Politics

  • No one ever called the NRA “sensitive”

    NRA goes ahead with Tucson rally days after shootings at nursing school

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  • No, it’s not an Onion story

    Albanian and Russian Observers Sent to Monitor American Elections

    (specifically in Florida)

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  • Follow up to “he’s lying”

    Here’s a followup to my earlier post about Bush’s uncomfortable relationship with the truth. Eleanor Clift, columnist and wife of James‘s old companion on the college newspaper, Tom Brazaitis, has a column on MSNBC: Not the Un-Clinton After All.

    Yet the myth of Bush as a bipartisan president who operates above the fray is relentlessly promoted by Bush and his minions. Just this week on the campaign trail, Bush took credit for a huge increase in education funding. Yet he has cut funding below what it was last year, making a mockery of the “Leave No Child Behind” education bill he signed last year with Sen. Ted Kennedy’s blessing. Bush uses words and rhetoric to create an image quite different from reality, a tactic that would normally invite condemnation from both the media and political foes.

    But it’s not true that Bush is a man of his word. He has shimmied and shifted in lots of areas, including Iraq, manipulating language the way Clinton did and exaggerating in the same way that he once pilloried Gore for doing. Bush says “regime change” doesn’t have to mean deposing Saddam Hussein—that the regime would be changed if Saddam disarmed. This is rhetoric worthy of Clinton, and it doesn’t mean that Bush has altered fundamentally his commitment to displace Saddam through military force.

    Even though there is no credible evidence linking the Iraqi president to the 9-11 attacks, Bush persists in suggesting on the campaign trail that Saddam might use Al Qaeda as his “forward army.” Polls show that two thirds of Americans believe Saddam was behind 9-11, a useful myth irresponsibly fed by Bush. The president said in a speech last month that Saddam is experimenting with unmanned drones capable of reaching the United States with weapons of mass destruction. When confronted with the geographical improbability of such a feat, a White House spokesman countered that the drones could be launched from ships. Unless Iraq has an aircraft carrier we don’t know about, that scenario is equally implausible.

    Compared with taking the country to war based on a body of lies, BushÂ’s duplicity on domestic issues doesnÂ’t seem as egregious, but the pattern is disturbing.

    There is hardly an issue where Bush hasnÂ’t pulled a fast one. The rules he announced with great fanfare this week to make it easier to move generic drugs onto the market were passed by the Senate in July. Bush opposed them then; now with polls showing voters think he hasnÂ’t done enough on domestic issues, heÂ’s flipped.
    How does he get away with such crass duplicity? The media doesnÂ’t want to disturb the story line. Gore was the prevaricator; Bush was intellectually challenged. So when Bush fiddles with the facts, the media doesnÂ’t see malevolence. They see a man whoÂ’s not articulate, who doesnÂ’t speak with lawyerly precision. And they canÂ’t believe how believable he is.

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  • I don’t miss my home state

    In an article on the fact that the wife of Arkansas’s governor, Mike Huckabee, is running for Secretary of State at the same time he is running for re-election against my close friend Jimmie Lou Fisher, we have a number of nice quotes. She (the wife) is so embarassing.

    Mr. Huckabee was already being accused of having pretensions to royalty. For example, he accepted $23,000 in clothing and gift certificates from Jennings Osborne, a wealthy supporter and appointee, in 2000 alone, then sued to block the state ethics commission from investigating such gifts.

    But his wife’s campaign difficulties have added to the governor’s burden. Her insistence on her own 24-hour state police detail, her crisscrossing the state to campaign events in a giant trooper-driven Ford Excursion provided by the state and her travel in and out of Arkansas on the state airplane, both with and without her husband, for reasons the governor’s office refuses to disclose all produced a month’s worth of bad press for both Huckabees at the start of the fall campaign.

    Mrs. Huckabee remains indignant, writing off her detractors as either mistaken about her or mean-spirited. “I’d be lying if I said it didn’t bother me,” she said in an interview. “If it wasn’t for the grace of God, I’d have shot a few people already.”

    “Jesus wasn’t liked, either,” she added. “And Jesus was mistreated, and called names.”

    Democrats say Mrs. Huckabee has shown a mean streak of her own, particularly in her only televised debate with Mr. Daniels, on Oct. 16. There, she raised the subject of Mr. Daniels’s drunken-driving convictions in 1983 and 1990, the more recent offense in a state vehicle; attacked him for putting his wife and daughter on the state payroll; and said he had not come up with “an original idea the whole campaign.”

    Mr. Daniels’s driving-while-intoxicated record was well known, and he apologized again for it. But Mrs. Huckabee maintains that he would be a bad role model for Arkansas youths. “He says his problem with alcohol was 12 years ago, and I know that’s not true,” she said this week. “I’ve had personal experience with it, but I haven’t brought that out. He could hardly stand up at the governor’s gala last Christmas.”

    She has a daredevil streak. As a youngster, she crossed the Arkansas River on a pipeline in the black of night. As first lady, she has gone bungee jumping, and even skydiving — albeit strapped to an Army paratrooper.

    Well, maybe I miss it a little. You have to read her statements in the proper accent. Also, where do I sign up to get strapped to an Army paratrooper?

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  • Attacks on girls’ schools in Afghanistan

    The NY Times has a followup article on the story I posted yesterday. The latest attack was 30 miles from the capital. Don’t tell me we’ve “secured” the country.

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  • Our war in Afghanistan

    I’m tired of listening to people talking about how we bombed Afghanistan because of our more enlightened view of women. Most of the government isn’t in favor of women’s rights — being only slightly to the left of the Taliban on that issue.

    We’re not interested in putting enough resources into the country to stabilize it, only enough to get started working on an oil pipeline.

    Vandals, With Fire and Rockets, Attack 4 Afghan Girls’ Schools

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  • Great letter in Salon

    … by Christopher Dazey on media coverage of anti-war rallies. Here is a sample, but you should read the whole thing, plus the rest of the letters. As a group, they are one of the best discussions of the art of protest — including all of the fringe groups and seeming off-topic speakers that often drive us all crazy when we attend one.

    Michelle Goldberg’s disappointment with the protesters in Washington over their apparent lack of a coherent message is akin to a campaign manager saying that her candidate should “stay on message.” However, the protesters were not running for office, and the language of corrupt, corporate politics should not be applied to grassroots movements.

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  • Cheney disinvited to Wellstone’s Funeral

    Good for the Wellstone family! They have disinvited Dick Cheney from the memorial service, because they’re unhappy at the vociferous Republican attacks on Mondale even before he is a candidate. [Link via TBOGG]

    Newt Gingrich went on “Meet the Press’ to say that Mondale supported privatization of Social Security. Isn’t the GOP in favor of that? You would think he would be more careful about lying about something that could easily be investigated.

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  • Electronic voting

    Since we live in a third-world country, unlike Brazil, we don’t have electronic voting in our small towns. There is a good slashdot discussion on this here.

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  • Vote Green

    I see no reason to vote for Carl McCall in this election. Pataki, whom I despise as much as the next person, appears ready to win in a landslide. He has been endorsed by all of the major newspapers in the state, and the latest polls show that McCall might even get less votes than Golisano.

    So my advice: McCall’s going to lose big anyway, so vote for the Green candidate, Stanley Aronowitz. You’ll help keep the Green Party on the state ballot without them having to go through and expensive petition process.

    Aronowitz is a great candidate. He was a steelworker and union organizer, and he is currently Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Urban Education at the CUNY Graduate Center.

    Every endorsement of Pataki has talked about how dysfunctional Albany is, with most decisions made by just three people: Pataki, Sheldon Silver, and Joe Bruno. Why reward the two major parties by letting them continue to operate this way? 98% of state legislators are re-elected in each election.

    I’m very, very serious about this. We have watched the Democrats collapse in front of the Republicans over civil rights, drug laws, health care, tax cuts for the wealthy, and war. When you have a chance to vote for a Green, particularly when doing so doesn’t help a Republican, you must do it.

    Good coverage of NY Politics, including the poll numbers, can be found on PoliticsNY.com.

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