Sunday, June 29, 2008

Sy Hersh's Latest Scoop: Guess what, folks! We're goin' to Iran.

In fact, we're already there, says Sy. And our Congress let it happen, often without knowing what it was they were authorizing.
Reviled as they are, Cheney and company are still running the show, and they're making every last minute of their tenure count.

from The New Yorker: Preparing the Battlefield

Blogger Jane Hamsher & Libertarian Candidate Bob Barr Play Nice Over Shared Concerns

Thanks for the link, Mr. X, courtesy of The Economist.
The last two minutes made my day.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Mugabe's Calling Card

Rare, moving, and quite disturbing hidden-camera reporting from within Zimbabwe, with transcript, from Australia's SBS Dateline.

It's both inspiring and tragic what risks people will take just to place a vote. These are people who know the meaning of democracy, and want it desperately, and yet it is being brutally withheld from them.

Isn't there anything the international community can do to support these people?

Monday, June 23, 2008

Quote du Jour: George Carlin, RIP

from the Reuters story:

Carlin told Playboy in 2005 that he looked forward to an afterlife where he could watch the decline of civilization on a "heavenly CNN."

"The world is a big theater-in-the round as far as I'm concerned, and I'd love to watch it spin itself into oblivion," he said. "Tune in and watch the human adventure."

Iconoclasts everywhere are gonna miss this guy.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

An Inside View from Zimbabwe...

... on the day democracy finally died there (if it wasn't dead already.)

from Sokwanele blog, which has been faithfully chronicling the whole catastrophic implosion of the country, including the gruesome violence of the past days.

Here's the AP story.

Friday, June 20, 2008

Quote du Jour: Semi-anonymous California Motorist

from Reuters:

U.S. motorists brave Mexico border violence for fuel

"It's worth taking the risk even with the violence," said a retired California engineer named Terry, who declined to give his surname, as he filled his red Ford pick-up truck in Tijuana, over the border from San Diego. "I know they could kill me or kidnap me, but the cost of filling my tank in the United States is just too much," he said.

WTF? I thought for a second I was reading The Onion. I've heard a lot of people bellyaching about the price of gas since it passed the $4 mark, and I've done some bellyaching about it myself, with good reason, especially knowing how little the oil companies are suffering in all of this, but saving $100 a month is worth the genuine risk (based on the recent travel advisory for border areas like Tijuana) of being kidnapped or murdered? Some people are just much, much braver than I am.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Tim Russert, RIP

As his colleague Tom Brokaw said, Russert's death came during a political campaign that he loved. He was recording voiceovers for Sunday's show when he collapsed.

He knew how to get a tough interview out of anybody. He will truly be missed.

NBC's Tim Russert dead at 58.

Monday, June 09, 2008

Sunday, June 08, 2008

Quote du Jour: Bob Schieffer on Hillary's Swan Song

Well, since I never got around to that eulogy, I'll post Bob Schieffer's from his "Final Thought" on today's "Face the Nation." Bob always says it better than I can. I thought I wasn't going to cry, but the last paragraph made me a little sniffly.
Finally today, Hillary Clinton made the speech of her life yesterday. She showed a grace all too rare in modern politics. And she set the right example for the young people who have worked so hard for her.

The Clintons have not had much practice at losing. And, until yesterday, that showed, in a not altogether flattering way.

But yesterday, it all changed. She offered no excuses. Instead, she said the race was over; the time had come to unite behind her opponent, for whom she said she would work her heart out.

She told her followers that she had not run to be the first woman president but had been a woman running for president, and that, the next time a woman runs, it will no longer be so remarkable.

As the father of two daughters and three granddaughters, I believe she's right about that. She lost this race, but she has advanced the cause of women everywhere.

In life, we lose more than we win. Sometimes it is losing, not winning, that brings out our best. Yesterday Hillary Clinton showed us her best.

Monday, June 02, 2008

Mika B. to Terry McAuliffe: Put the Bottle Down...

OK, yeah, regardless of what Hillary says tomorrow night or the day after in New York, it looks like it's pretty much over, judging by this appearance from legendary optimist Terry McAuliffe on "Morning Joe."

Despite my official conversion to Obamamania, I'm gonna be sad to see her go. It's been a hell of a ride, and the eulogy is gonna be tough to write.

But with all the slip-ups McCain's been making lately (as in being off by several thousand on the number of troops in Iraq) it's time to focus on Dems vs. 'pubs again and get on with this thing.