Sunday, April 30, 2006

Video Link: Colbert Blisters Bush at Conference

Stephen Colbert stepped up to the podium and absolutely shredded Bush and his Administration in an experience that must have been far, far more squirm-inducing than the speeches at Coretta Scott King's funeral.

I mean he says.

it.

all.

My jaw dropped.

A brilliant, courageous, history-making performance. And Helen Thomas is fantastic. Colbert has become the one man unfraid to stand up to George Bush on live, national television. He is - no other word for it - a media hero. Watch the full, high-resolution video (as well as the creepy Bush double footage, if you must) and see why.

The unedited, full version can be downloaded here (use a Bittorrent client):

Bravo.

UPDATE: Vicky Brago-Mitchell has hosted smaller, Flash versions of the video in three parts. You can get them on her website here. Thanks Vicky.

Quote of the Day:
"I know the human being and fish can coexist peacefully."
-- George W. Bush


PS: Watch for the creepy exchange of smirks between Bush and Rove at 51:44, when Bush says, "God bless America". Does that look like sincerity to you? Hmm....

New Feature: GOP PrisonWatch....

Welcome, kind readers. This is to announce the launch of our newest feature GOP Prisonwatch, wherein we hope to keep you up-to-date with the latest happy news on the ever-growing number of Republican public figures bound for prison.

Be sure to check back regularly for exciting new installments on a weekly, if not daily basis.

###

It's Sunday; which Republican is headed for the penitentiary?

Looks like it's Dr. Lester M. Crawford, former FDA commissioner, under criminal investigation by a federal grand jury. From the NY Times:

Dr. Crawford resigned in September, fewer than three months after the Senate confirmed him. He said then that it was time for someone else to lead the agency.

The next month, financial disclosure forms released by the Department of Health and Human Services showed that in 2004 either Dr. Crawford or his wife, Catherine, had sold shares in companies regulated by the agency when he was its deputy commissioner and acting commissioner. He has since joined a Washington lobbying firm, Policy Directions Inc.

The criminal investigation was disclosed at a court hearing in a lawsuit over the F.D.A.'s actions on the emergency contraceptive Plan B, a subject of bitter contention during Dr. Crawford's tenure as acting commissioner and commissioner. After the pill's maker, Barr Laboratories, applied three years ago to sell the pill over the counter, the agency repeatedly delayed making a decision on the application.

While many lawmakers, abortion rights advocates and former F.D.A. officials said the delays had resulted from politics, Dr. Crawford and other agency officials said their concerns were scientific and legal.

An advocacy group, the Center for Reproductive Rights, sued the agency in federal court in New York over the delays. Many such suits are quickly dismissed, but a federal judge allowed the case to proceed, giving the center the right to interview top F.D.A. officials, including Dr. Crawford.

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Site Announcements....



This site has recently been invited to join the Media Bloggers Assocation, which is a nice weekend surprise. The Association is welcoming new members, so do contact them about joining.

They are also currently defending member Lance Dutson, author of the Maine Web Report, who was recently charged by Warren Kremer Paino Advertising and the Maine Office of Tourism with copyright infringement and defamation for his postings.

Said MBA President Robert Cox:

"This case is nothing more than an attempt by a deep-pocketed litigant to bully a blogger for criticizing state officials and state contractors. We have successfully defended MBA members in nine previous cases and I don't expect the outcome here to be any different."

"Bloggers don't usually have an in-house legal department or high-priced outside First Amendment counsel, but they're at least as likely to need one as any MSM outlet. That's where we come in," said MBA General Counsel, Ronald Coleman of the Coleman Law Firm.

In addition to providing pro bono, "first line" legal advice, the MBA seeks to raise awareness of attempts by governments and corporations to intimidate
bloggers and citizen journalists by encouraging members to report such actions on their own blogs and encouraging all bloggers to carry the news throughout the blogosphere.

Corporate intimidation of bloggers is something the Electronic Frontier Foundation has also been working to combat for quite some time.

Meanwhile, the great news keeps coming. Jason Leopold of Truthout has the following happy news to impart:

Fitzgerald to Seek Indictment of Rove

Despite vehement denials by his attorney who said this week that Karl Rove is neither a "target" nor in danger of being indicted in the CIA leak case, the special counsel leading the investigation has already written up charges against Rove, and a grand jury is expected to vote on whether to indict the Deputy White House Chief of Staff sometime next week....

Luskin was informed via a target letter that Fitzgerald is prepared to charge Rove for perjury and lying to investigators during Rove's appearances before the grand jury in 2004 and in interviews with investigators in 2003 when he was asked how and when he discovered that Valerie Plame Wilson worked for the CIA, and whether he shared that information with the media....

In recent weeks, sources close to the case said, Fitzgerald's staff has met with Rove's legal team several times to discuss a change in Rove's status in the case - from subject to target - based on numerous inconsistencies in Rove's testimony, whether he discussed Plame Wilson with reporters before her name and CIA status were published in newspaper reports, and whether he participated in a smear campaign against her husband. The meetings between Luskin and Fitzgerald which took place on several occasions a few weeks ago were called to discuss a timeframe to schedule a return to the grand jury by Rove to testify about, among other things, 250 pages of emails that resurfaced February 6 from Vice President Dick Cheney's office and the Office of President Bush in which Rove wrote to former White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card about strategizing an attack against Wilson, sources familiar with the case said.

The rescheduled grand jury appearance by Rove took place Wednesday afternoon and hinges on whether Rove's testimony about the reasons he did not disclose the emails during his previous testimony will convince Fitzgerald not to add obstruction of justice to the list of charges he intends to file against Rove, sources said. As of Friday afternoon, sources close to the case said, it appeared likely that charges of obstruction of justice would be added to the prepared list of charges. Rove testified that he first found out about Plame Wilson from reading a newspaper report in July 2003, and only after the story was published did he share the information about her CIA status with other reporters. In fact, evidence has surfaced during the course of the two-year-old investigation that shows Rove spoke with at least two reporters about Plame Wilson prior to the publication of the column that first unmasked her identity and exposed her covert CIA status. The explanation Rove provided to the grand jury - that he was dealing with more urgent White House matters and therefore forgot - has not convinced Special Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald that Rove has been truthful in his testimony.

Rove has been questioned by FBI investigators and grand jurors on ten different occasions since October 2003. The time he has spent under oath exceeds 20 hours, sources said, adding that he answered a wide-range of questions about intelligence the White House used to win support for the Iraq war. But it was during Rove's request to appear before the grand jury for a fourth time that he suddenly changed his testimony to explain the circumstances of his conversation with at least one reporter, and how his attorney, Robert Luskin, helped Rove jog his memory. Fitzgerald has been suspicious that Rove altered his previous testimony once it became clear that the reporter he spoke to, Matt Cooper of Time magazine, would be forced to testify and reveal his sources for a story he wrote about Plame Wilson in July 2003. One of those sources has turned out to be Rove. Moreover, Rove has testified that he and other White House officials were not involved in a coordinated effort to attack the credibility of Plame Wilson's husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, who in mid-2003 questioned the veracity of the Bush administration's pre-war Iraq intelligence. However, grand jury testimony by at least a dozen administration officials have portrayed Rove as a key player in a campaign to destroy Ambassador Wilson's credibility in Washington, DC, sources familiar with several of the witnesses' testimony said.
Update: FireDogLake says (and I quote) "...it's looking like Orange Jump Suit time".Whee!


Quote of the Day:

"Number forty-seven said to number three:
You're the cutest jailbird I ever did see.
I sure would be delighted with your company,
come on and do the Jailhouse Rock with me."

--Elvis Aaron Presley

Friday, April 28, 2006

Soon, Very Soon....

From The Ostrey Report:

It's beginning to look a lot like Fitzmas, as they say in Democratic circles. It's likely the former top policy advisor for President Bush will soon come under federal indictment for his role in the CIA leak case. In the Fall '05 indictment of VP Dick Cheney's former chief I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Rove is repeatedly referred to as "Official A." According to legal experts, individuals given that status typically get indicted. More significant, of all the cases prosecuted by independent counsel Patrick Fitzgerald, who's leading the investigation, every single "Official A" was indicted. Not a good sign for Turd Blossom.

On Wednesday, Rove was called before the grand jury for a fifth time, and faced 3 1/2 hours of grueling questioning by Fitzpatrick. Given the amount of times he's been called to testify, and the amount of time he spent under oath this week, it's becoming increasingly certain that an indictment is imminent.

"Anytime your client has been identified as a subject, and has gone to the grand jury five times, and the last time is 3 1/2 hours, you have a lot to worry about," said Fmr. Deputy Independent Counsel Sol Wisenberg on MSNBC's Hardball Thursday.

Rove, who's likely to face charges of perjury and obstruction similar to Libby, was very upbeat and optimistic at a D.C. party Wednesday night following his testimony. But like many things in the Bushevik Monarchy these days, it's all window dressing. Rove has to be seriously concerned about his fate despite putting on a good public face. He reportedly told pals the day was extremely intense and difficult; like he had "gone to the doctor."

Sitting in for host Chris Matthews, Norah O'Donnell said "With gas drying up, with leaks spilling out, and with polls falling down, Republicans face some tough times in Washington." At least for now, let's just hope, for Karl Rove, the party is officially over.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

A State of War

Bush has said the 9-11 attack was because terrorists hate us for our freedoms.

"Freedom" being an entirely relative term, of course. Sure, Bush conservatives are all for freedom.

Unless of course, you're gay.

Or a woman.

Or a minority member.

Or poor.

Or a student.

Or a non-fundamentalist.

Or a protestor.

Or a scientist.

Or a union member.

Or a Democrat.

So in Bush's "Amur-ka", in the final analysis, the only ones entitled to freedom are privileged, polluting, white, rich, male, heterosexual, fundamentalist Republicans. And THAT, friends and neighbors, is a rapidly shrinking demographic.

So when Bush declares "They hate us for our freedoms," he's actually engaging in rare moments of truth, albeit inadvertently: his "haves and have mores" are unqestionably hated for all they represent -- an archaic plutocrat class that has felt blessed with a manifest destiny to oppress and enslave those who fared poorly in the lottery of birth.

Quote of the Day:
"A state of war only serves as an excuse for domestic tyranny."
--Alexander Solzhenitsyn

T. Rall, Cartooning....






















Rall is second only to Charles M. Schulz, the master of masters. And a Hell of a writer too. To wit:

A Maniacal Messianic Prepares to Fulfill His Destiny
"I have fulfilled my destiny," the president says manically. He has just entered the nuclear launch codes that will trigger World War III. Seconds later, he emerges from a bunker. The Secretary of State squeezes between two soldiers. "Mr. President!" he shouts. "We have a diplomatic solution!"

He smiles. "It's too late," he replies. "The missiles are flying. Alleluia. Alleluia."

The above scene, from David Cronenberg's 1983 adaptation of the horror novel "The Dead Zone," is a classic if slightly preposterous nightmare of a world destroyed by a demented demagogue. Now, incredibly, a lunatic out of a Stephen King movie has brought the United States to the brink of Armageddon.

Until I read Seymour Hersh's expose in The New Yorker and subsequent follow-up coverage by other journalists about the Bush Administration's plans to start a war against Iran, I had dismissed talk of George W. Bush's messianism as so much Beltway chatter. True, he hears voices, even claiming that God and Jesus Christ talk to him. "I believe God wants me to run for president," he told a friend in Texas. Eschewing mainstream religion, he routinely parrots the apocalyptic ravings of fringe Christianist cults: "And the light [America] has shone in the darkness [the enemies of America], and the darkness will not overcome it [America shall conquer its enemies]," he said during his fevered campaign for war against Iraq. He mimics Old Testament cadences: "God told me to strike at Al Qaeda and I struck them," Bush told the Palestinian prime minister in 2003, "and then he instructed me to strike at Saddam, which I did, and now I am determined to solve the problem in the Middle East."

Despite the man's wacky religiosity, I have been giving Bush the benefit of a small amount of remaining doubt after five years of the most disastrous rule this nation has ever suffered. I believed that he was breathtakingly bigoted, stupid and ignorant. But I didn't think he was out of his mind. Until now.


Read the rest here.

And...

Maybe old news to you, but the day before yesterday I saw a video of this incredible, HOT dancer, which led me to this incredible video.... the vocals were electric and gave me instant goosebumps and the lyrics were incredibly moving. I I generally run like Hell at the words "Broadway musical" but looked this one up because the VOCALS.... Some of the most fantastic singing I've ever heard.

It reminded me... we're only here a short while. Make the best of the time you've got.

peace.
Eric

Monday, April 24, 2006

The Jig's Up...

Okay; here's the original picture:





















A lot of people wrote to me about a certain story, so here's the deal:

"Rueters" was deliberately misspelled, and there are no "Grannies for Peace", "Doris MacInshaw", "Michael Brunell-Stevens", or "Gamma Force" division at the Department of Homeland Security.

The paramilitary name and the brown shirt of the law enforcement officer, as well as the entire story itself, were intended to highlight just how far we've come down the road to fascism. It's a sad truth that, with the current occupants of the White House, such an outrageous event is even remotely credible -- A LOT OF PEOPLE BELIEVED IT WAS TRUE AND WANTED TO FIND OUT MORE -- AND WITH GOOD REASON.

In fact, the REAL STORY ISN'T THAT MUCH OF A DEPARTURE:

The woman in the picture is an incredibly courageous American patriot named Betty Brassell. At 75, she's actually one of the younger members of Grandmothers for Peace. Last week, 17 members of the group, some as old as 91 (!), went to an Armed Forces Recruiting Center wearing pictures of their children and grandchildren serving in Iraq on strings around their necks and offering to enlist in place of young men and women being sent to Iraq.

When they were naturally refused, they staged a sit-in, and were arrested at Times Square in New York. According to police testimony, they didn't entirely block access to the recruiting center, which, according to their lawyer, Norman Seigel, means their arrest was illegal and in violation of their First Amendment rights to peaceably assemble.

The Manhattan DA is calling the case simple disorderly conduct, but Siegel told the judge they are exercising their First Amendment rights to peaceably assemble, hoping "to alert an apathetic public". The DA offered a plea bargain to dismiss all charges provided the grannies didn't engage in similar activities for six months, But the women insisted on a court appearance, hoping to use the witness stand to very publicly protest the war.

"We are at a very important point in the history of our country," 87-year-old Molly Klopot said. "It is our responsibility as patriots not to be silent."

If convicted, each of the women could be fined $250 and sent to jail for 15 days. Are they prepared to do the time? Absolutely, said one of the younger defendants, Jenny Heinz, 61. "A number of us have made a decision that we will not accept fines or community service."

Of course, a guilty verdict would have to come first. Then Judge Ross, 46, would have to decide if sending some women nearly twice his age to the slammer is really how he wants to be remembered.


You can read the original stories here and here.

Going to jail for your principles takes even more guts than slapping a Marine sergeant with a purse, I'd hazard. Here's a salute to some incredible American patriots. May they serve as an example to us all.

Quotes of the Day:
"Don't regard yourself as a guardian of freedom unless you respect and preserve the rights of people you disagree with..."
--Gerard K. O'Neill

"Democracies become dictatorships if we do not listen to the voice of the people."
--Tom Van Meurs

"Criticism in time of war is essential to the maintenance of any kind of democratic government."
--Robert Taft

"May we never confuse honest dissent with disloyal subversion."
--Dwight D. Eisenhower

"Suspicion must always fall on those who attempt to silence their opponents."
--Ian Buckley

"I love America more than any other country in the world and, exactly for this reason, I insist on the right to criticize her perpetually."
--James Baldwin

"Before the war is ended, the war party assumes the divine right to denounce and silence all opposition to war as unpatriotic and cowardly."
--Senator Robert M. La Follette

Sunday, April 23, 2006

THUMP! THUMP! THUMP!
"OPEN UP! IT'S THE DILDO POLICE!"



"NOW PUT DOWN THE ASSBEADS AND BACK AWAY SLOWLY WITH YOUR HANDS IN THE AIR..."

Not content with forcing childbirth upon South Dakotans, the cult of the great bearded sky wizard have decided to ban the sale of sex toys in South Carolina.

How far do they intend to take this? Will we see paramilitary troops suspiciously glaring at housewives lingering over the fresh produce section?

Remember, my fellow Americans, if dildos are outlawed, only outlaws will have dildos.

Quote of the Day:

"Do you want me to tell you something really subversive? Love is everything it's cracked up to be. That's why people are so cynical about it.... It really is worth fighting for, being brave for, risking everything for. And the trouble is, if you don't risk anything, you risk even more.

--Erica Jong "How to Save Your Own Life"

Saturday, April 22, 2006

Breaking: 75-year-old Grandmother Headed for Guantanamo

Rueters -
4 hours ago

NEW YORK - In a move some Republican strategists suggest might spell problems for an increasingly unpopular White House, Grannies for Peace member Doris MacInshaw was yesterday declared an "enemy combatant" and flown to Guantanamo Bay, where she now awaits interrogation.

MacInshaw was arrested for rioting and battery at a military recruiting center last October, and yesterday allegedly assaulted a Marine sergeant at a state university.

Said Michael Brunell-Stevens, Division Chief of Homeland Security's Gamma Force, "This kind of behavior cannot be tolerated in a time of war. Securing the homeland is and must be our top priority. Showing lenience only gives comfort to our enemies."

He added that MacInshaw will be spared the more "extreme" forms of interrogation "...as long as she continues to cooperate with our ongoing investigation".

When asked to comment, George Bush replied with characteristic resolve: "We will not sit idly by as these threats gather, and we will continue to act before dangers are upon us."

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales spoke with the press corps briefly, hinting at new draft legislation that will allow preemptive action to prevent future such disruptions as the country prepares for possible tactical nuclear strikes against Iran.

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Ain't it the Sad Truth....





Cernig of Newshog has backed up what I've been asserting all along -- many (modern) Republicans are sociopaths; their lack of empathy and compulsion to control propel them to positions of power - but can often lead to their downfall as well. Brilliant post. Thanks, Cernig.

To quote an outstanding American patriot:



"YOU."

"FUCKIN'."

"RAWK."


You Don't Have to be a Sociopath to be a Republican, but it Helps

Republicans exhibit many of the behavioral characteristics of a sociopath or socialized psychopath-- such as an outstanding ability to charm and seduce followers. Since they appear apparently normal, they are not easily recognizable as deviant or disturbed. Although only a trained professional can make a diagnosis, it is important to be able to recognize the personality type in order to avoid further abuse.

  • Glibness/Superficial Charm
    Language can be used without effort by them to confuse and convince their audience. Captivating storytellers that exude self-confidence, they can spin a web that intrigues others. Since they are persuasive, they have the capacity to destroy their critics verbally or emotionally.

  • Manipulative and Conning
    They never recognize the rights of others and see their self-serving behaviors as permissible. They appear to be charming, yet are covertly hostile and domineering, seeing their victim as merely an instrument to be used. They dominate and humiliate their victims.

  • Grandiose Sense of Self
    Feel entitled to certain things as "their rights." Crave adulation and attendance. Must be the center of attention with their own fantasies as "spokesmen for God," "enlightened," "leaders of mankind," etc. Create an us-versus-them mentality.

  • Pathological Lying
    Have no problem lying coolly and easily and it is almost impossible for them to be truthful on a consistent basis. Can create, and get caught up in, a complex belief about their own powers and abilities. Extremely convincing and able to pass lie detector tests.

  • Shallow Emotions
    When they show what seems to be warmth, joy, love and compassion, it is more feigned than experienced and serves an ulterior motive. Outraged by insignificant matters, yet remaining unmoved and cold by what would upset a normal person. Since they are not genuine, neither are their promises.

  • Incapacity for Love
    While they talk about "God's love" they are unable to give or receive it. Since they do not believe in the genuineness of their followers' love, they are very harsh in testing it from their devotees and expect them to feel guilt for their failings. Expect unconditional surrender.

  • Need for Stimulation
    Living on the edge, yet testing the beliefs of their followers with bizarre rules, punishments and behaviors. Verbal outbursts and physical punishments are normal.

  • Callousness/Lack of Empathy
    Unable to empathize with the pain of their victims, having only contempt for others' feelings of distress and readily taking advantage of them. Their skills are used to exploit, abuse and exert power. Since the follower cannot believe their leader would callously hurt them, they rationalize the behavior as necessary for their (or the group's) own "good" and deny the abuse. When devotees become aware of the exploitation it feels like a "spiritual rape" to them.

  • Poor Behavioral Controls/Impulsive Nature
    Rage and abuse, alternating with small expressions of love and approval produce an addictive cycle for abuser and abused, as well as creating hopelessness in the victim. Believe they are all-powerful, all-knowing, entitled to every wish, no sense of personal boundaries, no concern for their impact on others. The followers only see them as near perfect.

  • Early Behavior Problems/Juvenile Delinquency
    Usually have a history of behavioral and academic difficulties, but "get by" through conning others. Problems in making and keeping friends; aberrant behaviors such as cruelty to people or animals, stealing, etc.

  • Irresponsibility/Unreliability
    Not concerned about wrecking others' lives and dreams. Oblivious or indifferent to the devastation they cause. Cannot accept blame themselves, but blame their followers or others outside their group. Blame reinforces passivity and obedience and produces guilt, shame, terror and conformity in the followers.

  • Lack of Realistic Life Plans/Parasitic Lifestyles
    Tend to move a lot or make all-encompassing promises for the future. Many groups claim as their goal world domination or utopian promises. There is often significant contrast between the leaders' opulent lifestyles and the followers' impoverishment. Support by gifts and donations from the followers who are pressured to give through fear and guilt. Highly sensitive to their own pain and health.

  • Criminal or Entrepreneurial Versatility
    Change their images and those of their groups as needed to avoid prosecution, increase income and recruit a range of members. Are able to adapt or relocate as needed to preserve the group. Can resurface later with new names, front groups or new twists to their scams.

    Other Related Qualities

  • Contemptuous of those who seek to understand them

  • Do not perceive that anything is wrong with them

  • Authoritarian

  • Secretive

  • Paranoid

  • Only rarely in difficulty with the law, but seek situations where their tyrannical behavior will be tolerated, condoned, or admired

  • Conventional appearance

  • Seek enslavement of their victim(s)

  • Exercise despotic control over every aspect of their victims' lives

  • Have an emotional need to justify their crimes and therefore need their victims' affirmation (respect, gratitude and love)

  • Ultimate goals are the creation of willing victims

  • Incapable of real human attachment to another

  • Unable to feel remorse or guilt

  • Extreme narcissism and grandiosity

  • A sociopath may state readily that his or her goal is "to rule the world".

  • Quote of the Day:

    "The Bush definition of NOT lying is saying
    the same thing within a two-hour period."

    --Buzzflash

    Tuesday, April 18, 2006

    Lies, Damned Lies & More Damned Lies








    "Goin' Nookyuler"









    The Bush Administration would have us believe Iran is an immediate, dire threat to world peace, but, as with the majority of its assertions, Americans would do well to listen with the deepest of skepticism.

    Last January, Vice President Cheney suggested Iranian uranium enrichment was so dangerous that Israel may be forced to attack, just as it did 23 years earlier in Iraq; then just last month he warned of "dire consequences" if Iran didn't stop its enrichment program.

    It's interesting that Dick would take such a stance, in light of his role in orchestrating Iran's nuclear energy buildup -- much like Rumsfeld's role in directing the arming of Saddam Hussein a decade later:

    When Gerald Ford assumed the Presidency in August 1974... Richard B Cheney served on the transition team and later as Deputy Assistant to the President. In November 1975, he was named Assistant to the President and White House Chief of Staff, a position he held throughout the remainder of the Ford Administration.

    He was replacing none other than Donald Rumsfeld, who was named Secretary of Defense:

    ...Donald H. Rumsfeld served as Chairman of the transition to the Presidency of Gerald R. Ford. He then became Chief of Staff of the White House and a member of the President's Cabinet (1974-1975) and was the Ford Administration's Secretary of Defense from 1975-1977.

    Meanwhile, Paul Wolfowitz conveniently served in the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency under President Gerald Ford.

    According to the Washington Post,

    Ford's team endorsed Iranian plans to build a massive nuclear energy industry, but also worked hard to complete a multibillion-dollar deal that would have given Tehran control of large quantities of plutonium and enriched uranium - the two pathways to a nuclear bomb. Either can be shaped into the core of a nuclear warhead, and obtaining one or the other is generally considered the most significant obstacle to would-be weapons builders.

    Says Muckraker Report editor Ed Haas:

    In 1976, President Gerald R. Ford signed a directive that granted Iran the opportunity to purchase U.S. built reprocessing equipment and facilities designed to extract plutonium from nuclear reactor fuel....

    What the current Bush Administration is asserting... is that it needs to prevent Iran from achieving the exact same nuclear capabilities that President Ford and his key appointees, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and Wolfowitz were encouraging Iran to accomplish 30 years ago. Iran, a party to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, is guaranteed the right to develop peaceful nuclear power programs - regardless of whether the United States approves or disapproves the politics or political leadership of that country; a point that Iran has repeated over and over again. For 30 years, Iran has proclaimed that it needs nuclear power since its oil and gas supplies are limited, just like the United States, and therefore has the legal right to produce and operate nuclear power plants. Thirty years ago, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld agreed.

    In fact, it turns out this same team has been selling us the same poisonous snake oil for decades now -- and getting away with it time and time again.

    So what IS the status of Iran's uranium enrichment program?

    According to the Washington Post, Iran is about 10 years from being able to manufacture a nuclear bomb:

    A major U.S. intelligence review has projected that Iran is about a decade away from manufacturing the key ingredient for a nuclear weapon, roughly doubling the previous estimate of five years, according to government sources with firsthand knowledge of the new analysis....

    The NIE, ordered by the National Intelligence Council in January, is the first major review since 2001 of what is known and what is unknown about Iran. Until recently, Iran was judged, according to February testimony by Vice Adm. Lowell E. Jacoby, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, to be within five years of the capability to make a nuclear weapon. Since 1995, U.S. officials have continually estimated Iran to be "within five years" from reaching that same capability. So far, it has not.

    The new estimate extends the timeline, judging that Iran will be unlikely to produce a sufficient quantity of highly enriched uranium, the key ingredient for an atomic weapon, before "early to mid-next decade," according to four sources familiar with that finding. The sources said the shift, based on a better understanding of Iran's technical limitations, puts the timeline closer to 2015 and in line with recently revised British and Israeli figures.

    But of course the details of THAT report are classified.

    Fortunately, the Carnegie Endowment's Proliferation News provides specifics and the reasoning behind the estimates. And here's a little snippet that hasn't been noted at all by the major media:

    Iran began building the Pilot Fuel Enrichment Plant in Natanz, 200 miles south of Tehran, in 2001, and completed about 200 gas centrifuges over the next two years. IAEA experts assumed continuous assembly rates would allow Iran to finish a total of 1,345 by the end of last month.


    But the IAEA verified only 30% of the centrifuges are still functional, the majority having broken down from "...excessive vibration of the centrifuges, motor or power failures, pressure and temperature instabilities, or breakdown of the vacuum."

    Reports this month from Iran indicate scientists have begun enriching uranium with a successfully rebuilt "164-centrifuge test cascade assembly". According to Assistant Secretary of State for Security and Nonproliferation Steven Rademaker, this assembly would require 13.6 years to produce enough highly enriched uranium (HEU) for a nuclear weapon.

    Furthermore, UN Chief Weapons Inspector and ex-marine Scott Ritter told Yale attendees last week that Iran isn't a major threat because its uranium is contaminated by molybdenum, which is extremely difficult to remove and blocks valves and piping during enrichment.

    [Inspectors] are finding all the data necessary, but the political powers that be don't care about disarmament and nonproliferation," he said. "They have other policy objectives, namely regime change.

    Could it be that once again, "the facts are being fixed around the policy"?

    Unfortunately, it certainly looks that way. In fact, regime change in Iran was openly a major part of Bush's 2004 re-election platform:

    What's worse, a majority of ever-credulous Americans are said to support military intervention in Iran.

    But, as Information Clearing House points out, contrary to deceptive appearances, Iran was never "ordered" to "stop" its enrichment program:

    It's easy to get confused about developments in Iran because the media does everything in its power to obfuscate the facts and then spin the details in way that advances American policy objectives. But, let's be clear; the Security Council did NOT order Iran to stop enriching uranium. It may not even be in their power to do so since enrichment is guaranteed under the NPT (Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty). For the Security Council to forbid Iran to continue with enrichment activities would be tantamount to repealing the treaty itself. They didn't do that. What they did was "request" that Iran suspend enrichment activities so that the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) could further prove that Iran's nuclear programs were entirely for peaceful purposes.

    Iran, of course, did the only thing they could do; they graciously declined. After all, Iran followed every minute step that the Bush administration took in the long march to war with Iraq, so it is only natural that they would choose to take a different path. Why would they invite more intrusive inspections allowing the UN to ferret through every inch of Iranian territory in an attempt to uncover every armory, radar station, and missile site before the inevitable US bombing? Why would they endure the humiliation of being singled out and scorned for complying with the NPT when nuclear cheaters like India are rewarded with praise and offered banned nuclear technology by Washington?

    So what exactly DID the UN Security Council say?

    Well, on March 29, 2006 It ...underlined the importance of re-establishing full and sustained suspension of all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities, including research and development.

    and in regard tothe IAEA "Report on Iran's Nuclear Programme", Director General Mohamed ElBaradei told reporters:

    ...Iran needs to CONTINUE to be more transparent working with the Agency. (emphasis mine)

    and:

    We need a settlement that on the one hand assures Iran of its right to the use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes. Nobody questions Iran's right, I should say, but at the same time, assures the international community that the programme is exclusively for peaceful purposes.

    Hmm... nary a peep of a demand to be seen there.

    In fact, the Security Council went on to say:

    ...The Security Council reaffirms its commitment to the Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and recalls the right of States Party, in conformity with articles I and II of that Treaty, to develop research, production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination.

    So the truth is that the UN Security Council has in fact only REQUESTED that Iran SUSPEND R&D for 30 days while it confirms their uranium enrichment is for energy development.

    So why is Iran balking?

    Well, the answer would appear to be twofold:

    First, in light of Israel's extensive (and exclusive in the Middle East) nuclear arsenal and history of recalcitrant aggression, Iran in all likelihood DOES want the atomic bomb. And, while the thought of a latter-day Ayatollah Khomeini clutching a nuclear suitcase isn't exactly comforting, as the world's largest supplier in the global arms trade (including with Hussein), America's hardly in a position to claim the moral authority to use force in preventing it.

    Second, after having watched Hussein comply with US demands only to get screwed in the end anyway, Iran's mullahs are quite right in viewing any such demands (particularly from the Cheney-Rumsfeld-Wolfowitz cabal) with the deepest of skepticism.

    What's more, as columnist Tim Harper points out, the fallout from a preemptive strike on Iran wouldn't just be nuclear, and could spell horror for the US and its allies:

    Poison-laced missiles raining down on U.S. troops in Iraq or Afghanistan, the downing of a U.S. passenger airliner, suicide bombers in major cities, perhaps unleashing their deadly payload in a shopping mall food court. It could be 9/11 all over again. Or worse.

    On the political front, more anti-Americanism. Renewed venom aimed at Washington from European capitals, greater distrust from China and Russia, outright hatred in the Arab and Muslim world. Oil prices spiralling out of control, a global recession at hand.

    In Iran, a galvanizing of a splintered nation. An end to hopes for political reform, a rally-around-the-leader phenomenon common among the victimized, an ability to rebuild a nuclear program in two to four years. These are the potential costs of a U.S. military strike in Iran.

    "It would be Iran's Pearl Harbor and it will be the beginning of a war, not the end of a war. It will set back American strategic interests for a generation," says Joseph Cirincione, the director for non-proliferation at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

    The war will take place at a time and location of Iran's choosing. It will make Iraq look like a preliminary bout."

    But as usual, cooler heads aren't prevailing in DC. He continues:

    The timing of military strikes is now being openly debated in Washington.

    Cirincione says he believes there will be secret strikes announced by Bush after they happen. But first, he says, Bush should be expected to go to the U.S. Congress for authorization before mid-term elections in November, while Republicans still control the House of Representatives and the Senate.

    Approval before the elections, the strike after the elections, because the almost certain spike in U.S. gas prices following such action will blunt any rally-round-the-flag effect at election time, he says. John Pike, a military analyst at globalsecurity.org, predicts strikes in the summer of 2007, safely away from the presidential election the next year. He argues, as many do, that Bush already has congressional approval and needs not go back to lawmakers. "It will be a surprise," he says. "There's nothing like dropping bombs on evil-doers to give Republicans some political updraft."

    Pike argues that, despite all the breast-beating in Congress about misuse of a resolution that got the country into war in Iraq and all the sound and fury about clandestine surveillance in this country, nothing has been done to strip Bush of any power when it comes to war. "He will be looking at atomic ayatollahs. There will be some real downsides (to military action) and there will be efforts to redouble diplomatic moves, but in Tehran, the U.S. is equated with Satan.

    "What kind of diplomatic solution do they believe they can get from Satan?"

    Other analysts have been blunt in their assessment of the cost to the United States.

    "The most dangerous delusion is that a conflict would be either small or quick," says Richard Haass, the president of the non-partisan Council on Foreign Relations.

    Haass, who until July 2003 was a principal adviser to former secretary of state Colin Powell, says destroying Iran's nuclear capacity would require numerous cruise missiles and aircraft.

    "Iran would be sure to retaliate, using terrorist groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas and attacking U.S. and British forces and interests in Iraq and Afghanistan," he said in a written analysis this week. "This would require the U.S. to respond militarily against a larger set of targets inside Iran. What would begin as a limited strike would not remain limited for long."

    Haass also warned that such a strike would likely push oil prices above $100 (U.S.) per barrel, setting off an economic chain reaction that could lead to global recession. He predicts a certain increase in anti-Americanism in Europe, further rage against the U.S. in the Arab and Muslim world, and a questioning of U.S. ties in Russia and China."

    Even worse for Americans, in all likelihood, the Bush gang really would have to "go it alone" this time, as Tony Blair has apparently flatout refused to support any military action against Iran in response to its uranium enrichment.

    So take the Bush gang's word with a generous heap of salt. As NSC Counterterrorism heads Richard Clarke and Steven Simon pointed out in the NY Times:

    The parallels to the run-up to to war with Iraq are all too striking: remember that in May 2002 President Bush declared that there was "no war plan on my desk" despite having actually spent months working on detailed plans for the Iraq invasion. Congress did not ask the hard questions then. It must not permit the administration to launch another war whose outcome cannot be known, or worse, known all too well.


    Quote of the Day:

    "To initiate a war of aggression is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole."

    --the Nuremberg Tribunal, rejecting Nazi arguments that pre-emptive attacks were "necessary", 1946

    It's Monday... Which Republican's Headed to Prison Today?


    Former Illinois governor George Ryan Sr., was convicted today "...of 18 counts of steering state business to cronies for bribes, of gutting corruption-fighting efforts to protect political fundraising and of misusing state resources for political gain."



    Quote of the Day:
    "I foresaw that in the blinding sunshine of this land, I would become acquainted with a flabby, pretending, weak-eyed, devil of rapacious and pitiless folly."
    --Joseph Conrad, "Heart of Darkness
    "

    Monday, April 17, 2006

    Give a Listen: Artists Fight Back

    Following "My Sweet Neocon", Mick Jagger's fat middle finger in the face of the current White House occupant, my personal favorite post-punk bad girl Pink has teamed up with the long-dormant Indigo Girls to release "Dear Mr. President(sic)".

    The Dixie Chicks have replied to all the death threats and boycotts with the first track of their new album, featuring Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith, and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers band members Benmont Tench and Mike Campbell. Say what you will about the merits of country music, these women are talented and have definitely earned some respect.

    Meanwhile, Neil Young is about to release "Impeach the President (sic)", said to feature a 100-voice chorus.

    And now even the business community's jumping on the dogpile, with Maverick Business Consulting tipping the hat to the aforementioned Young and cosingers Crosby, Stills and Nash with the parody video "Our House, Up the River from Wall Street".

    Momentum is gathering. Let it sweep you up and compel you to take action today and every day, until the madness of King George has been put to rest.

    Quote of the Day:
    "Let me tell you bout hard work
    minimum wage with a baby on the way
    Let me tell you bout hard work
    rebuilding your house after the bombs took them away

    Let me tell you bout hard work
    Building a bed out of a cardboard box
    Let me tell you bout hard work
    You don't know nothing bout hard work.

    How do you sleep at night
    How do you walk with your head held high
    Dear Mr. President"
    --Alicia Moore, Amy Ray and Emily Saliers, "Dear Mr. President (sic)"

    Sunday, April 16, 2006

    The End of the Bully Era?

    This month, investigations into the Clinton Administration finally came to a quiet close, ending the most expensive and longest-running independent investigation in US history, and signaling what may well mark the sunset of the Neocon era.

    Of course, the real battle's barely begun; the military-industrial complex can still manipulate the vote, but there are strong indications everywhere of a sea change that might yet bring America back on course.

    First, there is Bush's shrinking support base for the Iraq occupation. The very antithesis of the Bush clan -- a smart, brave, capable, charismatic and radical socialist -- is well positioned to be the first woman in French history to ascend to the presidency, and in Italy, after his ouster, "we are not assholes" Berlusconi is racing to avoid the slam,while his successor makes good on a long-promised campaign pledge to withdraw from Iraq.

    Tony Blair is faring even worse than George in the polls, and in Australia, the equally-despised John Howard is testifying in connection with bribes to the Hussein regime.

    Among the troops, a flood of desertions (thanks in no small part to the efforts of GI Rights Online) is indicative of the growing unpopularity of the occupation -- fully 72% of American troops in Iraq support ending it this year.

    Two days ago, the sixth retired Pentagon general called for the ghoul-in-chief's resignation; it's no secret how hated he is for cowardice, sociopathic indifference and incompetence -- qualities which naturally earn "heckuvajob" plaudits from the Pretender in Chief.

    Next, among the tsunami of scandals threatening to engulf the Republican party is the recent disclosure that the man convicted for jamming phone lines during the 04 elections was likely taking orders directly from the White House -- likely from RNC chairman Ken Mehlman himself.

    Now hundreds and hundreds of thousands of Americans have signed resolutions calling for Bush's impeachment -- along with the city councils of San Francisco, Santa Cruz, Chapel Hill, NC and seven other towns and cities, five state Democratic parties and 19 local Democratic committees, all of whom have passed legal resolutions seeking impeachment "from the bottom up".

    But then, just when you thought it was safe to have a vagina.... the latter-day Cromwellians have succeeded in forcing childbirth upon South Dakota women -- even victims of rape or incest.

    And in their insanely zealous pursuit of "tur-rists" our torturemasters-in-chief are teaching lessons our kids are learning all too well. The brownshirts are widening the net and there are nasty, nasty plans in the works with results more disastrous than any the Bushites have visited upon us heretofore.

    Thus, the time is now, and somebody's got to say it.

    Quote of the Day:
    "President Bush has said that he does not need approval from the UN to wage war, and I'm thinking, well, hell, he didn't need the approval of the American voters to become president, either."
    -- David Letterman

    Friday, April 14, 2006

    Gee... If We Had Only Known...

    Two months after the 9-11 attacks, as the Bush cartel was just shifting into gear, a columnist across the globe made a few observations. Do have a read:

    Weather Report
    By Chris Floyd, St. Petersburg Times

    It won't come with jackboots and book-burnings, with mass rallies and fevered harangues. It won't come with "black helicopters" or tanks on the street. It won't come like a storm, but like a break in the weather, that sudden change of season you might feel when the wind shifts on an October evening: everything is the same, but everything has changed. Something has gone, departed from the world, and a new reality has taken its place.

    As in Rome, all the old forms will still be there: legislatures, elections, campaigns - plenty of bread and circuses for the folks. But the "consent of the governed" will no longer apply; actual control of the state will have passed to a small group of nobles who rule largely for the benefit of their wealthy peers and corporate patrons.

    To be sure, there will be factional conflicts among this elite, and a degree of free debate will be permitted, within limits; but no one outside the privileged circle will be allowed to govern or influence state policy. Dissidents will be marginalized - usually by "the people" themselves. Deprived of historical knowledge by an impoverished educational system designed to produce complacent consumers, not thoughtful citizens, and left ignorant of current events by a media devoted solely to profit, many will internalize the force-fed values of the ruling elite, and act accordingly. There will be little need for overt methods of control.

    The rulers will often act in secret. For reasons of "national security," the people will not be permitted to know what goes on in their name. Actions once unthinkable will be accepted as routine: government by executive fiat, the murder of "enemies" selected by the leader, undeclared war, torture, mass detentions without charge, the looting of the national treasury, the creation of huge new "security structures" targeted at the populace. In time, all this will come to seem "normal," as the chill of autumn feels normal when summer is gone.

    It Will All Seem Normal
    President George W. Bush signed an executive order about ten days ago overturning a law requiring the release of presidential papers 12 years after the end of an administration, The Associated Press reports. Bush officials say the president has "reinterpreted" the law - ordinarily the job of the Supreme Court under the old Republic - to mean that no papers can be released unless both the current president and the former president in question agree to it.

    Historians, journalists or ordinary citizens seeking information about the actions of past administrations will have to file suit to show a "demonstrated, specific" need for access to the blocked material. The mere assertion of a "right to know" about governmental affairs will not be sufficient. Such a right no longer exists.

    A Bush spokesperson acknowledged that anyone requesting to see such documents would be tied up in expensive court battles for years. However, the use of executive fiat to abrogate the function of the Supreme Court and overturn a law passed by the people's representatives was necessary in order to protect "national security," the spokesperson said.

    Of course, a sitting president already has the authority to withhold any past documents that might endanger national security. But Bush's new edict will allow the quashing of presidential papers that might be politically embarrassing or reveal criminal behavior by past administrations.

    Seem Normal
    Former special prosecutor Kenneth Starr predicts that the curtailment of civil liberties, including admitting the use of torture, will be approved by "at least five Supreme Court Justices," the Washington Post reports. (No points for guessing which five.) The Quiescent Quintet will gladly give "heightened deference to the judgments of the political branches with respect to matters of national security," says Starr.

    Indeed, the Bush administration is now openly considering the use of torture to compel testimony from suspected terrorists - or anyone designated as a suspected terrorist, Slate.com reports. True, a few girlie-men are still fretting about "constitutional rights," but the clever dicks in the Oval Office have that one sussed: recalcitrant prisoners can always be exported to friendly regimes, like Egypt or Kenya, where they don't bother with such prissy concerns. Information "extracted" there can then be used in U.S. trials.

    Wouldn't evidence acquired by such heinous and unconstitutional methods be thrown out by the courts? Ordinarily, yes - under the old Republic. But in America's new weather, the judiciary will no doubt "give heightened deference to the judgments of the political branches," etc. And if all else fails, a handy executive order can always "reinterpret" the Constitution to accommodate the needs of "national security."

    Normal
    Armed with the sweeping new powers of the "USA Patriot Act" passed late last month, the Bush administration is acting to "shift the primary mission of the FBI from solving crimes to gathering domestic intelligence," the Washington Post reports.

    In other words, the feds will move from protecting the people to spying on them. The CIA has also been given authority to take part in domestic surveillance and investigation for the first time. These domestic "black ops" will be overseen by a secret court appointed by the Chief Justice - William "Top Quint" Rehnquist.

    Like the Chill of Autumn
    Last week, President Bush demanded that Congress pass his "economic stimulus" bill by the end of the month, the New York Times reports. The bill would give $25 billion in federal money directly to the nation's wealthiest corporations, including IBM, Genereal Mototrs and General Electric, refunding taxes they paid over the last 15 years. In all, the bill will give $112 billion in tax breaks to the wealthiest individuals and corporations over the next two years.

    It won't come like a storm. It will all seem normal. Like a break in the weather, a shift in the wind.

    Quote of the Day:
    "As nightfall does not come at once, neither does oppression. In both instances, there's a twilight where everything remains seemingly unchanged, and it is in such twilight that we must be aware of change in the air, however slight, lest we become unwitting victims of the darkness."
    -- Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas

    Thursday, April 13, 2006

    Pitching Cheney....

    What's a Vice Lying-Rat-Bastard-in-Chief to do when, as Bob Harris notes, he's seven points less popular than the public beating of children and nearly half as popular as OJ Simpson?

    Well, some bright PR strategist had an idea -- what's more American than baseball, right? (the apple pie angle's out, having already been done)

    So following in the pawprints of his simian majesty, the Dick got all gussied up and waddled out to throw the first pitch of the season at a Washington Nationals baseball game.

    But when one is richer than God, it just gets harder and harder to quietly slum among the commoners -- especially when one's money is soaked in the blood of American soldiers.

    Thus, as the best-laid plans of chimps and men are occasionally apt to do, things went slightly awry: the White House correspondent pool reported that Cheney "stepped out onto the field dressed in khakis and a Nats bomber jacket to the sound of thunderous boos and catcalls."

    However, among the privileges American royalty pays for is a compliant press: Fock Snooze handily edited out portions of the background noise and had an announcer speaking over the segment, while the Post's David Nakumura outright manipulated the story:

    "The first pitch of the Washington Nationals' second season at Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium was low and away, bouncing in the dirt before being scooped up by catcher Brian Schneider.

    "For that, Vice President Cheney received a round of boos from the home crowd this afternoon. But the catcalls didn't last long before the fans cheered for the Nationals, who took the field in their white uniforms with red trim against the New York Mets."

    A number of online bloggers cried foul, forcing the Post to rephrase the story, marginally improving it, though still leaving the impression that the crowd was reacting to Cheney's inability to throw a baseball:

    "Vice President Cheney threw out the ceremonial first pitch, a right-handed toss that bounced in the dirt to the outside of the plate before being scooped up by catcher Brian Schneider. Cheney, booed by some as he walked to the mound, got even more catcalls after his throw -- a far cry from President Bush's fastball at last year's home opener."

    What's amazing is that this is contradicted by the Post's own Reliable Source column which reports Cheney "drew boisterous boos from the moment he stepped on the field until he jogged off."

    As more and more folks are making their voices heard, it's going to get harder and harder for team Bush to stay in the game. Is your voice among the growing chorus?

    Quote of the Day:
    "...my king, don't place upon the common ground the foot
    which stamped out Troy."
    -- Aeschylus, Agamemnon

    What Good Republicans Believe...

    Saddam was a good guy when Reagan armed him, a bad guy when Bush's daddy made war on him, a good guy when Cheney did business with him, and a bad guy when Bush needed a "we can't find Bin Laden" diversion.

    Trade with Cuba is wrong because the country is Communist, but trade with China and Vietnam is vital to the spirit of international harmony.

    America should get out of the UN, and our highest national priority is enforcing UN resolutions against Iraq.

    A woman can't be trusted with decisions about her own body, but multi-national corporations can make decisions affecting all mankind without regulation.

    Jesus loves you, and shares your hatred of homosexuals and Hillary Clinton.

    The best way to improve military morale is to praise the troops in speeches, while slashing veterans' benefits and combat pay.

    If condoms are kept out of schools, adolescents won't have sex.

    A good way to fight terrorism is to belittle our long-time allies, then demand their cooperation and money...

    Providing health care to all Iraqis is sound policy, but providing health care to all Americans is socialism. HMOs and insurance companies have the best interests of the public at heart.

    Global warming and tobacco's link to cancer are junk science, but creationism should be taught in schools.

    A president lying about an extramarital affair is a impeachable offense, but a president lying to enlist support for a war in which thousands die is solid defense policy.

    Government should limit itself to the powers named in the Constitution, which include banning gay marriages and censoring the Internet.

    The public has a right to know about Hillary's cattle trades, but George Bush's driving record is none of our business.

    Being a drug addict is a moral failing and a crime, unless you're a conservative radio host. Then it's an illness and you need our prayers for your recovery.

    What Bill Clinton did in the 1960s is of vital national interest, but what Bush did in the '80s is irrelevant.

    Remember, Republicans will always be the first and fattest hog at the government trough.

    Courtesy of Fr. Terry Gomer and Dare to Dream Network.

    Plug of the Day:
    Bake Sales for Body Armor is raising money to save soldiers' lives.

    Monday, April 10, 2006

    I love Maryscott O'Connor









    Here's why.

    Breaking: Iran shoots down US Spy Drone....

    From Iranmania in London:

    Tehran has shot down an unmanned surveillance plane in the south amid reports that the United States is planning military strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, a press report said.

    "This plane had taken off from Iraq and was filming border areas," a report in the hardline Jumhuri Eslami newspaper said. It added the Islamic Republic "officials have obtained information from the plane system and recordings", without giving any further details. US publications reported over the weekend that the White House is studying options for military strikes against Iran's nuclear facilities to pressure Tehran to abandon its controversial nuclear program, AFP reported.

    The US media have reported that the US military has been secretly flying surveillance drones over Iran since 2004 using radar, video, still photography and air filters to detect traces of nuclear activity not accessible to satellites.

    Has Bush found his new "casus belli"? Or has he revived plans to provoke an attack to justify preemptive invasion?

    Are we seeing life mirror art?

    Is this more of the same-old-same-old?

    Is it just us or is the king of the sucker-punch really nuts?

    And, more importantly, is he gonna kill us all?

    Finally, it's come to this. You have a choice today: resist or die.

    Quote of the Day:
    "There is a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can't take part; you can't even passively take part, and you've got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you've got to make it stop. And you've got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you're free, the machine will be prevented from working at all!"

    -Mario Savio, student free speech leader, UCal Berkeley (December 3, 1964)

    Saturday, April 08, 2006

    Riiigghhhtttt.....

    In the final stretch of the Italian elections Silvio Berlusconi asserts "We will win on Sunday and Monday because we aren't assholes," thus proving Bush isn't the only liar currently making headlines.

    The Ayes have it.

    The deception Bush can't spin

    By Joe Conason, Salon.com

    April 7, 2006 | If we are to believe the grand jury testimony of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby -- as reported by special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald in court papers (PDF) -- then the president of the United States has been deceiving the country ever since the CIA leaks investigation began in 2003.

    Compared with other deceptions that George W. Bush has perpetrated in the years since he promised to restore honor and integrity to the Oval Office, this one cannot be spun away as a misunderstanding, a "misunderestimate" or a mistake. From the moment that the Justice Department opened its probe of the disclosure of Valerie Plame Wilson's covert CIA identity to the press, Bush insisted that he wanted to find and punish the culprits, especially if any of them were among his White House staff. He claimed to consider the leaking of classified information to be a matter of the utmost seriousness.

    And he let his press secretary insist repeatedly that the White House had absolutely no idea how this terrible thing had happened.

    We have come a long way since then, of course. We have learned that at least two of the highest-ranking White House staff members leaked Plame's identity to reporters as part of a broader effort to discredit her husband, former ambassador Joseph Wilson, for daring to draw attention to White House misuse of intelligence on Iraq in an Op-Ed in the New York Times. We know that Libby, then the vice president's chief of staff and national security advisor, and Karl Rove, the White House deputy chief of staff, both participated in that effort -- and that both have lied repeatedly about their roles in the scheme.

    We also know that Vice President Dick Cheney was behind Libby's leaking. As one of the most vocal sources of misinformation about Iraq's alleged arsenal of weapons of mass destruction during the months leading to the invasion, Cheney was particularly eager to "push back" against Wilson in the spring and summer of 2003. No doubt his zeal intensified with each day that those weapons failed to turn up in occupied Iraq.

    And now, thanks to Libby's attempts to obtain classified materials for his criminal defense, we are told that the president played a direct and crucial role in the effort to discredit Wilson. Bush may not have been told that his staffers had leaked Plame's identity, but he certainly knew that they were disseminating classified material to selected reporters to discredit Wilson.

    According to Libby's grand jury testimony, the vice president instructed him in July 2003 to tell New York Times reporter Judith Miller about the classified contents of the CIA's National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, prepared in October 2002. The NIE indicated that Saddam Hussein had indeed been seeking to buy enriched uranium for nuclear weapons from Niger. By leaking that information to the Times, Cheney hoped to discredit Wilson, who had publicly rebuked the White House for exaggerating Iraq's alleged efforts to purchase uranium from Niger.

    Testifying before the grand jury, Libby claimed that he had balked initially at Cheney's instructions because the CIA report was classified -- and that Cheney told him the president had authorized the leak to Miller. (The president may or may not have the right to unilaterally declassify information.) In an April 5 brief to the court, Fitzgerald summarized the testimony of the vice president's former chief of staff about those events:

    "Defendant's participation in a critical conversation with Judith Miller on July 8 [2003] occurred only after the Vice President advised defendant that the President had specifically authorized defendant to disclose certain information in the NIE ... Defendant testified that he was specifically authorized in advance of the meeting to disclose the key judgments of the classified NIE to Miller on that occasion because it was thought that the NIE was 'pretty definitive' against what Ambassador Wilson had said and that the vice president thought that it was 'very important' for the key judgments of the NIE to come out ... Defendant testified that the vice president later advised him that the president had authorized defendant to disclose the relevant portions of the NIE."

    Libby's story doesn't directly implicate the president in the Plame leak. But the latest revelations contrast rather sharply with the assurances provided by White House press secretary Scott McClellan back in the fall of 2003, when the administration was still resisting the appointment of a special prosecutor or independent counsel to probe the leak of Plame's identity. On Sept. 29, 2003, Helen Thomas asked him whether "the president has tried to find out who outed the CIA agent? And has he fired anyone in the White House yet?"

    In his most patronizing tone, McClellan replied, "Helen, that's assuming a lot of things. First of all, that is not the way this White House operates. The President expects everyone in his administration to adhere to the highest standards of conduct. No one would be authorized to do such a thing." Asked whether the president knew anything beyond what the media had reported, McClellan said, "We don't have any information [about the leak] that's been brought to our attention beyond what we've seen in the media reports. I've made that clear." He emphasized that the president knew nothing about the leak, repeating, "We have nothing beyond those media reports to suggest there is White House involvement."

    The press secretary bristled when Thomas and other reporters suggested that the president had reacted too passively to the leak, and seemed unconcerned about its implications for national security and Plame's safety.

    "Absolutely, the President believes that this is a serious matter when you're talking about the leak of classified information," said McClellan. "The leak of classified information, yes, you're absolutely right, can compromise sources and methods. That's why the President takes it very seriously, and we've always taken it very seriously."

    That was the famous press briefing when McClellan exonerated Rove, while promising that any official responsible for the leak would be fired. "If anyone in this administration was involved in it, they would no longer be in this administration," he said, speaking for the president.

    How will McClellan explain away Libby's testimony, if and when a White House reporter asks a difficult question? He could say that the president had automatically declassified the NIE when he told Cheney that it could be revealed to Miller, but that wouldn't excuse the lies. He could claim that Libby is lying, but that might be dangerous. He could say that the president had no idea what Cheney and Libby were doing with the CIA document he declassified, but that would make the boss look very dumb.

    Or he could confirm the rumors that have been circulating about his plans to resign in the near future, and leave these irritating problems to someone else. Meanwhile, the White House and the CIA may have to rethink their recent threats to prosecute journalists under the Espionage Act for reporting leaks of classified information, such as the National Security Agency's warrantless wiretap program. Will Bush really want to indict reporters for doing their jobs, now that everyone knows he disclosed the nation's secrets to try to cover his own butt?

    About the writer:
    Joe Conason writes a weekly column for Salon and the New York Observer. His latest book is "The Raw Deal: How the Bush Republicans Plan to Destroy Social Security and the Legacy of the New Deal. "

    Friday, April 07, 2006

    I Fear Armageddon

    John Steinberg - The Raw Story

    Major studios rarely take on Washington, and cynicism about the way the media manipulate public opinion is rarer still, but Wag the Dog told the story of a President using the invasion of another country to drown out a damaging scandal. Although the story's closest historical referent was Reagan's invasion of Grenada (which conveniently distracted Americans from the death of 241 American soldiers in a single Beirut suicide bombing), and the movie's substitution of a sex scandal for the Beirut tragedy made the story more Hollywood (and more Clinton). When life returned art's favor, and Clinton bombed an alleged chemical weapons plant in Sudan and heaved some cruise missiles into Afghanistan at a relatively unknown dissident Saudi named Osama-something, Republicans were quick to argue that Clinton's Monica troubles were the real reason for the attacks.

    George Bush has a far bigger disaster to conjure away. In addition to nearly 3000 dead American soldiers, he has killed tens of thousands of civilians and destroyed a country. But that is not the disaster they are concerned with: One of the reasons President Bush has been so slow to admit failure in Iraq is because, in his mind it still isn't a failure. As I argued a year and a half ago, the invasion and occupation of Iraq was and remains a success in Bush's view. Halliburton and oil company profits are up. Bush was re-elected. His endless war has made all of this possible. The only fly in the ointment is the war's domestic unpopularity. As public opinion has turned, the gravy train is increasingly endangered.

    In a rational world, Bush's dismal track record (by our standards) would hasten the handing of the car keys to a designated driver. In the strange world that Bush and Karl Rove inhabit, it means that a bigger distraction must be created.

    The public groundwork for that new distraction is now being laid. The threat posed by Iran is now being trumpeted; the doctrine of preemptive war is being defended; and the pundits are already discussing the salutary effects another preemptive war.

    I don't mean to dismiss Iran's history of bad acts or its potential to wreak future havoc. There is evidence of both. But our approach should acknowledge that there is a huge difference between Iran and Iraq from a military standpoint. Much of Iraq's military strength was destroyed in the first Gulf War; more than a decade of sanctions further reduced the effectiveness of what remained.

    Iran, in contrast, has used the nearly two decades since the end of the Iran-Iraq war to create a formidable military. One aspect of that force is especially important now. More than a year ago I linked to a positively chilling article by Mark Gaffney about Iran's military advantage -- that's right, advantage -- over the United States in a theater war. If you have ever clicked on a link in an editorial, you need to click on this one.

    The short version is that Iran has Russian anti-ship missiles that are to the Exocet (the weapon that nearly defeated the British in the Falklands) what an F-22 is to a WWII-era Spitfire, and that there are no effective countermeasures. Our Fifth Fleet, which patrols the Persian Gulf, is completely vulnerable.

    The first several times I read Gaffney's article, I was reassured by the belief that the powers that be must know far better than I do that an attack on Iran would result in devastating
    losses to the Fifth Fleet. I assumed, therefore, that our saber-rattling was nothing more than that, and that even George Bush was not crazy enough to risk such horrible losses by actually attacking Iran.

    But George Bush and his enablers apply a calculus not grounded in conventional morality. So we must consider branches of the decision tree that sane people would not. I recently re-read Gaffney's article, and had a premonition more horrifying than any of the other nightmares with which I have darkened this space.

    What would happen if, for whatever reason, Iran sank a couple of American warships? George Bush would find another megaphone and another telegenic pile of bubble to stand on. The Andrew Sullivans and Thomas Friedmans of the world would drag their laptops and their Huggies with then as they dive under their beds, and again write trembling gibberish praising their Savior in Chief. And millions who only recently wandered out of Camp Jingo would scurry back in mortal fear.

    The cowed millions would demand action, and action they would get. Bush would round up his nuclear posse and unleash an unprecedented retaliation. Iran would glow for millennia with the radiation of a thousand nuclear warheads in the first all-out nuclear strike in history. Millions of Iranians, or perhaps tens of millions, would die. And Red State America would cheer. Bush's poll numbers would regain their former heights, and talk of censure and Valerie Plame and Katrina would dissolve into the radioactive haze that would blanket the planet.

    The civil war in Iraq would probably subside. Or perhaps we would withdraw regardless, having made a superseding, definitive statement of Texas testosterone. Either way, an Administration currently besieged on all sides would again ride high.

    My nightmare is that our rulers are now trying to figure out how to achieve this desirable result. Absent provocation like the sinking of a few U.S. ships, Bush will never get away with going nukular against Iran. So how to provoke Iran into taking the gambit? "Incredibly, we are on now upon the second iteration of that genus of questions. We know that Bush talked with Tony Blair about how to goad Saddaminto throwing the first punch against us three years ago." It is probably safe to assume that such high-school logic still prevails. So the Administration will look for ways to provoke such an attack again.

    One possibility we cannot dismiss out of hand is a "false flag"strategy. There are many viable options: we could attack Israel pretending to be Iran; Israel could attack us pretending to be Iran; we could attack Iran pretending to be Israel. In the superheated environment we have helped to create, it won't
    take much to ignite an inferno.

    Another is the possibility that Bush will ask Israel to take credit for starting the fight. And in fact it has been reported that Israel has already drawn up such plans, and that the Pentagon is seriously considering them. And let's not forget that Israel bombed a nuclear facility in Iraq in 1981. The United States publicly objected after the attack, but (a) Dick Cheney has since cited it approvingly and (b) I find it hard to believe that the Reagan Administration was unaware of the plan, despite the fact that U.S. would soon back Iraq in its war with Iran, which had just released the American embassy hostages a few months earlier.

    Whatever the contrived provocation, Dubya can probably count on President Ahmadinejad to respond to even a small-scale strike with a retaliation that would cost us at least an
    aircraft carrier. And the loss of even a single ship would trigger a "Remember the Maine" conflagration that would widely and properly be seen as a holocaust.

    What would be the consequences of such a war crime? Hundreds, perhaps thousands of Americans would die in a day as the Fifth Fleet was sacrificed. Bush would see no disincentive there -- the thousands of American soldiers killed so far have not altered his calculus. Iranian casualties from the U.S response could reach into the millions, but there are Americans who would welcome such a result if they believed Iran attacked us first. 125 billion barrels of proven oil reserves -- ten percent of the world total -- would be wiped out, which would perhaps double gasoline prices overnight. General Motors and Ford would
    sink absent massive bailouts our resurgent spendthrift emperor will be happy to disburse. Exxon and its ilk will cry all the way to the bank. Many thousands of square miles of Iran would become uninhabitable for thousands of years, dwarfing Chernobyl in scope, but what right-thinking Christian would want to live there anyway?

    Do those costs outweigh a thirty or forty point jump in Bush's approval ratings? I am afraid it depends upon who you ask.

    Like Mark Gaffney, I recoil from my own logic. No sane person can look at the possibility of such horrors and not shiver with revulsion. But recent history shows that there are no sane people making these decisions. When sanity again prevails in the White House, I will gladly dismiss the unthinkable as impossible. For now, I fear Armageddon.

    John Steinberg is a Senior Recidivist with the Poor Man Institute for Freedom and Democracy and a Pony. He bloviates regularly @ www.bluememe.blogspot.com .


    Quote of the Day:
    "I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds."
    --Robert Oppenheimer, quoting the Bhagavad Gita