22 September 2005

The Mahablog: The Mother of All Traffic Jams

Steve M. says it:

But ... but didn't right-wingers tell us that escaping a hurricane was easy if your elected officials weren't Democrats and you had a sense of personal responsibility and lived in an area where the average rate of melanin wasn't too high?

Could it be the righties were wrong?

From the Houston Chronicle:

Sixteen hours to San Antonio and Dallas. Eleven hours to Austin. With over a million people trying to flee vulnerable parts of the Houston area, Hurricane Rita will be a nightmare even if Galveston doesn't take a direct hit. .

Cursor's Media Patrol - 09/22/05

As Cindy Sheehan reaches Washington, and activists prepare to encircle the White House, Danny Schechter asks, "Where is the march on the media?"

Given current Pentagon accounting practices, "neither DOD nor Congress can reliably know how much the war is costing," according to a report from the Government Accountability Office, and "a leader in online philanthropy" teams with USAID in 'PayPal-ing the War.'

A Pentagon Web site has removed a document which discusses scenarios for preemptive use of nuclear weapons.

"Our dirty little secret" Basra is said to have "become like Tehran, where morals are enforced not by family but by religious militias," and an Iraqi diplomat says that "This is our greatest fear, that the religious people will take over Iraq."

The focus of "outer-circle cronyism" is described as being not so much on "handing out jobs to dubiously qualified friends and associates--that is, to one's own cronies. It's on handing out jobs to cronies of cronies, which increases the scale of the cronyism exponentially."

Digby: The "F" Word

Andrew Sullivan has two posts today that it seems to me are interrelated, although I don't think he meant them to be.

First he highlights a web-site that encourages soldiers fighting in Iraq to post sickening pictures of dead and wounded Iraqis in exchange for free (sexual) pornography. He writes:
If you send in pics of dead insurgents or Iraqis, you get free access to the porn part of the site. The pics that are appended have names such as "What every Iraqi should look like," "DIE, HAJI, DIE," and "Cooked Iraqi." I would think this violates the Geneva Conventions, not that the U.S. under this president cares about those very much any more. But it's also beyond depraved. Eric Muller sounded the alarm. Like the pictures from Abu Ghraib, these images are also a propaganda coup for Zarqawi and his monsters - a consequence of war in the Internet age. Have we really sunk to this?

Digby: Pretzel Addiction?

Jeebus. It looks like Bush has another scrape on his face today. Left temple.

This is ridiculous. How often does this have to happen before people finally ask some serious questions? Falling on your face all the time is simply not normal.

And if he's out falling off his bike again while the country is going to hell in a handbasket then people need to know that too.

Update: Maybe not. It could be something else. My bad.

Daily Kos: To Support the Rich, GOP Cuts From Our Troops

by Armando Thu Sep 22nd, 2005 at 08:16:33 PDT

From Sirota:

In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, President Bush and Republicans in Congress have refused to consider rolling back the $336 billion in new tax cuts that the richest 1 percent are slated to get over the next five years. They say we need to pay for reconstruction not by asking the wealthiest to sacrifice just a little bit, but by massive cuts to spending. And now we see what that means: The Navy Times today reports that those cuts "include trimming military quality-of-life programs, including health care" . . . This, while troops are fighting and dying for our country in Iraq.

. . . The specifics are ugly. They are, for instance, asking troops to "accept reduced health care benefits for their families." Additionally, "the stateside system of elementary and secondary schools for military family members could be closed." In the past, this idea "has faced strong opposition from parents of children attending the schools because public schools [in and around bases] are seen as offering lower-quality education."

The Daily Howler - 09/22/05

WHO WILL OPPOSE THE WAGE CUT? Lou Dobbs asks a good question on Nagin. Jesse declines to respond: // link // print // previous // next //
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2005

MILLIONAIRE COLLEGE PRESIDENT VALUES: We’ve long discussed those Millionaire Pundit Values, the values driving your lackluster press corps. But such values drive most of our modern culture. On the front page of today’s Post, Susan Kinzie describes the world of a D.C. college president. We’ll highlight our favorite element:
KINZIE (9/22/05): An independent report on the personal and travel expenses of suspended American University President Benjamin A. Ladner and his wife questions more than a half-million dollars spent over the past three years, including a family engagement party that cost hundreds of dollars per person, "professional development" trips for the couple's personal chef to Paris, London and Rome, and a lunch of more than $5,000 hosted by Nancy Ladner for a garden club...

Board members asked for an audit after receiving an anonymous letter this spring that complained of lavish spending by the Ladners...

Such are the values that now obtain atop our academic prig-pile. But then, such values have come to dominate American culture over the course of the past fifty years, as we described in our incomparable 1994 one-man show, Material World. (Washington’s insightful City Paper: “Bob Somerby turns a stand-up act into stand-up art...Material World is high comic art.”)

Juan Cole - 09/22/05

US Bombs Dhulu'iyyah
Basra declares Noncooperation


US warplanes bombed the small Sunni Arab city of Dhulu'iyyah (Thuluiya) on Wednesday. The bombing is unlikely to be an effective counter-insurgency measure. In fact, it appears to be a simple sort of tribal revenge, where the US military is punishing the city for the killing in the general area of 4 US private security guards the day before. I think it would have been better to do nothing rather than to reply to the incident with a bombing campaign, which will likely harm innocents and just drive more people into the arms of the guerrillas.

Huffington on Bolton and Plame

Someone in the Bush White House blew the cover of a CIA operative, Valerie Plame, to punish her husband, Joe Wilson. Wilson had gone to Niger to investigate the phony story pushed by Dick Cheney that Iraq had bought yellowcake uranium from that country. (The charge was in fact meaningless since insiders knew that Iraq had no capability to do anything with yellowcake. For this reason, the US military did not even bother to secure the yellowcake at Tuwaitha after Saddam's fall). When the Bush administration kept lying about the "African uranium" case, Wilson went public. That was why the Bushies believed he "had to be punished."' They would no doubt have preferred to "punish France," but not all of us get the primo revenge gigs.

Billmon: Appeasing North Korea

Bush ended with an attack on North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il. 'He's starving his own people,' Bush said, and imprisoning intellectuals in 'a Gulag the size of Houston.' The president called him a 'pygmy' and compared him to 'a spoiled child at a dinner table.'

Newsweek
"I Sniff Some Politics"
May 27, 2002

There was also a change in tone by the administration with much more respectful references to North Korea -- that was clearly noted by the North Korean press, which for example pointed out that in one of his press conferences, President Bush talked about "Mr." Kim Jong-il. You no longer saw references to pygmies and tyrants.

New York Times
Q&A: North Korea nuclear talks
September 19, 2005

I've been trying to see if I can figure out the differences between the nuclear agreement that Condi Rice signed with North Korea -- which, it turns out, may not be a real deal after all -- and the agreement negotiated by the Clinton administration in 1994. As far as I can tell, the two most important ones are:

  • Unlike Clinton, Rice did what the Cheney administration has vowed it would never do: She rewarded the North Koreans for agreeing to live up to their previous commitments.
  • Also unlike Clinton, Rice and her husband . . . I mean, her president, have not been the target of a hurricane of right-wing hate speech for negotiating with one of the world's most odious regimes. (This Frontpagemag screed, from which I stole the title of my post, is a fairly typical example.)

A third, but less important, difference is that the Cheney administration did not explicitly promise to build Kim Jong Il a light-water reactor, as the Clintonites did in the so-called Agreed Framework. However, Rice's team did promise to talk about building such a reactor "at the appropriate time." The North Koreans, perhaps sensing an opening, immediately declared that the appropriate time was right now, and issued one of their by-now familiar bloodcurdling threats to incinerate the Korean peninsula if the Americans so much as look at them crosseyed.

Avedon Carol - 09/22/05

The GAO says: The Pentagon has no accurate knowledge of the cost of military operations in Iraq, Afghanistan or the fight against terrorism, limiting Congress's ability to oversee spending, the Government Accountability Office concluded in a report released yesterday. Oh, that's just lovely. Via Big Media Matt.

Via Atrios, I see Limbaugh is not only reviving the old "Hillary killed Vince Foster" story, but even claiming that Cindy Sheehan is gonna get it if she keeps criticizing the good Senator - and that her arrest the other day was Hillary's revenge. (On the other hand, Dead whistle blowers.)

OK, you really do have to send Bill Scher's Chief Justice Roberts: What Went Wrong to every Dem in the Senate, so that maybe they will get the message and get on top of the next one.

Bradblog says: DIEBOLD STOCK PLUMMETS!

Via Atrios, The Stakeholder notes some remarkable connections between one bunch of right-wing creeps and another. Meanwhile, one right-wing creep gets a higher profile.

Americablog: What's the excuse this time?

by Chris in Paris - 9/22/2005 02:41:00 AM

Bush and the GOP had been itching for a war ever since Vietnam where they could fight it there way. The common belief, often by those who never actually fought, was that the politicians controlled the war and that next time, they were going to let the military fight the war and win. (Perhaps they also pine away for living in a military dictatorship as well where pesky folks who are representatives of the people don't get in the way.) OK, so they have the war that they always wanted, they've managed to neuter the press and for a good while had the country buying their story and accepting it all.

Viewpoint: The cult of 'People Power'

As part of the BBC's Who Runs Your World? series, Mark Almond, Lecturer in Modern History at Oriel College, Oxford University, assesses the myth and reality of "People Power".

We live in an age of revolution. To paraphrase Karl Marx, a spectre is haunting the world: People Power.

The image of huge crowds, peacefully protesting against corrupt and undemocratic regimes, has become an icon of the modern age. Starting in the Philippines in 1986 where the term "People Power" was coined, and taking wing in 1989 when a sea of people seemed to swamp the old guard communists in East Berlin or Prague, the myth of popular revolution took flight.

New Religious Left Blog...

...to counter Religious Right

British Troops Reduce Presence in Basra

The VERY Bizarre Case of Two British Special Forces Soldiers Arrested Undercover with Explosives by Iraqi Police and Freed from Iraqi Police by, You Guessed It, the British Army. Utter Descent Into Chaos. And What Were Those Two Brits Doing Anyway Dressed as Arabs, Packed with Explosives, and Perhaps Shooting at the Iraqi Police?--Buzzflash

By THOMAS WAGNER, Associated Press Writer 48 minutes ago

British troops in the tense southern city of Basra greatly reduced their presence in the streets Thursday, apparently responding to a provincial governor's call to sever cooperation until London apologized for storming a police station to free two of its soldiers.

For the second day, no British forces were seen accompanying Iraqi police on patrols of Basra, as they routinely had in the past.

Elsewhere, a roadside bomb hit a U.S. convoy in southern Baghdad, killing one soldier and wounding six others; a car bomb wounded another American soldier outside the capital; and suspected insurgents gunned down at least eight Iraqis in four separate attacks Thursday, officials said.

In an interview with Associated Press Television News in Baghdad on Thursday, Iraqi National Security Adviser Mowaffak al-Rubaie called Monday's attack by British forces on a Basra police station "a flagrant violation of Iraqi sovereignty."

Abramoff Probe May Threaten Leading Republicans as It Expands

By Jonathan D. Salant

Sept. 22 (Bloomberg) -- The widening investigation of lobbyist Jack Abramoff is moving beyond the confines of tawdry influence-peddling to threaten leading figures in the Republican hierarchy that dominates Washington.

This week's arrest of David Safavian, the former head of procurement at the Office of Management and Budget, in connection with a land deal involving Abramoff brings the probe to the White House for the first time.

Safavian once worked with Abramoff at one lobbying firm and was a partner of Grover Norquist, a national Republican strategist with close ties to the White House, at another. Safavian traveled to Scotland in 2002 with Abramoff, Representative Robert Ney of Ohio and another top Republican organizer, Ralph Reed, southeast regional head of President George W. Bush's 2004 re-election campaign.

House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, who once called Abramoff ``one of my closest and dearest friends,'' already figures prominently in the investigation of the lobbyist's links to Republicans. The probe may singe other lawmakers with ties to Abramoff, such as Republican Senator Conrad Burns of Montana, as well as Ney.

``These people all shared transactions together,'' said former House Democratic counsel Stan Brand, now a partner in the Washington-based Brand Law Group. ``That's always something that worries defense lawyers.''

Bush & Media: Normalizing the Abnormal

By Robert Parry
September 21, 2005

What’s been so surprising about the U.S. news media’s coverage of George W. Bush’s Katrina debacle is that leading journalists finally have broken with a five-year pattern of protecting both Bush and his presidency.

Until Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans – highlighting Bush’s weakness as a crisis manager, his skewed budget priorities and cronyism at key federal agencies – the national press corps had been held in sway by a mix of White House spinning and the bullying of the occasional critic.

From Election 2000 to the 9/11 terror attacks to the invasion of Iraq, the press corps often acted as if its principal duty to the nation was to normalize Bush’s often abnormal behavior, like the enabling family of a drug addict insisting nothing is wrong. While traditionally journalists play up the unusual, in Bush’s case, the media did the opposite.

Air Pollution Found To Pose Greater Danger To Health Than Earlier Thought

LOS ANGELES (Sept. 20)-Experts may be significantly underestimating air pollution's role in causing early death, according to a team of American and Canadian researchers, who studied two decades' worth of data on residents of the Los Angeles metro area.

When the epidemiologists examined links between particle pollution and mortality within more than 260 Los Angeles neighborhoods, they found that pollution's chronic health effects are two to three times greater than earlier believed. The study appears in the November issue of Epidemiology but was published early on the journal's Web site.

Among participants, for each increase of 10 micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3) of fine particles in the neighborhood's air, the risk of death from any cause rose by 11 to 17 percent, according to Michael Jerrett, Ph.D., associate professor of preventive medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California and the paper's lead author. Fine particle levels can differ by about 20 µg/m3 from the cleanest parts of Los Angeles to the most polluted.

21 September 2005

Faith-based disaster

David L. Kirp

Monday, September 19, 2005

That the Federal Emergency Management Agency mismanaged the Hurricane Katrina relief effort is old news. But there's more to FEMA's failure than simple bungling. The Bush administration's core belief that faith-based organizations can do the job better than the government or experienced nonprofits has compounded the problem.

Immediately after the hurricane, there were only two secular organizations to which FEMA's Web site urged that contributions be made; all the others were faith-based. What's worse, in at least some instances, FEMA relied on faith-based charities to spearhead the emergency-relief effort, regardless of whether they had expertise. Case in point: Tulsa, Okla.

Cursor's Media Patrol - 09/21/05

Newsweek reports on the 'Daily Dance With Death' for U.S. Marines near Fallujah, who typically go out on "472 extremely dangerous missions in less than a year -- invariably carried out while sleep deprived and drenched in sweat."

'More Blood, Less Oil' Reviewing "the failed U.S. mission to capture Iraqi petroleum," Michael Klare predicts that "oil production in Iraq is likely to remain depressed for years, no matter how much more blood is shed in its pursuit."

If experts are correct in claiming that faulty levees, not extraordinary surges, are to blame, then the flooding of New Orleans was "no more a natural disaster than a surgeon killing a patient by failing to suture an artery would be a natural death," says the author of "Rising Tide."

"Do you realize that if those walls had held, we'd have just had a little cleaning job?" says a New Orleans councilwoman, a point of view mocked by Limbaugh on the levees, and by Fox News analyst James Pinkerton, who accused flood victims of "whining all the time on TV to get more federal money." Plus: 'The New Black'

Heatwave makes plants warm planet

By Richard Black
Environment Correspondent, BBC News website

A new study shows that during the 2003 heatwave, European plants produced more carbon dioxide than they absorbed from the atmosphere.

They produced nearly a tenth as much as fossil fuel burning globally.

The study shows that ecosystems which currently absorb CO2 from the atmosphere may in future produce it, adding to the greenhouse effect.

End of a Rubber Stamp Era?

By Dan Froomkin

Special to washingtonpost.com

Wednesday, September 21, 2005; 11:57 AM
For the past several years, Washington has been a city of rubber stamps. When President Bush asked for something, the Republican-controlled Congress by and large gave it to him. Bush, in turn, hasn't vetoed a single bill. With a very few exceptions, when things went astray in the executive branch, the legislative branch didn't get all exercised about it.

But it's possible the era of rubber stamps is coming to an end.

Harold Meyerson: Master of the Poison Pill

Wednesday, September 21, 2005; Page A23

Why has President Bush placed Karl Rove atop the government's endeavors to rebuild the Gulf Coast? Rove knows as much about massive relief and reconstruction efforts as your pet schnauzer, but he's not devoid of germane expertise. He played a critical role, after all, in the formation of the Department of Homeland Security.

In the fall of 2002, as the legislation establishing the DHS was wending its way through Congress, Rove had a Rovean idea: Embed some extraneous, ideological criteria in the bill -- criteria that the Democrats would obviously oppose -- and then campaign against those Democrats for being soft on homeland security. Which is why one day the bill suddenly contained language mandating that the unionized federal employees at the agencies being merged into DHS would henceforth be non-union. Predictably, the Democrats squawked, and predictably, the Republicans took out after a southern Democratic senator up for reelection -- Georgia's Max Cleland, who'd lost an arm and both legs while fighting in Vietnam -- as indifferent to protecting our nation. Cleland was defeated.

Experts Say Faulty Levees Caused Much of Flooding

[...]

But with the help of complex computer models and stark visual evidence, scientists and engineers at Louisiana State University's Hurricane Center have concluded that Katrina's surges did not come close to overtopping those barriers. That would make faulty design, inadequate construction or some combination of the two the likely cause of the breaching of the floodwalls along the 17th Street and London Avenue canals -- and the flooding of most of New Orleans.

Senator Sold Stock Before Price Dropped

Shares Fell Two Weeks Later

By Jonathan M. Katz
Associated Press
Wednesday, September 21, 2005; Page A03

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a potential presidential candidate in 2008, sold all his stock in his family's hospital corporation about two weeks before it issued a disappointing earnings report and the price fell nearly 15 percent.

Frist held an undisclosed amount of stock in Hospital Corporation of America, based in Nashville, the nation's largest for-profit hospital chain. On June 13, he instructed the trustee managing the assets to sell his HCA shares and those of his wife and children, said Amy Call, a spokeswoman for Frist.

20 September 2005

Digby: Oppose John Roberts

Culture Kitchen has posted a letter from bloggers to the Judiciary Committee opposing the confirmation of John Roberts on the basis of certain rulings that make it clear he is hostile to Roe vs. Wade. I think it's perfectly obvious that he's going to vote to overturn and have, therefore, signed this letter.

I believe that a woman's right to choose gets to the very heart of what it means to be an autonomous, free human being. Control of one's own body is fundamental to individual liberty. If the church believes that abortion is morally wrong it should instruct its voluntary membership not to do it. Individuals must always be allowed to follow their own consciences. But there should be no legal coercion on such a personal matter.

Digby: I Fear Huckabee and Other Blogger Laments

Along with MSNBC's Tom Curry, CNN's Jackie Schechner, the NYT's Matt Bai and a sprinkling of party operatives and interest group reps, The Note attended a regular meeting of the Internet Left at Townhouse Tavern in Dupont Circle on Sunday. Here is what we took away:
1. Mike Huckabee instills fear.

2. Hillary Clinton provokes scorn.

3. Russ Feingold inspires passion.

4. And John Edwards' early focus on poverty — coupled with Elizabeth Edwards' statement of support for Cindy Sheehan — is getting him a second look from this crowd.
How typical that the Kewl Kidz at The Note need to attend a DC gathering of bloggers to find out what the Internet Left really thinks. Bloggers' defining characteristic, after all, is that they write down every single passing political thought right on these here internets for everybody to see.

Digby: Dubious Honor

Andrew Sullivan has named an award after Matt Yglesias for pointing out that the DHS was a stupid Democratic idea in the first place. Huzzah for Matt. Sullivan says:
Good stuff. Keep the honesty coming. If you see a right- or left-wing writer fessing up to their own side's errors or mistakes, let me know. We need more of it.
He is going to be very, very busy. It seems that all I ever read on the left is complaints about how the Democrats are spineless, useless fuck-ups --- which the right agrees with wholeheartedly. I could find endless examples every day of lefty bloggers howling complaints about the Democrats' errors and mistakes.

I've got one. How about the amazingly stupid idea of the leadership of the Democratic Party supporting the Iraq war?

Digby: He Comes from Such A Nice Family, Too

The clueless Richard Cohen is predictably making the vapid cocktail party argument that Bush can't be a racist because some of his best cabinet members are black and because he thinks little black children are just adorable. Here's Cohen scolding those of us who suspect that all those black people down in Louisiana might be giving some red state Republicans the vapors:
We owe the poor our special consideration. We especially owe the black poor an appreciation of their plight and their dolorous history. But in general it was incompetence, not racism, that slowed the relief effort -- incompetence on the local and state levels, too, and incompetence on the part of black as well as white public officials. The search for racist scapegoats does the poor no good. This relief effort ought to start, above all, with some clear thinking.
How about simple minded bullshit?

Billmon: Let's Make a Deal

Via Atrios, I see the Iraqi government is preparing an arrest warrant for its former defense minister, the billion dollar man:
Judge Raid al-Radhi, who is head of Iraq's commission on public integrity, said yesterday that he had given Iraq's central criminal court a dossier of evidence against Hazim Shaalan, who was minister of defence under the former government of Ayed Allawi.

"What Shaalan and his ministry were responsible for is possibly the largest robbery in the world. Our estimates begin at $1.3bn [£720m] and go up to $2.3bn," Judge Radhi, who is Iraq's senior anti-corruption official, told Reuters.

Radhi is obviously exaggerating a bit -- compared to the Saudi royal family, or even the U.S. defense industry, Shaalan is, if not exactly small potatoes, then just an average-sized spud. Still, $1.3 billion is a lot of bakhshish, particularly for a temporary minister in an interim government supposedly operating under the watchful eye of a Pentagon audit team (which may explain a lot.) Who knows where the money trail might lead?

Billmon: Paging Dr. Mengele

The Environmental Protection Agency's new rules on human testing, which the agency said last week would "categorically" protect children and pregnant women from pesticide testing, include numerous exemptions -- including one that specifically allows testing of children who have been "abused and neglected" . . .

In unveiling the new rules last week, the EPA promised full protection for those most at risk of unethical testing . . . But within the 30 pages of rules are clear-cut exceptions that permit:

  • Testing of "abused or neglected" children without permission from parents or guardians.
  • "Ethically deficient" human research if it is considered crucial to "protect public health."
  • More than minimal health risk to a subject if there is a "direct benefit" to the child being tested, and the parents or guardians agree.
  • EPA acceptance of overseas industry studies, which are often performed in countries that have minimal or no ethical standards for testing, as long as the tests are not done directly for the EPA.

The EPA provided little clarification yesterday in response to questions about the exemptions.

Baltimore Sun
Exceptions in New EPA Rules
Would Allow Testing Pesticides on Children

September 14, 2005

Billmon: Freaks of Nature

Congressional Republicans signaled today that they have abandoned their plan to conduct a joint House-Senate probe of the government's response to Hurricane Katrina . . .

The Democratic leadership has refused to appoint members to a joint committee, citing the lack of equal representation of Democrats on the panel, and the lack of power to issue subpoenas that the majority opposed. Democrats also have insisted on an independent inquiry.

[...]

jellyfish.jpg


Billmon: Beyond Satire

When Josh Marshall reported that the head (at least until last Friday) of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy, one David Safavian, was arrested today on charges of making false statements and obstructing an IG's investigation, I have to admit, I kinda shrugged it off.

Granted, the guy used to work for Jack Abramoff, and was a guest on one of Jack's luxury golf junkets to Scotland, and tried to help a charitable front group controlled by Abramoff get its hands around some surplus federal property (an early version of Shrub's urban homesteading initiative, I guess) and then lied to investigators about it.

Did I mention that Safavian also used to work for Grover Norquist?

Billmon: America the Beautiful II

From the latest Gallup Poll:
45 percent said Americans should make "major sacrifices" to pay for the [Katrina reconstruction] effort. But only 20 percent said they would be willing to make those sacrifices themselves.

So now we know the American definition of shared sacrifice: I share and you sacrifice.

Billmon: America the Beautiful

Since 2000 a half century of sustained decline in infant death rates first slowed and then reversed. The infant mortality rate is now higher for the United States than for many other industrial countries. Malaysia — a country with an average income one-quarter that of the United States — has achieved the same infant mortality rate as the United States . . . the Indian state of Kerala has an urban infant death rate lower than that for African Americans in Washington, DC.

United Nations Development Programme
Human Development Report
September 2005

Billmon: Looters

Dennis Kozlowski, the former CEO of Tyco International Ltd., and former Tyco finance chief Mark Swartz were sentenced Monday to up to 25 years in prison for stealing hundreds of millions of dollars from the company in a case that outraged the public with its tales of executive greed and excess . . .

The sentences capped a case that exposed the executives' extravagant lifestyle after they pilfered some $600 million from the company including a $2 million toga birthday party for Kozlowski's wife on a Mediterranean island and an $18 million Manhattan apartment with a $6,000 shower curtain.

At least they didn't steal any DVD players.

MaxSpeak: Bothered And Bewildered

One of the strangest things about the Katrina tragedy is the way people talk about poverty.

Conservatives talk as if the welfare system had never been reformed to their thunderous approval in 1996. We get the same old canards about underclass behavior and single moms, typified by the George (S)Will quotes I posted last week.

Liberals talk as if the reform had never happened, or they had never acceded to the reform and kept rolling backwards with talk about it not being as bad as we thought it would be, yadda yadda yadda.

Touched by His Noodly Appendage

The Flying Spaghetti Monster is made of my mother's spaghetti.--Dictynna.

An interview with the Prophet Bobby Henderson, the voice of Flying Spaghetti Monsterism.


by Jessica Thierman on September 18 at 05:39 PM

It’s not every day you get to speak to a prophet. Most of them are too dead—or at least too busy—to chat about their respective religions with a reporter from an online magazine. But Bobby Henderson, a 24-year-old out-of-work physics major, is not your typical prophet, and he’s willing to do whatever it takes to spread the Word at a time when his faith is under attack.

Flying Spaghetti Monster
Courtesy Niklas Jansson

Recently, a ploy to take the public’s attention away from the truth and focus it on a mythical theoretical debate has been cleverly crafted and successfully implemented by the United States government. The so-called debate about how we came to be, whether through Darwin’s theory of evolution or via Intelligent Design, is merely an elaborate guise to stifle the growing voices and eminent truths behind the real reason we exist: the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Henderson knows—he was touched by FSM's Noodly Appendage and anointed to spread the good word.

Americablog: Religious right worried that John Roberts isn't a member of the Taliban

by John in DC - 9/20/2005 07:11:00 PM

Gee, so Mr. Roberts may not believe that the Bible is the supreme law of the land. What a surprise (actually, it is a bit of a surprise, coming from a Bush court appointee).

Of course, the religious right is rumbling about Roberts' not-very-Biblical answer:
While many pro-family supporters are singing the praises of Judge Roberts' performance during the hearings last week, not everyone is joining in the song. For example, when the topic of the nominee's personal faith -- and its potential influence on his judicial decisions -- was brought to the table by California Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein, Roberts said: "There is nothing in my personal views, based on faith or other sources, that would prevent me from applying the precedents of the court faithfully." He added that when it comes to judging, he looks to law books for guidance -- not to the Bible or other religious sources. (See related story)

Rob Schenck of the National Clergy Council says that while he believes Roberts has convinced most observers that he is a conservative and has a conservative judicial philosophy, he admits he was not comfortable with that response. "I am very bothered by the statement that Judge Roberts made when he said that the Bible and his faith do not factor into his judgments on the court," Schenck says.

Cursor's Media Patrol - 09/20/05

Slate's Fred Kaplan says that a North Korea breakthrough "could easily have been accomplished two and a half years ago, had President George W. Bush been willing." The deal, which reportedly involved a "take it or leave it" maneuver by China, is now in doubt.

Billmon observes that while the "top homeland security advisor" assigned to lead an "internal White House inquiry" into Katrina has "absolutely no job experience whatsoever" in disaster response or emergency relief, she does have "prior cover up experience"

Alberto Does America Commenting on the formation of a new anti-obscenity 'porn squad' that is said to reflect "one of the top priorities" of Attorney General Gonzales, an FBI agent tells the Washington Post, "I guess this means we've won the war on terror."

Bush: Townsend to lead Katrina inquiry

Reuters
Tuesday, September 20, 2005; 9:46 AM

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President George W. Bush has named his homeland security adviser, Fran Townsend, to lead an internal inquiry into the much-criticized federal response to Hurricane Katrina, the White House said on Tuesday.

Townsend will look at "what went right, what went wrong and lessons learned from the federal response to Hurricane Katrina," said spokesman Trent Duffy, who spoke as Bush prepared to make his fifth trip to the disaster zone.

FDA Rethinks Women's Chief

Toigo Is Acting Head; Agency Denies Naming Veterinary Official

By Marc Kaufman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 20, 2005; Page A21

One week ago, the Office of Women's Health of the Food and Drug Administration sent an e-mail notice to women's groups and others announcing the appointment of Norris Alderson as its new acting director.

An FDA veteran trained in animal husbandry who spent much of his career in the agency's Center for Veterinary Medicine, Alderson quickly became the subject of active and largely negative comment on the Internet and elsewhere.

Immigration Nominee's Credentials Questioned

By Dan Eggen and Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, September 20, 2005; Page A01

The Bush administration is seeking to appoint a lawyer with little immigration or customs experience to head the troubled law enforcement agency that handles those issues, prompting sharp criticism from some employee groups, immigration advocates and homeland security experts.

The push to appoint Julie Myers to head the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, part of the Department of Homeland Security, comes in the midst of intense debate over the qualifications of department political appointees involved in the sluggish response to Hurricane Katrina.

Psychopaths could be best financial traders?

Mon Sep 19, 2:45 PM ET

"Wanted: psychopaths to make a killing in the markets."

Such an advert will not be appearing in the world's newspapers any time soon, but it may have a ring of truth after research revealed the best wheeler-dealers could well be "functional psychopaths."

A team of U.S. scientists has found the emotionally impaired are more willing to gamble for high stakes and that people with brain damage may make good financial decisions, the Times newspaper reported Monday.

In a study of investors' behavior 41 people with normal IQs were asked to play a simple investment game. Fifteen of the group had suffered lesions on the areas of the brain that affect emotions.

The result was those with brain damage outperformed those without.

Immigration memo intended for Rove arrives on Democrat's fax

Larisa Alexandrovna

An immigration memo intended for embattled White House advisor Karl Rove arrived instead on the fax machine of a Democratic congressman, RAW STORY can reveal.

The congressman who received the fax opted not to comment, and asked that his name not be used.

The focus of Smith's memo, addressed to "Hon. Karl Rove," is on immigration politics.

Cursor's Media Patrol - 09/19/05

As the 'Vote leaves Germany in a political mudbath,' a Der Spiegel report on the country's 'election mayhem' quotes one political scientist who's promoting the idea that "A grand coalition can also be a grand success."

Jason Vest argues that only 'Willful ignorance' explains "how the Pentagon sent the army to Iraq without a counterinsurgency doctrine," and Time looks back to "the secret history" of 'A Year of Crucial Missteps.'

Polls find that President Bush's Katrina ratings fell -- especially among Republicans -- after a New Orleans speech said to have triggered some 'Base Emotions,' despite what the WSWS calls "Bush's efforts to chloroform public opinion with superstition and fatalism."

Amid reports of continuing relief problems in New Orleans, Needlenose suggests that if 'Reality keeps overtopping the levees,' "Karl Rove's walls of spin may have a hard time holding."

"Get yourself raped." The Washington Post's Glenn Kessler insists that remarks made by Gen. Pervez Musharraf while on a mission to "promote a moderate image of Pakistan" were accurately quoted, despite Musharraf's denials. Earlier: One of 'Asia's Heroes.'

EXCLUSIVE: UP IN FLAMES

Tons of British aid donated to help Hurricane Katrina victims to be BURNED by Americans

From Ryan Parry, US Correspondent in New York

HUNDREDS of tons of British food aid shipped to America for starving Hurricane Katrina survivors is to be burned.

US red tape is stopping it from reaching hungry evacuees.

Instead tons of the badly needed Nato ration packs, the same as those eaten by British troops in Iraq, has been condemned as unfit for human consumption.

Senator John Kerry's Speech at Brown University

Remarks As Prepared for Delivery

Providence, RI
- I want to thank you for what the Brown community has done to help and comfort the many victims of Hurricane Katrina. This horrifying disaster has shown Americans at their best -- and their government at its worst.

And that's what I've come to talk with you about today. The incompetence of Katrina's response is not reserved to a hurricane. There's an enormous gap between Americans' daily expectations and government's daily performance. And the gap is growing between the enduring strength of the American people -- their values, their spirit, their imagination, their ingenuity, and their willingness to serve and sacrifice -- and the shocking weakness of the American government in contending with our country's urgent challenges. On the Gulf Coast during the last two weeks, the depth and breadth of that gap has been exposed for all to see and we have to address it now before it is obscured again by hurricane force spin and deception.

Katrina stripped away any image of competence and exposed to all the true heart and nature of this administration. The truth is that for four and a half years, real life choices have been replaced by ideological agenda, substance replaced by spin, governance second place always to politics. Yes, they can run a good campaign -- I can attest to that -- but America needs more than a campaign. If 12 year-old Boy Scouts can be prepared, Americans have a right to expect the same from their 59 year-old President of the United States.

Dodging the Costs of the Warfare State

By Norman Solomon, AlterNet. Posted September 19, 2005.

When the New York Times' editors warned of dire budget deficits, they failed to name the real reason: our 'war president.'

The New York Times began this week with an editorial that typifies the media mind-set of the warfare state.

Monday's editorial warns of dire consequences from a growing deficit that has been boosted by tax cuts -- in combination with "the pre-Katrina priorities laid down by Mr. Bush." Those priorities include a U.S. military budget that has reached half a trillion dollars per year. But the Times editorial does not devote a single word to military spending or the Iraq war.

Why not mention the option of an American pullout from Iraq, where the U.S. war effort has already drained $200 billion from taxpayers? Well, those who determine editorial positions at the New York Times -- and the other major newspapers in the country -- cannot bring themselves to call for a quick end to the U.S. military role in Iraq.

House Bill Would Limit U.S. Power to Protect Species

Published: September 20, 2005

WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 - The chairman of the House committee overseeing natural resources introduced a bill Monday that would make it more difficult for the federal government to set aside land it deems crucial to the health of endangered species.

The proposed amendments to the Endangered Species Act also increase the obligation of government agencies to tell landowners quickly if the law limits their development options, and to compensate them.

NYPD Unplugs Cindy Sheehan

City’s Finest pulls move even Bush wouldn’t have tried

by Sarah Ferguson


September 19th, 2005 5:54 PM Cindy Sheehan may be the Rosa Parks of the anti-war movement. But that didn't stop members of the New York Police Department from marching into the crowd of about 150 people gathered in Union Square Monday to hear her speak and yanking away the microphone.

The NYPD pulled the plug just as Sheehan was calling on the audience not to lose heart in the fight to end the war in Iraq.

"We get up every morning, and every morning we see this enormous mountain in front of us," said Sheehan, speaking on behalf of the other parents and family members of fallen soldiers who have taken up the crusade to bring the troops home.

Official, Abramoff associate arrested

David Hossein Safavian, the Bush administration’s top federal procurement officer in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), was arrested yesterday based on a three-count criminal complaint filed in federal court, according to a Justice Department statement.

The government alleges that Safavian, as chief of staff at the General Services Administration (GSA), helped an unnamed lobbyist acquire GSA-controlled property in and around Washington, D.C.

Sources say the lobbyist is likely Jack Abramoff, who has been indicted by a grand jury in Florida. Safavian and Abramoff worked together at Preston, Gates and the two traveled with Rep. Bob Ney (R-Ohio) and others on a golf trip to Scotland in 2002.

19 September 2005

The Mahablog: The Ranks of the Dead

Remember that long-ago, innocent time--2003, I think--in which General Thomas Franks famously snapped, "We don't do body counts"? Not entirely true, of course, as somehow numbers of bodies got released to the media from time to time, anyway. Today Ellen Knickmeyer writes in WaPo that the U.S. military is counting bodies even more these days.
Using enemy body counts as a benchmark, the U.S. military claimed gains against Abu Musab Zarqawi's foreign-led fighters last week even as they mounted their deadliest attacks on Iraq's capital.

But by many standards, including increasingly high death tolls in insurgent strikes, Zarqawi's group, al Qaeda in Iraq, could claim to be the side that's gaining after 2 1/2 years of war. August was the third-deadliest month of the war for U.S. troops.

For you younger folks: Body counts became controversial during the Vietnam War, as explained by Mark Benjamin in Salon--

If history offers any clue, counting dead insurgents is a misleading endeavor that can destroy trust in the Pentagon and ultimately lead to atrocities on the battlefield. During the Vietnam War, historians say, inflated body counts that sometimes included civilians shattered the Pentagon's credibility with the American people and undercut support for that war. Former soldiers from that era say that relying too much on body counts can drive soldiers in the field to commit atrocities in order to achieve a high number of kills -- though there is no indication that is happening in Iraq.

King of Zembla: Little Ahmed Chalabi Will Go to Bed Hungry Tonight -- Unless You Help

Tell us where the $8.8 billion (did we say 8.8? Oops! Make that 9.8) went, and maybe we'll discuss it:
From the Indian Ocean tsunami to the church around the corner, Americans have shown time and again they are willing to open their pocketbooks for charity, for a total of about $250 billion last year alone.

But now, amid pleas for aid after Hurricane Katrina, the Bush administration has launched an unusual effort to raise charitable contributions for another cause: the government's attempt to rebuild Iraq.

Although more than $30 billion in taxpayer funds have been appropriated for Iraqi reconstruction, the administration earlier this month launched an Internet-based fundraising effort that it says is aimed at giving Americans "a further stake in building a free and prosperous Iraq."

Contributors have no way of knowing who's getting the money or precisely where it's headed, because the government says it must keep the details secret for security reasons.

But taxpayers already finance the projects the administration is seeking charitable donations for, such as providing water pumps for farmers. And officials say any contributions they receive will increase the scope of those efforts, rather than relieve existing taxpayer burdens.
Elsewhere on the charity beat: you may have missed the recent revelation that Pat Robertson's "Operation Blessing" -- the organization that was briefly listed just behind the Red Cross on FEMA's hurricane-relief website -- diverted half of its donations to another of Robertson's rackets, the Christian Broadcasting Network:
Bill Horan, the charity's president, at first denied his charity gave any money to Robertson's television operation.

"Well, that's an absolute, total and complete distortion of the truth," Horan said. "Operation Blessing does not give 1 red cent to CBN."

When he was told of the Operation Blessing documents obtained by ABC News, which show a contribution of $885,000 to CBN, Horan called it an accounting issue.

King of Zembla: Obsolete and Quaint

Gonzales also argued that dropping Geneva would allow the president to "preserve his flexibility" in the war on terror. His reasoning? That U.S. officials might otherwise be subject to war-crimes prosecutions under the Geneva Conventions. Gonzales said he feared "prosecutors and independent counsels who may in the future decide to pursue unwarranted charges" based on a 1996 U.S. law that bars "war crimes," which were defined to include "any grave breach" of the Geneva Conventions. As to arguments that U.S. soldiers might suffer abuses themselves if Washington did not observe the conventions, Gonzales argued wishfully to Bush that "your policy of providing humane treatment to enemy detainees gives us the credibility to insist on like treatment for our soldiers."
-- Newsweek, 5/24/04

We have a little note that we pinned up over our desk because we kept forgetting: the fact that Robert Novak says it doesn't make it true.

Driftglass: Bush Katrina Reconstruction Plan

The movie JAWS Explains Bush/Rove Plans for New Orleans...--Dictynna


In four moves.


Money go into the cage,


cage goes into the water,


shark in the water....


our shark...



1...2...3...

Farewell and adieu to you, fair Spanish ladies.

Farewell and adieu, you ladies of Spain.

For we've received orders for to sail back to Boston.

And so nevermore shall we see you again
.

The Daily Howler - 09/19/05

CONSTANT AS THE SPEED OF LIGHT! The parson Meacham just couldn’t wait to repeat a simple story: // link // print // previous // next //
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2005

JESS B. SEMPLE: Three cheers for Lisa Randall, Harvard physics professor! In Sunday’s Times, she wrote a lengthy piece about distorted public discussions of science. Deep in her piece, she hit on a problem—people love simple stories, she said, and the press corps loves to supply them:
RANDALL (9/18/05): Sometimes, as with global warming, the [seriousness of the scientific community’s] claims have been underplayed. But often it's the opposite: a cancer development presented as a definite advance can seem far more exciting and might raise the status of the researcher far more than a result presented solely as a partial understanding of a microscopic mechanism whose connection to the disease is uncertain. Scientists and the public are both at fault. No matter how many times these ''breakthroughs'' prove misleading, they will be reported this way as long as that's what people want to hear.

A better understanding of the mathematical significance of results and less insistence on a simple story would help to clarify many scientific discussions.

Our analysts cheered as Randall told a verboten tale—we humans just luvv “simple stories.”

Juan Cole - 09/19/05

One to Two Billion Dollars Missing at Ministry of Defense

Hannah Allam of Knight Ridder broke the story this past summer that a billion dollars was missing at the ministry of defense, according to a government audit.

Patrick Cockburn of the Independent now confirms that report based on his own sources, saying that actually between one and two billion dollars were embezzled from the Iraqi ministry of defense under Defense Minister Hazem Shaalan.

Member of Parliament killed
24 Bodies Found


The deputy speaker of the Iraqi parliament, Husain Shahristani, had the final text of the constitution "read" in parliament so as to meet a criterion for the validity of the process in the eyes of the United Nations. The parliament did not vote on the draft, contrary to what you will read in the US press.

The Egyptian Elections and Bush's War

My article, "Bush's war and the Egyptian elections", which argues that "Mubarak's rigged victory shows that right-wing predictions of an "Arab spring" were wishful thinking." - is out at Salon.com.
'The groundhog did not see its shadow in Egypt last week.

Billmon: Back to Iraq

It hasn't been getting much attention in the post-Katrina era, but there's still a war going on in Iraq, and the Cheney administration is still losing it.

I'm as guilty as anybody of letting that grim fact slide out of my field of vision -- which still leaves me one up on Shrub, since I can at least pay attention to one disaster at a time.

The death toll over the past week in Iraq has been more than 250; over the past three weeks, more than a thousand, including the horrible crowd control disaster on the Tigris bridge two days after Katrina hit the Gulf Coast. That's a third of a 9/11 in less than a month. That flypaper for terrorists the hawks are always talking about is getting awfully clogged with the dead bodies of innocent civilians.

Billmon: Base Emotions

A new poll from Rasmussen Reports puts at least a little factual flesh on the bones of my theory that Bush's rhetorical embrace of bleeding heart conservatism isn't going to go down well with a sizable chunk of the conservative base.

The poll, taken immediately after Shrub's New Orleans speech, shows that approval of his handling of the disaster actually fell after the sound and light show in Jackson Square:

The latest Rasmussen Reports survey shows that 41% give the President poor marks for handling the crisis, that's up 37% before the speech.
And the erosion appears to have been primarily among Republicans -- 63% of whom gave Shrub a grade of good or excellent, down from 71% before the speech.

Billmon: Here We Go Again

Tropical Storm Rita continues to eye extreme South Florida as it moves into the central Bahamas, bringing along with it maximum sustained winds of up to 60-miles-an-hour . . .

Forecasters say the storm, which is making its way toward the west at near nine miles an hour, could gather enough strength to reach hurricane status within the next 24-hours. Models from the National Weather Service show the hurricane’s projected path could hit somewhere along the Texas gulf coast as early as Saturday or Sunday. (emphasis added)

KBTV-4
Texas Gulf Coast is Keeping an Eye on Rita
September 19, 2005

Atmospheric conditions are continuing to become more conducive for strengthening . . . and all forecast guidance suggests Rita should intensify some more . . . before and after it reaches the Gulf of Mexico . . . All indications are that Rita will become a major hurricane over the Gulf of Mexico. (emphasis added)

National Weather Service
Tropical Storm Rita Discussion #7
September 19, 2005

Billmon: Body Counts

"I don't believe you have heard me or anyone else in our leadership talk about the presence of 1,000 bodies out there, or in fact how many have been recovered. You know we don't do body counts."

Gen. Tommy Franks
Press Briefing
March 18, 2002

"Different people have different views as to how to handle things. I guess I'm so old I watched the Vietnam War, and the body counting, and never found it impressive."

Donald Rumsfeld
Press Briefing
March 15, 2002

Americablog: What Karl says behind closed doors

by Joe in DC - 9/19/2005 09:37:00 AM

Huffington Post puts what Karl says "off the record" on the record. The entire MSM already seems to know what he says when he is on "super secret double background," now we can too:
Karl Rove, President Bush's top political advisor and deputy White House chief of staff, spoke at businessman Teddy Forstmann's annual off the record gathering in Aspen, Colorado this weekend. Here is what Rove had to say that the press wasn't allowed to report on.

On Katrina: The only mistake we made with Katrina was not overriding the local government...

On The Anti-War Movement: Cindy Sheehan is a clown. There is no real anti-war movement. No serious politician, with anything to do with anything, would show his face at an anti-war rally...

Americablog: Errors of Commission: the GOP effort to whitewash the Katrina disaster

by John in DC - 9/19/2005 10:15:00 AM

My new Radar column is up:
Fifty-four Republican senators voted against legislation that would have created the independent Katrina commission, and the GOP House is getting ready to pass a bill authorizing a Republican-led inquiry. Their reasoning for rejecting the will of the people? It depends on which politician you ask.

A spokesperson for Senator John McCain says that the senator supports an independent commission. But when pressed if that meant a 9/11-style commission, the response was, “Uh, no.”

Americablog: Dick Cheney Speaks!

by Michael in New York - 9/19/2005 11:15:00 AM

I have to comment on a link provided by Joe in DC. Ever since Katrina struck, we've been flabbergasted that the MSM hasn't asked the most obvious, basic questions: why did Bush stay on vacation till Wednesday, why did Rice GO on vacation Tuesday and finally come back Thursday (only out of embarrassment) and how could Cheney conceivably stay on vacation through Saturday morning, some FIVE DAYS after the worst natural disaster in our nation's history devastated three states? Do they regret staying on vacation? What exactly were they doing on vacation (shopping for shoes, buying a mansion, etc.) while the floodwaters were rising and people were dying?

More Horrible Than Truth: News Reports

Published: September 19, 2005

DISASTER has a way of bringing out the best and the worst instincts in the news media. It is a grand thing that during the most terrible days of Hurricane Katrina, many reporters found their gag reflex and stopped swallowing pat excuses from public officials. But the media's willingness to report thinly attributed rumors may also have contributed to a kind of cultural wreckage that will not clean up easily.

First, anyone with any knowledge of the events in New Orleans knows that terrible things with non-natural causes occurred: there were assaults, shots fired at a rescue helicopter and, given the state of the city's police department, many other crimes that probably went unreported.

Katrina Wallops Black Voters

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, Pacific News Service. Posted September 16, 2005.

The aftermath of the hurricane could dilute black voter and Democratic strength throughout the South.

President Bush, Karl Rove, and top GOP strategists would never publicly gloat over Katrina's unintended political consequence. But there was a big and potentially lethal one for black voters and the Democratic Party. Nature's catastrophe scattered thousands of poor, black Democratic voters throughout more than 30 states from New Hampshire to California. That could dilute black voter and Democratic strength in Louisiana, and the South.

Black voters make up one third of the state's voters, and nearly one-half of New Orleans voters. They gave Clinton more than 90 percent of the vote in 1992 and 1996. That propelled him to victory over Bush Sr. and Robert Dole, and helped break the GOP stranglehold on state offices.

ACLU releases Iraq prisoner abuse report documents

By Christine KearneyThu Sep 15,10:21 PM ET

Some U.S. soldiers serving in Iraq interrogated prisoners "using techniques they literally remembered from the movies," according to documents from a U.S. military report released by the American Civil Liberties Union.

The civil rights group released on Thursday 1,800 pages of documents obtained from the government as part of a federal lawsuit seeking information on the treatment of U.S.-held detainees.

The U.S. military was widely criticized after pictures of guards abusing detainees in Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad were made public in April 2004.

ACLU said the documents, taken from interviews conducted for a 2004 investigation by Lt. Gen. Paul Mikolashek, the Army's inspector general, contradict the investigation's findings that there were no systematic failures that led to detainee abuse.

Deadline Hollywood

They Shoot News Anchors, Don’t They?

Media moguls, not looters, killed Katrina’s truth tellers


by NIKKI FINKE


At first, only CNN
appeared not to have thoroughly read the proverbial memo. It was the only network, on air and on its Web site, to compare and contrast the wildly contradictory statements by federal, state and local officials, sometimes within hours, but often within minutes of each other. It was CNN that posted the first full transcript of New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin’s profanity- and passion-filled September 2 interview on local radio. It was also CNN that first exposed the gruesome nature of the conditions at the Superdome, at the convention center and in the hospital corridors. Its broadcasters were the first to keep a heart-wrenching online blog during Katrina. Even as late as September 6, political correspondent Ed Henry was the first to counter the claims by House Majority Leader Tom DeLay that local officials and not the feds were to blame, by reporting that congressional Republicans, in a secret confab, were giving the Bush administration a big fat F.

Then the fix was in.

Going back for more

After a couple of weeks in New Orleans with an emergency team providing aid to victims of Hurricane Katrina, Philomath residents Peggy Peirson and Dan Kearl spent only a few days at home resting up and telling stories before getting ready to head back and continue recovery efforts on the Gulf Coast.

Members of Oregon's Disaster Medical Assistance Team, a mobile medical unit funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, arrived home exhausted and shell-shocked on Sept. 10 and were put on alert to go back Thursday. The call to fly out can come at any moment.

The scenes they have already encountered at Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport top any movie or, for that matter, any experience they have ever witnessed, they said.

Attention all Krugman addicts...

Here is a non-New York Times Source for Paul Krugman's columns:

http://pkarchive.org/

Now I need to find one for Frank Rich.

Atrios: A Free and Independent Media

How it's done:
Another Win for 'Friends & Allies'
When John G. Roberts is approved as chief justice of the United States, as expected, he can thank President Bush 's "Friends & Allies" program, which went to work on him immediately after he was nominated. The project, started by the Republican National Committee in the 2004 re-election campaign, is simple and effective: Give opinion makers, media friends, and even cocktail party hosts insider info on the topic of the day. How? Through E-mailed talking points, called D.C. Talkers, and conference calls. For Roberts, it worked this way: A daily conference call to about 80 pundits, GOP-leaning radio and TV hosts, and newsmakers was made around 9 a.m. On the other end were the main Roberts gunslingers like Steve Schmidt at the White House and Ken Mehlman and Brian Jones at the RNC. D.C. Talkers would then be distributed to an even larger list filled with positive info about Roberts and lines of attack on his critics. "The idea," said one of those involved, "is to feed them information and have them invested in us." It has even created addicts, he added. "Now they come to us before going on TV."
...Kurtz, yesterday: (tip thanks to P O'Neill):
KURTZ: The politicians don't talk about it very much. But does that let journalists off the hook? Since when do we take our talking points from the political class?

A televisual fairyland

From January 2005, but still fresh, unfortunately--Dictynna

The US media is disciplined by corporate America into promoting the Republican cause

George Monbiot
Tuesday January 18, 2005


On Thursday, the fairy king of fairyland will be recrowned. He was elected on a platform suspended in midair by the power of imagination. He is the leader of a band of men who walk through ghostly realms unvisited by reality. And he remains the most powerful person on earth.

How did this happen? How did a fantasy president from a world of make believe come to govern a country whose power was built on hard-headed materialism? To find out, take a look at two squalid little stories which have been concluded over the past 10 days.

Uncle Sam's rich uncles overseas


It's an odd situation. Foreigners have in effect been financing 43 percent of the cost of the Iraq war, a war many of them oppose. Now they will help to finance the federal government's cost of Katrina, a disaster their press tells them was badly managed initially.

But can these foreign investors be trusted to keep helping to maintain the United States economy?

In fiscal 2006, starting next month, Katrina may add as much as $200 billion to the federal deficit. The total deficit could reach $500 billion, Washington experts reckon. Katrina could cost a trillion or so in the years ahead.

Iraq Invasion Radicalized Saudi Fighters--Report

Sep 18, 2005 — By Dominic Evans

RIYADH (Reuters) - Hundreds of Saudi fighters who joined the insurgency in Iraq showed few signs of militancy before the U.S.-led overthrow of Saddam Hussein, according to a detailed study based on Saudi intelligence reports.

The study by the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), obtained by Reuters on Sunday, also said Saudis made up just 350 of the 3,000-strong foreign insurgents in Iraq — fewer than many officials have assumed.

Clinton launches withering attack on Bush on Iraq, Katrina, budget

Sun Sep 18, 3:43 PM ET

Former US president Bill Clinton sharply criticised George W. Bush for the Iraq War and the handling of Hurricane Katrina, and voiced alarm at the swelling US budget deficit.

Breaking with tradition under which US presidents mute criticisms of their successors, Clinton said the Bush administration had decided to invade Iraq "virtually alone and before UN inspections were completed, with no real urgency, no evidence that there were weapons of mass destruction."

The Iraq war diverted US attention from the war on terrorism "and undermined the support that we might have had," Bush said in an interview with an ABC's "This Week" programme.

Clinton said there had been a "heroic but so far unsuccessful" effort to put together an constitution that would be universally supported in Iraq.

Lindsey Graham's Smear

No, Ruth Bader Ginsburg does not advocate pederasty.
By Timothy Noah
Posted Friday, Sept. 16, 2005, at 4:00 PM PT

What is Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., smoking? On the fourth day of the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on John Roberts, President Bush's nominee for chief justice of the Supreme Court, Graham accused Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg of advocating that the age of sexual consent be reduced to 12. Let's go to the transcript:

Well, there are all kind of hearts. There are bleeding hearts and there are hard hearts. And if I wanted to judge Justice Ginsburg on her heart, I might take a hard-hearted view of her and say she's a bleeding heart. She represents the ACLU. She wants the age of consent to be 12. She believes there's a constitutional right to prostitution. What kind of heart is that?

Graham's bizarre smear, deployed to warn Democrats not to come down on Roberts' "value system," was omitted from nearly all news accounts, presumably because no one knew what on earth he could possibly be talking about.

Gold settles at new 17-year peak

Fri Sep 16, 4:04 PM ET

NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. benchmark gold futures closed at a 17-year high on Friday as robust demand for bullion and jitters over inflation and the U.S. economy stoked a buying spree in the precious commodity for a second straight day.

December delivery gold on the New York Mercantile Exchange's COMEX division climbed $4 to end at $463.30 an ounce. The session high at $464 was the loftiest level for a most-active futures contract in New York gold since June 1988.

Gold's rally this week has added $10, or 2.3 percent, to the December gold contract.

Prices extended gains after first hitting a 17-year peak on Thursday as money from investment funds and independent traders continued to flow into the market, traders and analysts said.

Poll: Fifty percent would vote in Democrat for Congress

RAW STORY

A post-Katrina poll published in last Monday's newstand edition of Newsweek (PRNewswire link) contains heartening news for Democrats, RAW STORY has discovered. Just fourteen months before the Congressional elections, Democrats have opened up a 12 point lead over their GOP rivals.

The Republicans currently maintain a 232-to-202 advantage over the Republicans. Bernie Sanders of Vermont is the only Independent Congressman, and he usually sides with the Democrats.

Baker-Carter commission recommends national voter ID card

John Byrne

A voting reform commission which has already taken heat for playing host to sham voting rights groups run by members of the Bush-Cheney campaign has now recommended the institution of a national voter ID card.

The full recommendations of the commission, led by erstwhile Secretary of State James Baker III and former President Jimmy Carter, can be found here.

What has happened to Iraq's missing $1bn?

By Patrick Cockburn in Baghdad

Published: 19 September 2005

One billion dollars has been plundered from Iraq's defence ministry in one of the largest thefts in history, The Independent can reveal, leaving the country's army to fight a savage insurgency with museum-piece weapons.

The money, intended to train and equip an Iraqi army capable of bringing security to a country shattered by the US-led invasion and prolonged rebellion, was instead siphoned abroad in cash and has disappeared.

"It is possibly one of the largest thefts in history," Ali Allawi, Iraq's Finance Minister, told The Independent.