get Stuffed

Oh, barf.

The Washington Post examines the Bush family legacy with the headline “The Roosevelts, Kennedys, and Now the Bushes.” I don’t think I have time to point out the entire myriad of reasons why Shrub hasn’t earned the right to shine F.D.R.’s or J.F.K.’s shoes, no less be considered a part of one of the great American dynasties, but let’s just start with this:

FDR: The New Deal
Shrub: Attempting to dismantle Social Security using a web of taxpayer-funded misinformation campaigns

JFK: Civil Rights Advocate
Shrub: Leader of party seeking to restrict the rights of gays, encroach upon a woman’s right to choose, and undermine the rights guaranteed by the Geneva Conventions

There may not be a distinctive "Bush style" that other politicians try to mimic, as they did with JFK's appearance and wit. The family has yet to capture the romantic fancy of fiction writers and Hollywood producers. The incumbent is launching a second term, according to polls, with nearly as many Americans scornful of his presidency as supportive of it. No matter.

By any objective measure, political scholars say, Bush is a name that belongs next to Adams, Kennedy and Roosevelt as a force whose influence spans decades.
Really? I didn’t think comparing the policies of presidents was a subjective comparison. This is the problem with American journalism today—an inexplicable but evidently abject fear of critiquing the inherent value of policy, as opposed to its viability. Just because a policy can be enacted doesn’t automatically make it a good policy. And just because the Bushes managed to hold control of the White House for a third collective term doesn’t mean it warrants them a place among the great American political dynasties. If hanging on to the means to exert influence for decades is all it takes to become an American legacy these days, with no analysis of whether that influence lives up to the ideals that American politicians are meant to represent, we’ve really and truly lost the plot.

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More GOP Lunacy

Pam's House Blend on a GOP Civil Rights Calendar.

Not just ironic, not just slanted propaganda, not just a lunatic piece of garbage that makes you wonder whether to laugh or cry, but also another fine use of your tax dollars.

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Celebrate

Happy Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

In college, I had the honor of putting together a video that celebrated Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. that was to be played around the campus on this day. Although I had learned about Dr. King before and had always respected him, working on the video, which focused heavily on his "I Have a Dream" speech, gave me a deep and abiding admiration and love for the man that I carry with me to this day.

On speaking out against Vietnam in 1967, Dr. King's speech included the following passage, which I believe resonates movingly today:

We can no longer afford to worship the god of hate or bow before the altar of retaliation. The oceans of history are made turbulent by the ever-rising tides of hate. History is cluttered with the wreckage of nations and individuals that pursued this self-defeating path of hate. As Arnold Toynbee says : “Love is the ultimate force that makes for the saving choice of life and good against the damning choice of death and evil. Therefore the first hope in our inventory must be the hope that love is going to have the last word.”

We are now faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. In this unfolding conundrum of life and history there is such a thing as being too late. Procrastination is still the thief of time. Life often leaves us standing bare, naked and dejected with a lost opportunity. The “tide in the affairs of men” does not remain at the flood; it ebbs. We may cry out desperately for time to pause in her passage, but time is deaf to every plea and rushes on. Over the bleached bones and jumbled residue of numerous civilizations are written the pathetic words: “Too late.” There is an invisible book of life that faithfully records our vigilance or our neglect. “The moving finger writes, and having writ moves on…” We still have a choice today; nonviolent coexistence or violent co-annihilation.

We must move past indecision to action. We must find new ways to speak for peace in Vietnam and justice throughout the developing world — a world that borders on our doors. If we do not act we shall surely be dragged down the long dark and shameful corridors of time reserved for those who possess power without compassion, might without morality, and strength without sight.

Link via The American Street.

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Next Up: Iran

It is becoming more and more evident that Iran is next on Bush's To Do list. According to CNN's report, Seymour Hersh claims that inside sources tell him that the Bush administration has been carrying out secret reconnaissance missions to learn about nuclear, chemical and missile sites in Iran in preparation for possible airstrikes there. Hersh claimed his information came from "inside" sources who divulged it in the hope that publicity would force the administration to reconsider.

Hm. First of all, who hasn't heard about these Iran plans? There have been hints and insinuations for months, starting with the suggestion that Iraq might "possibly" have illegal nuclear weapons and that they "refused" to stop their program. I even personally know someone in the know who basically confirmed that invading Iran was a foregone conclusion. And the reasoning sure sounds familiar doesn't it? It's charming that Bush even still bothers to sort of come up with a reason to invade new countries. But why mess with a winning formula, I guess. And contrary to what Hersh says, I think the information about Iran has seeped out slowly and steadily on purpose - to get the public used to the idea of invading Iran. Remember the buildup to Iraq? We saw that one coming a mile away. Did any of us really think there would be a last-minute settlement that would prevent us from going to war? No, Bushco were determined to blast Saddam the minute they stepped into the White House.

You can bet that in the coming weeks and months, we will see a slow steady publicity campaign build up to support the idea of bombing Iran. They're harboring nuclear weapons. They're dangerous. They support terrorism. On and on. And will the public buy it again like they bought Iraq? Excuse me while I suppress a snicker. Did they re-elect a moron who got us into a mess called Iraq which still has no sign of being cleaned up, even with the upcoming charade of a forced democratic "election"? Are 60% quoted as being "hopeful" about the next four years under Bush? Have many of them gladly given up civil liberties to a governement that is very clearly NOT protecting them from terrorism? Will any of them stand up and cry out when Bush once again sidesteps Congress and the rest of the world to carry out a new mission that will never be "accomplished"? I think you can guess the answer.

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Liberals Will Save America

I am tired of hearing that liberals hate America. Making that fallacious claim is a regrettably effective tool of the Right, which is why it has become their most trusted and oft-invoked response to any criticism issued from an even remotely liberal source. While it was initially just an easily dismissed irritant, it has now become problematic to the point of costing us elections, and it’s time we laid this deceptive assertion to rest once and for all.

My immediate reaction to hearing a conservative say that liberals hate America is that the opposite is true. Conservatives in large part resist the very things that America is meant to stand for, including, as their base increasingly depends on the religious, a secular rule of law. Trying to undermine the separation of church and state, the separation of powers, and the democratic ideals upon which the country was founded has always seemed to me indicative of a distaste for what America really is. But the truth is, neither liberals nor conservatives hate America. What they hate is each other’s visions of America.

It comes down to the difference between strength and power, which are two very distinct things. I once addressed this notion in discussing the differences between Kerry and Bush as men, leading up to the election, but it did not occur to me at the time that it stood as metaphor for the differences between two vastly divergent political movements as well.

Bush and his conservative supporters celebrate America as a superpower. Her greatest strength in their eyes is the industrial-military complex, the capitalist model, her strong economy. And there is little argument that America is a world leader in these areas, that each of them has afforded her a position of leadership among nations. But that is not strength; that is power. And make no mistake, power is what they seek. Power, force, might, bring ‘em on, dead or alive—this is the language of the Right. It has little to do with strength, and everything to do with control.

Conservatives seek first and foremost to control ideas, which is why they are not above resorting to propaganda in the form of federally-funded videos masquerading as news stories, payoffs to media operatives to shill on behalf of their education policy, or using a federal agency to promote their agenda regarding its own future. Part of their control of ideas and the public discourse of their policies is continued efforts to control the media, whether through media consolidation and ownership (Fox) or intimidation (CBS). Journalists who ask tough questions are threatened with severed access, which makes for a difficult and uneventful career.

The media, in large part, is under conservative control, despite their constant claims to the contrary—the much ballyhooed liberal slant of the media is, of course, simply part of their ploy to ensure stories favoring their agenda. In the interest of fairness, and in an attempt to deflect criticism of liberal bias, media outlets find themselves in the position of equating a Democrat exaggeration with a Republican lie, in the interest of “balance.” The Right has learned that controlling the media is as simple as making repeated accusations of impropriety, until they are sufficiently cowed as to ignore always-plentiful Republican scandal in favor of searching out Democratic foibles so as to appear to give each side equal scrutiny. The result is that the Right is often left to wreak havoc upon the populace without much inquiry, while the Left finds itself stuck indefinitely under a looking glass.

Control of ideas, control of the media, control of weaker allies by promises of financial retribution to those who join our coalition of the “willing,” control of opposition by infiltrating groups of dissenters, squashing demonstrations, keeping Congressional Democrats out of meetings, and deeming filibusters as somehow inherently wrong…the list goes on and on, each individual tactic serving as an integral function of their primary goal: holding on to their ability to control. They will do anything to stay in power, from undermining elections, to stacking the courts with like-minded judges, to keeping money out of the hands of social service groups that don’t bend to their religious agenda. For Conservatives, it’s not about how you play the game; it’s only about how you continue to win at it.

And their definition of winning is one that liberals will never understand. Winning is not simply having control of all three branches of government, nor is it having the power to impede the steady march of progress that has seen liberals win battles from ending slavery to granting gays and lesbians the right to marry in Massachusetts; they will not be happy until we say they are right. Only complete and total acquiescence to their ideology will satiate them. Having been on the wrong side of every issue since the Revolution—including the Civil War, the New Deal…even rural electrification—doesn’t deter them in the slightest. They will never give up their fight for control until there is no one left to disagree; in other words, they will never give up.

In contrast, Liberals’ vision of America has everything to do with strength and little to do with control. Liberals argue that America’s greatest strength has always been her progressiveness, her awkward struggle for egalitarianism, her existence as a melting pot where all people are meant to be free. The opposite of control, the Liberal view is about personal freedom and finding the balance that ensures the expression of one person’s right doesn’t infringe on another’s.

Liberals want each person to have the freedom to develop his or her individual strengths, in the interest of making America as strong as it can be. Such a position requires nuance that is lost on our opposition. Take, for example, the debate over guns. The NRA sides consistently with Conservatives, who were quite content to let the ban on assault weapons lapse, which endangers us all, particularly our police who are most likely to come face to face with one of the previously-banned weapons in the hands of someone willing to use it. Liberals believe in a balance—allow the sporting rifles and handguns desired for hunting and self-protection, and ban the weapons that have no functional use other than the indiscriminate slaughter of other people. It is a reasonable position that seeks to ensure the protection of some while not impeding on the recreational and safety concerns of others. Yet this stance has been demonized by Conservatives as a backdoor attempt to undermine the Second Amendment—a fabricated bill of goods designed only to malign an idea that is in opposition to theirs, which is, once again, on the wrong side of the issue.

Liberals’ desire to facilitate personal freedom in a spirit of mutual cooperation extends to their views on providing a safety net for Americans, including access to affordable health care, workers’ rights, and Social Security. Taxation is a vital source of federal revenue to provide such programs, and the Conservatives’ inexhaustible barrage of complaint about taxes is not only tiresome but counter-productive. A society at the mercy of ill, unemployed, and/or destitute masses is not a strong society, and there but by the grace of the fates go any of us. Directing federal funds to keep the most vulnerable among us from falling off the edge is in all of our own best interests, for humanitarian and practical reasons. This is, unfortunately, an argument lost on much of America, the Conservatives having successfully denigrated this position as “tax and spend liberalism,” a waste of taxpayers’ money on those who deserve whatever lamentable fate befalls them.

Similarly misconstrued is Liberals’ position on religion in the public sphere, which came to a head during the holiday season, when it was repeatedly claimed that Liberals were trying to ban Christmas. Recognizing that there are significant numbers of Americans who are not Christians, Liberals want to acknowledge that perhaps the public sphere (i.e. government property) is not the most appropriate place for celebrations of Christmas. Asking Christians to contain Christmas to the private sphere (i.e. non-taxpayer funded arenas) does not demean Christmas. It simply does away with the notion that the government endorses one religion over another. Despite Conservatives’ suggestions otherwise, America was not founded as a specifically Christian country, and although the separation of church and state only provides for a prohibition on State-sponsored religion, compelling the use of taxpayer dollars for acknowledgement of one religion’s high holiday and not another’s is close enough to warrant concern. And one’s relationship with God (or lack thereof) should have no business dictating the flow of federal funds; if a Christian-identified group does good work for the poor, let them receive any and all appropriate grants, and if an atheist-identified group does the same, let them receive the same benefit.

Liberals do not want Christians to be unable to practice their religion; in fact, we want them to be able to practice their religion in any way they see fit…until, that is, it infringes on the rights of non-Christians to practice their religion, or non-believers to not practice religion at all. It is possible for all to coexist, so long as each is respectful of the others’ rights.

My rights end where yours begin. It’s such a simple but powerful concept, yet it is anathema to Conservatives, because it necessarily excludes their desire to control and force their dissenters to succumb to their will. It isn’t enough that they can change the channel when Queer Eye for the Straight Guy comes on; the show must be taken off the air altogether. It isn’t enough that they can put up Nativity scenes in their churches and in their homes and on their lawns; there must be one at City Hall, too. It isn’t enough that their children can pray and learn about creationism at home and at church; they have to be able to do it at school, too, and so must all the other kids, irrespective of their families’ views. It just isn’t ever enough.

And that is their vision of America—a country where their views are imposed upon everyone. (Differences among their own ranks, making this implausible even were all Liberals to disappear, do not register.) Only having rid the country of minorities, gays, feminists, evolutionists, atheists, pacifists, abortionists, stem cell researchers, the poor, the needy, the infirm, immigrants, environmentalists, animal rights activists, non-Christians, and anyone else who disagrees with them could they be happy. Or such is their claim. But without anyone upon whom to pass judgment, I wonder how long such contentment could possibly last.

In the end, most Americans love what they think America can be, whether that vision is of an oasis from racism, a world leader in humanitarianism, a capitalist beacon, a theocracy, or anything else. But there are two main views—that of a country full of opportunities for control and power concentrated in the hands of a few, or that of a country full of opportunities for individual freedom, from which a collective strength can be drawn.

The Conservative view ultimately benefits a very small minority; the Liberal view benefits us all. That’s why Liberals are right, and as soon as we learn to effectively communicate that message, it’s why Liberals will save America.

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Just Shut Up Already

If I hear one more Conservative claim that “no one ever gave me anything” when arguing against taxation, as if tax dollars go straight from their wallets and into the hands of able-bodied but lazy do-nothings who cheerfully line up for “government hand-outs,” I’m going to go apeshit.

Did you go to public school?
Do you use roads?
Have you ever mailed or received a letter?
Do you appreciate having criminals kept off your street?
Have you ever taken a lovely stroll through a national park?
How about that war you so resolutely support—you think those soldiers work for the sheer joy of it?

All I can say is let’s go ahead and have it your way. Let’s all stop paying taxes. I hope your house doesn’t catch on fire, because there might not be anyone willing to man the firehouse for free.

More on why Liberals are right and Conservatives are idiots later.

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Blogga Drama

In case you haven’t been following the sordid (yet still immensely boring) soap opera that is the Right’s attempt to deflect criticism over the Armstrong Williams kafuffle, the big stinking deal is that the Dean campaign paid Kos and Jerome at MyDD to be technical consultants, and so that supposedly proves that Lefty bloggers are just as corrupt as a professional journalist who accepts payola from the administration to hawk their education program.

Yawn. Kos and Jerome both disclosed their paid relationships with the Dean campaign, and Jerome even stopped blogging during the period he was a consultant for them. I don’t even read Kos that often, and I knew about his consultancy, so I can’t believe anyone would think there was an attempt to hide it. (If you care to get some of the details, see Kos’ here, and no doubt he’ll continue to post on it. Digby’s got some good analysis here and here, too. And you can find stuff at Pandagon, among others.)

I’m sure this will have some annoying and difficult consequences for Lefty blogges in general, and Kos and Jerome in particular, but the big issue at the moment is that it’s taking the focus off what Armstrong Williams and the administration did, the key difference between the situations being that Kos and Jerome are not professional journalists, the Dean campaign was a private organization using private money, and the relationship between them was disclosed, whereas Williams is a professional, the Department of Education is part of the government, and the quarter-million dollar payout to Williams came out of our collective pockets. That should be the end of the story, but now Novak, O’Reilly, et. al. are on the case, so it’s not likely to die anytime soon.

Ultimately, I guess I think the whole thing is stupid, because I don’t think bloggers have the same responsibilities as professional journalists, particularly in terms of objectivity. Anyone who tunes in the Kos or MyDD or Atrios or Altercation or Druge or Instapundit or any other political blogger you can think of knows that they’re getting news favoring a particular viewpoint, which is probably the exact reason they tune in. If you’re reading Kos or Drudge expecting objectivity, you’ve got bigger problems than worrying about whether they’re on someone’s payroll.

I don’t think there’s anything wrong with delivering news with an ideological bent; in Britain, it’s well-known which papers are liberal and which are conservative, because the papers themselves acknowledge it, and people buy whichever rag is most aligned with their own viewpoint. Even Fox news’ conservative bias doesn’t bother me; it’s their claims of objectivity that do. If they would just admit their position, I wouldn’t care what lies they were spewing because at least it would be under an honest banner.

Bloggers should be regarded as the same as British newspapers—delivering news from a specific and identified political perspective. And if a blogger is hired by a political campaign to serve in any capacity, disclosing the relationship should be good enough. Such an arrangement shouldn’t be seen as undermining a blogger’s credibility, since a political blogger’s credibility isn’t based on objectivity in the first place; it’s based on delivering fact-based opinions on the issues. Just as a reader can choose to reject a blogger’s conclusions about a particular news story, so they can choose to reject a blog altogether if the author’s relationship with a political candidate is outwith the reader’s sense of acceptability.

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More on Project Implicit

(Background on Project Implicit here.)

Okay, I did two more studies at Project Implicit. I got one that attempted to discern my preferences for Love versus Money. Being constantly broke but happily married, I figured that I might come out with a slight subconscious preference for Money, since we always want what we don’t have. But in fact, my data suggested a strong automatic preference for Love relative to Money. It wasn’t even a contest; I’m a Love girl.

The other studies that came up were Morning versus Night (yawn—I skipped it) and Carbs versus Proteins (another snoozefest—my ass is a testament to my strong automatic preference for carbs; I don’t need Harvard to tell me). The second one I took was Progress versus Tradition.

The results surprised me a little: My data suggested a slight automatic preference for Progress relative to Tradition. I would have thought it would be more than a slight preference, but the whole time I was doing it, I was thinking, “It depends on the tradition.” In some ways, my life is very traditional—I’m married, we have a small house in a smallish, suburban town, we have nondescript office jobs, etc.—and I appreciate all those things. In some ways, it’s not traditional—we don’t have children, we aren’t religious, we’re from different continents, the couple we most love to double-date with is gay, we’re raging blues in a red state, etc.—and I appreciate all those things, too.

What I don’t appreciate is archaic parochialism, and I think I do have a strong automatic preference for short-handing it as traditionalism, so maybe I need to nurture a strong preference for rethinking my associations.

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