All time worst wingnut post

Kevin Drum asks the important question, what is the all time worst wingnut post.  Michelle Malkin dressed as a cheerleader gets my vote but Ann Althouses obseesion with with Jessicas Valentes breasts is a close second.

You can vote here

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BCS Insanity 2007

Hoping not to jinx anything, I’m now looking forward to what it will take for BC to earn a shot in the national title game. Clearly, they have to win out, which means winning games in Death Valley (Clemson) and Maryland. The Clemson game is going to be the most ominous, as we’ve beaten them twice in a row. An ACC title game would be vs. either Virginia or Virginia Tech.

The comeback win last Thursday taught me a great life lesson. When you’re recording one game on the DVR and watching another, make sure to schedule the box to record the program that comes on after the game as well. Throughout the night I was watching the recording of that game during commercials in the World Series, but since I had failed to record the program that came on after the BC-VT game, I was only able to watch up until halfway through the 4th quarter. Running to the computer after finding this out, I honestly figured they’d lost, but had hoped that they hadn’t been shutout. It turns out I missed the greatest comeback in the team’s history.

BCS Sucks Ass

Heading into this week, I’m wondering how many years it will take before the Big 10, Pac 10 and Big East finally start having conference championship games. If SEC, ACC and Big 12 teams have to do it, then the other three conferences shouldn’t be getting over. That said, if Arizona St. makes it through these last four games undefeated, how can Ohio St. be considered more worthy of a slot in the title game? Hypothetically, if Kansas-BC-OhioSt-ArizonaSt all win out, the title game could be BC vs. Ohio St, which appears on its face to be very very very unfair. Likewise, if one of those four teams loses a game and LSU wins out, how can anyone pretend that making it out of the SEC with one loss is somehow less impressive than making it out of the Big 10 undefeated, never having to play a conference championship game?

I’m anticipating that if BC holds onto the #2 ranking and earns a shot at the title, there will be a #3 team that most of the college football world considers more worthy, and it will suck having to listen to it for a full month prior to New Years. The NCAA has to be hoping that there are only two undefeated teams at the end (sorry Hawaii, even though Boise St. beat Okahoma in a BCS bowl game to go undefeated last year, and in 2004 Utah decimated just about every team it played, “your kind” are second-class citizens.) I think it will most likely work out to something like 2004, when USC and Oklahoma played in the title game, while Auburn went undefeated and had to take a back seat. I think it’s wrong to exclude ANY SEC team that goes undefeated in the title game.

Anyways, I’m looking forward to Arizona St-Oregon in a couple hours, and the Seminoles are in Chestnut Hill tonight. The Celtics played defense last night. Peyton is in for a long, painful Sunday.   Continue reading

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Political Clips

The Politics of Parsing

The Politics of Douchebagery

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Rudy in a nutshell

Joe Biden sums it up perfectly:

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I wanted to write a football post, but…

Is it just me or have the Patriots ruined this years NFL season.  Yeah, they are fun to watch, and you can speculate how many records Tom Brady will break by the end of this year; but at this point the suspense is over, barring injury the only thing that may stop the Patriots from winning the superbowl are the Colts.  One of my friends suggested that the Colts should move to the NFC to insure a good superbowl, mostly I think he is making the suggestion because he fears no one will show up at his superbowl party and he might be right.  I am sure many advertising execs share my friends fear, this predicamnet got me thinking that maybe, maybe one or two of the Democratic candidates for president should switch parties.

At this point the Republicans don’t have a serious candidate and after the Democratic convention no one will be talking about issues.  It would be great to see the Democratic nominee, maybe John Edwards, arguing the with the Republican nominee, someone like Hillary Clinton about the need to get Pharmacutical money out of the political process and the best way to provide healthcare for everyone.  Or maybe Barrack Obama as the Democratic nominee could argue against the much more conservative Hillary Clinton that the time to leave Iraq is now.

All of the Democratic candidates should have more appeal to the “values voters” as all of them are on their first marriage and seem pretty good at wearing their faith on their sleeves  after all nothing leads better than example.  It is time for one of the Democratic candidates to switch parties, if for no other reason than to save the Republican party from the confederacy of dunces they have to choose from at the moment. 

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Keith’s Performance Review

Ever had a review at work? Check this out:

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Future Senate nominee?

This is too funny to pass up:

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) – A man was arrested after a government agent allegedly found him in an office building restroom lying next to an inflatable, anatomically correct doll with his pants down.

Craig S. McCullough, 47, was charged Wednesday with indecent exposure, a misdemeanor.

See the whole story here

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Secretary of _______ Wesley Clark

Intellectual dishonesty in politics is a parasite in search of an ambitious host. The transformation that takes place inside the body of an infected politician, especially one hanging onto someone else’s coattails for dear life, is embarrassing to witness first hand. Their allegiance to this other person and what they can provide is a phenomenon that is automatically given a pass within the beltway. The pundits seem oblivious when a most celebrated mind devolves into a shadowy Frankenstein’s monster right in front of them. Unnoticed, so the smart puppeteers wrongly believe, this change is the type of thing that forever alters a plebe’s impression of such a politician. We can see it quite clearly. In General Wesley Clark’s case it has been gut wrenching. He’s is clearly a lightweight when it comes to telling lies, and that, along with being on a panel with Andrew Sullivan, is what doomed him last Friday on Real Time w/ Bill Maher.

Here is how it happens. The word comes down that a cabinet slot could be yours in two years – heck, it’s yours now, of course it would be presumptuous to announce such a thing at this point, but consider yourself part of the “inner circle”. Isn’t it nice in here? We’re glad you like it…so what we need you to do is go out and argue in favor of these votes and positions Senator Clinton has already committed to. Of course, we’re in campaign mode right now, which is entirely different from how the administration will be run once she’s elected President. Right now your input will not be as helpful as what you can do for us working the talk shows. Once the election is over, you can count on having a significant role in policymaking, but for now, review these talking points we’ve put together for defending Hillary’s vote in favor of branding Iran’s military as a terrorist organization.

That was an idea the White House had, and since it was proposed in the senate by Joe Lieberman, you just know it’s brilliant. So say all those Jews and Christians who merged at a conference organized around the idea of dropping bombs on Iran. Continue reading

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John Edwards gets something right

One of the biggest problems with american health care is the “overtreatment” of certain conditions, and Edwards might have a plan to improve the situation.

“The excessive costs of prescription drugs are straining family budgets and contributing to runaway health care costs,” Edwards said at the start of a seven-day campaign tour of the early-voting states of New Hampshire and Iowa.

“With such aggressive and often misleading drug company marketing, it’s too easy for advertising — instead of doctors or proven results — to influence families’ health decisions,” Edwards’ campaign quoted him as saying.

Drug advertising revenues had quadrupled to over $4 billion a year in the 10 years since rules were relaxed to allow firms to advertise medicines directly to consumers, he said. But the FDA had reviewed only a fraction of the ads, Edwards added.

The Edwards plan would institute a two-year delay on consumer advertising of all new drugs, and require FDA approval before drug companies launch major ad campaigns.

Firms would also be required to disclose more information about side effects and comparisons of drugs against placebos and alternatives.

It is good to see some presidential candidates are looking at real issues and real solutions and not just talking about Jack Bauer.

The entire article can be seen here

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Chris Dodd – A Brilliant Floor Speech

Check this out. In 8 minutes, Dodd runs through just about everything. No meandering. This man needs to be the senate majority leader. What I saw and heard here had ‘Profiles in Courage’ potential.

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Bartolome de Las Casas

He was a Spainard who made the voyage to North America in the 1500s. The following work is a portion of his ‘Brief Account of the Devastation of the Indies’, published in 1542. The first reading of this a while back was shocking, but the reason it came to mind recently was the “phony soldiers” episode. Casas had written this and sent it back to Spain for the kingdom’s own purposes, but it was leaked, translated and used by other countries to point out his country’s sins in America. Especially Protestant nations like England and The Netherlands, whose Spanish adversaries were Catholic (along those lines, if anyone hasn’t studied The Hundred Years War, you’re missing out). So Casas was accused of treason and heresy for telling the truth. Patriotism warranted such charges, as those who subscribe to the “phony soldiers” mantra today believe also. You’ve got to read below the fold to get even a taste of what Casas exposed:

colonizationThe Indies were discovered in the year one thousand four hundred and ninety-two. In the following year a great many Spaniards went there with the intention of settling the land. Thus, forty-nine years have passed since the first settlers penetrated the land, the first so claimed being the large and most happy isle called Hispaniola, which is six hundred leagues in circumference. Around it in all directions are many other islands, some very big, others very small, and all of them were, as we saw with our own eyes, densely populated with native peoples called Indians. This large island was perhaps the most densely populated place in the world. There must be close to two hundred leagues of land on this island, and the seacoast has been explored for more than ten thousand leagues, and each day more of it is being explored. And all the land so far discovered is a beehive of people; it is as though God had crowded into these lands the great majority of mankind.
Continue reading

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The Kindness of Stangers

By Robin Fox, from an essay in the September/October issue of Society. Fox is a professor of social theory at Rutgers and the author, most recently, of Participant Observer: Memoir of a Transatlantic Life. His “Human Nature and Human Rights” appeared in the April 2001 issue of Harper’s Magazine.

Since Laocoon’s warning to his fellow Trojans went so tragically unheeded, the course of history has been strewn with the corpses of ungrateful nations which, despite the misery that stemmed from their inability to govern their own affairs, bitterly resented and actively resisted the firm and forceful help of others. The stranger’s gift of peace, order, and prosperity is lesswelcome to us than the death, chaos, and poverty that are our own doing. For in the end they are our own, and that is what matters to us. Like truculent adolescents, we do not want to be told how to do things or have them done for us; we want to make our own, even fatal, mistakes. We will take what we can use from what is offered, but we want, at last, to do it ourselves: to manage our own lives, however badly. The main thing about the stranger, after all, is that he is strange. He is not like us; he will never understand us. Our greatest fear, perhaps because the possibility is often so seductive, is that we will become like him and lose our selves. The stranger’s gift never comes without strings, and we do not want to be tied.

missionariesWe of the post-Enlightenment Anglophone West are among the most earnest of the givers. We are not, like our medieval Catholic ancestors, really proponents of the Crusade and the holy war against the heathen. Weare at heart Protestant missionaries: We want to bring the good news and the benefits of civilization to the benighted of the earth. And if they don’t want it, then like Protestant parents, and entirely for their own good of course, we must sternly make them accept it. Certainly, we hoped to make profits and attain political power in the process, but these were small prices the benighted had to pay for the incomparable gifts we had to offer. Critics of colonialism miss the point if all they see is the profits and the power. Our civilizing mission was, and still is, as dear to us as the jihad is to Muslims. Even when it is not Protestantism per se that we are offering, it is the children of the Protestant Ethic that we know as democracy, liberty, equality, and the free market. Our learned men tell us we are the foreordained bearers of a truth so fundamental that with its triumph history will come to an end, there being nothing left for mankind to achieve. If this is so, how can the benighted so stubbornly, and even violently, refuse our gift of a free leg up onto the stage of world history? Continue reading

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Family planning prevents climate change?

As people argue as to whether or not global warming is a good thing, the UN is starting to figure it out.  The real problem is too many people.

Climate change, the rate of extinction of species and the challenge of feeding a growing population are among the threats putting humanity at risk, the UN Environment Program said in its fourth Global Environmental Outlook since 1997.

“The human population is now so large that the amount of resources needed to sustain it exceeds what is available at current consumption patterns,” Achim Steiner, the executive director of the program, said in a telephone interview. Efficient use of resources and reducing waste now are “among the greatest challenges at the beginning of 21st century,” he said.

Maybe this will give rise a to a market for child free credits in much the same way low emission industries can sell their carbon credits, childless people should be able to sell baby-credits to prolific breeders.   

The enire article is here

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Phish – The Wedge

1998-11-07 Chicago, IL

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A Mr. Fish Cartoon

spanking

Source

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Deval Patrick Endorses Barak Obama

In Boston there was a rally 9,500 strong, and Governor Patrick introduced Barak Obama:

“I’m in love with Massachusetts
And the neon when it’s cold outside
And the highway when it’s late at night
Got the radio on
I’m like the roadrunner

I’m in love with modern moonlight
128 when it’s dark outside
I’m in love with Massachusetts
I’m in love with the radio on”

-The Modern Lovers, “Roadrunner”

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No Lake, No Trout

confusionI. (TPMmuckraker – Iraq Revokes All Contractor Immunity – Spencer Ackerman) The metaphorical statue of L. Paul Bremer III has come crashing down. Today the Iraqi government formally revoked one of the Coalition Provisional Authority’s enduring vestiges — a decree of immunity from prosecution in Iraqi courts for U.S. security contractors.

II. (Think Progress) In California, half of the equipment the National Guard needs is not in the state, either because it is deployed in Iraq or other parts of the world or because it hasn’t been funded, according to Lt. Col. John Siepmann. While the Guard is in good shape to handle small-scale incidents, “our concern is a catastrophic event,” he said. “You would see a less effective response (to a major incident),” he said.

At a press conference five months ago, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R-CA) echoed these concerns, stating, “A lot of equipment has gone to Iraq, and it doesn’t come back when the troops come back.” The Chronicle reported that the California National Guard was missing about $1 billion worth of equipment. Now, as 14 major wildfires rage across the state, those earlier warnings are materializing. While California currently has approximately 1,500 Guardsmen serving in Iraq, the strains on the disaster response teams are compounded by the missing personnel and equipment.

III. (CNN – Turkish Planes Bomb Kurdish Rebels) Turkish warplanes and helicopter gunships have been bombing Kurdish separatist positions in Turkey along the Iraqi-Turkish frontier amid continuing diplomatic efforts to avert a major cross-border incursion by Turkish military forces.

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Video from hell (San Diego)

Larry Himmel in front of his destroyed home

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Carl

“…oh, you noticed.” Carl

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Lake Trout

I.  Two Republican representatives, both of whom I think the worst of as a rule, seem to be battling against Cheney over the White House’s leaking of false information that indicates Israel struck a nuclear facility in Syria that was being built with the help of North Korea. Check this out:

(Raw Story – GOP Accusing White House of Leaking) In 2006, Larisa Alexandrovna reported for RAW STORY on Hoekstra’s approval of Vice President Cheney’s renewed use of former Iran-Contra middleman Manucher Ghorbanifar to help frustrate diplomatic talks between the US and Iran. A follow-up article by Alexandrovna revealed that Hoekstra himself had met with Ghorbanifar in the late spring or early summer of 2006 in a possible attempt to create “falsified intelligence” that could lead to war with Iran. Alexandrovna has also reported that the target of the Israeli airstrike was not a nuclear facility and, most recently, that sources in the intelligence community believe Vice President Cheney is behind the selective leaks concerning the incident.

One intelligence official told Alexandrovna, “The allegations that North Korea was helping to build a nuclear reactor have not been substantiated by US intelligence, but that hasn’t stopped Dick Cheney and his minions at the NSC, Elliot Abrams and Steve Hadley, from leaking the information [to the press], which appears to be misleading in the extreme.”

II.  After the bloggers (including myself and others) jumped all over the story about Senator Rockefeller’s love for the idea of granting immunity to telecom companies coinciding with a campaign bucks bonanza – the NYTimes finally covers it, on a Tuesday and thus far only online.

III.  monkey(Murray Weiss – NYPost) THE number of NYPD cops using drugs, stealing property – even from the dead – and committing other acts of corruption, including extorting sex from female suspects, spiked sharply last year, according to a confidential NYPD report.

IV. (Raw Story) The mayor of the Indian capital said Monday that authorities could not deal with the scourge of violent monkeys, blamed for the death of a top city official over the weekend. The danger posed by the estimated 10,000 monkeys that roam the city was brought home sharply on Sunday when deputy mayor S.S. Bajwa, 52, died after falling from his apartment while fighting a horde of wild simians. If the animals are caught, “we are under pressure to release them due to pressure from animal activists and from people due to religious reasons

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Garry Kasparov – Educating America

This is a brilliant man who I have written about in the past (Somewhere between Belarus and Zimbabwe). In this interview he explains the geopolitical strategy for Russia, which is entirely about keeping the Middle East embroiled with tension so that oil prices remain high.

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Teletubbies & Sublime

This could very well be the best thing that ever gets posted here.

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bBlogBouillabaisse – DiceK in Game Seven

mitt romneyPam’s House Blend: “Rudy flip-flops on marriage amendment — and still fails to win over Values Voters”  Straw Poll Results:
Name … Percentage

1. Mitt Romney … 27.62%
2. Mike Huckabee …27.10%
3. Ron Paul … 14.98%
4. Fred Thompson …9.77%
5. Sam Brownback …5.14%
6. Duncan Hunter …2.42%
7. Tom Tancredo … 2.30%
8. Rudy Giuliani …1.85%
9. John McCain … 1.40 %

Al: “Manny Ramirez gets put on the top six stories on Yahoo for saying it doesn’t matter if the Red Sox lose game 5…mountains of words all over the frivilous vast expanse of sporting media, and Dubya slides on this episode right here”. Video pulled from Blue Girl, Red State

Manila Rice from The Largest Minority covered Maher Arar’s appearance at a House hearing (via satelite, since it’s still not safe for him to actually step foot in America): Calls Mount for Bush to Apologize to Torture Victim

The Liberal Doomsayer sends Dennis Hassert off proper

James at NBAObsessed: Gilbert Arenas to test Free Agency

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Senator Dodd (D-CT) Does the Opposite

This is encouraging.

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Senator Rockefeller (D-WV) – Selling Us Out

I’ve been watching this immunity story like a hawk, but haven’t had the time to comment on it here.  This post I found after reading TPMmuckraker’s front page today was too good not to share.  I’m posting the first 2 sentences of the post written by Ryan Singel on Wired.com, along with two charts. He’s put together an outstanding case study on why we will never have a government “of/by/for the people” as long as elections continue to be financed with private money.

(Ryan Singel: Democratic Lawmaker Pushing Immunity Is Newly Flush With Telco Cash) Senator Jay Rockefeller (D-West Virginia) is reportedly steering the secretive Senate Intelligence Committee to give retroactive immunity to telecoms that helped the government secretly spy on Americans. He has also recently benefited from some interesting political contributions.

AT&T Rockefeller

Verizon Rockefeller

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PTSD News

The scam has been exposed for quite a while now (VA Failing – Troops Suffer (2005), Born Under Punches, Walk It Off, 20,000 Soldiers Denied Healthcare), but the big money media won’t go after the story. There is a game being played with PTSD numbers, and the most egregious sin against our troops is the military’s tendency to write off PTSD as a “pre-existing condition” whenever it can. This leaves the veteran uncovered and at a serious disadvantage when it comes to achieving success as a civilian. It’s almost like the government consulted with the big money health insurance companies on how best to keep costs down.

So on a Friday we get two great stories on PTSD, with each of them covering a seperate aspect.

(Gregg Zoroya-USAToday: Veteran stress cases up sharply) The number of Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans seeking treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder from the Department of Veterans Affairs jumped by nearly 20,000 — almost 70% — in the 12 months ending June 30, VA records show.
More than 100,000 combat veterans sought help for mental illness since the start of the war in Afghanistan in 2001, about one in seven of those who have left active duty since then, according to VA records collected through June. Almost half of those were PTSD cases.

The numbers do not include thousands treated at storefront Vet Centers operated by the department across the country. Nor do they include active-duty personnel diagnosed with the disorder or former servicemembers who have not sought VA treatment. About 1.5 million U.S. troops have served in Iraq or Afghanistan. Of those, 750,000 have left the military and are eligible for VA health care. The nearly 50,000 VA-documented PTSD cases far exceed the 30,000 military personnel that the Pentagon officially classifies as wounded in the conflicts. The discrepancy underscores the view by military and civilian health officials, such as Lt. Gen. James Campbell, director of the Army staff, that troops tend to ignore, hide or fail to recognize their mental health wounds until after their military service.

homeless veteran

(Shankar Vedantam-WaPost: Most PTSD Treatments Not Proven Effective) The majority of treatments for post-traumatic stress disorder that are used to treat hundreds of thousands of veterans lack rigorous scientific evidence that they are effective, according to a report issued yesterday by a panel of the federal government’s top scientists.
“If a treatment that is not shown to be efficacious is nevertheless delivered to veterans, and if the treatment is relatively inert, even if it does not harm the veterans, it may demoralize the veteran,” said Richard McNally, a Harvard University psychologist and PTSD expert. “Providing treatments that do not have a good basis in evidence can result in people not improving, therefore getting demoralized and therefore not seeking treatment that can actually help them.”

But the panel failed to find evidence that any medication was effective in treating PTSD — this included the drugs Paxil and Zoloft, which have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat the disorder. “A very high percentage of people who have been diagnosed with PTSD are on medications,” said Larry Scott, the founder of the advocacy group VA Watchdog dot Org, which serves as an information clearinghouse for veterans.

Veterans are prescribed drugs in mass quantities. It is a way to quickly consider the patient as being “in treatment”, without having to devote a lot of man-hours doing any psychiatric heavy lifting. The FDA officials and whatever doctors who helped out in this regard, to facilitate the opening of a new market for their big money drug daddies, should be investigated. Nothing is getting better for our military. The voices are growing louder though.

With that in mind, let me remind everyone to check out the work of: Blue Man in a Red DistrictArmy of Dude – Soldier Voices Forum – VideoVetsIraq Slogger

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Sad Day For Pakistan

(AHN) The twin blasts that marred former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto return to Pakistan was the deadliest terror attack in the country’s history, with a death toll of 132 and more than 200 wounded. The figures are likely to rise, authorities said.

I’m really disappointed by the condition of humanity. These thoughts are sad ones. Plenty of distractions work to bury all that, but the notion of jihad equaling something so heinous, this perversion of Islam, how it is surging in Pakistan and other places, speaks volumes. People are not acting for the sake of this life here on earth. Ironically, they kill innocent people because of a hunger for power here on earth that cannot be satisfied through the spreading of their ideas alone.

No – very much like the United States, the pretend-jihadists foolishly believe that violence is their golden ticket.
bhutto

(Pakistan Daily Times – Written prior to the attacks) That Bhutto remains a crowd-puller is evident from her reception. But leaving aside the rhetoric, the symbolism, the dramaturgy and even the poetry of the moment, the plunge she has taken is probably the most challenging decision of her life. Ms Benazir Bhutto is back; she has replicated her 1986 reception. Once again, she is five-star material. But 2007 is not 1986. The difference offers both challenges and opportunities.Writing in the Times of London, Bhutto says she is carrying “a manuscript of a book” and describes it as “a treatise on the reconciliation of the values of Islam and the West and a prescription for a moderate, modern Islam that marginalises extremists, returns the military from politics to their barracks, treats all citizens and especially women equally and selects its leaders by free and fair elections.” This is a tall order. Reality is that this manifesto, if it can be called that, may be more of a wish-list.

(CNN) The blasts confirmed fears of instability linked to her return, which came after she reached a controversial agreement with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf that will allow her to seek re-election as prime minister. Many were bitterly opposed to that deal. “This is what everyone feared,” Rivers said.

Ahmed said Musharraf, who is waiting to see if the Supreme Court confirm his eligibility as president, will most likely take this opportunity to strengthen his position. “He will say, ‘I told you so, He will tell Washington I told you so. He will tell Benazir Bhutto I told you so. This is not the time for you to come back, stay out let me handle the administration, let me be the strong man,’ ” Ahmed said.

(Bloomberg) Credit-default swaps on Pakistan’s debt rose 25 basis points to 300 basis points, according to ABN Amro Holding NV. Each basis point on a contract protecting $10 million of debt from default for five years adds $1,000 to the annual cost. Pakistan’s benchmark stock index may fall from a record after the attacks targeted the convoy of Benazir Bhutto, who returned to the nation seeking to be elected prime minister.

The “thug bubble”…

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Napoleons’ picks

Buffalo Bills 20, Baltimore Ravens 17. I think the Bills are due for a victory, while the Ravens are ripe for an upset.Tampa Bay Buccaneers 27, Detroit Lions 17. If the Redskins could suffocate the Lions, why not the Bucs?Tennessee Titans 34, Houston Texans 21. The Texans are improving, but they’re not good enough to beat the Jaguars or the Titans yet.New England Patriots 41, Miami Dolphins 6. These two teams could conceivably run the table in opposite directions this year. The Patriots could go undefeated; the Dolphins winless.

New Orleans Saints 24, Atlanta Falcons 17. The desperate Saints routed Seattle this week, and Atlanta is nowhere near as good as Seattle.

New York Giants 27, San Francisco 49ers 20. Since the opening the two weeks, these two teams have gone in opposite directions.

Washington Redskins 34, Arizona Cardinals 13. Lest you Cardinals fans ever get used to winning, here comes another defeat.

Cincinnati Bengals 34, New York Jets 27. Who’s worse here? I’m counting on the Bengals finally putting together enough to win. They have the talent.

Oakland Raiders 27, Kansas Chiefs 20. Here’s another toss-up, but I think the Raiders are good enough to finally break through against the Chiefs.

Dallas Cowboys 41, Minnesota Vikings 17. Ugh. Just when the Vikings get something going, they have to run into an angry Cowboys team.

Chicago Bears 23, Philadelphia Eagles 20. Neither team is very good, but the Bears want to make up for last week’s humiliation.

Seattle Seahawks 17, St. Louis Rams 16. The Rams are another team that could potentially run the table in reverse this year. If the Seagulls lose, though, first place will continue to be occupied by none other than the Arizona Cardinals in a bad division.

Pittsburgh Steelers 27, Denver Broncos 17. I enjoyed watching the Broncos not lose last week. No such luck this week, though.

Jacksonville Jaguars 34, Indianapolis Colts 20. The Colts finally fall. The Jags’ combination of strong defense and powerful running should be enough to bring down Indy.

Napoleon is wrong about the cardinals, sure they may not even have a quarterback but they are due.  The best thing about this season is that several teams have a chance at perfect seasons, the Patriots in a good way( and yeah I might be saying that the jinx the Pats) and several teams are looking good to go winless.

See Napoleons blog here

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Majority of Americans favor expansion of S-CHIP

An overwelming majority of people in the US seem to favor expansion of the S-CHIP program.

Eight in 10 Americans favor expanding the State Children’s Health Insurance Program, or S-CHIP, including large majorities of Republicans, Democrats, and Independents.

More interesting, to me at least, is that people are willing to make a sacrifice to see that S-CHIP is expanded

While the president has raised concerns about the additional cost of expanding S-CHIP, those who favor the proposal say they’d even be willing to pay more in taxes to help the program cover more children.

This makes the supporters of the S-CHIP program very different than supporters of things like the war in Iraq, in that they are willing to put their money where their mouth is.  At least I have never heard a single supporter of the war suggest that taxes should be raised to pay for the it.  The goal of universal health care is an issue that seems to unite and inspire almost everyone in the country.  It is interesting that the only person standing in the way of expanding the S-CHIP program is the cynical leader of the minority party.

The article is here

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Suicide Prevention (Rerun)

(Since I’m devoting all of my writing energy to a project that cannot be shared publicly, I’ll be reruning some old ones and trying to post some more heady reading material from elsewhere along the way. Original posting)

US Foreign PolicyThe US military just can’t help themselves when it comes to troops being killed. They lied about Pat Tillman’s death, and here’s another example: Contrary to U.S. military statements, four U.S. soldiers did not die repelling a sneak attack at the governor’s office in the Shiite holy city of Karbala last week. New information obtained by The Associated Press shows they were abducted and found dead or dying as far as 25 miles away. Perhaps it’s out of shame or embarassment, but there is something that plays into this urge to supress the truth rather than deal with what these events actually mean. Is it so unbelievable that our enemy could kidnap four of our soldiers, drive away, kill them and never be caught? Or is that fact something we can live with, as long as the public doesn’t hear about it? I think the latter is right on, and the sad truth is that any number of US soldiers could be kidnaped, killed and then dumped on the side of the road like these four were, and to the bosses it wouldn’t cause anything a swig of peptol bismol wouldn’t fix.

Dick Cheney would respond to it like this, “Oh yea? Well you can tell the group responsible for this that they can kidnap and kill whoever they want, because we’re not leaving!” To some people that sounds like evidence of strength, but to me it’s just further proof that these troops that die at this point in the war really represent nothing more than the cost of doing business. Their deaths are something we as a society, along with the majority of our government, pretend to care about in the same way that we pretend to care about people who got cancer because their water was contaminated by a company’s pollution. Truth of the matter is, as a whole we simply shrug it off and go on with our day. Of course, it would be crazy if Dick Cheney were to respond to an entire family with leukemia and breast cancer by saying, “You can kill this family and every other family on this block…you hear me chemicals? Go ahead and kill these kids, we humans aren’t going anywhere!”

The logical response would be to find out how to keep from poluting the drinking water, but people like the ones we have calling the shots at the moment don’t think on that level at all. In terms of their role as the protectors of the republic, they protect entities rather than people. The entities they protect will in turn take care of the people, so there’s nothing they have to worry about along those lines. So a problem with education or lack of health care or work can be fixed in a number of ways, and the prefered method is to have the military fighting a war at all times. It creates work on the back end as equipment and weapons are needed, and for society’s dead-enders and/or the fools who really believe in the concept of killing Arabs halfways across the world to protect their neighbor living in the suburbs of Phoenix, the front line is a good place to deposit most of what the government would have had to pay for during your life anyhow.

When you run the numbers, it’s certainly not as simple a business model as say, systematically raising the niccotene level in cigarettes, but with the ability to continue grinding up bodies and equipment, expending rounds of ammo at the pace we are without any power within government willing to put an end to it, the promise of continuous orders for vehicles, uniforms, weapons, body armor, etc. and the subsequent lifelong need for medication, therapy, surgery, medical equipment, etc. for the veterans…our private sector then finds itself flush with opportunities to ramp up production, spread some stock options around, and takeover the operations of its competition. Once these businesses are given enough time to consolidate, the price per item cost will lower, and even more money can be made.

The key ingredient of course is human bodies that can pull the trigger and be maimed and/or killed in the war. As long as there are troops wearing uniforms, the public can be told of their absolute heroism and how they’re our best and brightest, with the story line that the war is what allows you and I to have our freedom. A universal farce that works like a charm, as regardless of the circumstances of the war in question, the soldier is to be compared with those who defeated Germany and the Brittish, and any indication to the contrary, like evidence that the troops are not only far from our “best and brightest” but that they are also apt to exhibit behavior common amongst the uneducated thugery of inner city ghetos throughout the homeland, is sure to be confronted with a thunderous wave of condemnation that is so exact and overwhelming in it’s force, that whoever was making their living by providing commentary prior to that moment, will most likely never have the opportunity to do so afterwards.

This video (Iraqi soldiers beating detainees while US troops cheer) brought me back to a time I remember quite well, as it began for me not even a decade ago. You’re in a humvee with your fellow soldiers, part of a combat unit and what takes place inside our “hearts and minds” would never make it past network censors, let alone the level of decency that exists within most communities around the world. In fact if you were to pluck out a handfull of trained killers from any line unit in theatre today, and put them in front of an auditorium full of kids in the frame of mind they’re in on a daily basis, those kids would most likely be scarred for life, and if the birds-and-the-bees discussion had yet to take place, it would have to start that night at home in an uncomfortable way like, “Mommy, does your snatch smell like salmon or clam chowder?”

Hence the reason for officers and medals, as the face of this organization cannot include any of these people and still be taken seriously by the general public. That they’re heralded as something just below demigod within our media and the underlying culture is proof that there is in general, a very good business reason for highlighting the legend and ignoring most everything else. Which doesn’t explain why the military can’t just admit that four soldiers were overtaken by twice as many of the enemy, and driven away with before anyone even noticed they were gone. Perhaps this type of lie has more to do with the career of a few officers than anything else, as I’m sure the platoon leader and company commander of the unit those soldiers belonged to are kissing their careers bye-bye. Though how can you blame anyone for anything at this point? Afterall, Rumsfeld did say, “stuff happens”!

It’s a cost of doing business. Now if you’ll excuse me, I need to get in touch with my broker.

Update: Another video you need to watch – CBS News Report on the effort to secure a single street within Baghdad.

Posted in Al Swearengen, Military | Comments Off on Suicide Prevention (Rerun)