10 December 2005

The. Biggest. Scandal. Ever! Phony Front Companies Cycle Millions Back to GOP!

Sat Dec 10, 2005 at 09:48:20 AM PDT

Brent Wilkes & Mitchell Wade - Bagmen in the Successful Plot to Take Over the United States and Enrich GOP Officeholders

I hope you are sitting down when you read this. The Duke Cunningham scandal goes much deeper than just the $2.4 million in bribes being reported by the media. There is a lot the media is not telling you.

Ever wonder why the Republicans have SO much money in every national election?

And what did the Dukester do to get his Rolls-Royce, anyway? Whose Lear Jet was he flying around in? The answers to those 3 questions turn out to be The. Biggest. Scandal. Ever!

Republicans sinking in sleaze

A decade ago the Democrats were thought to be shady. Now it is the turn of Mr Bush's party
A DECADE ago Newt Gingrich’s Republican revolutionaries seized control of Congress after 40 years of Democrat rule by promising to end the culture of graft and corruption on Capitol Hill.

Today, after a string of indictments, scandals and a criminal investigation that threatens to implicate dozens of politicians next year, the tables have turned full circle. It is now President Bush’s Republicans who are seen as the party of sleaze.

Polls suggest that two thirds of Americans believe that corruption is a serious political problem. That, allied with the growing unpopularity of the war in Iraq, is raising fears in the White House of a voter backlash in next year’s mid-term congressional elections.

Military's Information War Is Vast and Often Secretive

The media center in Fayetteville, N.C., would be the envy of any global communications company.

In state of the art studios, producers prepare the daily mix of music and news for the group's radio stations or spots for friendly television outlets. Writers putting out newspapers and magazines in Baghdad and Kabul converse via teleconferences. Mobile trailers with high-tech gear are parked outside, ready for the next crisis.

The center is not part of a news organization, but a military operation, and those writers and producers are soldiers. The 1,200-strong psychological operations unit based at Fort Bragg turns out what its officers call "truthful messages" to support the United States government's objectives, though its commander acknowledges that those stories are one-sided and their American sponsorship is hidden.

Psychiatry Ponders Whether Extreme Bias Can Be an Illness

By Shankar Vedantam
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 10, 2005; Page A01

The 48-year-old man turned down a job because he feared that a co-worker would be gay. He was upset that gay culture was becoming mainstream and blamed most of his personal, professional and emotional problems on the gay and lesbian movement.

These fixations preoccupied him every day. Articles in magazines about gays made him agitated. He confessed that his fears had left him socially isolated and unemployed for years: A recovering alcoholic, the man even avoided 12-step meetings out of fear he might encounter a gay person.

For Rove, New Testimony, New Problems

By Jason Leopold
t r u t h o u t | Report

Friday 09 December 2005

There are unanswered questions about whether Karl Rove was truthful when he was first interviewed by FBI and Justice Department investigators in early October 2003 regarding whether he played a role in the leak of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson. According to sources close to the probe, he was not.

In that very first interview, which took place just three months after Plame Wilson's name was published in a July 14, 2003, story by conservative columnist Robert Novak in an attempt to discredit her husband, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, a critic of the Bush administration's prewar Iraq intelligence, Rove testified that he did speak with a handful of journalists and told them about Plame Wilson and that she worked at the CIA - but only after her identity had already been made public. In fact, Rove had been one of the two "senior administration officials" cited in Novak's column confirming Plame Wilson's identity. Additionally, Rove had also been a source for Time magazine reporter Matthew Cooper, who also published Plame Wilson's name in a story three days after Novak's column - another fact President Bush's deputy chief of staff allegedly withheld from prosecutors.

ACLU: Protesters Placed in Terror Files

By Anslee Willett
The Gazette, Colorado Springs

Friday 09 December 2005

The names and license plate numbers of about 30 people who protested three years ago in Colorado Springs were put into FBI domestic-terrorism files, the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Colorado said Thursday.

The Denver-based ACLU obtained federal documents on a 2002 Colorado Springs protest and a 2003 anti-war rally under the Freedom of Information Act.

ACLU legal director Mark Silverstein said the documents show the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force wastes resources generating files on "nonviolent protest."

"These documents confirm that the names and license plate numbers of several dozen peaceful protesters who committed no crime are now in a JTTF file marked 'counterterrorism,'" he said.

Pentagon Memo on Torture-Motivated Transfer Cited

By Ken Silverstein
The Los Angeles Times

Thursday 08 December 2005

A court filing describes a classified proposal to send a detainee away for information extraction.

Washington - Although Bush administration officials have denied that they transfer terrorism suspects to countries where they are likely to be abused, a classified memorandum described in a court case indicates that the Pentagon has considered sending a captured militant abroad to be interrogated under threat of torture.

The classified memo is summarized - its actual contents are blacked out - in a petition filed by attorneys for Majid Mahmud Abdu Ahmad, a detainee held by the Pentagon at its Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, facility.

Doctor Links Merck Trial to His Demotion

Published: December 10, 2005

Less than a week after his videotaped lambasting of Merck was played in a Houston federal courthouse, Dr. Eric Topol, a prominent cardiologist, has lost his title as chief academic officer of the Cleveland Clinic's medical college.

In the courthouse yesterday, jurors continued deliberating whether Merck's painkiller Vioxx had caused the death of a Florida main in 2001.

Live Tracking of Mobile Phones Prompts Court Fights on Privacy

Published: December 10, 2005

Most Americans carry cellphones, but many may not know that government agencies can track their movements through the signals emanating from the handset.

In recent years, law enforcement officials have turned to cellular technology as a tool for easily and secretly monitoring the movements of suspects as they occur. But this kind of surveillance - which investigators have been able to conduct with easily obtained court orders - has now come under tougher legal scrutiny.

David Saxon, 85, University President and Victim of Red Scare, Dies

Published: December 10, 2005

BERKELEY, Calif., Dec. 9 (AP) - David S. Saxon, a physicist who was dismissed by the University of California for refusing to sign a loyalty oath in the Red Scare of the 1950's but went on to lead the entire system, died here on Thursday. He was 85.

Mr. Saxon, whose death was announced by the University of California, Berkeley, also led the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The US has used torture for decades. All that's new is the openness about it

By ignoring past abuses, opponents of torture are in danger of pushing it back into the shadows instead of abolishing it

Naomi Klein
Saturday December 10, 2005
The Guardian


It was the "Mission Accomplished" of George Bush's second term, and an announcement of that magnitude called for a suitably dramatic location. But what was the right backdrop for the infamous "We do not torture" declaration? With characteristic audacity, the Bush team settled on downtown Panama City.

It was certainly bold. An hour and a half's drive from where Bush stood, the US military ran the notorious School of the Americas from 1946 to 1984, a sinister educational institution that, if it had a motto, might have been "We do torture". It is here in Panama, and later at the school's new location in Fort Benning, Georgia, where the roots of the current torture scandals can be found.

Cursor's Media Patrol - 12/09/05

Extraordinary Rendition "Evidence" used by the White House in 2002 to assert links between Al Qaeda and Iraq was reportedly "fabricated" by a fearful ghost detainee after he had been "secretly handed over to Egypt" by "the Pinochets of the next generation."

The state department's top legal adviser admitted that the U.S. has not given the Red Cross access to all detainees in its custody, and a Human Rights Watch analyst reportedly said that "Poland was the main base for CIA interrogations in Europe, while Romania played more of a role in the transfer of detained prisoners."

Richard Reeves describes "Mr. Victory" as "talking as fast as he can," while laying out a "strategy to mask defeat" in Iraq.

Norman Soloman revisits Defense Secretary 'Rumsfeld's Handshake Deal With Saddam,' and recalls a photo "notably absent" from coverage of the trial said to have 'put Saddam back in charge.'

'Dangerous Assignment' The American Journalism Review finds "little surprise that terrorists and criminal gangs would strike at journalists. But no one expected 15 deaths to come at the hands of American troops."

A UN report finds 'Two-thirds of Palestinians living in poverty,' and a poll identifies a more "pressing problem" than security in Israel, which 'leads West in child poverty.'

New Mexico reportedly plans to build a $200 million spaceport in the desert, to serve as "a launching pad for space tourists." Earlier: 'New Mexico's Most Exclusive Circles.'

Jesus Bans "Christian" Group

Shocking announcement sends militant Focus on the Family organization into crazed tailspin

By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist

Friday, December 9, 2005

In an astonishing but not completely unexpected announcement, Jesus H. Christ, vice president and CFO of All That Is Inc., appeared today on a large tortilla at a roadside taco stand in Zacatecas, Mexico, to announce that, effective immediately, the pseudo-Christian group Focus on the Family, led by Dr. James Dobson and best known for its blazing hatred of gays and its fear of glimpsing the human female nipple during nationally televised sporting events, is effectively banned from His Divine Beneficence.

Merkel gaffe forces US into damage limitation mode

By Bertrand Benoit in Berlin
Published: December 9 2005 17:46 | Last updated: December 9 2005 17:46

Angela Merkel and Condoleezza Rice were doing a good job of healing the rift between Germany and the US last Tuesday, until Germany’s new chancellor made a serious diplomatic gaffe.

The US secretary of state had admitted the kidnap of a German citizen by the American security services was a mistake, Ms Merkel said. As soon as the press conference was over US officials denied Ms Rice has said any such thing.

Appeals Judges Question SEC's Hedge Fund Rule

Laying the groundwork for disaster?--Dictynna

By Carrie Johnson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 10, 2005; Page D01

Appeals court judges sharply questioned yesterday whether the Securities and Exchange Commission had a reasonable basis for adopting a controversial rule that requires hedge funds to register with the agency.

A divided SEC passed the rule in a 3 to 2 vote last year, citing evidence that the loosely regulated investment pools had become a breeding ground for fraud and trading abuses. But New York fund adviser Phillip Goldstein sued to stop the rule, arguing that the SEC had overstepped its authority and did not provide adequate foundation for the move.

Moving in Uncharted Territory

By James Howard Kunstler, kunstler.com. Posted December 10, 2005.

When people of any political persuasion cry for America to pull out of Iraq they should be ready to understand that things won't be "back to normal."

When people of any political persuasion cry for America to pull out of Iraq, what do they suppose will be the result? That America will go back to being the same nation of easy-motoring, McMansion-buying consumpto-trons we were in 1999? Things have changed.

The world oil markets have changed. Their stability through the 1990s was a transient phenomenon, and a circumstance which, unfortunately, put us to sleep. During that time, OPEC, led by Saudi Arabia, was the world's "swing producer" -- the oil producer with spare capacity that could always open the valves and pump more. And they did, even cheating on their own official quotas, which only had the effect of flooding the market with "product" and driving down the prices -- so by the end of the last century oil had sunk to $10 a barrel.

09 December 2005

Digby: Great Game

I had meant to review "Syriana" when I saw it over the Thanksgiving week-end, but with one thing and another, I let it slide. Now I see that the reviews are coming in fast and furious and I'm left in the dirt. Typical.

I'm not going to bore anyone with a synopsis, because anyone who is reading this can go to the web-site and see the trailer and read all about it right now. (God I love these internets.)

Digby: SOS

by digby

Glenn Greenwald at Unclaimed Territory heard Howard Dean's shocking shocking comparison between Iraq and Vietnam and was led to do a rather unusual thing. He went back and read what our leaders were saying during Vietnam and compared it to what they are saying to today. What he found was quite interesting.

Digby: Foxocities

In the latest installment of the "Democrats are in Disarray" show, Fred Barnes just did a reverse triple axel that would make Michelle Kwan weep. After going on and on about how the Democrats are all over the map, they don't know what they are doing, they are rudderless and lacking in ideas, he said that Nancy Pelosi has got the democrats voting in "lock-step" which is empowering the (apparently useless) GOP moderates. (Then he pouted and stomped his tiny foot in frustration.)

Digby: The System Worked

Kevin Drum is asking some questions about what happened on that flight in Miami yesterday. It all sounds a little "screwy" to me too, but not just because the witness accounts sound as if the marshalls may have overreacted. There's something else screwy about this.

The marshalls were obviously persuaded that it was quite possible that this man had a bomb in his carry on bag. And apparently, the marshalls went through the plane after the fact, looking for accomplices, pointing guns at the passengers and knocking cell phones out of their hands ostensibly because they thought they might contain guns.

Digby: Thanks Bill

I'm not religious but I've always loved Christmas --- the food, the lights, the tree, the music, the whole thing. Now the right wing pricks have gone and made it a cause in their goddamned culture war and I can't enjoy it anymore. One sniff of fruitcake and a picture of Bill O'Reilly enters my mind. I'm instantly nauseated.

Digby: Campaign Troops

Via Dan Froomkin, I see that Fox News (of all places) is following this story of Bush making political speeches before military audiences:
... lately the president has been saying more than just "hello" to troops. Twice last month in speeches to military audiences, the president attacked Democrats and fired back at their accusations that pre-war intelligence was manipulated by his administration.

Digby: So, Like, Totally Funny

Via Wolcott I see that the spokesmodel of Open Robe Media, Atlas Shrugged, has a hilarious picture of Howard Dean up photoshopped as Hitler. But it's ok because it's totally funny:
Hey guys, its a joke. Helllllllllllllllllllllo, its F-U-N-N-Y (even if Dean's remarks were far from funny, futile maybe, treasonous maybe, stupid for sure, humorous - not). Actually, the pic is hysterical. I never said he was Hitler, never even called him a Nazi. A clown for sure. That's a clown pic - this is a clown pic too. Conversely, when the left calls Bush Hitler, they are dead serious. You can not compare the two. The above picture is hysterical. You clowns are as bad as the one in the picture. Sheesh.

U.S. Journalism's Shameful Anniversary

By Robert Parry
December 9, 2005

One year ago, reporter Gary Webb – his life in ruins – killed himself with a handgun. The tragedy made him the final victim of a long-running cover-up protecting the Reagan-Bush administration’s tolerance of drug trafficking by its client army, the Nicaraguan contras.

But Webb’s death also could be blamed on the fecklessness of modern American journalism. The nation’s leading newspapers had driven the 49-year-old father of three to his desperate act rather than admit that they had bungled one of the biggest stories of the Reagan-Bush era – the contra-cocaine scandal.

Juan Cole - 12/09/05


A suicide bomber jumped on a bus in Baghdad just as it was about to head south for Nasiriyah on Thursday, eluding security. The bus was lifted by gigantic fingers of flame, reaching out to kill and wound bystanders, as well. Some 43 were killed and at least 70 wounded.


Al-Hayat: President Jalal Talabani [Ar. ULR] is preparing a meeting in Sulaimaniyah to be attended by the Americans and by leaders of the underground Sunni Arab guerrilla movement. US Ambassador Khalilzad has announced that he would be willing to talk to any groups save the Saddamists (direct cronies and strong supporters of the overthrown dictator) and the jihadi terrorists (e.g. the group of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi).

Researchers: Alcohol misuse, divorce rates higher among returning troops

By Leo Shane III, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Friday, December 9, 2005


WASHINGTON — Army researchers saw alcohol misuse rise from 13 percent among soldiers to 21 percent one year after returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, underscoring the continuing stress of deployment for some troops.

In post-deployment reassessment data completed in July, researchers also saw soldiers with anger and aggression issues increase from 11 percent to 22 percent after deployment. Those planning to divorce their spouse rose from 9 percent to 15 percent after time spent in the combat zone.

And that’s just the start of the problems, according to military family support groups.

FEMA Official Criticizes Trailer Plan for Evacuees

Lump-Sum Payments to Victims Urged

By Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, December 9, 2005; Page A12

The federal government's second-ranking disaster official in Louisiana yesterday criticized the Federal Emergency Management Agency's program to house Hurricane Katrina evacuees in trailers, calling the effort wasteful and counter to the long-term interest of more than 100,000 displaced families.

Instead of spending as much as $140,000 for each trailer and site for a family to use for 18 months, the government should hand out in a lump sum the $26,200 that Congress has approved for storm victims, Scott Wells, a FEMA official and the federal coordinating officer for Louisiana, told senators.

Waning Era of the Middle-Class Factory Job

By Mark Trumbull
The Christian Science Monitor

Thursday 08 December 2005

Flint, MIchigan - For Mary Aremia-Van Alst, the happiest day of her 10 years working at Delphi Corp. is easy to pinpoint: It was the day she got the job.

<>"I was ecstatic," she says, referring to that day in January 1995. The auto-parts company, then a division of General Motors Corp. (GM), was hiring in Flint for the first time in years.

The job offer was a passport to a paycheck that more than doubled her $10-an-hour wage at Citizens Bank.

It was also a ticket to a world where a working-class job could produce a middle-class lifestyle, with strong benefits and the money to send her children to a Catholic grade school.

Diebold execs gave to Republicans in spite of ban

RAW STORY

Although Diebold officially banned political donations by top brass in 2004, Diebold executives have continued to feed money to Republican campaigns, the Cleveland Plain Dealer reports. The story was earlier reported by blogger Michael Petrelis.

After a Bush campaign fundraiser and controversial statements by CEO Walden O'Dell, Diebold barred its CEO, financial officer, and Election Systems VP from making political donations. However, that ban has not stopped other executives from giving to GOP campaigns.

In all, Diebold executives contributed $1,400 to the campaigns of Senator Mike DeWine (R-OH) and Ohio State Senator Kirk Schuring (R-Canton).

Great Lakes near ecological breakdown: scientists

Thu Dec 8, 2005 2:16 PM ET

By Andrew Stern

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Stresses from polluted rivers to invasive species threaten to trigger an ecological breakdown in the Great Lakes, a group of scientists hoping to sway U.S. environmental policy said on Thursday.

Seventy-five scientists who study the world's largest collective body of fresh water released their report on the myriad problems that need cleanup or restoration ahead of two key policy announcements next week.

"This is just a critical period for the Great Lakes," Andy Buchsbaum, director of the National Wildlife Federation's Great Lakes office, said about next week's announcements.

Tax Cut Showdown

The House of Representatives passed two major tax-cut bills this week. One deserves to become law; the other deserves to die. It will be up to the Senate to make sure that happens.

On Wednesday, the House overwhelmingly passed a bill that would shield millions of taxpayers from the alternative minimum tax next year. The relief is expensive - costing nearly $30 billion - but it's critical. Without it, many middle-class Americans, who were never the intended target for the alternative tax, would be suddenly forced to pay higher taxes when they filed their 2005 tax returns. (The alternative tax was intended to stop rich people with lots of shelters from escaping their tax burden entirely, but it has not been changed to reflect inflation or the tax cuts passed under President Bush.)

Report Says States Aim Low in Science Classes

Published: December 8, 2005

WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 - Nearly half the states are doing a poor job of setting high academic standards for science in public schools, according to a new report that examined science in anticipation of 2007, when states will be required to administer tests in the subject under President Bush's signature education law.

The report, released Wednesday by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, suggests that the focus on reading and math as required subjects for testing under the federal law, No Child Left Behind, has turned attention away from science, contributing to a failure of American children to stay competitive in science with their counterparts abroad.

Scientists Say Recovery of the Ozone Layer May Take Longer Than Expected

Published: December 7, 2005

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 6 - The layer of ozone in the earth's upper atmosphere, which protects life from harmful ultraviolet radiation but which has been damaged by artificial chemicals, may take a decade or two longer to recover than previously thought, scientists reported Tuesday.

Until now, the ozone layer had been expected to return to its 1980 condition by about 2050. But at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union here, the scientists said new measurements and computer simulations suggested that continuing use of the chemicals - chlorofluorocarbons, or CFC's - would delay the recovery until about 2065.

The End of the Party

In the House, Bush is a liability, the Hammer's been indicted and the once-united GOP juggernaut stumbles toward an ugly divorce

The first hint I had that something was wrong -- that the karmic balance of the U.S. House of Representatives had shifted irrevocably -- came at about the twenty-two-minute mark of what was supposed to be a routine fifteen-minute vote on a labor appropriations bill. Republicans weren't supposed to lose this bill -- H.R. 3010, a relatively uncontroversial Fiscal Year 2006 Appropriations Act for the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education. It wasn't even supposed to be in play. The big challenge was supposed to be later that evening, in a heavily politicked budget-reconciliation package that threatened to be the toughest fight a wounded Republican Party had faced since the Gingrich years.

Cursor's Media Patrol - 12/08/05

As Der Speigel asks, "Does Anyone Believe Condoleezza Rice?," Robert Parry finds that she has something in common with her predecessor, and the Los Angeles Times reports that "a classified memorandum described in a court case indicates that the Pentagon has considered sending a captured militant abroad to be interrogated under threat of torture."

As the 'U.S. rejects new talks on climate change,' Inuit indigenous peoples file a complaint accusing the U.S. government "of violating their human rights by failing to do enough to fight a thaw of Arctic ice undermining their hunting cultures," reports Reuters. Earlier: 'The world's toxic waste dump.'

An Orlando man said to be returning from "a missionary trip in Ecuador" was gunned down by federal air marshals after running off a plane in Miami, in what a Homeland Security spokesman called a "textbook scenario." An ABC News report says that a "missing Egyptian may help explain why air marshals acted as they did."

'Acts of defiance against war turn ordinary people into criminals,' reports the Independent, including a conviction for "standing outside Downing Street and reading aloud the names of the 97 British soldiers who have died in the Iraq conflict."

Clarence Page can only "wonder how bad the real news must be," as "Iraqi children could be heard shouting ... 'Support George Bush,'" in what Slate calls another feel-good story from the Baghdad Post.

'Fitzgerald spends three hours with [new] grand jury,' and Lawrence O'Donnell explains why Time's Viveca Novak "may have more to answer for than any other reporter involved."

Referring to Matt Taibbi's "vicious, nasty name-calling" in his article, 'The End of the Party,' the Washington Post's magazine writer says, "there's absolutely no excuse for it -- except, of course, accuracy." Plus: Rep. Tom DeLay, home and away.

A Harris poll finds "Republicans, college graduates and people with incomes over $75,000" feeling less alienated than other Americans.

Weighing the case of 'The New York Times Versus The Civil Society,' Edward Herman cites the late John Hess as saying that "in all 24 years of his service at the paper he 'never saw a foreign intervention that the Times did not support.'" A book publisher also has a 'Bitch' with the Times.

DNC Fact Check: President Bush Said We Can't Win

12/8/2005 1:13:00 PM


To: National Desk, Political Reporter

Contact: Karen Finney of the Democratic National Committee Staff, 202-863-8148

WASHINGTON, Dec. 8 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The following was released today by the Democratic National Committee:

The RNC got it wrong. Today, they falsely claimed that President Bush has always predicted victory in the War on Terror, and argued in a release that "President Bush Never Said We Couldn't Win." In fact, last summer, on the first day of his convention, President Bush told Matt Lauer on NBC's "Today Show" that he didn't think "we can win it."

NBC, "The Today Show", 8/30/04

MATT LAUER: You said to me a second ago, one of the things you'll lay out in your vision for the next four years is how to go about winning the war on terror. That phrase strikes me a little bit. Do you really think we can win this war of ter--on terror? For example, in the next four years?

PRESIDENT BUSH: I have never said we can win it in four years.

MATT LAUER: No, I'm just saying, can we win it? Do you say that?

PRESIDENT BUSH: I don't--I don't think we can win it.

How America Plotted to Stop Kyoto Deal

Published on Thursday, December 8, 2005 by the Independent / UK
by Andrew Buncombe

A detailed and disturbing strategy document has revealed an extraordinary American plan to destroy Europe's support for the Kyoto treaty on climate change.

The ambitious, behind-the-scenes plan was passed to The Independent this week, just as 189 countries are painfully trying to agree the second stage of Kyoto at the UN climate conference in Montreal. It was pitched to companies such as Ford Europe, Lufthansa and the German utility giant RWE.

Put together by a lobbyist who is a senior official at a group partly funded by ExxonMobil, the world's biggest oil company and a fierce opponent of anti-global warming measures, the plan seeks to draw together major international companies, academics, think-tanks, commentators, journalists and lobbyists from across Europe into a powerful grouping to destroy further EU support for the treaty.

Britain 'trying to stall $1.3bn theft inquiry that could hurt Allawi's election chances'

By Patrick Cockburn in Baghdad

Published: 09 December 2005

The British government is trying to stall an investigation into the theft of more than $1.3bn (£740m) from the Iraqi Ministry of Defence, senior Iraqi officials say.

The government wants to postpone the investigation to help its favoured candidate Iyad Allawi, the former prime minister, in the election on 15 December. The money disappeared during his administration.

US bars access to terror suspects

The US has admitted for the first time that it has not given the Red Cross access to all detainees in its custody.

The state department's top legal adviser, John Bellinger, made the admission but gave no details about where such prisoners were held.

Correspondents say the revelation is likely to increase suspicion that the CIA has been operating secret prisons outside international oversight.

The issue has dogged Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's tour to

US terror watchlist 80,000 names long

Thu Dec 8,10:59 AM ET

A watchlist of possible terror suspects distributed by the US government to airlines for pre-flight checks is now 80,000 names long, a Swedish newspaper reported, citing European air industry sources.

The classified list, which carried just 16 names before the September 11, 2001 attacks in New York and Washington had grown to 1,000 by the end of 2001, to 40,000 a year later and now stands at 80,000, Svenska Dagbladet reported.

Airlines must check each passenger flying to a US destination against the list, and contact the US Department of Homeland Security for further investigation if there is a matching name.

Want credibility? Call off Cheney, back ban on torture

EDITORIAL BOARD
Friday, December 09, 2005

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is spending much of her official visit to Europe this week insisting that the American government does not condone and will not permit torture of prisoners, here or abroad. That such a defense is necessary is a national embarrassment, but it is necessary because the words and actions of President Bush and his administration raise doubts.

As Rice has pointed out, the government has a problem in that persons detained, arrested or captured as terror suspects are not, like uniformed soldiers from the army of an enemy state, entitled by law or treaty to the protections of the Geneva Convention. The enemy has no army and no state.

Goodbye, New Orleans

By Mike Tidwell, OrionOnline.org. Posted December 9, 2005.

The Bush administration has given New Orleans a quiet kiss of death with its final Katrina budget package. If we can't rebuild it right, we may as well kiss it goodbye.

As we reach the 90-day mark since Katrina hit, it's time we ended our national state of denial. Turns out House Speaker Dennis Hastert had it right all along, though his reasons were flawed. We should call it quits in New Orleans not because the city can't be made relatively safe from hurricanes. It can be. And not because to do so is more trouble than it's worth. It's not. But because the Bush Administration has already given New Orleans a quiet kiss of death now that the story has run its news cycle.

As someone who dearly loves New Orleans and has experienced many of her charms, it pains me immeasurably to call for this retreat. This is not a rhetorical stunt or a shock argument meant to invite compromise talks. I mean what I say: Shut the city down and board it up before thousands more lives are lost.

08 December 2005

House, Senate Reach Deal on Patriot Act

By JESSE J. HOLLAND
The Associated Press
Thursday, December 8, 2005; 12:01 PM

WASHINGTON -- House and Senate negotiators reached an agreement Thursday to extend the USA Patriot Act, the government's premier anti-terrorism law, before its major provisions expire at the end of the month.

"All factors considered it's reasonably good, not perfect, but it's acceptable," said Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., and chairman of the Judiciary Committee, as he announced the deal.

Class Warfare With Taxes

Robert Reich
December 08, 2005

Robert B. Reich is the Maurice B. Hexter Professor of Social and Economic Policy at Brandeis University, and was the secretary of labor under former President Bill Clinton.

Tax bills now wending their way through the House and Senate would cut about $60 billion in taxes next year. But there’s a huge difference between the two. The biggest item in House bill is a two-year extension of the president’s tax cuts on stock dividends and capital gains. The House bill doesn’t touch what’s called the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). By contrast, the biggest item in Senate bill is temporary relief from the AMT. But the Senate bill doesn’t extend the dividend and capital gains tax cuts.

No legislative choice in recent years has so clearly pitted the super-rich against the suburban middle class. Most of benefits of the House’s proposed extension of the dividend and capital gains tax cuts would go to the top one percent of taxpayers, with average annual incomes of more than $1 million. Most of the benefits of the Senate’s cut in the AMT would go to households earning between $75,000 and $100,000 a year, who would otherwise get slammed.

America, Fascism, And God: Sermons from a Heretical Preacher

BUZZFLASH REVIEWS

Some BuzzFlash readers may remember a searing, insightful sermon by a Texas minister that caromed around the Internet for awhile. It was called "Living Under Fascism" -- and it fulfilled the hopes and expectations that a religious leader would utter the "F" word and then make a convincing case that the Republicans have crossed the line into that form of government.

Rev. Davidson Loehr delivered his historical sermon on November 7, 2004. He warned then:

"You may wonder why anyone would try to use the word 'fascism' in a serious discussion of where America is today. It sounds like cheap name-calling, or melodramatic allusion to a slew of old war movies. But I am serious. I don't mean it as name-calling at all. I mean to persuade you that the style of governing into which America has slid is most accurately described as fascism, and that the necessary implications of this fact are rightly regarded as terrifying. That's what I am about here."

Open and Shut

Four years later, we still have ten big questions
by Jarrett Murphy
December 5th, 2005 6:30 PM

On Monday, December 5, the 9-11 Public Discourse Project—a private group formed by 9-11 Commission members after their official mandate lapsed in 2004—held a wrap-up press briefing in Washington, signaling the last gasp of official inquiries into the attacks four years ago. The National Institute of Standards and Technology also recently completed its final report on the twin towers. Already gathering dust are a Federal Emergency Management Agency study, the joint inquiry by Congress, the McKinsey reports on New York City's emergency response, probes by federal inspectors general, and other efforts to resolve the myriad doubts about the hijackings.

07 December 2005

Driftglass Says Conservatives Mourn Loss of Communists as Opponents



Right Lieberman?

As a forward, in case anyone is curious, this pic is pretty much exactly how my visual imagination works.

The vision of the GOP leadership brain-caste as a squalling, Argus-eyed baby just precipitated inside my head a couple of days ago and hung around. Scary and very apt, the image of a ravenous, irrational Me-Me-Me Id Beast with a hundred eyes. Some kind of raging termagant, eternally, hatefully and microscopically X-raying everyone for orthodoxy, purity and perfect loyality to the idiotic pronouncements of Dear Leader.

Talking Points Memo on C. Cillizza Washington Post Blog

(December 07, 2005 -- 03:15 PM EDT)

Last week we mentioned that in a 'scandal scorecard' on his new Washington Post blog The Fix, Chris Cillizza included a reference to a former Democratic congressman who resigned from Congress for crimes committed before he was even elected, in an apparent effort to make the scorecard look less overwhelmingly weighted toward Republicans.

This morning a TPM Reader asked Cillizza about it in a reader chat.

Digby: The '05 Campaign

Atrios wonders why Bush is doing the happy talk thing about the economy when it won't make anyone change his or her mind about it:
There are things which make sense in the context of a first term, a presidential campaign, a major policy to sell, or if there is an heir apparent (like Gore in 2000). But basically either people are happy with the economy or not and no speechifying by Bush is going to change their minds
I thought the same thing and then realized that he was just repeating his stump speech, slightly updated.

Digby: Orwell's Dog

President Bush is disturbed by the U.S. military's practice of paying Iraqi papers to run articles emphasizing positive developments in the country and will end the program if it violates the principles of a free media, a senior aide said Sunday.
"He's very troubled by it" and has asked Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld to look into the pay-to-print program, national security adviser Stephen Hadley said.
That's because he had ordered that all the unfriendly press operations in Iraq be bombed.

Digby: Addressing The Legion

Watching these mini Nuremberg rallies with the president, and now the vice-president, using the troops to make political points I'm uncomfortably reminded that going back to Rome (and probably earlier) the point of having the troops assembled before the leadership was to make it clear that the military backed the leadership against all comers. Today this is slightly more subtly accomplished, but the motivation is the same. It is shamelessly done not just to convey the point that the military will follow the orders of the administration (which it is constitutionally required to do) but that it also politically backs the administration against its critics. These are political speeches done for the purpose of answering political critics.

Digby: Nation Building

I was only half listening a minute ago as NBC's Jim Meceda in Bagdad was describing how a woman was stripped and tortured and then taken to Abu Ghraib and terribly abused. I turned quickly to see who this latest person was who had come forward to accuse the US of inhumane treatment --- only to find that it was a witness testifying at Saddam's trial. Wow.

Until the past two years I never would have made that assumption, never, even though I'm quite aware of all the nasty things we've done around the world over the years, including My Lai. But when you read things like this, it's natural to assume that any news of torture, Abu Ghraib etc. are reports of US behavior.

Digby: Aggrieved Conservatives

I have hesitated to link to Rick Perlstein's Princeton speech, published here on Huffington Post, because he makes a very kind statement about me in it, and I sound like I'm tooting my own horn by posting about it. But, I decided to post about it anyway, because what he says is so important for people to understand: Republican intellectuals like to promote themselves as the party of Goldwater the principled conservative and Reagan the optimistic conservative, but they are actually the party of Richard Nixon, the aggrieved conservative. Their penchant for secrecy, their disdain for democratic processes, their lawless political tactics and their belief that might makes right are best understood by looking at them in that light.

Digby: Moral Foundations

I see that Senator Lieberman is concerned about partisanship poisoning the atmosphere in Washington and he has some stern words for Democrats who insist on criticizing the president.
"It's time for Democrats who distrust President Bush to acknowledge he'll be commander-in-chief for three more years. We undermine the president's credibility at our nation's peril."
For instance he really hates it when Democrats say things like this:
After much reflection, my feelings of disappointment and anger have not dissipated, except now these feelings have gone beyond my personal dismay to a larger, graver sense of loss for our country, a reckoning of the damage that the president's conduct has done to the proud legacy of his presidency and, ultimately, an accounting of the impact of his actions on our democracy and its moral foundations.

Digby: Desperate

Atrios has a post up this morning about Mel Gibson the holocaust denier. If the California Republican Party has its way, it could soon be Governor Mel Gibson, the holocaust denier:
With segments of Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's political base rising in revolt, directors of the California Republican Party have demanded a private meeting with the governor to complain about the hiring of a Democratic operative as his chief of staff.

Cursor's Media Patrol - 12/07/05

El-Masri v. Tenet As the ACLU files a lawsuit on behalf of a German man, challenging the CIA's practice of "extraordinary rendition," the New York Times reports that "it would be hard to imagine a more sudden and thorough tarnishing of the Bush administration's credibility than the one taking place [in Europe] right now."

In 'The New Rules of Engagement,' Time's Baghdad bureau chief Michael Ware, who last week challenged assertions made by Bush, reports on the rifts between Iraqi insurgent groups and al-Qaeda in Iraq. And as part of a series on 'Iraqi poster wars,' BAGnewsNotes wonders if the U.S. is 'Behind the Allawi banner?'

As a presidential speech touts progress in rebuilding Iraq, Congress is reportedly showing interest in what the administration did -- and didn't -- do with "prewar analysis that was correct in forecasting the post-Saddam chaos that currently engulfs the country."

Tuesday's double suicide attack at a Baghdad police academy is said to reveal that "insurgents have infiltrated the deepest levels of the Iraqi forces, a danger that has bedeviled the American enterprise from the start."

'Agent Buzz' Defense Tech sifts evidence suggesting that "insurgents in Iraq could very well have chemical weapons. And they may be using them -- on themselves."

Editor & Publisher questions how "misreporting up the chain of command" led to the U.S. military misleading "the media and the families of ten Marines."

A public television producer says that Fox News and "many American newspapers" appear to be following the same rules he once observed in writing supermarket tabloid stories, such as "Rabid Nun Infects Entire Convent."

After FAIR found C-SPAN's "Washington Journal" to be 'failing' at its "No. 1 Goal," Media Matters asked: 'Why is C-SPAN hosting Brent Bozell?' And the Wall Street Journal's Paul Gigot signs off from PBS, praising Kenneth Tomlinson for "defending the importance of balance and diversity on public television."

Diebold insider alleges company plagued by technical woes, Diebold defends 'sterling' record

Miriam Raftery
In an exclusive interview with RAW STORY, a whistleblower from electronic voting heavyweight Diebold Election Systems Inc. raised grave concerns about the company’s electronic voting technology and of electronic voting in general, bemoaning an electoral system the insider feels has been compromised by corporate privatization.

The Diebold insider, who took on the appellation “Dieb-Throat” in an interview with voting rights advocate Brad Friedman (BradBlog.com), was once a staunch supporter of electronic voting’s potential to produce more accurate results than punch cards.

Patron saints of right wing think tanks acquire Georgia Pacific Corp

Oil barons Charles and David Koch, two of the nation's worst environmental criminals, now control the country's largest privately held company

In a move that does not bode well for the nation's forests, last month the Koch brothers of Kansas engineered a $13.2 billion buyout of forest products producer Georgia Pacific Corporation, making Koch Industries the nation's largest privately held company.

The Kochs are smart, focused, and incredibly wealthy. For years they've been pushing both a libertarian and free-market agenda through tens of millions of dollars in contributions to conservative causes, candidates and organizations.

Cursor's Media Patrol - 12/06/05

As it's said that 'Rice Miscasts Policy on Torture,' offering 'A Weak Defense,' current and former CIA officers tell ABC News that "Two CIA secret prisons were operating in Eastern Europe until last month," and the U.S. "scrambled to get all the suspects off European soil before Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived there."

Sen. John Kerry called for Rumsfeld to be fired, following a speech in which the defense secretary said that "To be responsible ... one needs to stop defining success in Iraq as the absence of terrorist attacks."

"Nowhere in Bush's Plan for Victory speech was there mention of undermining the efforts by American troops to win the hearts and minds of Iraqis by using phony news and paycheck journalism," writes a Kansas City Star columnist. "Naturally the White House is shocked — shocked!" As was Christopher Hitchens.

Amid threats of a challenge in Connecticut and resurfacing rumors of cabinet courtship, the WSWS wonders, 'What is troubling Joe Lieberman?'

As a 'Texas Judge Lets Stand 2 of 3 Charges' against Rep. Tom DeLay, a new USA Today/CNN/Gallup poll of his home district finds DeLay losing to an unnamed Democrat. DeLay was seen rushing away from photographers outside a fundraiser attended by the 'Velcro veep.'

After the former 9/11 Commission handed out low grades in a final report card on the nation's efforts to prevent future terrorist attacks, 9/11 widow Kristen Breitweiser declared the panel's findings to be no surprise.

As Iran announces 'plans to build two more reactors,' Raw Story illustrates how a Jerusalem Post article trumpeted by the Drudge Report, "grossly sensationalizes" IAEA head Mohamed El-Baradei's comments about Iran's nuclear capabilities.

A University of Kansas professor says he suffered a roadside beating by two men, who made reference to his canceled course "describing intelligent design as mythology."

"Even the most godless among us has to tremble before the biblical scale of the past twelve months' headlines," writes Matt Taibbi, "the tsunami that swallowed south Asia ... Katrina (also known as America Not Immune) and now this."

Cursor's Media Patrol - 12/05/05

"The U.S. does not permit, tolerate or condone torture," said Secretary of State Rice, before departing for Europe where she 'faces growing anger,' following a Washington Post article on an "erroneous rendition" and Der Speigel's report on CIA planes passing through German airspace. Earlier: 'The Hunt for Hercules N8183J.'

The head of Project Censored says that military autopsy reports released by the ACLU, "provide indisputable proof that detainees are being tortured to death while in US military custody. Yet the US corporate media are covering it with the seriousness of a garage sale for the local Baptist Church."

A former prime minister met with a rude reception on a campaign swing in Najaf, although "perhaps no one has more enemies than Sunni Arab politicians" in Iraq.

As the Washington Post reports on "the difficulty that the Democratic foreign-policy elite has in coming together around a crisp alternative" to Bush's Iraq policy, Alexander Cockburn discloses "the Republicans' only source of comfort" after Rep. Murtha's stance signals "mutiny in the U.S. senior officer corps."

While the FBI is said to have "reopened an inquiry" into the forged Niger documents, the Senate Intelligence Committee's Phase II investigation into pre-war intelligence, is reportedly "still facing opposition from administration officials and has seen little action from the committee's chairman."

Rich also cites Jonathan Landay's article, "Lack of Hard Evidence of Iraqi Weapons Worries Top U.S. Officials," published on Sept. 6, 2002. Two days later, when Bush administration officials blanketed the airwaves, the article wasn't mentioned on "Meet the Press" or on CNN's "Late Edition."

"Things really aren't that good" in a 'Joyless Economy,' argues Paul Krugman, while Paul Craig Roberts unpacks the "glitter" in a jobs report, revealing 'an economy driven by debt.'

Ohio Bill Would Restrict Elections Officer


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Ohio's chief elections officer would no longer be able to hold two jobs seemingly at odds - counting votes and backing candidates - under changes to an election-reform bill made public Monday.

In a jab at GOP Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell, who was an honorary vice chairman in the Bush-Cheney campaign last year, some fellow Republicans want to prohibit such dual responsibilities in the future.

The proposal also prohibits the secretary of state from taking an active role on a ballot issue, although it would not affect issues already in the pipeline.

FEMA Official: Katrina Response 'Broken'

By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer Tue Dec 6, 7:01 PM ET

WASHINGTON - Facing a growing body count and shortages of food, water and ice, federal emergency officials braced for riots in Mississippi in the days following Hurricane Katrina, new documents reveal.

Federal Emergency Management Agency officials knew their response system had been shattered by the Aug. 29 storm and were unable to provide fast help — even when the needs were obvious.

"This is unlike what we have seen before," William Carwile, FEMA's former top responder in Mississippi, said in a Sept. 1 e-mail to officials at the agency's headquarters. He was describing difficulties in getting body bags and refrigerated trucks to Hancock County, Miss., which was badly damaged by the storm.

Months of Terror for Man Held by 'Mistake'

By Jeremy Armstrong

A FATHER of four said yesterday he was held for nearly five months because he had a similar name to a terror suspect.

Khaled el Masri, 41 - Lebanese born but a German national for 10 years - was taken prisoner on holiday in Macedonia on December 31 2003.

He was held there 23 days and told to confess he was an al-Qaeda terrorist.

He said: "I heard the door being closed and then they beat me from all sides with hands and feet.

"With knives or scissors they took away my clothes in silence ... They stripped me naked. I was terrified.

Ford exec who brokered secret deal with gay-haters caught leading the charge for Bush's extreme right Supreme Court nominees out of his Ford office

by John in DC - 12/06/2005 02:08:00 PM

So, Ford embraces anti-gay bigotry. And the two Ford execs who negotiated the anti-gay secret deal with the gay-hating extremist groups, Ziad Ojakli and David Leitch, are actually former top officials in the Bush White House. And now we find out, below, that one of those same top Bush/Ford officials is also running secret meetings out of Ford's own offices in support of Bush's far-right Supreme Court nominees.

Putting aside the question of who this Ford employee actually works for, Ford or the White House, is anyone seeing a larger pattern here?

Attytood: Abramoff law firm has a new scandal -- in Philly

Greenberg Traurig is a South Florida-based law firm that few people outside of its region had heard of some 10 years ago. Since 1997, according to its own Web site, Greenberg Traurig has quadrupled from eight office and 325 lawyers to 32 sites with 1,500 attorneys.

The firm also became a lot more political. In 2000, it played a key role in aiding George W. Bush become president in the Florida recount. The next year, it decided to ramp up its lobbying shop in D.C. by hiring Republican insider Jack Abramoff, triggering a series of events that is threatening to topple the GOP establishment in Washington.

Now, another hire from that time period is coming back to haunt the firm -- and it happened right here in Philly. That hire's name is Leonard Ross, and he was Major John Street's ex-law partner and close friend. Greenberg Traurig hailed the hiring of Ross in a news release on April 3, 2000, and it left little question why he was brought in.

Military Misleads Press, Families, About How 10 Marines Died Last Week in Iraq

By E&P Staff
Published: December 06, 2005 10:00 PM ET

NEW YORK Why did the U.S. military mislead the media and the families of ten Marines killed near the Iraqi city of Falluja while "on patrol" last week about how they were killed? The military announced on Tuesday that it actually happened at a "promotion" ceremony and they were not on foot patrol as initially reported.

Families of the victims immediately raised questions about the incident and it was unclear whether the site had been properly swept for explosive devices.

Sources Tell ABC News Top Al Qaeda Figures Held in Secret CIA Prisons

10 out of 11 High-Value Terror Leaders Subjected to 'Enhanced Interrogation Techniques'

By BRIAN ROSS and RICHARD ESPOSITO

Dec. 5, 2005 — Two CIA secret prisons were operating in Eastern Europe until last month when they were shut down following Human Rights Watch reports of their existence in Poland and Romania.

Current and former CIA officers speaking to ABC News on the condition of confidentiality say the United States scrambled to get all the suspects off European soil before Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived there today. The officers say 11 top al Qaeda suspects have now been moved to a new CIA facility in the North African desert.

Carrying the 'White Man's Burden' in Iraq

By Joshua Holland, AlterNet. Posted December 7, 2005.

One of the many rarely spoken reasons why conservatives in Washington won't let us leave Iraq is the old notion of civilizing a primitive nation.

Last week, on the precious real estate of the right's flagship, the Wall Street Journal editorial page, Iraq war-hawk Sen. Joe Lieberman (D?-CT) let slip another unspoken reason why we remain in Iraq more than two and a half years after achieving our stated goal of "disarming" Saddam Hussein.

Lieberman wrote that the Iraqis are on the brink of transitioning "from the primitive, killing tyranny of Saddam to modern, self-governing, self-securing nationhood." That is, "unless the great American military that has given them and us this unexpected opportunity is prematurely withdrawn."

Chemical used in food containers disrupts brain development

Bisphenol A (BPA) has been linked to damage in developing brain tissue

The chemical bisphenol A (BPA), widely used in products such as food cans, milk container linings, water pipes and even dental sealants, has now been found to disrupt important effects of estrogen in the developing brain.

A University of Cincinnati (UC) research team, headed by Scott Belcher, PhD, reports in two articles in the December 2005 edition of the journal Endocrinology that BPA shows negative effects in brain tissue "at surprisingly low doses."

The research was supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health and the Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation.

Warming could free far more carbon from high Arctic soil than earlier thought

Scientists studying the effects of carbon on climate warming are very likely underestimating, by a vast amount, how much soil carbon is available in the high Arctic to be released into the atmosphere, new University of Washington research shows.

A three-year study of soils in northwest Greenland found that a key previous study greatly underestimated the organic carbon stored in the soil. That's because the earlier work generally looked only at the top 10 inches of soil, said Jennifer Horwath, a UW doctoral student in Earth and space sciences.

American dream, in peril, is successfully pursued through state programs

Landmark study finds state "asset building" policies hold key to reducing poverty in America

Working hard and being employed may no longer be enough to ward off poverty, according to a study released today by the Sodexho Foundation and Brandeis University's Institute on Assets and Social Policy. The study finds that the U.S. has a large contingency of working poor who do not have sufficient resources to support their families at a minimum economic standard.

The future might be more promising, however. The study shows that new state policies are enabling more low-income households to move from poverty to the middle class by rewarding work effort, enhancing job-related earnings and providing ways to encourage the accumulation of assets such as savings and home ownership.

06 December 2005

Closer look at Pentagon logs finds masked political requests from Republican Senate staffers

Ron Brynaert

A closer examination of documents released by the Pentagon which log all requests filed under the Freedom of Information Act shows that various individuals connected to the Republican party -- including at least five former staff members for the National Republican Senatorial Committee -- filed requests on Democratic congressmembers without identifying their employer.

Democrats, on the other hand, were more likely to state their affiliation: the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee made eight requests of the Pentagon by name since 2000 as RAW STORY reported last week.

Charlie's Diary: Conspiracy Theories

<>I generally try to avoid getting political in this blog, because (being a mercenary sort) I'm not inclined to piss off one sector or another of my audience and potential customer base. (Hey, you can read, can't you?) But I think I can safely admit to a certain degree of fascination with the policy train-wreck currently unfolding on the other side of the Atlantic (and, to a lesser extent, in London).

It is, perhaps, more important to study the political circumstances that made the Iraq war possible than to consider the war itself. At this point there's relatively little wiggle room in Iraq; it's more than two years since the invasion and it's doubtful that any new directions in western foreign policy can make much difference to the eventual outcome -- too much water (and blood) has flowed under the bridges on the Tigris and Euphrates. The big questions we ought to be worrying about are: how did we get into this mess, and more importantly, how do we avoid getting into similar messes in future?

Across the Great Divide: Something Stinks, Mr. Smith

Instead of just listening to someone talk to you all the time... you have songs and cartoons and you get to watch movies and read things which makes it seem like I’m not learning but I really am!"

- 8th grade Social Studies student, praising Ignite!Learning's The COW

My theory is that few Texas pols are actual crooks, they just have an overdeveloped sense of the extenuating circumstance.
Molly Ivins

The same might be said of certain Texas businessmen.

Back in 1990, brother Neil and Silverado Savings and Loan were the first whiff of Bush family scandal that reached a wide general public. Since paying his fine and being banned from banking, Neil has been further off the radar than Roger Clinton.

Since then, it appears, Neil has more in common with Billy Carter, who went from managing the family peanut warehouse to engaging in international lobbying.