By LAURIE KELLMAN, Associated Press WriterIt's good to see that a voice of experience understands what is going on here. If the Senate doesn't want to censure the President fine. However, I think it is necessary that Congress ensure that the balance of power remains.
WASHINGTON - Nixon White House counselor John Dean asserted Friday that President Bush's domestic spying exceeds the wrongdoing that toppled his former boss from power, and Sen. Orrin Hatch (news, bio, voting record) snapped that Democrats were trying to "score political points" with a motion to censure Bush.
"Had the Senate or House, or both, censured or somehow warned Richard Nixon, the tragedy of Watergate might have been prevented," Dean told the Senate Judiciary Committee. "Hopefully the Senate will not sit by while even more serious abuses unfold before it."
Testifying to a Senate committee on Wisconsin Democratic Sen. Russell Feingold's resolution to censure Bush, Dean said the president "needs to be told he cannot simply ignore a law with no consequences."...
"To me, this is not really and should not be a partisan question," Dean told the panel. "I think it's a question of institutional pride of this body, of the Congress of the United States."
The blog is founded on the belief that even in this era of polarized politics the truth actually is somewhere in the middle and those of us that live there have to fight to have the truth heard.
Friday, March 31, 2006
John Dean Blasts Warrantless Eavesdropping
Thursday, March 23, 2006
Consumer Group challenges constitutionality of bill
Consumer Group Challenges Deficit Law
Sorry, no text. It's late and your mouse works so go ahead and click the link.
It's official! The Dems don't have all the nuts...
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Republican Senate candidate Stephen Laffey once told a newspaper columnist that God wanted him to run for mayor of Cranston.
He spent $2,000 to soundproof his mayoral office because of fears people were eavesdropping.
And when journalists noticed he had digitally erased a former friend from photographs on his campaign Web site, he suggested aliens were to blame.(Full text)
1,889 days and no vetoes: Bush gaining on Jefferson
By Richard Benedetto, USA TODAY Thu Mar 23, 7:02 AM ETCome on George let's set a record!
President Bush Thursday becomes the longest-sitting president since Thomas Jefferson not to exercise his veto, surpassing James Monroe.
Monroe was in office 1,888 days before he vetoed his first bill on May 4, 1822, a measure to impose a toll on the first federal highway. Jefferson never exercised his veto during two terms in 1801-09.
Thursday is Bush's 1,889th day in office, and no veto is in sight. As of Wednesday, Congress had sent him 1,091 bills. He signed them all.
Bush came close to a veto last month when Congress threatened to block a deal to turn over operations at ports in six states to a company owned by the Arab emirate of Dubai. He threatened a veto, but he avoided a showdown when the Dubai company decided to sell that part of its business to American interests.
"After that, we're not likely to hear a veto threat from him that much again," says G. Calvin Mackenzie, government professor at Maine's Colby College.
Some analysts say Bush's failure to use his veto shows an unwillingness to confront fellow Republicans who control Congress. "He doesn't want to fight battles unnecessarily and create a distance between himself and his party," says Mark Rozell, a George Mason University political scientist who has studied presidential vetoes.
Others say Bush's avoidance of the veto is a sign of strength. "Bush and his party are so close on most issues that there's no need to veto," Mackenzie says.
Rep. Rahm Emanuel (news, bio, voting record), D-Ill., scoffs at that: "This is a rubber-stamp Congress. Why would he veto anything?"
Still others say it is a matter of Bush's management style. "He's a CEO kind of guy. He gives his orders, delegates the negotiating to others and is willing to live with the outcome," says Robert McClure, a political scientist at Syracuse University's Maxwell School.
Bush has used veto threats to shape bills more to his liking. For example, the House wanted $370 billion for last year's highway bill; the Senate, $318 billion. Bush drew the line at $256 billion, then compromised at $286.4 billion, more than he wanted but far below the House and Senate levels.
Bush said Tuesday that the veto threat has helped him reduce the rate of domestic spending: "One reason why I haven't vetoed any appropriation bills is because they met the benchmarks we've set."
BTW, are you allowed to pat yourself on the back for meeting benchmarks when you have a single discretionary spending project, which is quickly bordering on long term, that is now in the neighborhood of $280 billion?
Tuesday, March 14, 2006
We the Morons
Monday, March 13, 2006
US Government urges Congress to raise debt limit
WASHINGTON (AFP) - The US government appealed to Congress to raise the national debt limit by the end of this week or face a potential shutdown of federal operations for lack of cash.So, what happens if the debt limit isn't raised? All non-essential federal government operations will have to shut down. So, no Social Security, no HUD, you get the picture.
"It's really the week this must be done because the Congress will be out of session at the end of this week," Treasury spokesman Tony Fratto told reporters.
Treasury Secretary
John Snow has issued increasingly urgent warnings to Congress that the statutory debt limit of 8.184 trillion dollars is fast-approaching, and that the government will then lose its borrowing power.
Last week, Snow said new issues of federal debt instruments would only raise enough cash to keep government operations financed until mid-March.
"I must advise you that the Treasury has now taken all prudent and legal actions to avoid reaching the statutory debt limit," Snow wrote in a letter to senior Republican and Democratic members of Congress.
"I therefore strongly urge Congress to pass a debt limit increase immediately."(full text by clicking title)
Just how out of control is this? The U.S. Federal Debt was around $5.5 trillion in 1997 and remained virtually unchanged through September of 2001.(Source) Then we went on an unprecedented spending spree while at the same time cutting taxes. For a little more perspective the Federal debt increased $3.1 trillion from 1980 - 1992. It has increased more than that in the last 5 years, going from $5.6 trillion to $8.8+ trillion.
Yes, there is some evidence here that it has to do with the party in control of the White House but it goes deeper than that. We as citizens have to call on our leaders to have a plan. Currently the plan is cut taxes and hope that the economy goes through the roof to pay the bills. Sounds nice. However, you can't spend money like a drunken sailor in the process. (No offense meant to our fine men and women in the U.S. Navy.) You have a chance to speak in November.
George Clooney: I am a Liberal. There, I said it.
From The Huffington Post.com
I am a liberal. And I make no apologies for it. Hell, I'm proud of it.
Too many people run away from the label. They whisper it like you'd whisper "I'm a Nazi." Like it's dirty word. But turn away from saying "I'm a liberal" and it's like you're turning away from saying that blacks should be allowed to sit in the front of the bus, that women should be able to vote and get paid the same as a man, that McCarthy was wrong, that Vietnam was a mistake.
And that Saddam Hussein had no ties to al-Qaeda and had nothing to do with 9/11.
This is an incredibly polarized time (wonder how that happened?). But I find that, more and more, people are trying to find things we can agree on. And, for me, one of the things we absolutely need to agree on is the idea that we're all allowed to question authority. We have to agree that it's not unpatriotic to hold our leaders accountable and to speak out.
That's one of the things that drew me to making a film about Murrow. When you hear Murrow say, "We mustn't confuse dissent with disloyalty" and "We can't defend freedom at home by deserting it at home," it's like he's commenting on today's headlines.
The fear of been criticized can be paralyzing. Just look at the way so many Democrats caved in the run up to the war. In 2003, a lot of us were saying, where is the link between Saddam and bin Laden? What does Iraq have to do with 9/11? We knew it was bullshit. Which is why it drives me crazy to hear all these Democrats saying, "We were misled." It makes me want to shout, "Fuck you, you weren't misled. You were afraid of being called unpatriotic."
Bottom line: it's not merely our right to question our government, it's our duty. Whatever the consequences. We can't demand freedom of speech then turn around and say, But please don't say bad things about us. You gotta be a grown up and take your hits.
I am a liberal. Fire away.
Wednesday, March 08, 2006
House to see if Bush can find his pen
Bush Faces GOP Effort to Stop Ports Deal By LIZ SIDOTI, Associated Press WriterBrilliant! I am sure that some folks at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue just had a coniption. It is about time that Congress, especially the Republicans, started acting like they have a spine and not a rubber stamp committee.
WASHINGTON - His presidency already at a low point,President Bush now faces a GOP move in Congress to stop a plan he steadfastly supports: a Dubai-owned company's entry into U.S. port operations.
House Republicans have united around legislation that would block DP World from taking over significant management of terminals at six U.S. ports, ignoring a veto threat from the president.
"We are going to send a very clear signal that we want to have American interests secured by leaders in America," said Rep. Jerry Lewis (news, bio, voting record), R-Calif.
His House Appropriations Committee planned to attach the legislation Wednesday to a $91 billion measure for states recovering from Hurricane Katrina and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Offering few specifics, Lewis said only that his legislation would not single out any one country or company but would effectively prevent DP World from operating U.S. port terminals.Full text
For the record, I am opposed to any foreign government having control of US ports etc. I am not saying Nissan shouldn't own land in Tennessee to make trucks. I am saying Japan shouldn't own the Nashville airport. There is a huge difference. Think of it this way: Imagine the backlash in Dubai if it were announced that the United States government would now be solely in charge of their airports.
Monday, March 06, 2006
Save Yourself for Kinky!
Is Texas ready for Governor Kinky?Amen to that!
By John Whitesides, Political Correspondent Mon Mar 6
HOUSTON (Reuters) - The line of well-dressed young executives stretches down a hallway, past a table of Kinky Friedman talking action figures and straight up to the candidate for Texas governor in the black cowboy hat.
"I'll sign anything," country singer and mystery novelist Kinky Friedman assures the crowd arriving for a downtown luncheon speech as they snap up Kinky T-shirts, bumper stickers and posters sold to finance his independent -- and decidedly nontraditional -- bid for governor.
With a blizzard of one-liners, a campaign slogan of "Why the Hell Not?" and an eclectic blend of policy ideas from all sides of the ideological divide, the former frontman for the band Kinky Friedman and the Texas Jewboys says he wants to "change the world one governor at a time."
Friedman hopes to tap voter frustration with Republican Gov. Rick Perry, Texas Democrats and politics in general to become the latest celebrity governor, following wrestler Jesse Ventura in Minnesota and actor
Arnold Schwarzenegger in California....
"I just want Texas to be number one in something other than executions, toll roads and property taxes," Friedman says. But if he loses he promises to ditch Texas and head to Hawaii.
"If I lose this race I will retire in a petulant snit," he said. "I'm not going to go out gracefully, I promise you."Full Text
Wednesday, March 01, 2006
At 75, Gorbachev Laments U.S. 'Arrogance'
From the Seattle Post Intelligencer:
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
MOSCOW - Mikhail Gorbachev's magnetic brown eyes shine as brightly as ever, and he speaks with the same passion about the collapse of the Soviet Union as he prepares to mark his 75th birthday on Thursday.
The man who ended the Cold War and launched democratic reforms that broke the repressive Soviet regime continues to enjoy the limelight, globe-trotting on behalf of his political foundation and environmental group and taking part in charity projects.
At a meeting with foreign reporters this week, Gorbachev blamed the United States for losing a chance to build a safer and more stable world following the Soviet demise.
"Ending the Cold War was given as a gift" to the United States, but it only strengthened its arrogance and unilateralism, he said. "The winner's complex is worse than an inferiority complex, because it's harder to cure."
While praised worldwide, Gorbachev has been reviled at home, where a majority of Russians hold him responsible for the Soviet breakup and subsequent economic chaos that impoverished millions.
He won a mere 1 percent of the vote in the 1996 presidential election; he hasn't run since.
Many still accuse him of caving in to the West. Anatoly Utkin, a senior researcher with the U.S. and Canada Institute, chastised Gorbachev for drastically cutting Soviet nuclear arsenals and agreeing to Germany's reunification without getting anything in return.
"Gorbachev didn't know the West. And the West didn't trust the nobility of his motives and coldly used him," Utkin said in a column in the weekly Argumenty i Fakty.
Gorbachev's record as a man who gave freedom to his land also was tarnished by some darker pages.
One was his handling of the 1986 reactor explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear plant, which the Soviet leadership announced to the world only after scientists in Sweden detected a radioactive fallout.
Gorbachev insisted the Kremlin just didn't know the scope of the disaster, but many claim the Soviet leadership deliberately downplayed its gravity.
He is also blamed for a Soviet troop crackdown on demonstrators in Lithuania in 1991 that killed 14 and injured nearly 1,000.
Gorbachev said the troops were sent against the protesters in Vilnius on a secret KGB order of which he was unaware - a claim his foes shrugged off as improbable.
Gorbachev still bristles when he talks about the betrayal by his communist lieutenants who launched the August 1991 coup that briefly ousted him. The coup collapsed within days, encouraging the Soviet republics to declare independence and shattering Gorbachev's hopes of keeping them together in a looser federation.
Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin, who celebrated his 75th birthday in February, recently accused Gorbachev of having advance knowledge of the coup and waiting it out to see who would win.
"Yeltsin is a liar," Gorbachev snapped, rejecting the allegation as "sheer nonsense."
Looking back at the turmoil that preceded his resignation, Gorbachev says he has never regretted his refusal to turn to military force to prevent the Soviet collapse. He said that sometimes his "hands were itching" to use force, but he realized that could have led to a civil war and even a global nuclear conflict.
Gorbachev said this week that while he could have ended Yeltsin's political career easily by dispatching him as ambassador to a distant country, he didn't do so because such a move would compromise his principles.
Yeltsin humiliated Gorbachev by giving him just a few hours to clear out of the presidential office after he signed the Soviet Union out of existence on Dec. 25, 1991. He never invited him to the Kremlin afterward.
Gorbachev's relations with the Kremlin have seen a marked improvement under Vladimir Putin, whom he has praised repeatedly for ending the political chaos and economic decline of Yeltsin's era.
Despite his age, Gorbachev seems as lively and energetic as before, giving the impression of genuinely enjoying life. "I like good dishes from all over the world. I have tasted them all and I still can't name a favorite," he said.
He rarely touches a fiction book, but reads a lot of history, philosophy and political science.
"I also watch a lot of movies, mostly on TV. I have gotten sick of (American) blockbusters and love Russian movies," he said.