Saturday, November 17, 2007

Yep, Harry, you've got to watch that guy...

... in the White House. He's a sneaky one.

Reid shuts down Bush recess appointments during Thanksgiving.

With nothing to veto and no midnight appointments to make, I guess he'll have to content himself with pardoning turkeys over the congressional break (yes, I did mean that literally... he's not much for the pardoning of the featherless.)

Friday, November 16, 2007

Busted: Highlight from Wednesday's hearing...

... of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, on assessing whistleblower allegations against the State Department Inspector General (Howard Krongard):
REP. DIANE WATSON (D-CA): If your brother [Alvin "Buzzy" Krongard] is currently at the hotel in Williamsburg, Virginia, sitting on that [Blackwater advisory] board, would you repeat that you would recuse yourself?

KRONGARD: Immediately.

WATSON: OK. Then maybe you want to do it today...

KRONGARD: Recuse myself from anything having to do with Blackwater, yes. I mean, I wouldn't step down.

WATSON: Blackwater, yes, that's what I'm referring to. He's sitting on the Blackwater -- I understand he's in the hotel. He's checked in the hotel. You might want to follow up on that.

KRONGARD: Well, if he's -- if he's there for that meeting, as a member of that committee, he may be there to tell them he's not joining. I don't know.

WATSON: OK, now, remmeber you're on the record.

KRONGARD: Yes, sir -- I mean, yes, ma'am.

WATSON: OK, and you know what today's date is?

KRONGARD: Yes.

WATSON: OK. Will you recuse yourself from any inquiries, audits, or investigations your office conducts regarding Blackwater?

KRONGARD: Absolutely.

WATSON: OK. We have it on the record. Now...
Krongard clears things up later in the hearing, after a little phone call. Oops.

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Speaking of writers...

... I have mixed feelings about the ongoing television writer's strike.
I'm rooting for them, but I miss my Daily Show/Colbert Report hour. Oh well...

Photos: Writer's Strike Grows Stronger

Norman Mailer...

... tough guy, Luddite, and consummate writer, 1923-2007, RIP.

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Quote du Jour: Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI)

from Tuesday's Senate Judiciary Committee vote on the Mukasey nomination (he was approved, of course, and his nomination sent up to the full Senate. I can understand why many in the committee voted for him, in the interest of the Justice Department and its dire straits, and in the interest of future precedent -- since not every nomination can be all-out war, and this nominee was recommended by anti-Gonzales bulldog Chuck Schumer, after all, who had second thoughts, post-hearing, before coming back around. However, I am also heartened to hear opinions like this one, and wish more in the committee had expressed them -- and backed them up with a vote.)
WHITEHOUSE: The reason that I voted against Judge Mukasey is that I feel that the discussion about torture that we have had has provided the opportunity for this country to have a moment of clarity about what should be a simple and clear proposition. And I'm afraid that by allowing this nomination to proceed, we will lose that moment of clarity.

I don't think we can look to this administration to provide that moral clarity to the world.

Unfortunately, it is my belief that when Vice President Cheney, for instance, gets on the television and tells the world that we do not torture, around the world, far too many people believe not only that we torture, but that we lie.

And so, Congress has the chance to provide that moment of moral clarity that I think is important.

No one, I doubt, feels the harm to the Department of Justice more than I do. I served as a United States attorney and the calling that that department represents is very, very, very important to me, to this country, to the values that we share.

So, I am very deeply torn to have voted against this nominee.

But I do see a nation under the Bush administration that is on a slow and sickening slide from the city on a hill that earlier presidents talked about.

We have compromised our values. We have disregarded our Constitution. We have degraded our standing in the world. And people died for this stuff.

So, in some respects, it is a sacrifice to the Department of Justice. And that pains me and grieves me.

But in pursuit of that moment of clarity that can be a signal to the rest of the world that the fires of our values still burn alive in American hearts, I have voted against this candidate.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Pakistan: Who Saw This Coming?

Just about everyone but the White House and the State Department, it looks like.

No, that's not fair... of course they saw it coming; they just didn't really have the time to spend on the fact that
  • one of the world's eight nuclear powers,
  • next door to India, a fellow nuclear power who's contributing greatly to the fight against the Taliban in Afghanistan, thus pissing off those in Pakistan who support the Taliban,
  • ruled by a general who seized power in a coup,
  • (and he's the good guy, if you don't count exiled former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, who can't even enter the country without an attempt on her life)
  • a good proportion of whose people support the Taliban and view Osama bin Laden as a hero while burning George Bush in effigy (sure, he's not my favorite person, either, but he ranks a lot higher on my list than Osama... not saying much, I know)
  • who most likely are sheltering bin Laden, if he's still alive, as well as other top Al Qaida leadership, not because Musharraf wants to, but because he can't control entire regions of his country,
  • which recently have come to include his own capital.

So now Musharraf's declared martial law, and speculation is that it has more to do with an upcoming supreme court decision that would have prohibited him from being re-elected in January, than with any other of the overwhelming problems facing his country.

So far, all we've had is a "statement" from our secretary of state, the same person who threw around the term "mushroom cloud" back when it was oh-so-safely hypothetical...

Quote du Jour: Tony Blair on his hopes of personal redemption...

... and a salvaging of his legacy...
... or, more precisely, a peace deal between Olmert and Abbas.

from "Late Edition" this morning.
And so, for all sorts of reasons, strategic, tactical, immediate, long-term, we've got to just make this work. And however difficult it is for the leaders, in a way, this is the toughest option at one level for them but also the surest way to show people the leadership they want to have shown.

Thursday, November 01, 2007

... or maybe it's Fred Phelps He's not so fond of...

He certainly wouldn't be alone in the sentiment.

Invading soldiers' funerals really pushes the boundary between one person's freedom and another's, under the law.
Personally, I'm glad the grieving father's right to grieve in peace was acknowledged by the jury before the right of a family of deranged hatemongers to crash his son's funeral.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Friday, October 26, 2007

Maybe I spoke too soon...

... about giving FEMA the benefit of the doubt. I hadn't realized that Tuesday's "news conference," at which Deputy Administrator Harvey Johnson talked about lessons learned from Katrina being applied to the wildfire response, was held with FEMA staffers pretending to be reporters, since none of the real reporters could make the briefing that was held with only 15 minutes prior notice.

Is it sympathy for the devil to just feel sorry for these guys?

I mean, the guy in that photo is no Dana Perino. Poor dude; he obviously never got fashion advice from Naomi Wolf on how to pick a power suit. Maybe he should just stay out the press conference business, especially the deciding-whether-to-hold-one-even-if-no-one's-there part.

Paulison spoke confidently of the response itself in an interview with NPR.

As long as they do their job, I guess that's what counts. But then I'm only a blogger with a snarky (and sometimes overly generous) opinion. Hell hath no fury like a press corps implied to be irrelevant. We're going to be hearing about this one for awhile.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

And who else is doing a heckuva job?

No, I'm not going to trash FEMA again until their (earnest, at least) new leadership under David Paulison proves or disproves itself in response to the California wildfires.

This year's award has got to go to First Kuwaiti, for turning the (grandiose and ill-conceived, to begin with) U.S. embassy in Iraq into arguably the most disastrous construction project in the Mesopotamian region since the Tower of Babel. And yet we just awarded them another three contracts.
Related: Filipino "contractors" in Iraq: OK, this is bad...

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Speaking of The Colbert Report, on Thursday's show...

... Stephen had Craig Newmark, founder of craigslist, as a guest, and Newmark (or let's just call him Craig) mentioned a really cool thing: DonorsChoose.org, which allows donors to choose the precise amount of their donation to students and classrooms in need, as well as the specific project they would like to fund.

Friday, October 19, 2007

Politico on Stephen Colbert's Alleged "Favorite Son" Bid

Ah, Politico, whether his run is for real or not, you're just playing into his hands by taking it so seriously with this lengthy analysis of the legal implications of the bid. You just want him to mention your article on his next show, don't you?
He may be fumbling giddily about on-air, drunken with the sheer bravado of it all, (he being the character rather than the "real" Stephen Cole-burt, of course) but I'm sure he has plenty of "people" around him who know what's what, and will advise him not to push it farther than will sell books and entertain his minions.
(Yes, there's already a copy sitting on our living room table, so I guess I'm one of said minions. And he should feel free to mention this post on his next show, too ;)

Friday, October 12, 2007

Nobel Watch Update: Yep, he did.

Not a big surprise, but good news, nonetheless, from an earth-based perspective (hard to imagine an alternative perspective, but some factions may claim one...)
Maybe he'll run and maybe he won't. Polls show him with a much better chance to beat Giuliani than Hillary. I'll be honest. I'd like to see a woman (not just any woman; I'm not talking Elizabeth Dole or Condi Rice) but a moderate-to-liberal woman in the White House, whether as veep or in the top spot. Reservations notwithstanding, (in a nutshell, the hawkish persona she's cultivated for this campaign) I think Hillary would do a fine job at the top. But I wouldn't mind seeing another Clinton/Gore / Gore/Clinton ticket, and I could get behind Gore/Obama or Gore/Edwards as well.
But regardless of that omnipresent election year question, and regardless of the precise details on what's happening environmentally, (that's what Gore's co-recipients, the IPCC, are trying to find out) the more attention paid to the planet on which we depend for our survival, (barring that expedition to Mars) the better. And this can't hurt.
Related: Nobel Watch: Will he get it? Will he get it?

Thursday, October 11, 2007

A Chessman's Life

I think I've seen this guy before, playing a game in "the circle" down in D.C.

Homeless man is chess king of Washington

But I hadn't realized he was a tournament champion and aspiring master (the highest title in American chess.)
If he could just beat the bottle the way he beats his challengers... but nothing's as easy as black and white...
Wishing him luck, though.

Nobel Watch: Will he get it? Will he get it?

Yes, with all that's going on in the world, sometimes it's still fun to engage in a little frivolous speculation... and some Democrats are acting a bit like kids waiting for Christmas morning.
A) Will Al Gore receive the soon-to-be-announced Nobel Peace Prize?
B) If so, will it prompt him, as some diehard Gore fans are hoping, to ride the momentum into the race?

Warning to English Verbs: You Will Be Regularized

... according to this study by Harvard mathematicians on the evolution of the English language over time.
"Wed" is next on their prediction list of irregular verbs that will take the dominant "-ed" ending for its past tense form.

Saturday, October 06, 2007

What does a U.S. security contractor have to do to get kicked out of Iraq?

Apparently engaging in manslaughter (at the least) and conspiring to cover it up isn't quite enough to put you on the bench for more than two months.

The information that the Blackwater employee who was involved in the Christmas party "incident" was back to work in February for a DOD contractor in Kuwait, after being quietly flown home by Blackwater, in complicity with the State Department, was tactfully not submitted to the House oversight committee in time for last week's hearing, although the meager payoff to the victim's family was disclosed. And he's since been sighted back in the Green Zone in Iraq.

And apparently the Army didn't know any more than DOD did, according to Chairman Waxman's letter:

The report also stated that in April 2007, the U.S. Army tried to call Mr. Moonen, a veteran of the 82nd Airborne Division, back to active duty, but cancelled the request upon learning that he was already overseas.

But I'm sure that even if these facts were mentioned, Ranking Member Davis and Reps. Mica and Westmoreland would still spend most of their questioning minutes complaining about what a tragic waste of time the hearing was and how the good folks at Blackwater and the State Department are just trying to do their jobs and don't deserve all this pointless harassment from those meanies on the other side of the aisle.

Monday, October 01, 2007

Speaking of off-the-radar countries...

This blog by Sokwanele Civic Action Support Group is documenting the catastrophic economic collapse within Zimbabwe.

This is Zimbabwe

Sokwanele is local slang for "enough is enough."

U.S. Policy on Burma: A Point for Semantics; Now What?

The brutally repressive regime of the country referred to in English by the name Myanmar (its name in the Burmese language had never changed, according to the notes on etymology in the Wikipedia article) is still known as Burma (from Bama or Bamar) by the U.S., Canada, U.K., Ireland, and Australia. And for good reason, I think.
Colonial history aside, the name change was instituted by an illegitimate government that has been holding the democratically elected leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, under house arrest indefinitely.
The U.N. uses the name Myanmar.

But regardless of what you call it, a tragedy is unfolding there, while once again the world stands by and looks on sadly, as if there's nothing it can possibly do. Where's the sense of urgency that always seems (now that "radical Islamic regimes" and their oil have replaced Russia and the Red Scare as Bogeyman #1 on our radar) to surround crises in countries a bit to the west of Southeast Asia, a bit to the north of Africa?

Buddhist monks are being rounded up by the thousands, with possibly 200 or more protesters killed.

This assessment by a Swedish diplomat is heartbreaking in its sense of hopelessness for the country's future:

Liselotte Agerlid, who is now in Thailand, said that the Burmese people now face possibly decades of repression. "The Burma revolt is over," she added.

"The military regime won and a new generation has been violently repressed and violently denied democracy. The people in the street were young people, monks and civilians who were not participating during the 1988 revolt.

"Now the military has cracked down the revolt, and the result may very well be that the regime will enjoy another 20 years of silence, ruling by fear."

So that's it? It's "over?" Just like with Tiananmen Square, only, without economic prosperity, even less hope?

Sunday, September 30, 2007

What We've Been Missing: the Classics in Color

Don't get excited, Ted Turner. I'm talking about classical sculpture and architecture, which has always seemed more abstract and universal because it lacked color (color: how garish! how baroque!)
But as scholars have known for a while but kept mostly to themselves, color was a big part of classical art, meaning that Renaissance sculpture and the later neoclassical style was actually quite innovative; it just thought it was being entirely derivative.
The true ancient style was dripping in color, that unfortunately washed away in time.
There's an exhibit right now at the Sackler Museum at Harvard, but I hope more reproductions start popping up in other places, too, so we can all witness the ancient world in color.

Here's some background from a German archeology site.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Quote du Jour: John Edwards/ Arcade Fire

So that's what that song that's hopelessly stuck in my head is about...

The black mirror knows no reflection
It knows not pride or vanity
It cares not about your dreams
It cares not for your pyramid schemes

Maybe...
I read an article in a British newspaper a couple weeks ago. It said, based on some work being done by American scientists -- suggested that the polar ice cap will disappear in 23 years, unless we change our behavior.

And once it's gone, it is not coming back. And this is -- you know, I won't claim to be a scientific expert, but I'm smart enough to figure out that a polar ice cap reflects the sun's heat. And when that ice cap is gone, the black, dark ocean is going to absorb the sun's heat. And it is not healthy for America.
from Edwards' MySpace/MTV presidential candidate forum last night

MTV, what have you done to me?
Save my soul, set me free!
Set me free! What have you done to me?
I can't breathe! I can't see!
World War III, when are you coming for me?
Been kicking up sparks, we set the flames free
The windows are locked now, so what'll it be?
A house on fire or a rising sea?

Why is the night so still?
Why did I take the pill?
Because I don't wanna see it at my windowsill

http://www.arcadefire.net/lyrics/neon/

No Second Thoughts: Bush Quote du Jour

from today's White House briefing with recently anointed new spokesperson Dana Perino:

QUESTION: Did it strike the president that 18 Republican senators voted for this bill? Did that make him have any second thoughts about his plan to veto?

PERINO: The president does not have second thoughts.

I like this new spokesperson already.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Well, it's hard to pick on a woman in a pink suit.

Although I've always admired that shade of salmon, from a purely aesthetic standpoint, I don't think the pinker and gigglier Hillary is as endearing as the Hillary we all know and... respect... would be, (in my dream scenario) standing in a boring suit and talking about how maybe getting into Iraq wasn't such a great idea and getting into Iran would be even more not-so-hilariously insane.

From the WP on the debate last night.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

And by the way...

While Iran's president is still on our turf, now the Senate is trying to hand Bush another ambiguously worded authorization for war?

I'm going to pretend I didn't notice the glaring omission of a certain junior senator from New York (whom I was almost ready to consider picking as a tentative frontrunner for my very own not-so-coveted primary vote) in the list of senators who voted against the Lieberman-Kyl amendment.
At least, happily, the most offending two paragraphs were removed from the amendment, the ones which essentially called (admittedly with all the force of a "Sense of the Senate" resolution) for war at any moment when the president happens to be feeling especially scrappy, and a sort of qualifying amendment was added at the end, but why did such an overwhelming number of Democrats feel compelled to vote for it at all? Have the neocons perfected their voodoo technology, or have the Dems learned nothing from these ever-present polls, their (now so distant-seeming) victorious election, etc.? Are they just trying to make Hagel and Lugar look especially heroic?
The American people do not want any more wars. We don't even want the one we've got.
Can't they hear us anymore, or have they just tuned us out?

Here's the speech by Jim Webb that I had just assumed was going to be more influential than whatever mind-altering drugs ended up in all but 22 of the Senate water pitchers.

Monday, September 24, 2007

And now let's welcome our very special guest, "a petty and cruel dictator."

I've always been a fan of dwelling comfortably with ambiguity, but Columbia University's president seemed to take it to an extreme today by inviting Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and then discussing him in the introduction pretty much like he wasn't in the room (he had a translator, you know.)

Given the quality of Ahmadinejad's public discourse thus far, just not inviting him would have been a pretty decent decision.

He did offer some historical perspectives that were of merit, like pointing out the hypocrisy of the U.S. with regard to the nuclear issue (to applause) and our tendency to keep memories of the hostage crisis alive while burying those of our complicity in several decades' worth of intervention in Iran, from coups to Saddam's eight-year war against them.

However -- and effusive, flowery language aside -- he also said a bunch of stuff that was frankly unbelievable (painting his nation as a gentle, peace-craving haven of democracy where the press is entirely free, Jews are beloved, and women enjoy dizzy heights of freedom) and some stuff that was just plain nutty, which inevitably casts a shadow of discredit on the entire speech, even the snippets which may have contributed in some small way to a dialog. He and his Western Hemisphere counterpart Chavez are pretty good at doing that.

The excerpt below is probably the nuttiest part (and no, Mr. President, they weren't laughing with you for your remark about living in a straights-only zone. You have your 10 percent non-straights like everyone else, unless you've executed them all out of existence, which is the question you dodged and haven't yet answered. And I'm not sure all of the women in your country consider being "exempt from many responsibilities" as a sign of respect. We tried that argument in the West during the Victorian days, and it didn't quite hold up.)

AHMADINEJAD (THROUGH TRANSLATOR): In Iran, we don't have homosexuals, like in your country.

(LAUGHTER)

We don't have that in our country.

(AUDIENCE BOOING)

AHMADINEJAD (THROUGH TRANSLATOR): In Iran, we do not have this phenomenon. I don't know who's told you that we have it.

(LAUGHTER)

But, as for women, maybe you think that being a woman is a crime. It's not a crime to be a woman.

Women are the best creatures created by God. They represent the kindness, the beauty that God instills in them. Women are respected in Iran. In Iran, every family who is given a girl is given -- in every Iranian family who has a girl, they are 10 times happier than having a son. Women are respected more than men are.

They are exempt from many responsibilities. Many of the legal responsibilities rest on the shoulders of men in our society because of the respect, culturally given, to women, to the future mothers.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Happy Birthday, Blog.

Here's a belated present (I wish it was surprising that I'm late for my own blog's birthday) of a new look.
At one year old yesterday, you've nearly come of age in blog years. I'm so proud. Next year I'll take the time to make you an original template, blog, I promise.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Letter to a Young Patriot

Naomi Wolf was on The Colbert Report last night to discuss her new book The End of America: A Letter of Warning To A Young Patriot, and naturally had trouble getting a word in edgewise with her gracious host, but this Guardian article details her listing of the 10 steps democracies take on the path to fascism. Some of the later stages have only been lightly broached, but we have a pretty good handle on the first three or four, which is reason for caution, I think.
(And now I'm going to swallow my feminism for a moment and note that the author of the '92 bestseller The Beauty Myth, a big phenom during my college grrl days -- and Gore campaign styling consultant -- is looking pretty fabulous these days ;)

Belgium is not for sale...

... not any more, at least. (And I love the way the PR guy from eBay Belgium phrased it: "We decided to take [the ad] down, just to avoid confusion.")

This is the biggest headline I've seen involving Belgium since I left Belgium two weeks ago (and pretty much at any time in my life before traveling there as well.)

But seriously, folks, this is a great country in the heart of Europe with a history that's central to the story of Europe. It would be a darn shame to see it split into little sub-kingdoms and Brussels made into a no man's land like D.C., even if it would be so wealthy that no one actually living in city limits would probably care (quite unlike D.C.)

Monday, September 17, 2007

Quote du Jour: ACLU Director Anthony Romero

"Sen. Craig has not always been a great friend of civil liberties, but you shouldn't have to endorse the civil liberties of others to keep your own," said ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero, alluding to Craig's history of voting against gay rights.

The ACLU, yet again proving it can be the bigger person, is supporting Craig by making a claim that his "bathroom bust" was unconstitutional.

I think their opinion is quite reasonable, and that a bit of light-hearted schadenfreude over the senator's shameful hypocrisy is probably preferable to inviting precedent for cops to spend their time hanging around airport bathroom stalls watching for foot signals.

It would be more satisfying, though, if the senator would just take this opportunity to cop to said hypocrisy, instead of holding onto his thoroughly transparent cover story and the self-hating bigotry that's already translated into discriminatory legislative positions.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Mother Teresa letters/ Nonbelievers coming out of the closet

These somewhat surprising letters should be a catalyst for thoughtful discussion. I say "should be" because they will probably instead prompt merely the drawing of the usual battle lines.

E.g. this "Hardball" debate (well, what do you expect? It's "Hardball") between Christopher Hitchens, author of an unsympathetic book on Mother Teresa (in this clip, he seems to have acquired a bit of sympathy for her as a pawn in the game, although that could simply be a rhetorical tool) and Father Bill "You wanna take this outside?" Donohue, who, in this exchange, makes Hitchens (whom I grudgingly admire but have trouble forgiving for his pro-Iraq war stance) look relatively equanimitous.

Here's the book which compiled the letters discussed in the Time article:
Mother Teresa: Come Be My Light by
Brian Kolodiejchuk

*

And on a loosely related note, this article in the Washington Post notes the rise of the nonbelievers' movement since 9/11.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Update on Burned Iraqi Boy

Yes, the title of this CNN article is a bit giddy, but if there's something special about America, it's not what's going on in DC; it's the 12,000 CNN readers who contributed to the fund to help this boy, and the doctor who agreed to treat him for free.
Maybe if our policymakers consulted those 12,000 people more often, or gave a damn what they thought, we'd all be better off.

Related: Another heartbreaking story from Iraq...

AQSL, the terrorist formerly known as bin Laden...

... or, "What's in an acronym?"

First time I've heard that one.

from one of Tuesday's Senate hearings with Gen. Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker:


SEN. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-SC): Why do you think bin Laden is so worried about the outcome in Iraq?

AMBASSADOR CROCKER: Well, I think -- again, as I mentioned earlier, it has been regarded by Al Qaida senior leadership, AQSL, as the central front. They are trying to give us a bloody nose, which would be an enormous shot of adrenaline in the arm of international jihadists.

Friday, September 07, 2007

Back to Work...

... for me and for the good old 110th Congress.

I had a great vacation and am feeling jetlagged but revived in spirit. I hope the same is true for the legislative branch, and that they'll get down to accomplishing something tangible, especially on Iraq.

Harry Reid had the following to say in a press conference today, where he seems to take a stand against the kind of empty political compromise that gives moderation a bad name. Let's hope it holds true in the coming weeks.

We're going to take this matter up the week of September 17. The one thing that we're trying to do is to give the Republicans the ability to keep their word.

They said, in September, there would be a change of course. We're willing to go halfway with them, as long as everyone understands that we're not going to do something that's cosmetic in nature.

To say that a Democrat and a Republican get together and have a piece of legislation that we can all vote for and it doesn't accomplish anything -- I will do everything I can to stir up enough votes to stop that from passing.

I want some legislation that will change what's going on in Iraq, for the reasons I've already outlined.

This is a war that's going to soon be in its sixth year -- think about that -- costing this country -- we're close to three-quarters of a trillion dollars.

I think enough's enough.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Gone Fishing

Well, gone, anyway, for a couple of weeks. And not a minute too soon. I'm having one of those days where it started out cloudy; now it's sunny; but it still feels cloudy.
See you in September.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Another heartbreaking story from Iraq...

... maybe the saddest I've heard:

Five-year-old-boy set on fire.

How can anyone justify to themselves an act like that, obliterating a young child's capacity and reasons to smile?

I have to hope an offer of medical aid will be made by some group or individual with the means to do so.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Poems from Guantanamo

This small book, edited by Marc Falkoff, a lawyer for 17 of the detainees, is subtitled "The Detainees Speak."
But Dan Chiasson from the NYT Sunday Book Review notes that it might be better titled "The Detainees Do Not Speak" or "The Detainees Are Not Allowed to Speak," due to the Pentagon's heavy vetting of the edition.
Still, given the human drive for expression, and the circumstances under which these were written, (one of them, Falkoff says, carved into a Styrofoam cup when pen and paper were banned, one of them, a despondent claim of innocence by a prisoner who has been in solitary confinement for nearly four years and tried to kill himself 12 times) it seems worth looking at.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Women's Options: Another Casualty of the War in Iraq

This CNN story about women resorting to prostitution when low-paid cleaning work is not enough to feed their children is generating a lot of interest, hopefully enough to make a difference among those in Iraq (and perhaps in Washington) with the power to alleviate the situation, as well as with the average CNN viewer.

But for the average CNN viewer, Arwa Damon provided a link to an organization that is accepting donations to help women in this situation, as well as women in Kurdistan who have been facing a horrific number of "honor killings."

I have to admit that I can't even comprehend what could bring someone to kill an immediate family member for an (often unsubstantiated) claim of dishonor. I can't imagine a father killing his own daughter for any reason at all besides insanity, although it happens at times, in all parts of the world. But for it to be considered routine is beyond what I can fathom.

The president of the Organisation of Women's Freedom in Iraq, Yanar Mohammed, received the Eleanor Roosevelt Global Women’s Rights award this year. I try to donate something each year to one or two organizations, and I can't think of a better one than this.

In the meantime, it's free to sign the petition.

Related: Are these supposed to be the good guys?

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

The Rise and Fall

Listening to the rehash of the Rove resignation on The NewsHour, Charlie Rose, etc., last night and reading articles like this one in The Washington Post, I was just pondering the "might have been" for the Republican plans of a permanent majority were it not for A) Iraq, B) Katrina, and C) the campaign-driven decision to abandon "compassionate conservatism" for bringing out the base.
Compassionate conservatism was a great buzzword, and it got people excited in 2000 (even if not quite excited enough to elect GWB in the popular vote.) And after 9/11, Bush the Younger had won over even those who had considered him a laughingstock, at least temporarily.
However, none of those three events came from the "outside."
Iraq was the definition of pre-emptive.
The unfunded levees; the bureaucratic mishandling and seeming apathy from the White House toward Katrina were rooted in misplaced trust and serious disorganization in the ill-conceived Department of Homeland Security and in a growing isolation of those at the top, and an insulation of the president from anything seemingly unpleasant that was going on "out there" in the country.
And the choice to humor the base at all costs was a miscalculation that proved Rove's undoing, and an ironic one, since it's been pointed out that, back in Texas, the Religious Right was not in the W. camp. The battles within the GOP on immigration and the Harriet Miers disaster are reminders that there's still a bit of the Elder (moderate) Bush in the son, as well as the Texas pragmatist who once made his repuation on knowing how to compromise with Democrats.
When you ask what went wrong, the answer seems to simply be that Rove just took it all too far, and stopped listening to anyone, thinking he could somehow pull it back together in the end. It came to be just the two of them, and now they're going down together.
If things were otherwise, would the Democrats have simply faded away, little by little? It's very possible; that's how good the Rove machine was when it was good. If it hadn't self-imploded, even the lean and hungry team of Emanuel, Pelosi and Schumer would have struggled for a few seats here and there. But fortunately for the Dems, it did implode, and now, given a chance, they've begun to get their groove back. And the wheel keeps on turning.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Look, kids: real robot armies!

It's things like this that make me glad I wasn't born a single year later...

More Republicans Talking Sense (White House Edition)

First it was Newt Gingrich; now we have the infamous 1994 Cheney, talking the most sense I've ever heard (too bad 2007 Cheney is too stubborn to listen to advice.)

The popular YouTube video of Cheney in 1994 making the case not to invade Iraq

The transcript from "Editor & Publisher"


And Karl Rove is finally "movin' on down the road," to quote his boss. I have to admit that even I felt a twinge of sentiment listening to Karl choke up as he made his farewell speech beside the guy he's spent so many decades with and shared such a deeply symbiotic relationship. But then I cry over animated rats in Disney movies, so that doesn't mean I'm not glad to see the door hit him on the way out... to spend more time with his family (and perhaps Fred Thompson?)
We probably haven't seen the last of him, but at least he won't be architecting national policy for the next year and a half.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

The Last Frontier...

... of human discovery may be our own brains. But this article sheds a lot of light on the subject:

10 Unsolved Mysteries of the Brain

(One month) older than my years...

... that's how I scored on the RealAge Test. I know this has been out a while, and I think I took it a few years ago, actually (and scored better, I think) but anyway, I guess it could be worse.
Positive factors included daily flossing, not smoking or eating much red meat, good BMI, education level, wearing my seatbelt and taking a vitamin every day.
Negatives included not enough exercise, never having lifted a weight in my life (okay, maybe once) not enough vitamin C, not enough Omega-3 (I try, but tuna has mercury in it and salmon is so darn expensive; back to stocking up on walnuts) and too small a social network.
Most of these things I knew, but good to have them reinforced, to motivate me to kick my age down to what I get mistaken for when ordering liquor (and not ordering liquor would probably kick it down even further, unless it's red wine ;)

Thursday, August 09, 2007

What's the world coming to...

... when Newt Gingrich starts sounding (to my registered Democrat ears) like a voice of reason in this roiling sea of campaign insanity?

from his remarks at the National Press Club on Tuesday (and I'm sure his interest in the subject of the candidacy process is informed by his own deliberation process, but on that point, he's not opining.)
[The current system] turns the candidates into rigidity. Because if a candidate says something in March of 2007 and, in the course of the campaign, they learn something fundamentally different and they mature and change, and in August or September or October, they adopt a new position based on having grown during the year, they will promptly have flip-flopped.

And so you begin to trap people. As the campaigns get longer, you're asking a person who's going to be sworn in, in January of 2009, to tell you what they'll do, in January of 2007, when they haven't got a clue. Because they don't know what the world will be like.

And you're suggesting they won't learn anything through the two years of campaigning.

It was John F. Kennedy, campaigning in West Virginia, being horrified by poverty, which profoundly changed him in 1960.

And so we now have a system that is overly focused on money, overly delegated to technicians, and in which candidates are held to a rigidity standard that is very dangerous, while their answers are held to a soundbite and 30-second standard, which is just, frankly absurd.

What's your answer on Iraq in 30 seconds?

What's your answer on health care in 30 seconds?

Now, I believe this is really, really serious.

Sunday, August 05, 2007

The War on War

I've been thinking lately... about this so-called war on terrorism (or struggle against global extremism -- whatever they're calling it today.)
For all my shame and disgust at the way it's being conducted, do I support the idea of a struggle against violent extremism?
As a self-professed radical moderate, I can't say there's much that I support more, in principle. And there certainly are some things we've gotten right about it, in practice. But there's a heck of a lot more that we've gotten wrong.
And there are other wars that I'd support as well...

To name a few:

A war on global poverty
A war on global injustice
A war on pandemic diseases
A war on diseases that are potentially curable through support for advances in medicine
A war on crime fed by hopelessness from within communities and apathy from without
A war on climate change fed by unchecked pollution fed in turn by corporate greed
A war on willful ignorance and intolerance due to arrogance or self-hatred
A war on unwillful ignorance fed by poor access to education
A war on inequality owing to systematic discrimination
A war on contempt for the mentally ill and the elderly
A war on contempt for, oppression of, and violence against women
A war on random, unfocused violence
A war on systematic, focused violence (what we call terrorism falls somewhere in between those two extremes. All three varieties equally suck.)
A war on a warlike mindset

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Surge Assessment: Life Cycle of a Timeline

Do I hear a "January '09," anybody?

Ted Kennedy, from today's Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on the nominations of Admiral Mullen and General Cartwright for chairman and vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff:

We had, in January, when this surge was started -- Secretary Gates said, "It's viewed as a temporary surge."

In February Secretary Gates told the Senate Appropriations Committee, "I think General Petraeus believes they'll have a pretty good idea whether this surge is working, probably, by early summer."

And in April, Secretary Gates told us, "More time would be needed. I think it's been General Petraeus's view all along, sometime, at some point, during the summer -- mid- to late summer, perhaps -- he has thought that he would be in a position to evaluate whether the plan was working."

In May the president said even more time would be necessary. He told us General Petraeus said it would be at least the end of the summer before we can assess the impact of this operation; the Congress ought to give Petraeus' plan a chance to work.

A week later, Secretary Gates said the administration would make their evaluation of the situation of the surge in September.

On May 9th, Lieutenant General Ray T. Odierno, the commander of the Multi-National Force-Iraq, said the surge needs to go through the beginning of next year for sure.

Then, on July 20th, General Odierno again admitted that it would be at least November before the military could provide a real assessment.

Sunday, July 29, 2007

A Welcome, if Fleeting, Respite

Some good news from Iraq

But one can always hope it will have some small unifying effect on the country. You never know.

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Filipino "contractors" in Iraq: OK, this is bad...

... so maybe I owe at least one German high school student a teary apology, after hearing about what is essentially hijacked slave labor being used to build the U.S. embassy in Baghdad, being effectively (up until this point) swept under the rug by the State Department's I.G.

And hearing about people dying from formaldehyde exposure in FEMA trailers doesn't boost my patriotism very much.

Not sure what else to say, except, once again, dammit, I voted for Gore (and Kerry.) I know we're not perfect (ahem, what country is?) but who knew how fast we could fall in 6 1/2 years?

Pat Tillman Update

It may be worse than we even thought.

U.S. exchange students in Germany moonlight as scapegoats (I mean goodwill ambassadors)

I went through the checklist:

Did I vote for Bush? No, not once.
Pro-war in Iraq? Nope, was out carrying "No Blood for Oil" signs, even when Hillary was still game for it.
The death penalty? No.
Gun control? Yeah, pretty much. (No comment please, Mr. X. ;)
Climate protection? Yep, for it.
I love organic grocery stores,
and to sweeten the deal, I'm not even from Texas.

What more do they want from me?
I'm kinda afraid to ask.

Ah well, I'm too old to be an exchange student, so maybe I shouldn't take it personally, but I am headed on vacation soon to two of Germany's next-door neighbors (who have, from all accounts, not much more love for us Yanks) so I guess I'm feeling a little defensive.

Quote du Jour: Bud Cummins on his old boss

on "Hardball" today with a giddy Chris Matthews (admittedly Cummins, one of the fired U.S. attorneys, has reason to be bitter, but I think he summed up Gonzales' present situation pretty well.)
I think that his credibility is gone. It's partly -- it's clearly partly his fault. I could probably list a dozen things he's done that makes him deserving of losing his credibility. Part of it's politics. The Democrats are now on him like piranha.

But the bottom line is, he has no credibility left. And he's like a boxer that can't keep his hands up anymore but he won't fall down. Somebody needs to throw in the towel.

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Gonzo Testimony

Three questions on the TSP memo and Gonzales' blatantly false statements at yesterday's hearing:
  1. What were you thinking, Al?
  2. Did you really think Chuck Schumer wasn't going to follow up on those documents?
  3. Who's pulling the strings here, and what are they smoking? (OK, four questions ;)

Monday, July 23, 2007

Time Magazine: Who Dies in Harry Potter? (No Spoiler Alert)

Here's a refreshing perspective on the Potter series... once again, without any spoilers, for those of you who are still waiting for the book to arrive in the flesh (so to speak.)

Who Dies in Harry Potter?

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Gee, that's the nicest thing a U.S. general ever said about Saddam...

... and he's not alive to hear it.

from the commandant of the Marine Corps, General Conway's remarks at the National Press Club yesterday.

There is sectarian violence. But if you talk to Iraqis, they would say, hey, my wife's a Sunni; my father-in-law is a Sunni -- or their father-in-law might even be a Shia, you know. I mean, they're just that intermarried.

And Saddam demanded one thing. That was that whatever you are, whatever sect you are, that's second; you're an Iraqi first. And I think we need to be able to capitalize on that.

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Speaking of sleep...

... who's live-blogging the Senate slumber party?
Don't look at me... Maybe it's just the humidity of mid-July in D.C., but politics has been making me yawn this past week or so, as my spotty posts seem to indicate.
Wake me up when there's a chance in heck of getting any meaningful legislation passed.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

The Wonderful World of Sleep

Interesting program on the latest research into various aspects and functions of sleep:

WNYC Radio Lab: Sleep

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Biden Starts the Hard Sell

No, not his candidacy for the Democratic nomination.
He's begun a campaign, on the Senate floor today, to win Republican votes for a timely exit strategy, to be passed, if not before the August break, then by September.
False starts and incoherent flourishes aside, he makes a good speech, and he knows his stuff; gotta give him that.
The question is, do we continue to send our kids into the middle of a meat grinder, based on a policy that is fundamentally flawed?

I don't think there's a dozen Republicans on that side of the aisle who agree with the president's strategy. Nor do I believe, if the president had followed the recommendation of the senator from Delaware and, then, the senator from Arizona, back before there was a civil war, to put enough troops in to solidify the situation on the ground, we might not be here.

The rationale he offered and I offered, if I'm not mistaken, was, Mr. President, you don't have a strategy. The secretary of defense -- these are not a bunch of dead-enders. They're not a bunch of thugs. They are thugs. But you've got a big problem, Mr. President.

If I'm not mistaken, I heard the senator from Arizona make those speeches four years ago. I heard him, along with me, call for more troops, back then, in order to get out sooner.

We predicted there would be a civil war if we didn't gain control. Surprise, surprise, surprise. We have a civil war.

Look, I understand the political dilemmas that we find ourselves in when we have a president of our own party we have a problem with. I've been there. It never kept me from talking up, speaking up.

You recall, my friend from California, as presiding member, to use the trite expression, I beat President Clinton up and about the head, as they say in the neighborhood where I come from, to use force in Bosnia, to end a genocide.

The president didn't agree with me. I was told, calm down; don't put him in that spot. I'm accustomed to taking on presidents of my own party. And I know it's hard. It's hard.

But I tell you what. Name me any one of the people who were quoted here who thinks the policy we're pursuing now makes any sense.

Look. Ever since the Democrats took control of the Congress back in January, we've been working to build pressure on the administration, and quite bluntly, on our Republican colleagues, to change course in Iraq.

Because I've reached the point, Madam President -- I think the president is impervious to information. There's a great expression -- I believe it was Oliver Wendell Holmes -- he was referring to prejudice. And the president is not prejudiced, but it'll make the point.

He said "Prejudice is like pupil of the eye. The more light you shine upon it, the more tightly it closes."

This administration is like the pupil of the eye. The more hard facts you give them to prove that their policy is a failure, the tighter it closes and the less -- the less inclined to change they are.

Monday, July 02, 2007

Recommended Viewing: "The Prisoner"

This documentary by the directors of "Gunner Palace," is, first of all, simply an order of magnitude better than "Gunner Palace" -- more complex and nuanced, more stylistically innovative (still cartoons used to illustrate flashbacks), and just more substantive. The earlier film was criticized for being a bit too neutral to really say anything, and so maybe what Epperlein and Tucker needed was the strong voice of a single subject to carry the film, and Iraqi journalist and former Abu Ghraib prisoner Yunis Abbas is perfectly suited to this task.
This is a fascinating character study as well as a suspense story where the villains -- Saddam, U.S. military bureaucracy, nameless bullies and callous leadership -- are always shadowy and ill-defined. But this film, with its focus on Abbas' candid but uncynical first-person narrative -- and the names of dead prisoners and undocumented abuses he wrote, through it all the earnest journalist, on the inside of his underwear and on pieces of tin foil smuggled outside the prison in visitors' mouths -- is a testament to what really did happen not so long ago in U.S.-occupied, post-Saddam Iraq.

The Prisoner: or How I Planned to Kill Tony Blair

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Trust, but verify.

I can't count how many times I've heard politicians (particularly GOP presidential hopefuls) drop that Reagan quote in the last six months, but in the last six days, it's really peaked in the zeitgest. Now, even Democrats like Pat Leahy are using it.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Patrick Leahy at today's press conference on the latest subpoenas:
You know, I remember that sort of made-up saying, although I loved it, and President Reagan did it so well. I remember when he said, "Trust, but verify." It was a Russian slogan, even though nobody could find it.

But it's a wonderful slogan. And President Reagan was right on that, on arms control. He was right on that and so many other things.

So I consider myself a strong Reaganite here.

I trust, but I want to verify. And I want to verify under oath. I want to verify on the record. And I don't want to verify behind closed doors.

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Heckuva Job, Pete.

Peter Pace spent what was theoretically the pinnacle of his career as the scapegoat and whipping boy of Donald Rumsfeld.
So it's not exactly ironic that he goes out on the same note, with barely a whimper.

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

It's about time...

... moderate (and former "lifelong" Democrat) Mayor Michael Bloomberg admits he doesn't really want to be a Republican anymore.
Early pundit reaction basically translates this as the first step toward an independent run for the White House, a move that would greatly threaten the GOP nominee's chances and be another breakthrough election for third parties.
So there's really nothing not to like in this story, as far as I'm concerned ;)

Sunday, June 17, 2007

The Continuing Shame of Abu Ghraib...

... the sad story of the rise and fall of General Antonio Taguba, by Seymour Hersh in The New Yorker.

Read this and weep.

Quote du Jour: Bob Schieffer

From "Face the Nation" today:
And finally today, I have never been much for third parties and independent candidates. For all its flaws, the old two-party system has brought us a long way in this country, and I'm slow to change.

But as I watched the Senate fumble around with the immigration bill, it made me wonder, has our two-party system lost the ability to get anything done?

We keep hearing that both parties are playing to their base. Republicans don't want to offend conservatives, so they block real immigration reform. Democrats fear the liberal left, so they don't want reform.

Result: nothing gets done on that or anything else. Yet polls show a majority of Americans want reform, want a guest worker program for illegal immigrants in this country, favor a way to make their status legal.

Who speaks for that segment of the electorate?

Certainly not Democratic and Republican leaders, who are so busy pacifying those so-called base voters.

You know, I hope we do see a third-party candidate in the presidential race next year, not because I favor anyone who might run as an independent, but because a third choice would force both the Republicans and the Democrats to move more to the center, to stop an independent from siphoning off moderate voters.

If both parties are forced to shift their hunt for votes to the center, rather than the edges of their parties, who knows?

They may find some common ground every once in a while, and actually get something done.

Friday, June 15, 2007

Congressional Quote du Jour: A Little Grammar Review

from Wednesday's House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform's Hearing on the GSA Administrator Investigation

REP. JOHN YARMUTH (D-KY): I have two questions. One is that you said, sometimes, you have a problem with tense. And basically there are only three tenses.

LURITA DOAN, GSA ADMINISTRATOR: No, that's not true.

YARMUTH: Past, present and future.

DOAN: No, there's, like, present perfective. There's present progressive, past progressive...

YARMUTH: In the time continuum -- that's grammar. But in the time continuum, there are only -- it either happened, it is happening or it will happen.

DOAN: Or it's ongoing as we talk.

YARMUTH: I'm trying to get a handle on exactly where the issue of tense might relate to whether or not you actually were speculating about what you might do, what you may have in fact done or what you were in the process of doing.

DOAN: Well, I thought I was using, like, a hortatory subjunctive right there, in which...

YARMUTH: OK.

Well, she was an English professor, who graduated from Vassar with honors in English... as the blogger linked above points out, maybe she does know her tenses after all.

You Don't Have to Be Crazy to Hear Voices...

... although, no doubt, it helps.
But that cheap joke aside, Daniel B. Smith, who was on The Colbert Report last night, has written what looks like a fascinating book on the phenomenon of auditory hallucination through the ages, centered around the story of his own father, an otherwise normally functioning attorney who heard voices throughout his life.

Muses, Madmen, and Prophets: Rethinking the History, Science, and Meaning of Auditory Hallucination

Thursday, June 14, 2007

For the Time Being: The Current Strategy

'We have made a deal with the devil,' from crooksandliars.com, by Steve Benen
Apparently, U.S. forces have not only aligned themselves with dozens of Sunni militiamen, we’re now cooperating with sectarian militias, working outside the Iraqi security forces, that include insurgents that have attacked Americans in the past. What’s more, we’re allowing them to procure weapons and we’re granting them the power to arrest other Iraqis.

“We have made a deal with the devil,” said an intelligence officer in the battalion.

The dynamic is not without complications. Joshua Partlow’s report explained that “fighters on both sides appeared nearly identical,” using the same weapons and wearing similar clothes. “Now we’ve got kind of a mess on our hands,” a leader of a U.S. Stryker team remembered thinking. “Because we’ve got a lot of armed guys running all over the place, and it’s making it very hard for us to identify which side is which.”

Might these militias turn on the U.S. sometime soon? No one knows. Ali Hatem Ali Suleiman, a Sunni militia leader said, “Let’s be honest, the enemy now is not the Americans, for the time being.”

When September Ends: A "vast metaphysical question."

Remember when September was the moment of truth as to whether or not the surge plan was working in Iraq?
Tony Snow doesn't, as of today, although the press corps tried to jog his memory.

QUESTION: The president himself has said, not just in the Reuters interview but in others, that in September we will find out whether it's working. He's been blunt about it.

SNOW: Well, again, you'll be able to see what's going on at the juncture.

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: He has said "We'll know whether it's working in September."

SNOW: OK, but what I'm saying -- OK.

QUESTION: Is that what you think?

SNOW: No, I think my concern is that the expectation that seems to be raised is that suddenly, in September, there may be an expectation that the report says, "OK, all the problems are solved."

No. But what will happen in September is that we will have an opportunity to assess what's going on. Yes, we'll have an opportunity to say...

(CROSSTALK)

SNOW: ... whether it is working -- whether it is working. That does not mean that we'll have all the work. It will not be completely successful at that juncture. "Is working" where you have it in the motion of a present imperfect, I think, is fine. So...

(LAUGHTER)

QUESTION: Is it a moment, though, for judging -- I understand the difference between -- it's not going to be over then, but is it the right time to judge whether the new way forward is working?

SNOW: Again, we'll see. We'll have to take a look. I just...

QUESTION: That sounds like backpeddling.

SNOW: No, it's not backpeddling. It's just it seems to me to be such a vast, metaphysical question.

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Congressional Quotes du Jour: The Good, the Bad and the Dangerously Insane

Ron Paul (R-TX) from Tuesday's Republican Presidential Debate on CNN:
We have a lot of goodness in this country. And we should promote it, but never through the barrel of a gun. We should do it by setting good standards, motivating people and have them want to emulate us.

But you can't enforce our goodness, like the necons preach, with an armed force. It doesn't work.

Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) discussing the William Jefferson indictment on the House floor this week (Jon Stewart's moment of zen yesterday):
When we talk about the standard here, we all know that bringing dishonor on this House is a standard that all of us attempt to meet.

Trent Franks (R-AZ) in yesterday's House Armed Services Committee hearing on body armor, in which he suggests that the committee just suit up a couple of staffers in the sets of armor in question, find Jim Webb's gun and go down to the basement to do their own damned ballistics test. Hey, if NBC News can do it:
And it's just perhaps a little bit unusual, the suggestion, Mr. Chairman, that -- we've got a gun range in the basement of this building. And I think we ought to take a couple of sets of both sets of this body armor and have both sides have a sworn affidavit that this is indeed the exact armor that's going into the field, and that we all go down and have some experts there to make sure that the tests are fair, and witness this for ourselves.

Friday, June 01, 2007

Play Pumps: just heard about this...

Someone had a good idea:
Children playing instead of their mothers or themselves spending hours a day carrying water from the river.

Welcome back, Jack

Dr. Kevorkian leaves prison after serving eight years.

Eight full years... and you think about some of the violent criminals who spend far less time than that, for crimes that don't seem to compare, either in degree or kind.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Death of Panda Released into Wild: Sad, but not surprising...

... the strategy of protecting the habitats in the first place seems the better and more cost-effective approach, as a WWF director notes.

New Sudan Sanctions: A Different Perspective

Not everyone agrees that the U.S.'s unilateral sanctions are the best approach. My sense remains that they are necessary, but the truth is, I don't have a clue what's actually going on over there, so how could I possibly say for certain?

This guy, the Sudanese ambassador, John Ukec Lueth, a former government dissident now representing the so-called unity government, spoke rather passionately to the National Press Club yesterday about his perspective:
We just want the people of the United States to know that their government is going the wrong way. The situation in Darfur is more complex. You know, don't run away with the issue of genocide. We do not like any woman to be raped. We do not like anybody to be killed. These are our brothers and sisters. We are more concerned about them than anybody who pretends to say that. If they have a fiduciary interest, they should stop that. They should think that, "These are our brothers. They are our brothers and our sisters."

And in the end, I was fighting the Sudanese government. I am back now. They embraced me, and we are trying to build a new Sudan. That's what we said. And as a result, leave the custody of our people in our hands. Leave the solutions of the problem in our hands and help us where we ask for.

We have asked for the African Union to come and help us. Let them come. We will determine on the ground how many troops we need. We will also provide them with what we have. And we will have the U.N. and the African Union, as well as the Europeans, to help us also.

We appreciate also the help that the United States has given us. They have spent $1.3 billion in Darfur and southern Sudan. We do not ignore that.

We must go on the right track. And this unilateral taking of decisions is not a good thing in diplomacy, in good neighborlihood. You know, even though a country is so small, like my country, it has its guts. It belongs -- it is -- we own that country. It is our home. And we cannot be overtrodden about it.

Anything else?

I appreciate you all coming. I am available any time. If you want to know more, I will give you more. I'm around here. I came here to do this. And I want people out there -- you are the medium for getting the truth out there. You know better of how things should be constructive and objective.

I believe most of you are objective. That's what made you come here this afternoon. And thank you for coming. Thank you very much.

The Cold War: We'll meet again, don't know where, don't know when...

Apparently, Putin has looked into GWB's soul and seen an imperialist aggressor. Or maybe he just wants an excuse to try out some new toys. Either way, it's not building a safer world for any of us.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Garrison Keillor: Belated Memorial Day Speech

I enjoyed this weekend's episode of A Prairie Home Companion, which described the best Memorial Day speech ever in Lake Woebegone, one acknowledging that silence was the best tribute that could be offered by civilians, who can't really understand, to veterans who could never explain it to them.
This Salon article is in a similar but bolder vein.

Monday, May 28, 2007

Today in Darfur...

... is probably much like yesterday, last week, last year...

Stuff like this is still happening regularly.

This is the same world we live in, "over here," but if we truly felt it to be the same world, wouldn't something effective have been done by now to stop it? Does the world lie in thrall to the government of Sudan? What's the deal here?

Friday, May 25, 2007

Clinton-Gore Doubleheader

(Yes, I get nostalgic sometimes...)
  • And this from Bill's commencement address at Rochester Institute of Technology:
Consider what you celebrate today at RIT. You learn together; you master technologies; you have rational arguments; you look at evidence. You learn from each other and you appreciate your differences.

How much of the world is dominated by patterns of thought and action directly opposite to what you have come here to pay tribute to, to political and religious, even emotional fundamentalism, designed to divide rather than unite, to crush argument, to seize power rather than to empower people?

How you think matters. And how people see you thinking matters.

I don't know how many times, when I was president and I was trying to convince people to make peace in one area of the world or another, someone would tell me, I hate it that we're doing this, but we have to because of the way they behave.

How much behavior in the world today; how many tribal wars; how many ethnic and religious conflicts are being driven by people who justify their conduct based on what someone else did to them or how they made them feel ashamed?

I don't care if you've got a Ph.D. and if you've been to outer space and back, every time, for the rest of your life -- you remember this -- every time, for the rest of your life, you say, do, or feel anything because you say, I have no choice because of how destructive people were to me, or because I had this problem or that problem, you give up your freedom.

You are only a free person when you recognize that every moment of every day, no matter what happens to you, no matter what is said to you, no matter what is done to you or your crowd, you still are free to decide how to respond.

(APPLAUSE)

That's why Gandhi was a free man and a great man.

(APPLAUSE)

That's why Mandela is recognized for the enduring greatness, not of his sacrifice, but of the way he responded to his sacrifice, not just inviting his jailers to his inauguration, but putting the leaders of the political parties that supported apartheid in his government, because, he said, "If I want us to go forward together, that means them, too."

He was a free man because no one could make him hate or kill or react. He got to decide.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Masters of compromise

The final incarnation of the war funding bill is another example of what I don't mean by "radically moderate."

But to be fair, the pork that made it in this bill is the best kind of pork, things (e.g. Katrina, health care for veterans and impoverished children) that would have had separate bills of their own, if the monster that is this mismanaged war didn't have its hooks in everything.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Off Topic: Louie Gohmert wins the prize...

... for the most tangential Republican digression in today's all-day House Judiciary hearing on the U.S. attorney firings, featuring the Plame-blonde Monica Goodling, who actually held her ground better than Gonzales or Sampson did (if they'd guessed that, would they have let her testify sooner?)
GOHMERT (R-TX): The Latin phrase meant "truth for Christ and the church," and that was the official motto of Harvard in 1692.

And the rules and precepts of Harvard in 1646 said, "Let every student be plainly instructed and earnestly pressed to consider well the main end of his studies is to know God and Jesus Christ, which is eternal life, and therefore to lay Christ at the bottom as the only foundation."

It is part of the foundation.

And I would also submit to my colleagues that the hate crime bill passed out of this committee and taken to the floor and passed recently leaves an opening. If someone here seems to indicate there's something wrong about being a Christian and someone is induced to commit violence against that Christian, then the person on this committee could possibly be charged under the hate crime bill as the principal for having committed the act of violence.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Obama to world: Don't give up on us yet.

Barack Obama* at a campaign event today in Philadelphia
*Note that this quote does not indicate an endorsement of any particular candidate, just an endorsement of these particular sentiments. ;)
Listen, when George Bush steps down, the entire world is going to breathe a sigh of relief.

(APPLAUSE)

And we will have an opportunity to go before the world, to stand before them and say, we are back; that we want to work with you, that we want to work to deal with the transnational threats of climate change and nuclear proliferation.

We want to work with you to deal with global poverty. We want to end the genocide in Darfur.

(APPLAUSE)

We want to bring an end to malaria and HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa.

And while we're at it, we want to close Guantanamo and we want to restore habeas corpus...

(APPLAUSE)

... because that's who we are. We want to lead not just with our military but with our values and with our ideals.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Big Gulp: The Ashcroft Hospital Visit

Don't they have security in hospitals to keep people like Al Gonzales and Andrew Card away from vulnerable convalescents?

If you're like me and somehow missed the revelation of this story at a Tuesday congressional hearing, it bears repeating.

As Chuck Schumer said, it "makes you almost gulp."

And Jon Stewart's Latin American soap opera reenactment is pretty hilarious. On that note, I'll never be able to hear Ashcroft belt "Let the Eagle Soar" from now on without a sentimental tinge of respect, statue-drapings notwithstanding.

Seriously, though, I wonder if Ashcroft, whom his deputy Jim Comey described as being barely conscious at the time of the visit, ever has nightmares about those two looming apparitions at his bedside...

Well, if the 'pubs don't want Ron Paul...

... the Libertarians could consider taking him in. Isn't it time he came out as a Lib, anyway?

Apparently, there's a petition to kick Paul out of the Republican debates.


What next, the Dems trying to kick out Mike Gravel?

Friday, May 18, 2007

And even vitamins...

... should be taken in moderation, according to this study linking high-dose vitamin use with death from prostate cancer. Once again, we're talking high, high doses. When I see the 1,000+ percentages RDA on the Nutrition Facts lists on the backs of some vitamin bottles, I always wonder if they'd done enough studies like this. Apparently not.

The Da Vinci Diet

The epitome of moderation. No wonder he was a rare person.
Most of these are actually very simple and do-able; it seems the challenge would be doing them all, all the time. (That's always the challenge.)

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Chimeras Among Us

MIT scientist offers help to cyclist accused of blood doping.
Apparently, DNA tests to look for chimerism have found that about 50 to 70 percent of healthy people are chimeras, a medical term meaning that their blood may have originally mingled with a vanished twin in utero, early on, or with their mother's own blood.

Monday, May 14, 2007

"And if not now, when?"

said the Rabbi Hillel, perhaps not thinking of this commentary in the Baltimore Chronicle, but if the shoe fits...

Impeach Bush or Get Rid of the Impeachment Clause

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

I'm a sucker for anthropomorphicized robot buddy stories

Robots in Iraq

(this blog's first and perhaps only post to get both the war tag and the warm and fuzzy tag.)

Recommended Viewing: Outfoxed

I just saw this 2004 film, Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism, which popped out of the Netflix queue just in time to coincide with Murdoch's current bid for the Wall Street Journal, and to freak me out about the future of our society if the Bancroft family does eventually cave.
Be strong, Bancrofts!
One Fox coup I'd almost forgotten about (although it was probably mentioned in Fahrenheit 9/11, and I just have a short memory) was how instrumental they were in the 200o election by prematurely proclaiming Bush the winner at one point in the night, prompting the rest of the networks to desperately follow suit within minutes, not wanting to be scooped (accuracy be damned.) And that's not the only instance of the other networks following Fox's lead, sadly...

Sunday, May 06, 2007

Even green tea...

... can be harmful in large quantities, according to this New Scientist article.
However, we're talking very large quantities, more than 10 cups a day, at least (I go through 2-3 if I'm lucky.) The only danger is really to people taking supplements, which contain 50 times the amount in a single cup of tea.

Friday, May 04, 2007

French "celebrity" atheist Michel Onfray: If you can't beat 'em, join 'em?

Once again, I have to give the creds to fake news anchor Stephen Colbert for tipping me off on real news; in this case, to the growing popularity of French atheist philosopher Michel Onfray. I'm not sure how I feel about the concept of what this Northwest Herald article characterizes as "militant atheism," and as a humanist, I find Onfray's almost apocalyptic language and confrontational manner disconcerting. He goes way beyond the wry-verging-on-smug wit of Richard Dawkins. But he does raise some interesting questions about the direction we're headed, globally, given the growing atmosphere of religious fervor over the past several years.

And these lines about Onfray's encounter with France's right-wing presidential candidate inspired a touch of envy, when I considered the impossibility of a similar encounter in the U.S. between a right-wing candidate and a prominent American atheist (no names even come to mind immediately, besides Penn Jillette and James Randi.) I guess Sam Harris would be a good choice.
Ahead of France’s presidential election later this month, Philosophie Magazine arranged a meeting recently between Mr. Onfray and the front-running candidate, Nicolas Sarkozy, who sometimes attends church. [envious italics mine, given this is a right-wing candidate!] They argued about faith, politics and philosophy.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Are these supposed to be the good guys?

To be fair, this is an insular, non-Islamic sect not representative of the larger Kurdish population, who generally practice a form of Islam more tolerant than that practiced by others in the region, and it's probably not fair even to generalize about the sect based on this one incident, but WTF?
I couldn't even watch it, honestly. Just the thought that humans behave in this manner makes me ill. But it needs to stop, yesterday.

Kurdish Yezidi girl is stoned by a large mob for living with a Muslim man, having been lured back home by her family's claims of forgiveness.