Thursday, August 31, 2006

Corker Hearts Bush


It's the look of love. Don't they look like they're about to kiss? Perhaps the kiss was a private affair.

At the Nashville fundraiser, where Bush collected 1.5 million dollars for Bob Corker and the Tennessee Republican Party at tax-payer's expense, Bush said Corker is his friend.


Bush said his millionaire friend is a "mainstream Tennessean." The Decider claimed that "Washington needs people like Corker... people who will ... support the Patriot Act," do as they're told and gaze at me worshipfully like Harriet Miers does.

Bob Corker can do that.

Cartoon via Hamdems
Bush & Corker Look of Love photo via Memphis Commercial Appeal

Related Posts: Nashville Protest: Sick and Tired of Bush in Tennessee
Corker Sued for Profiting Off Environmental Crime

Fox News Ratings Plummet


What can we say?

Plenty.

Republicans are losing in the polls, and Fox News is losing viewers, and we are drinking French champagne.

According to the Nielsen ratings, as compiled by TV Newser, Fox News Channel's total viewership dropped 7 percent from last August, and it's prime time audience is down 28 percent.

To those who say this is merely because Fox News viewers tend to be people who have no control over the remote because they are trapped inside Republican nursing homes, and many have died of late, how do you explain the following?

"CNN's ratings increased 35% in total and 21% in prime time as MSNBC moved up 26% and 6%."

Harold Ford - The Competent Right-Winger


Here's one of Ford's recent tv ads, via MyDD where Matt Stoller weighs in on the prospects of our famously illiberal Harold Ford, Democratic contender for the Frist senate seat. Stoller observes that the conservative Democrat is running "as a more competent right-winger."

He's running as a more competent right-winger, someone who wants to move beyond partisan politics to lower gas prices and increase the effectiveness and reach of the security state. Ford isn't and never claimed to be a progressive, and he's running in Tennessee, where there is a strong right-wing presence.

Based on our accountability memo, and other polling coming in that shows that voters are choosing between Iraq and terrorism, Ford is making the absolutely wrong strategic decision. When given a choice between a Republican and a fake Republican, they'll pick the real one every time. But then, Ford's not a progressive. I know Ford's supposedly gaining on his scandal-tarred opponent in the polls. We'll see what happens. My guess is that Ford's messaging will not work, but it's possible that Corker could simply self-destruct and Ford could look like an acceptable alternative.

Nashville Protest: Sick and Tired of Bush in Tennessee


Yesterday, some 400 protesters lined the street outside Loew's Vanderbilt Plaza Hotel in order to give the worst president ever a very rude welcome to Nashville.


Bush was in town to raise money for blind Bush follower and wannabe Republican Senator, Bob Corker.



Tax-payer's paid for Bush's campaign trip to Nashville.



Tax-payers pay for the War pResident's countless trips around the country -- which have no real purpose other than to raise millions of dollars for the Dark Side.



The Decider collected $1.5 million in Nashville.


Bush said Tennessee should elect Bob Corker -- "because he's not a lawyer." Corker's Democratic opponent, Harold Ford, is a lawyer. Presumably, only a Democrat could imagine that a knowlege of law is some kind of qualification for going to Washington to make laws.


The pResident famed for not possessing an intellect said Corker is a "mainstream Tennessean." Cause in this dirt poor state, millionaires are mainstream.


But wait, it gets better. . .



The pResident who said, "Brownie, you're doin' a heckuva job," said that Bill Frist is "one of the finest citizens your state has ever produced."



And they expect us to believe this man is reading actual books?



According to a recent poll, "just 36 percent of Tennesseans approve of Bush's job performance." In other words, we here in Tennessee are sick and tired of the miserable failure of a pResident. Just like the rest of the nation, we are ready for a Bushtemberfest Holiday.

Meanwhile, Bush and his blind followers are launching a campaign to brand their critics as people who "appease terrorists."

Just think, 36 percent of Tennesseans do not appease terrorists.



Note: The estimate of approximately 400 protesters was arrived at by two different people, myself and Joyce Arnold, editor and columnist at the Church Street Freedom Press. The local weekly LGBT paper will have a story on the protest asap.

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Frist Caught Lying on Medical License Application

Has Dr. Frist Been Practicing Medicine Without a License?

Will the Senate Majority Leader be forced to take the "M.D." sign off his Senate Majority Leader office door?

We knew Bill Frist was out of touch with his home state, but who knew the catkiller and long distance diagnoser was breaking the laws of Tennessee? Oh, we forgot, Frist is a Republican. Breaking laws is what Republicans do.

WASHINGTON - Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist acknowledged Tuesday that he may not have met all the requirements needed to keep his medical license active — even though he gave paperwork to Tennessee officials indicating that he had.

The state of Tennessee requires its licensed physicians to complete 40 hours of continuing medical education every two years. Frist, a heart-lung surgeon who is considering a 2008 presidential run, submitted a license renewal with the Tennessee Health Department stating he has fulfilled that requirement.

Responding Tuesday to repeated requests from The Associated Press, a Frist spokesman said the Republican senator may not have done his continuing education after all, and had contacted the Tennessee Board of Medical Examiners to see if corrective steps were necessary. . .

Frist recently took blood-pressure tests on Iowans during a visit to the state that holds the first presidential caucuses. He also keeps the letters "MD" next to his name on his Senate office door and has been known to keep a doctor's bag and lab coat on hand on the campaign trail or in his Capitol Hill office. . .

Dan Warlick, a Nashville lawyer who represents doctors in trouble with the Tennessee Board of Medical Examiners, said a case such as Frist's would likely be taken seriously.

"They have been routinely revoking licenses for physicians who have misrepresented to the board what they have done," Warlick said.

----

Join the Bush Protest in Nashville today - Doctor Frist will be there.

Thanks to William and Fred!

UPDATE: A spokeswoman for the Tennessee Department of Health says it is unlikely that Frist will have his medical license suspended, but likely that he will be fined $40 for every hour of continuing education he did not complete. That'll teach the filthy rich catkiller.

Protest Bush Visit to Nashville, Again


Bump -- The Bush Protest is today.

As we noted in a previous post, King George will be in Nashville again on August 30.

And, yes, the cat killer will be there.

The following details about the protest are from an email alert from the Nashville Peace and Justice Center:

PROTEST GEORGE BUSH’S VISIT TO NASHVILLE!

The protest will be held across the street from the Loews Vanderbilt Plaza Hotel, "as the guests arrive between 3:30 and 4:30, so we hope to greet Bush and his fat cats just as they come in. Those of us who must arrive later can stay for the 5:00 and 6 o’clock news broadcasts and give a rude welcome to departing guests around 7:00."

What they're saying:

Kleinheider at Volunteer Voters says asking people to give Bushie a rude welcome with a protest is "irresponsible" -- "This email is an incitement..." Kleinheider sounds shrill.

Bush Would Lose Debate With Iranian President


According to an online CNN poll, Iranian President Ahmadinejad would pummel Bushie in a televised debate.

But the two will never debate.

That's not because Bushie fears that the other President might be able to express complete thoughts, but rather it has to do with George W. Bushie's fear of losing status.

Just like high school drama queens, neocon males obsess about such things. Bushie is a high-status preppy who is hyperanxious about maintaining his spot in the hierarchy. And according to the code of high status males, talking to someone deemed to be beneath you will take you down a notch or two on the hallowed hierarchy ladder. And then it would just be so totally mortifying to show your poser face at the Heritage Foundation.

CNN Poll:

Who would win a debate on world issues between President Bush and Iranian President Ahmadinejad?

Bush 37% -- 40540 votes

Ahmadinejad 63% -- 68839 votes

Total: 109,379 votes

Via Real Clear Politics

Background story: Iran's leader calls for TV debate with Bush

From Macaca to White Supremacist Groups



Senator George "Macaca" Allen should start looking for a new career.

Today.

Maybe dog catcher. Allen's white supremacist past has caught up with him.

What is it with Republicans? Are they born foaming-at-the-mouth retarded and racist? Or, is it something about their environment?

The Nation reports:

Only a decade ago, as governor of Virginia, Allen personally initiated an association with the Council of Conservative Citizens, the successor organization to the segregationist White Citizens Council and among the largest white supremacist groups.

In 1996, when Governor Allen entered the Washington Hilton Hotel to attend the Conservative Political Action Conference, an annual gathering of conservative movement organizations, he strode to a booth at the entrance of the exhibition hall festooned with two large Confederate flags--a booth operated by the Council of Conservative Citizens (CCC), at the time a co-sponsor of CPAC. After speaking with CCC founder and former White Citizens Council organizer Gordon Lee Baum and two of his cohorts, Allen suggested that they pose for a photograph with then-National Rifle Association spokesman and actor Charlton Heston. The photo appeared in the Summer 1996 issue of the CCC's newsletter, the Citizens Informer.

According to Baum, Allen had not naively stumbled into a chance meeting with unfamiliar people. He knew exactly who and what the CCC was about and, from Baum's point of view, was engaged in a straightforward political transaction. "It helped us as much as it helped him," Baum told me. "We got our bona fides." And so did Allen.

Descended from the White Citizens' Councils that battled integration in the Jim Crow South, the CCC is designated a "hate group" by the Southern Poverty Law Center. In its "Statement of Principles," the CCC declares, "We also oppose all efforts to mix the races of mankind, to promote non-white races over the European-American people through so-called "affirmative action" and similar measures, to destroy or denigrate the European-American heritage, including the heritage of the Southern people, and to force the integration of the races."

...Former Reagan speechwriter and conservative pundit Peggy Noonan pithily declared that anyone involved with the CCC "does not deserve to be in a leadership position in America."

Asked whether Allen supports or deplores the CCC, John Reid, his communications director pleaded ignorance. "I am unaware of the group you mention or their agenda and because we have no record of the Senator having involvement with them I cannot offer you any opinion on them," Reid told me in an e-mail response.

Read the whole thing...

Related Posts: Sen. George Allen Sings Praises to Confederacy (video)
Speaking 'Shrilly' of George "Macaca" Allen and Gods and Generals

Universal Health Care and Incompetent Government


I used to have access to universal health care. As a Canadian immigrant, my family and I had the right to a number of universal pro family benefits, which included the best access to health care we have ever enjoyed. Consequently, the years I spent in Canada taught me that the Canadian Government cares about families.

A government that behaves as if it cares about families is not something that most Americans can even imagine.

Accessing health care in Canada was always a breeze and never a bureaucratic nightmare. As a resident of Tennessee, I consider myself to be an expert on bureaucratic nightmares. Want to renew or get a new driver's license in this state? Expect to stand in a line so long that you will be standing outside in the sweltering summer heat, sweating like a pig, for at least an hour. Once inside the packed and stuffy warehouse-like building, you can count on waiting a few hours more, and you will be lucky if after that wait you are not told to come back tomorrow and do it all over again. By the time you are done, you may need a doctor.

In the time it took me to help my teenager get her driver's license, I could have seen half a dozen Canadian doctors and had time left over to go on a shopping spree.

Obviously, the Tennessee State Government is not capable of managing a universal health care program. But maybe we could contract it out to Canada?

Or California?

The California Democratic Legislature is about to send Gov. Schwarzenegger a bill that would create a single-payer universal health care system. (California already has enough pro family programs in place to make the rest of the country look like a third world.) The Republican Governor has gone on record as opposed to a single-payer plan, but his office says he has "no official position" on this particular bill.

Will Schwarzenegger dare to veto universal health care with the election on the horizon?

Dave Chappelle once joked that if he were president, he'd give everybody fake Canadian IDs so we could all have access to excellent health care. As long as Republicans are in power, that seems like the best chance for this nation to get the same kind of universal access to health care that every other developed nation enjoys.

Or, we could move to Canada.

L-Girl over at We Move to Canada has posted an article I wrote a few years ago about my experience with the Canadian system. You can also find out at her cool blog all about why and how to move to Canada. And check out her post and the really interesting discussion about differences between Canada and the U.S.

Update: Surprise! The new U.S. Census Report [reveals that] the number of Americans without health insurance continues to rise at an alarming rate. .

Begat, Bothered, Bewildered


Bewildered Bush
by Maureen Dowd

Doing his stations of the Katrina cross, President Bush went for breakfast with Mayor Ray Nagin at Betsy’s Pancake House.

As Mr. Bush tried to squeeze past some tightly placed tables, a waitress, Joyce Labruzzo, teased him, saying, “Mr. President, are you going to turn your back on me?’’

“No ma’am,’’ he replied, with a laugh and a pause for effect. “Not again.”

It was a rare unguarded moment — showing that his towering Katrina failure is lodged somewhere in the front of his cerebral cortex — in a trip of staged, studiously happy settings, steering away from the wreckage of buildings and people so searing for anyone who loved the saucy and sauce-laden New Orleans of old.

W.’s anniversary contrition for the cameras was a more elaborate version of his famous Air Force One flyover a year ago, when he had to be shown a DVD of angry news coverage of apartheid suffering here before he belatedly and grudgingly broke off his five-week Crawford vacation.

In an interview on the Upper Ninth Ward’s desolate North Dorgenois Street, the president told NBC’s Brian Williams that, besides Camus, he had recently read a book on the Battle of New Orleans and “three Shakespeares.” A White House aide said one of them was “Hamlet.”

What could be more fitting? A prince who dithers instead of acting and then acts precipitously at the wrong moment, not paying attention when someone vulnerable drowns.

Asked by the anchor whether he was asking people in the country to sacrifice enough, he replied briskly, “Americans are sacrificing — we pay a lot of taxes.”

The last two days in Mississippi and New Orleans were W.’s play within the play. He took the role of the empathetic and engaged chief executive, rallying resources to save the Gulf Coast, even as the larger lens showed a sad picture of American communities that are still decrepit and hurting, while the Bush administration’s billions flow to reconstructing — or rather not reconstructing — Iraq.

You longed for this Crawford Hamlet to just go out there and say, “This just isn’t good enough.”

Instead, he gritted his teeth and put on his blandly optimistic cheerleader-in-chief role and talked about restoring “the soul’’ of New Orleans. It always makes me nervous when W. does soul talk.

He was brazen enough to pose as the man of action even in a city ruined by his initial and continuing inaction. “I’ve been on the levees,’’ he told a crowd at a high school here yesterday. “I’ve seen these good folks working.’’

He spoke to a small number of residents in the boiling sun before the one house that had been tidily restored in a blighted working-class neighborhood in Biloxi. Outside the TV frame, there was a toilet on its side in the yard of a gutted house full of dangling wires, iron scraps and other sad detritus. On one fence spoke there was a child’s abandoned stuffed toy.

At a stop at a building company in Gulfport, Miss., he chirped biblically: “There will be a momentum, momentum will be gathered. Houses will begat jobs, jobs will begat houses.”

Douglas Brinkley, the New Orleans writer who recounted the history of the trellis of failure, Republican and Democratic, federal, state and local, in “The Great Deluge,’’ noted that Mr. Bush was merely “sweating bullets trying to get the visit over with.”

“In the Republican playbook, Katrina’s a loser,’’ he said.

Mr. Bush tells journalists he has been reading prodigiously, 53 books so far this year, with three bios of George Washington, two of Lincoln and one of Mao. He seems more attuned to his place in history and yet he doesn’t really seem to get that his presidency will be defined by rushing into one place too fast and not rushing into another fast enough.

He has let Dick Cheney and Rummy launch Cat-5 attacks on critics of the war. Darth Vader reiterated his nutty pre-emption policy, and Rummy compared critics of Iraq to Chamberlains who appeased Hitler, noting that “once again we face similar challenges in efforts to confront the rising threat of a new type of fascism.”

Somebody needs to corner the defense chief and explain that it’s not that we don’t want to fight terrorism, it’s that we want to do it efficiently and effectively. Why is it necessary to scare the country, make false connections between an ill-conceived war and fighting terror, and demonize critics with outrageously careless historical references to Hitler and fascism?

W. needs to restore the soul, not merely of the Big Easy, but of the White House.

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Protesting Bush Outside 'Free Speech Zones'


"Bush was in Minnesota Tues., Aug. 22, fundraising for a Republican candidate for the 6th Congressional seat. Roger Cuthbertson, a Minneapolis member of Veterans for Peace and protest organizer, rented a 10-foot pontoon boat for the event and was joined by others in pontoons, sail boats, and bass boats.

Knowing roads leading to the lake would be blocked, Cuthbertson said a boat protest 'just makes sense.'"

via DU

For those of you here in Tennessee, don't forget the Boy King will be in Nashville on Wednesday to raise money for Wannabe-Senator -- ethically-challenged Bob Corker. Corker has also been described as "a little tiny man with a Napoleon complex."

For info on the Nashville Protest -- Nashville Protests Bush.

Defunders of Liberty -- Hurting the Left


by Thomas Frank

Before he became K Street’s most enterprising racketeer, Jack Abramoff was best known as a sort of young Robespierre of the Reagan Revolution. In 1983, as chairman of the College Republicans, he declared that he and his minions did not “seek peaceful coexistence with the left. Our job is to remove them from power permanently.”

By all accounts, Abramoff carried out this mission with a Ramboesque single-mindedness. A ferocious latter-day red-baiter, he seems to have encountered Communists everywhere he went in early-80’s America, fighting them (literally, with his fists) on campus, detecting their influence in the nuclear freeze movement, scheming to checkmate students worried about El Salvador by calling attention to the crimes of “their beloved Soviet Union.” As a reward he got his handsome mug on the cover of the John Birch Society’s Review of the News.

Abramoff’s remark about liquidating the left was not just the intemperate raving of a hot-blooded youth. It also expressed the essence of the emerging conservative project: You don’t just argue with liberals, you damage them. You use the power of the state to afflict their social movements, to wreck their proudest government agencies, and to divert their funding streams. “Defund the left” was a rallying cry all across the New Right in those heady days; Richard Viguerie even devoted a special issue of Conservative Digest to the subject in 1983.

Abramoff and his clean-cut campus radicals pushed their own “defund the left” campaign with characteristic élan, declaring war on Ralph Nader’s Public Interest Research Groups, or PIRG, environmental and consumer activist outfits that were funded by student activity fees on some campuses. The young conservatives were always careful to cast the issue as a matter of “student rights” versus political coercion, but Abramoff clearly saw it as an avenue to ideological victory. “When we win this one,” he boasted in 1983, “we’ll have done more to neutralize Ralph Nader than anyone else, ever.”

What the young conservatives of those days understood was that slogans are cheap, but institutions are not. Once broken or bankrupted, they do not snap back to fight another day. Cut off PIRG’s supply lines and the groups must dedicate their resources to justifying their existence, making it that much harder for them to agitate against nuclear power. It’s the political equivalent of strategic bombing, in which you systematically blast the rail junctions and ball-bearing factories of the other side.

Examples of such B-52 politics are all around us today. There are “paycheck protection” and school voucher campaigns, which are sold as rights issues but which are actually megaton devices to vaporize the flow of funds from labor unions to Democratic candidates. Social Security privatization, promoted as a way to make our retirements cushier, will also divert billions of dollars away from the welfare state and into the coffers of the G.O.P.’s allies on Wall Street.

Then there is the K Street Project. Almost as soon as they took control of Congress in 1995, Republican leaders began leveraging their newfound power to transform the corporate lobbying industry into a patronage fiefdom of the G.O.P. Lobbying firms were urged to hire true-believing Republicans or lose their “access”; once the personnel were Republican, the money followed. The result for the other side was also predictable: less money flowing to Democrats and a severe devaluation of a career in progressive politics. If Democrats have no place in Washington’s private sector, then the attractiveness of being a liberal is diminished by just that much more.

What is most ingenious about all this is not so much its destructiveness but the way it appeals to mainstream notions of fairness. Consider another of Jack Abramoff’s remarks from back in the days when he raged against PIRG. The groups, he said, should “compete in the free marketplace of ideas” just like the College Republicans did, where attracting private funding was what proved an idea to be “truly good and truly worthwhile.”

In Washington today, where each bad idea to rattle through the nation’s billionaire class seems to have a dedicated think tank to push it along, we are living out Abramoff’s dictum: that an idea is not worth hearing unless a large amount of somebody’s money is behind it.

Thomas Frank is the author, most recently, of “What’s the Matter with Kansas? How Conservatives Won the Heart of America.’’

Monday, August 28, 2006

Remembering Katrina & The Distant Decider



One Year Ago Disaster Struck America -- and the pResident Stayed on Vacation

The front page of this morning's New York Times called our attention to the most memorable image of The Decider during the devastation of Katrina.

One year later, the disaster of a Bush Administration continues to fail the people of New Orleans and America.

But from a pResident who has the audacity to call the richest one percent of the nation his base, what else did we expect?

True to form, Bush will mark the anniversary of Katrina with empty rhetoric and photo-ops.

Bush Fights to Restore His 9/11 Image

A year after the Katrina disaster, President Bush is still struggling to recover from the image, above, of a wartime president flying by as desperate and vulnerable Americans suffered.

Today, visitors of all kinds -- tourists, volunteer crews -- come away shaken by the scope of the disaster and its lingering aftermath. Despite extensive television attention, it is one of the few natural disasters in the United States that may have been understated by the coverage. The extent of the wreckage -- block after block of darkened windows and trash-strewn yards -- is simply too far-reaching to be captured in video clips.

Always, Bush will be remembered as the pResident who lost an American city.

Huffington Post has a Katrina Timeline with photos and videos.

Daily Show Wins Emmy Award


Colbert Loses to Barry Manilow!

Jon Stewart and the Daily Show are Emmy winners for the best variety, music or comedy series and for the best writers. Yay!

Stephen Colbert - "a man Time magazine recently named to its list of 100 People Who Shape Our World" lost to Barry Manilow!


Weird. Just plain weird.

The category Manilow won and Colbert did not was called, "outstanding individual performance in a variety or music program."

"I lost to Barry Manilow! BARRY MANILOW!" Colbert screamed. "I lost to the Copacabana! Singing and dancing is not performing!"

But two of Colbert's word inventions -- "Truthiness" and "Wikiality" -- were named on Sunday by the Global Language Monitor as television's "top buzzwords of the year."

American Infrastructure Falling Apart


While Bush skirts around the nation raising money for campaigns and commemorating disasters with phony photo-ops, it's anybody's guess when the next disaster will strike.

Photo-ops for Katrina, photo-ops for 9/11. Rumors of a new war scheduled for after election day - which will certainly require its own phony photo-ops, and maybe even a plastic turkey for Thanksgiving Day.

What happens when there are so many disaster anniversaries that our dear leader has no time for anything other than disaster anniversary photo-ops? Who will raise millions for the Dark Side?

Some people say the real threat to the nation is not from the terrorists without, but from our own government's failure to invest in even the basic maintenance of our infrastructure.

The American Society of Civil Engineers says we should worry. But we knew that.

WASHINGTON — A pipeline shuts down in Alaska. Equipment failures disrupt air travel in Los Angeles. Electricity runs short at a spy agency in Maryland.

None of these recent events resulted from a natural disaster or terrorist attack, but they may as well have, some homeland security experts say. They worry that too little attention is paid to how fast the country's basic operating systems are deteriorating.

"When I see events like these, I become concerned that we've lost focus on the core operational functionality of the nation's infrastructure and are becoming a fragile nation, which is just as bad — if not worse — as being an insecure nation," said Christian Beckner, a Washington analyst who runs the respected Web site Homeland Security Watch (www.christianbeckner.com).

The American Society of Civil Engineers last year graded the nation "D" for its overall infrastructure conditions, estimating that it would take $1.6 trillion over five years to fix the problem.

"I thought [Hurricane] Katrina was a hell of a wake-up call, but people are missing the alarm," said Casey Dinges, the society's managing director of external affairs.

Krugman: Broken Promises


A Year Later
By Paul Krugman

Last September President Bush stood in New Orleans, where the lights had just come on for the first time since Katrina struck, and promised “one of the largest reconstruction efforts the world has ever seen.” Then he left, and the lights went out again.

What happened next was a replay of what happened after Mr. Bush asked Congress to allocate $18 billion for Iraqi reconstruction. In the months that followed, congressmen who visited Iraq returned with glowing accounts of all the wonderful things we were doing there, like repainting schools and, um, repainting schools.

But when the Coalition Provisional Authority, which was running Iraq, closed up shop nine months later, it turned out that only 2 percent of the $18 billion had been spent, and only a handful of the projects that were supposed to have been financed with that money had even been started. In the end, America failed to deliver even the most basic repair of Iraq’s infrastructure; today, Baghdad gets less than seven hours of electricity a day.

And so it is along our own Gulf Coast. The Bush administration likes to talk about all the money it has allocated to the region, and it plans a public relations blitz to persuade America that it’s doing a heck of a job aiding Katrina’s victims. But as the Iraqis learned, allocating money and actually using it for reconstruction are two different things, and so far the administration has done almost nothing to make good on last year’s promises.

It’s true that tens of billions have been spent on emergency relief and cleanup. But even the cleanup remains incomplete: almost a third of the hurricane debris in New Orleans has yet to be removed. And the process of going beyond cleanup to actual reconstruction has barely begun.

For example, although Congress allocated $17 billion to the Department of Housing and Urban Development for Katrina relief, primarily to provide cash assistance to homeowners, as of last week the department had spent only $100 million. The first Louisiana homeowners finally received checks under a federally financed program just three days ago. Mississippi, which has a similar program, has sent out only about two dozen checks so far.

Local governments, which were promised aid in rebuilding facilities such as fire stations and sewer systems, have fared little better in actually getting that aid. A recent article in The National Journal describes a Kafkaesque situation in which devastated towns and parishes seeking federal funds have been told to jump through complex hoops, spending time and money they don’t have on things like proving that felled trees were actually knocked down by Katrina, only to face demands for even more paperwork.

Apologists for the administration will doubtless claim that blame for the lack of progress rests not with Mr. Bush, but with the inherent inefficiency of government bureaucracies. That’s the great thing about being an antigovernment conservative: even when you fail at the task of governing, you can claim vindication for your ideology.

But bureaucracies don’t have to be this inefficient. The failure to get moving on reconstruction reflects lack of leadership at the top.

Mr. Bush could have moved quickly to turn his promises of reconstruction into reality. But he didn’t. As months dragged by with little sign of White House action, all urgency about developing a plan for reconstruction ebbed away.

Mr. Bush could have appointed someone visible and energetic to oversee the Gulf Coast’s recovery, someone who could act as an advocate for families and local governments in need of help. But he didn’t.. How many people can even name the supposed reconstruction “czar”?

Mr. Bush could have tried to fix FEMA, the agency whose effectiveness he destroyed through cronyism and privatization. But he didn’t. FEMA remains a demoralized organization, unable to replenish its ranks: it currently has fewer than 84 percent of its authorized personnel.

Maybe the aid promised to the gulf region will actually arrive some day. But by then it will probably be too late. Many former residents and small-business owners, tired of waiting for help that never comes, will have permanently relocated elsewhere; those businesses that stayed open, or reopened after the storm, will have gone under for lack of customers. In America as in Iraq, reconstruction delayed is reconstruction denied — and Mr. Bush has, once again, broken a promise.

Sunday, August 27, 2006

Bush Wins 'Groping Across Borders Prize'


Equal Rites Awards of 2006 - Bush Wins 'Man-Handling Prize'

Every year Ellen Goodman celebrates Equality Day by announcing the Sexist Jerk Awards of the year, or as she prefers to call them, "the much-coveted Equal Rites Awards to those who have done their best over the past year to set back the cause of women."

It's no surprise that the First Frat Boy - George W. Bush is a 'winner' in the category of Groping Across Borders or -- winner of the Man-Handling [Sexist Jerk] Prize of the Year.

"The Man-Handling Prize for groping across borders goes to The Decider, who came up behind Angela Merkel's back and gave the horrified German chancellor a hefty massage. This 'Love Attack,' as it was described in Germany, proves that no woman is too powerful to get George as her main squeeze."

Some of the other losers, or 'winners' of the Equal Rites Awards of 2005:

The Patriarch of the Year is Utah's Judge Walter Steed, a polygamist and jurist who dispensed the law for 25 years while breaking it. We send him and his three wives a full set of "Big Love" DVDs to enjoy now that he is, uh, retired.

The Blind Justice Award is bound to those men who once ruled that a woman wearing skin-tight jeans couldn't claim rape. This year, the court ruled that sexual abuse of a teen was less serious because she wasn't a virgin. We send them, at long last, some woman to join the bench.

The International Ayatollah Award goes to Saudi Arabia, where women have long been kept out of the drivers' seats. Now King Abdullah wants them out of the newspapers as well, because publishing pictures of women could lead men astray. We send him a revised motto for the kingdom: Out of sight? Out of your mind?

Misogyny in Music Award goes -- as did the Oscar -- to that sweet song "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp." Much as we sympathize with the tribulations of the small businessman, we hope this tune hip-hops right down the road to moral bankruptcy.

The Raging Hormonal Imbalance Award -- It is headed along with a testosterone testing kit to Joe Francis, the sleaze master who made his fortune sexploiting sexhibitionists on "Girls Gone Wild." Then he went wild, slamming Los Angeles Times reporter Claire Hoffman against the hood of a car. The only new video we want to see is Francis doing a perp walk.

The Superstar in Sexism prize goes to Brett Myers, the Phillies pitcher who wasn't using a designated hitter when he was seen striking his wife -- 12 inches shorter, 120 pounds lighter -- on the streets of Boston. To him, simply, we wish a losing streak on the mound and in the courtroom.

The Male In-Security Award [goes] to the airport guard who searched Margaret Jackson and came across highly detailed designs of an airplane in her briefcase. He found it easier to believe she was a terrorist than a corporate head. As she wrote him later, "Dear Bill, this is from the chairman of Qantas, who is a woman." Here's to what they call the New Normal.

More losers . . . -- via The Dees Diversion

In a related vein, another infamous Republican Groper, Arnold Schwarzenegger, has made a politically embarassing groping lawsuit go away by settling out of court.

Return to the Scene of the Crime


Frank Rich (link to full column below) says 'good luck Bubble Boy' in the futile GOP effort to spin The Decider as Katrina hero. Bush will be in the Gulf for Katrina photo-ops on Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday, the greedy cowboy will be here in Nashville to raise money for the Dark Side at tax-payer's expense.

Bush and Katrina
by Frank Rich

PRESIDENT BUSH travels to the Gulf Coast this week, ostensibly to mark the first anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Everyone knows his real mission: to try to make us forget the first anniversary of the downfall of his presidency.

As they used to say in the French Quarter, bonne chance! The ineptitude bared by the storm — no planning for a widely predicted catastrophe, no attempt to secure a city besieged by looting, no strategy for anything except spin — is indelible. New Orleans was Iraq redux with an all-American cast. The discrepancy between Mr. Bush’s “heckuva job” shtick and the reality on the ground induced a Cronkite-in-Vietnam epiphany for news anchors. At long last they and the country demanded answers to the questions about the administration’s competence that had been soft-pedaled two years earlier when the war first went south.

What’s amazing on Katrina’s first anniversary is how little Mr. Bush seems aware of this change in the political weather. He’s still in a bubble. At last week’s White House press conference, he sounded as petulant as Tom Cruise on the “Today” show when Matt Lauer challenged him about his boorish criticism of Brooke Shields. Asked what Iraq had to do with the attack on the World Trade Center, Mr. Bush testily responded, “Nothing,” adding that “nobody has ever suggested in this administration that Saddam Hussein ordered the attacks.” Like the emasculated movie star, the president is still so infatuated with his own myth that he believes the public will buy such nonsense.

[...]

[T]here is next week’s Katrina show. It has its work cut out for it. A year after the storm, the reconstruction of New Orleans echoes our reconstruction of Baghdad. A “truth squad” of House Democrats has cataloged the “waste, fraud, abuse or mismanagement” in $8.75 billion worth of contracts, most of which were awarded noncompetitively. Only 60 percent of the city has electricity. Half of the hospitals and three-quarters of the child-care centers remain closed. Violent crime is on the rise. Less than half of the population has returned.

[...]

“Out of the Katrina debacle, Bush is making political gains,” Mr. Brinkley says incredulously. “The last blue state in the Old South is turning into a red state.”

Perhaps. But with no plan for salvaging either of the catastrophes on his watch, this president can no sooner recover his credibility by putting on an elaborate show of sermonizing and spin this week than Mr. Cruise could levitate his image by jumping up and down on Oprah’s couch. While the White House’s latest screenplay may have been conceived as “Mission Accomplished II,” what we’re likely to see play out in New Orleans won’t even be a patch on “Mission: Impossible III.”

Read the whole thing...

Saturday, August 26, 2006

Bush Vacations Again - Protesters Arrive


Worn out from the hard work of fundraising for the crooks, liars and racists on the Dark Side, the War pResident takes another vacation.

More than 600 protesters - who are obviously not lazy like the pResident - remind The Decider that the people in this alleged democracy do not consent to his war.

via the Unknown Candidate


Happy Equality Day!


American women won the right to vote 86 years ago. Though there were rumbles of discontent about women's status on this continent from the very beginning of the nation's birth, the 72 year long civil rights struggle officially began with the Seneca Falls Woman's Rights Convention in 1848.

In Seneca Falls it was resolved that: "The history of mankind is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations on the part of man toward woman, having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over her. To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world. . . "


Of all the resolutions passed at Seneca Falls, the resolve to demand the right to vote was thought to be by far the most radical. So radical, that Lucretia Mott feared it would make the women appear to be "ridiculous."



In the 72 years it took to win the vote, those who were dead set against the idea were many and even included The New York Times.

It was said that if women won the right to vote, it would be the death of the family and the end of civilization. In light of the present anti-woman and rabidly rightwing era, I thought it would be interesting to look at some of the propaganda from the conservatives who opposed women's right to vote.



The specific issues have changed, but the general idea is the same. That being, the fear of women's economic, social, and political independence.

Happy Women's Equality Day . . .

WHEREAS, the women of the United States have designated August 26, the anniversary date of the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment, as symbol of the continued fight for equal rights . . .





Take the Women's History Quiz

Neocon Gives Real Time Audience the Finger


The Return of Real Time With Bill Maher - A Real Disappointment

Former lefty and now neocon Christopher Hitchens gave Bill Maher's audience the finger last night -- twice. The loud-mouthed neocon told the liberal audience to fuck-off.

In true arrogant neocon form, Hitchens behaved as if he was the only guest on the panel. (Hitchens has a drinking problem.) The neocon rudely interrupted the other guests so often that he dominated the conversation. It was a rare moment when Bill Maher paid attention to his other guests - Max Cleland and Vali Nasr. I would have liked to hear more from Max Cleland. Great way to treat your liberal guests, Bill!

And I waited how many months for this?

One solidly liberal hour a week of Bill Maher is not too much to ask.

I understand the purpose of having neocons on the show. The back and forth conversation is supposed to liven things up and create balance. But more often than not, the conservative guests are rude self-absorbed neanderthals who think conversation is a competitive sport and the object is to dominate. Apparently starved for attention and thinking their every thought is brilliant, they talk incessantly, even to the point of rudely interrupting the other guests. You have to be pretty damn arrogant to not understand that the audience would like to hear from all members of the panel. And Bill does a piss poor job of reining them in. This problem is even worse when the panel actually includes a woman.

The best Maher shows are the rare ones with a panel stacked with liberals and only liberals. Remarkably, liberal guests tend to take turns speaking, rather than rudely interrupting each other. That politeness explains why they so often get little speaking time when they are on a panel with rude boors such as Hitchens.

I'll say it again -- the best Maher shows are the rare ones with a panel stacked with liberals and only liberals. Gawd knows we hear more than enough from neocons on the other days of the week. If Bill Maher wants to turn his show over to the neocons, I may as well watch FOX News.

The highlight of the evening was the video appearance of Kos. But Bill did an extremely poor job of interviewing him and seemed to know precious little about blogging. In other words, he didn't do his homework. If this sounds harsh, it is also true that Maher can do much better. He also mispronounced Kos' name.

I sent this post to HBO; here's their contact form.

Update: Video at YouTube of Hitchens insulting the audience, then giving them the finger when they respond to the insult with boos.

Photo of Hitchens via the rightwing Newsbusters where they are celebrating Hitchens' rude behavior. Photo of Kos via Al Rodgers in the comments of this dkos thread.

Women's History Quiz


Test Your Knowledge of Herstory

What better way to celebrate Equality Day -- or to remember the women who fought long and hard for the right to vote -- than to test your knowledge of the forbidden subject of herstory?

I lifted this portion of a quiz from the National Women's History Project. Short answers are in the comments, longer answers here.

1. Which mother led a 125–mile march of child workers all the way from the mills of Pennsylvania to President Theodore Roosevelt’s vacation home on Long Island?

2. One of the most important Union spies and scouts during the Civil War was a Black woman who had escaped from slavery. Can you name her?

3. Before the 1960s, farm workers in the U.S. were not paid even the minimum wage, and had no influential representatives to fight for their rights. What part did Dolores Huerta play in changing this situation?

4. The line of beauty products she created for African–American people made her the first Black woman millionaire in the United States. Who was she, and when did she do this?

5. She came to the U.S. when she was a teenager to study science and stayed to become “the world’s foremost female experimental physicist.” Her most famous experiment disproved what had been thought to be a fundamental scientific law. Who is this outstanding Asian–American scientist?

6. She took her job as “First Lady” seriously, traveling the country and the world to gather information about the problems and concerns of workers, children, minorities, and the poor. She wrote a daily newspaper column and made frequent radio broadcasts. Who was this active wife of a president?

7. When the Mexican Revolution of 1910 reached the Texas border, she and her friends organized La Cruz Blanca, The White Cross, to take care of the wounded. They nursed people from both sides of the fighting. She was also known as a journalist and community activist. Who was she and where did she live?

8. Who was the last reigning monarch of the Hawaiian Islands, deposed when American business and military interests wanted to annex Hawaii to the U.S.?

9. She opened “Hull House” in a run–down Chicago neighborhood, a community center to improve conditions for poor immigrants. The program of English–language classes, childcare, health education and recreational opportunities soon inspired hundreds of other settlement houses throughout the country. Her name?

10. Daughter and granddaughter of Paiute Indian chiefs from Nevada, she lobbied Congress, wrote extensively, and traveled across country during the late 1800s lecturing on the hardships brought upon Native Americans by the U.S. Government. Her name?

11. Her 1939 Easter Sunday concert on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial drew a crowd of 75,000. Who was she, and why was she singing there?

12. Who printed the first copy of the Declaration of Independence that included the signers’ names?

Dowd: Junior Needs a Spanking


Spanking Junior
by Maureen Dowd

The Old King put the Boy King over his knee yesterday and gave him a good thwack with a lobster-shaped paddle.

O.K., that didn’t happen, but don’t you wish it had?

Junior certainly deserves it, with recent attempts to blame his dad for policies that led to 9/11 and the rise of Osama and Middle East terrorism.

As with so many things about this byzantine, Shakespearean relationship between father and son, reunited here at last for a wedding, a christening and a funeral this weekend, it’s an ironic turn of events.

The son was furious when the father was painted as a wimp in the 1988 campaign, and now he and his spinners are painting 41 as a weak leader. W.’s pain at what happened to his aristocratic dad with “the wimp factor” led him to overreact in the other direction when he became president, embracing a West Texas-tough, muscle-bound foreign policy that shunned diplomacy, nuance, compromise, multilateral treaties and allied coalitions as measures that reflected impotence.

And now it has led him to scapegoat his own father, and Bill Clinton, for sending signals of weakness that encouraged the terrorists — even as many Middle East experts say it is W.’s culturally obtuse, diplomatically averse and morally simplistic style that has spurred terrorism and made the world more dangerous.

The Bush spokesman Tony Snow recently told reporters that “when the United States walked away, in the opinion of Osama bin Laden in 1991, bin Laden drew from that the conclusion that Americans were weak and wouldn’t stay the course, and that led to September 11th.”

Afterwards, questioned by furious Bush I foreign policy types, Bush II officials tried to claim that Mr. Snow was talking about President Clinton running away from Somalia, but clearly the spokesman was referring, as he originally confirmed, to the truncated end of Desert Storm.

In Crawford recently, the president also criticized previous administrations for policies that indicated that “stability is more important than form of government.”

Translation: Dad cuddled up to the corrupt Saudi monarchy and other Middle East dictators and let Saddam stay in power and was tough on Israel. I got rid of Saddam to establish a democracy and uncritically sided with Israel, a democracy.

Of course, now W. has now been reduced to pleading with dictatorial Mideast leaders to help him quell the violence engulfing Iraq and Lebanon, and with the military dictator Musharraf to help him capture Al Qaeda members.

The Bush I inner circle whispers that W. and Condi are “in over their heads,” as one told me, and that without 41, Jim Baker and Brent Scowcroft around, there is no one to “corral” Dick Cheney from his hard-line craziness.

“They misread history,” said one Bush I foreign policy official. “43’s born-again background and lack of experience and simple view of the world made him think it was easy to define who the enemy is. But hope is not a policy — hoping to win, hoping to make a democracy. They came in with the philosophy that the U.S. was the most powerful country in the world and they could remake the world any way they wanted. Condi and others assumed that the Middle East would fall apart peacefully, the way the Soviet Union did, if given a chance. But the Middle East is a totally different place.”

They agree, as one said, that 41 is a “very private guy who loves his son dearly, and you will not catch any daylight between them. I doubt that he’s taking any joy from the fact it’s clear now that he did the right thing in ’91 and his son is screwing up.”

Poppy Bush did not like it when Jimmy Carter tried to give him advice after he took over the job and he would be very loath to do that with any successor — much less a son who was so threatened by his dad’s shadow that he drifted until his 40’s.

Father and son do talk quite a bit on the phone, and sometimes about world affairs. But 41, as one associate notes, “is not the type of guy to say, ‘George, you should be doing x, y and z.’ He might say something more oblique, like, ‘So-and-so says this is happening.’ ”

At this hazardous moment in world history, somebody has got to grab the stubborn, shuttered scion wearing the “43” windbreaker and talk some sense into him, the way Dwight Eisenhower did when he privately dressed down the young J.F.K. after the Bay of Pigs fiasco. And who better than his dad, that 82-year-old still demonically driving his cigarette boat around the Bay of Bushes?

Friday, August 25, 2006

VA Refuses to Shut Down Highways for King George


I love it! Why can't more states be like Virginia? Every time Bush comes to Nashville, driving across town becomes a nightmare. Tennessee should follow Virginia's example. When he comes here next week to collect money for crooks, liars and racists, make him helicopter in.

And he should either pay for it out of his own pocket, or let his miserable party pay.

The last time Bush came to Nashville, it cost tax-payers a small fortune. This is a poor state. Why do we have to pay for the pResident to come here to pick up money for his lousy party's political campaigns? This is a blue county, when Bushie comes here and we pay for it, Democrats are paying for Republican fundraisers. Let the friggin' Dark Side pay their own way.

Urgent Fundraiser? Bush Wanted Carpool Lanes Closed
President Ends Up Taking Helicopter

WASHINGTON -- Talk about political gridlock. Secret Service officials confirm to The Washington Post they tried to get the Virginia Department of Transportation to close down the carpool lanes on a highway leading out of Washington Wednesday so President George W. Bush could easily get to and from a fundraiser for Republican Sen. George Allen.

State experts who monitor traffic predicted a commuting nightmare, because they would have had to close down the lanes for much of the day for logistical reasons, so they denied the request.
Vehicles using Virginia's high occupancy vehicle lanes must have three or more riders from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Some hybrid vehicles and motorcycles are exempt.

The president traveled to the fundraiser by helicopter.

Previous Story: August 23, 2006: Bush Helping Lawmaker Who Used Racist Term

After all that hard work raising money for Sen. George "Macaca" Allen -- at tax-payer's expense -- King George has gone back to his favorite pastime - tax-payer paid vacation. Duh.

'I am Macaca'


Shekar Ramanuja Sidarth won a highly prized spot in Larry J. Sabato's "popular seminar on campaigns and elections" via his winning essay of three words:


I am Macaca.


I'm glad the college student got something postive out of his encounter with Sen. George "Macaca" Allen.

Sidarth has plenty of other qualifications for the class, as a story in today's Washington Post documents -- Fairfax Native Says Allen's Words Stung.

Related Posts:
Speaking 'Shrilly' of George "Macaca" Allen and Gods and Generals
Sen. George Allen Sings Praises to Confederacy (video)
Senator Allen Sounds Like A Racist and Washington Post Condemns Senator George Allen

Morning After Pill Finally Okayed



So, finally the FDA approved over the counter access to Plan B.

Seattle Post-Intelligencer Editorial Board:

In approving pharmacists' sales of emergency contraception, non-prescription, the FDA has finally taken a big step to prevent pregnancies, protect health and reduce abortions.

The new policy will allow sale of the Plan B morning-after pill to women 18 and older without a prescription. The agency had to be dragged into science and good public policy.

President Bush's political advisers and a succession of ranking Food and Drug Administration officials repeatedly blocked, sidelined or delayed proposals that had received thorough scientific review. U.S. Sens. Patty Murray of Washington and Hillary Clinton played key roles in forcing action, by holding approval of an FDA commissioner nominee.

Even the new decision included a compromise based on ideology. Girls 17 and younger will need a doctor's approval for emergency contraception. Elaine Rose, executive director of Planned Parenthood's affiliates in Washington state, said, "Once again, there is no scientific basis, just as there has been no scientific basis for the foot-dragging" over more than three years.

The Morning-After Pill Conspiracy says the battle ain't over yet!

Conservatives are not happy. In response to the news, the Family Research Council says it is "reviewing legal options." The Concerned Women of America aren't happy either. Too bad!!

Fear of Foreign Flags


God help this foolish and misguided country. Here's yet more evidence that we are living in the new wannabe Evil Empire, or the new and ever-improving wannabe USSR.



Rocky Mountain News:

LAKEWOOD — A seventh-grade geography teacher at Carmody Middle School was suspended with pay today when he refused to take down three foreign flags on display in his classroom.

Eric Hamlin said the flags of China, Mexico and the United Nations were relevant to the unit on the fundamentals of geography he teaches during the first six weeks of the semester. He’s used the same display for most of the nine years he’s taught in Jefferson County, Hamlin said.

The foreign flags are in addition to the standard U.S. flag found in all classrooms.

Hamlin said principal John Schalk escorted him from the building Thursday before classes began. He was handed a letter saying the matter is under investigation and warning him to remain off school property.

Jeffco Public Schools spokeswoman Lynn Setzer said Schalk believed Hamlin was in violation of a state law on display of foreign flags on public property.

Schalk interprets the law as allowing foreign flags as part of a specific lesson, but not for the duration of the six-week unit.

Hamlin has more than 50 flags that he uses during the course of the year. He asks students to consider the symbolism different countries put on their flags, such as the stars and stripes on the U.S. flag.

An actual law against displaying foreign flags?

Cause the world is our enemy?

via Talkleft