Jim Webb vs. Lindsey Graham

Webb is probably the first senator I’ve seen on one of these weekend shows throw down on behalf of the troops.  He is pointing out how ridiculous Graham, McCain and others sound when they say, “I’ve spoken to the troops, and they want to finish the job…”, as if the military didn’t screen who they’d be talking to when they arrived there.  Webb points this out and plenty more:

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Drowned

Chickenhawk vs. Cindy Sheehan

Pertaining to the White House dumbing down explainations of what is happening in Iraq by attributing everything bad to al-Qaida, it’d been killing me these past few weeks. My first ray of hope was this first column, written by the NYTimes Public Editor, citing the paper’s tendency to just use the WH’s statements in their stories. Then there are two other items, one a great post by Glen Greenwald and the other is Friday’s NYTimes front page story on this.

1. Seeing Al Qaeda Around Every Corner – NYTimes Public Editor Carl Hoyt
2. Everyone we fight in Iraq is now “al-Qaida” – Glen Greenwald
3. Bush Distorts Qaeda Links, Critics Assert – 7/13/2007 NYTimes Front Page

Various strands of madness:
New York Times Journalist Killed in Baghdad Khalid W. Hassan, 23 years old
Soldier shoots himself to avoid Iraq – Misleading headline, he actually hires someone to shoot him in the leg
Reuters Photographer, Driver Killed Photographer Namir Noor-Eldeen, 22, and driver Saeed Chmagh, 40

Dessert:
Iraqi Kurds Say Politics Revised Oil Law

Opponents of an earlier draft’s decentralization, as well as potential foreign oil company access, threatened to block the law’s passage…”It’s taken this back to square one, frankly,” KRG Natural Resources Minister Ashti Hawrami told UPI from his mobile phone in Irbil. He was referring to additional changes that centralized authority given to regions and governorates in the draft agreed upon in February, including the control over oil.

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Here’s the Pat Tillman Coverup

“Following the Committee’s April 24, 2007, hearing on the Tillman fratricide, the Committee wrote to White House Counsel Fred Fielding seeking “all documents received or generated by any official in the Executive Office of the President” relating to Corporal Tillman’s death. The White House Counsel’s office responded that it would not provide the Committee with documents that “implicate Executive Branch confidentiality interests” and produced only two communications with the officials in the Defense Department, one of which was a package of news clippings. The response of the Defense Department to the Committee’s inquiry was also deficient.” – The Gavel

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Kickass Clips

#1 – The Sanctity of Marriage

#2 – Christian extremists disrupt Hindu Senate invocation

#3 – Bush Loyalty?

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Time For Scary Scary

terror alert“I believe we are entering a period this summer of increased risk. We could easily be attacked. Summertime seems to be appealing to them. We do worry that they are rebuilding their activities.” – Chertoff bases ‘gut feeling’ on history, Al Qaeda statements

Following the 2004 elections, former Homeland Security Chief Tom Ridge admitted it flat out, that the terror warnings leading up to the election were bogus and entirely political in nature – TOM RIDGE’S BOMBSHELL: HOW THE BUSHIES ISSUED UNJUSTIFIED TERROR ALERTS

Republicans are arroused by the idea that we might get hit again sometime soon, as it would be a political win for the party of fear…“At the end of the day, I believe fully the president is doing the right thing, and I think all we need is some attacks on American soil like we had on [Sept. 11, 2001], and the naysayers will come around very quickly to appreciate not only the commitment for President Bush, but the sacrifice that has been made by men and women to protect this country,” Dennis Milligan (GOP chairman of Arkansas) said. Here is another example of this from today: ‘Santorum Suggests New Terror Attacks Will Change View Of War’:

In an alarming display of fearmongering, former Republican Senator Rick Santorum has suggested that a series of “unfortunate events,” namely terrorist attacks, will occur within the next year and change American citizen’s perception of the war. (Source)

I’m not up to riffing on this, but wanted to point out one thing, and that being the dynamic of Congressional oversight. Not only is a letter like the one below written and delivered, but that very action is “news” in and of itself, which makes the fear mongering much more difficult to continue on with. I think this response by Rep. Bennie Thompson, Chairman of the Homeland Security Committee is perfect:

July 11, 2007

Dear Secretary Chertoff:

Over the past five years, tens of billions of taxpayer dollars have been dedicated to standing up and building capacity at the Department of Homeland Security. The Department of Homeland Security is charged with deterring, preventing and responding to the threat of terrorism. To that end, systems have been erected to identify risks and communicate them to the American public. With all the resources you have at your disposal and all the progress that you assure us that you are making, I cannot understand why you are quoted in the Chicago Tribune as saying you have a “gut feeling” that we are entering a period of heightened risk this summer.

Words have power, Mr. Secretary. You must choose them wisely—especially when they relate to the lives and security of the American public. What color code in the Homeland Security Advisory System is associated with a “gut feeling?” What sectors should be on alert as a result of your “gut feeling?” What cities should be asking their law enforcement to work double shifts because of your “gut feeling?” Are the American people supposed to purchase duct tape and plastic sheeting because of your “gut feeling?”

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NYC Firefighters Blast Giuliani

(h/t C&L)There had been ripples of this being in the cards for Rudi once this campaign progressed. I posted something concerning the air conditions in NYC after 9/11, and began filtering for news on this. The NYTimes ran a story in their Sunday edition a couple weeks back that comes to mind, and they pretty much walked on their tip-toes throughout the article. With that in mind, it’s truly a blessing to have this video technology available today!

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Casting for 9/11 ‘The Sequel’

9/11 the sequel

The story is going to be buried (U.S. Aborted Raid on Qaeda Chiefs in Pakistan in ’05), and our country will once again be left stupefied, wondering “what happened”, as the Pulitzer Prize winning book Ghost Wars by Steve Coll (BUY IT!) will be followed up with a much needed sequel, leaving me and apparently the CIA and US Army Special Forces wondering what blows up next. It is a replay of the late 1990s in the Afghan-Kush region, only instead of the political implications of a blow job and how a failed raid against al Qaeda would “play” for the administration in charge back then, it is the political implications of already having embarked on a remarkably naive clusterfuck of historic precedence in Iraq, and because the childish codgers who brought us that one were looking to make up for it by doing the same exact thing in Iran as soon as they could, it was Pakistan’s joke of a government that Donald Rumsfeld apparently concluded was too important of an ally to risk offending, with the carrying out of military operations in its tribal areas, where it so happened that a meeting of al Qaeda brass took place at a time and location we were aware of beforehand.

I’m rarely angered anymore by the newspaper, having grown accustomed to the fact that good news will be difficult to come by most days, but tonight I’m really pissed off. The bottom line here is that given the opportunity to strike against the organization that took down the towers, you and I can no longer be confident that the political angle will be pushed aside as promised. For Clinton it was the reluctance to fire off more rockets, since the ones that landed in Sudan weren’t able to kill bin Laden, and also the fact that he’d managed to give Republicans an opening to work with, concerning what came out of the opening he’d asked Monica to work with.

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The Libby Results Are In

If you ever wanted some assurance that the free-ride is finally over for our beloved bubble boy, the reaction from left to right is bound to make you smile. While there’s a thick fog surrounding the most vehemently childish portion of the right-wing and James Carville’s bald head, it isn’t going to spread so easily anymore. This is the United States of America. In this country you cannot swear to tell the truth, and then lie under oath. It is against the rules. To argue against that logic, in my mind, makes you an unethical shill. Now I’ll share the opinions of some political writers who, unlike the child-cons I just described, will still be relevant in 10 years:

Frank Rich – A Profile in Cowardice: “There was never any question that President Bush would grant amnesty to Scooter Libby, the man who knows too much about the lies told to sell the war in Iraq. The only questions were when, and how, Mr. Bush would buy Mr. Libby’s silence. Now we have the answers, and they’re at least as incriminating as the act itself. They reveal the continued ferocity of a White House cover-up and expose the true character of a commander in chief whose tough-guy shtick can no longer camouflage his fundamental cowardice.”

Andrew Sullivan – Why The Perjury?: “It means of course that they knowingly exaggerated the causes for war. That’s why this story still rankles, because it’s the closest the outside world has really gotten to the real nexus of decision-making on Iraq that obviously took place in Cheney’s circle. I can still just about believe that Bush thought the WMD case was sound. I can’t believe, given all that we now know, that Cheney did. He’s too smart. The data he read, we now know, was far more equivocal than the data the public was provided with. He’s not new at this. He probably never wanted to make the WMD argument anyway, put it in to appease the UN crowd, and certainly wasn’t going to query its validity. We may never know, of course, because Cheney will have destroyed the evidence, but if I had to guess, I’d say it’s obvious Cheney knew all along that the WMD line was a cover, not a real threat, but realized by the summer of 2003 that any hint of this leaking (even from a two-bit blowhard like Wilson) needed swift and brutal rebuttal. They were embarrassed enough by the WMD bust, but if it was revealed that they had ignored all the caveats beforehand, it could get really dicey.” (Response posts 1, 2)

Pat Buchanan – How Scooter Skated?: “Will the student deferments for these fellows never end?”

Matthew Yglesias: “Is ‘I broke the law to help my boss cover-up embarrassing but non-criminal conduct’ a reasonable case for lenience? No. Is ‘he broke the law to help me cover-up embarrassing by non-criminal conduct’ a reasonable case for granting someone clemency? Also no.”

Here are the numbers (h/t Andrew Sullivan)

libby pardon poll

Oppose Pardon = RED

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Immigration Debate – My Contribution

Arnold Schwarzenegger has phone sex on Howard Stern Show

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Beck – Jackass

“…and we will, rise in the cool of the evening”

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bBlogBouillabaisse – Novocaine

faces

  1. Chavez Meets Ahmadinejad in Tehran

  2. Beatbox…talent? skill? exercise? disorder?

  3. New Drug Deletes Bad Memories

  4. Judge lifts injunction on ‘DC madam’ phone records

  5. Biden on Bush: “This guy is braindead.”

  6. Consumerist.com Catches Geek Squad Stealing Porn From Customer’s Computer (Video)

  7. Statements from Presidential Candidates on Libby Commutation

  8. A Review of Recent US Death Trends in Iraq

  9. Dusty asks, “Independence Day…WTF is it Anyway?”

  10. (NewYorker) Last month, the publisher Simon & Schuster announced a partnership with a Web site called MediaPredict, which would use the collective judgment of readers to evaluate book proposals.

Posted in Words | 1 Comment

Happy July 5th!

I hope everyone took it easy – no mangled body parts due to fireworks and such. Here’s Keith Olbermann’s latest Special Comment regarding Bush granting clemency to Libby. This thing is already covered a million different ways all over the net, so I figured I’d just post something like this to mark the time.

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Bill Hicks’ Legendary One Night Stand, 1990

RIP Bill:

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The Political Cost of Republican Nativism

illegal immigration

Posted in Al Swearengen, Politics | 16 Comments

A.Q. Khan – aka “Fallout Boy”

aq kahnA Pakistani scientist peddled nuclear arms technology to Iran, North Korea and probably Harlem as well for all we know, which justifies jail time at least, if not a USA-certified “enemy combatant” designation. Imagine the amount of dire scenarios that ran through the heads of Bush and Cheney when they learned of this particular man’s contribution to the free market!

After all, it wasn’t even more than a year ago that Kim Jong Ill tested a missile which landed in the Sea of Japan. Since then we’ve agreed to deliver to him monies in frozen accounts, accumulated through a bit of criminal racketeering. The hard part has been finding a bank that will transfer the bribe money, but besides all that, he’s apparently going to give us in return…well, the same deal we had already acquired in the 90s, only with less certainty. What is certain though, is that A.Q. Khan provided the type of nuclear leverage that was used by North Korea in this negotiation that has been going on for years now.

Iran was also a customer. This information is troubling when it seems like every day we’re inching a bit closer to a spate of that pussified bullshit we call “war”, when billions of dollars worth of missiles, cluster bombs and no doubt a series of ‘bunker busters’ are splattered all across the map, killing thousands of innocents and in true GOP-fashion, basically making a lot of noise and a big fucking mess without really accomplishing anything. I like to think of it as a geopolitical version of Danny Bonaduce saying he’s going to “shake your foundation”, and instead just getting high and photocopying his prick a couple thousand times.

Weapons of mass destruction is what it’s supposedly all about, and like the simple child who continues to believe in Santa Claus by junior high, it’s deja-vu with the political posturing and from the get go about a mile of territory just handed over to the lunatics pushing for war before the debate even starts. “Iran having the bomb is a problem”…whatever Democrat says this is an idiot in my book. Because the idea isn’t to AGREE with your political opponents after they’ve already pulled this trick on everyone once.

What you do instead, is respond to a question about the danger that Iran poses by talking about A.Q. “Fallout Boy” Kahn, and pointing out the fact that he sold nuclear technology to Iran. Then point out the fact that we settled at an earlier time with Pakistan to have him placed under house arrest. After that point has sunk in, you can then deliver the punch line. “He’s a free man today, and it is possible that he may have been free already for a month or more before. That’s right, in the same country that Osama Bin Laden is reported to be laming it for the time being.”

Then let the hoopleheads try to wrap their head around a concept like this and see what happens. All we’d need would be one front runner for the Democratic nomination to start up with this during one of the debates, and maybe Americans would stop and think about how we’re allied with a dictator who took power in a coup and presides over a nation of increasingly fanatic religious youth, yet putting the screws to a neighbor to the south whose leader was democratically elected. Our ally has within its borders, the man who orchestrated 9/11 and the supplier of “Nuclear Bomb Making For Dummies” to the Axis of Evil.

Posted in Al Swearengen, Military | 1 Comment

Government Mule – Mule

With the late Allen Woody on bass:

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RMD – ResMed Inc.

RMDThis company manufacturers and sells a medical device known as the CPAP. Consisting of a motor, tube and mask, the CPAP pumps a steady continuous flow of air through the mask and into the nose of a person while they are sleeping. Sleep apnea and chronic snoring are both known to be 100% neutralized when using this device. History has been full of remedies for these two conditions, and up until the CPAP entered the market, none of them ever worked. The downward trend in RMD’s stock price over the past 4.5 months has been something I’ve monitored closely, and if my weekend number crunching hadn’t been put off until today due to school, I’d have struck when the market opened on Monday. That is not the case, but regardless, I’m going in for 2400 shares at 41.54.

My instincts began to take over on my speculation regarding State Street Corp. last night, as I had spelled out clearly in the prose written yesterday that my expectations weren’t anything more than 10% over a year. I think that’s a very conservative estimate, but my instinct was to write it, so that means something. It’s a good case study in whether or not I’m wise to trust first instincts in such a way, and if the stock breaks out I’ll learn something. RMD will easily become the most expensive stock I’ve ever bought, with a P/E ratio over 52. And so, I essentially have decided to forgo the reasonably priced sedan that gets excellent gas mileage in lieu of a sports car I’d been drooling over for a long time now.

Posted in Al Swearengen, Economics | 1 Comment

4 Great Clips

Lewis Black on right-wing paranoia
Michael Moore is interviewed by CNBC outside of the New York Stock Exchange (They wouldn’t let him in!)
Tommy Chong on Neil Cavuto’s show
Classic Barney Frank clip from 2006 (the GOP had just attached a cut in the estate tax to the minimum wage bill)

Posted in Video | 10 Comments

Banking

frinkI haven’t written about anything market-related in a couple weeks. This is mainly due to other demands on my time, but my reading regime hasn’t waned, so the ideas I have are plentiful. One thing that’s on my mind is how tremendously shady the world of investment banking appears to be, with not only the collapse of two Bear Sterns hedge funds (both recently launched) within a week due to more mortgage woes, but the involvement of US Treasury Secretary Paulson in preventing SEC Chairman Cox from writing an amicus brief to the Supreme Court on behalf of Enron shareholders. The ethical implications here are blinding, as Paulson came from Goldman Sachs to work in Bush’s cabinet, and the investment banks had already lost the trial. An appeals court overturned the verdict, and so the case was SCOTUS-bound, or at least it should have been.

My intention is to make sure that I’ve always got a piece of the finance-portion of the US economy in my portfolio, and now that BSC and GS are dancing the Charleston, I’m considering State Street Corporation. Their business is more about processing transactions on a global basis, so as individual regions expand, their revenue increases along with it. A single meltdown on the domestic side won’t derail State Street, and in times like these, when the known-unknowns (thank you Rummy) are piling up, this type of a business model is more my cup of tea. Clearly not as sexy as the aformentioned shadier banks – I’m not really expecting anything more than 10% if I hold it for a full year – the hundreds of sub-custodians (banks in countries abroad that act as weigh stations or distribution points for their nations’ customers) out there should see a regular increase in transaction volume month to month when compared with the previous fiscal year, and in the South Pacific especially, this will equal higher revenue for State Street. And since 99.999999999% of this extra work is completed by their internal information technology systems, the profit margin only grows from this trend.

Malaysia-focused ETFs are what I’m looking at right now, as along with the banking pick, I want to make sure that I’ve got an invitation to this party as well. What Latin America did for my portfolios from 2003-2006, a couple well placed purchases in this region could be just the thing to help rescue me from what has thus far been a pathetic showing this year through five months (+3.71%). Simply put, I’m looking outward for my piece of the near future. My trust in the FED is in tact, but with that said, there needs to be a lot more to smile at than a series of engineered statistics for there to be still this much juice left in the US stock markets for the rest of 2007.  Still bullish on energy, especially oil, gas and coal – I’m not the slightest bit nervous about my two technology picks Oracle and Adobe – Iphone or no Iphone, I’m scared of all retail stocks at the moment, with Dell being the only one on my radar.

Ticker/Price/(Buy)/Shares/Value
ACI 35.01 (34.37) 1000 $35,000
ADBE 40.37 (41.89) 1650 $66,610.50
BAM 40.55 (39.60) 7327.5 $297,130.13
CNQ 66.39 (62.66) 3535 $234,688.65
ORCL 20.00 (19.17) 4000 $80,000
PBR 122.31 (101.04) 1891 $231,363.85
TS 49.15 (45.93) 2000 $98,320.00
CASH $100,127.53
Total $1,143,698.69
Gain 3.71% $40,883.33

Posted in Al Swearengen, Economics | 1 Comment

The Murder of Jose Padilla

spanish inquisitionWeek after week, this guy Padilla manages to look more and more like the poster child for what Republican authoritarianism is great at producing. There are many more taxpaying victims of small government, anti-New Deal conservatism out there, from Katrina victims to the folks who have been downsized and/or ruined by insurance that refuses to insure, but in Padilla’s case there is a dynamic that cannot be ignored. This of course being the fact that for every GOP Presidential candidate besides Ron Paul, keeping in place the system that murdered this man or even making it more ferocious and gruesome, happens to be a linchpin of their sales pitch. Attracting Republican primary voters, according to Campaigning Crack-whore Calculations LLC, apparently requires a candidate who is proud of his ‘Club Gitmo’ gear.

In right-wing world the Military Commissions Act of 2006, which rendered habeas corpus a thing of the past, is not a sign that our republic has lost its way, but rather a sign of progress. Never mind the fact that its inception was the result of incompetent law-breaking over a period of many years, resulting in the glut of mostly innocent individuals now in our custody, and the need to minimize exposure to shame or embarrassment over the reality of what that illegal behavior has actually accomplished. Habeas corpus wasn’t exiled for the sake of national security. Habeas corpus was a victim of partisan political expedience, for reasons spelled out in the Supreme Court’s decision on ‘Hamden v. Rumsfeld’, it had to be sacrificed for the sake of the (GOP) team.

That same team required also, years of sacrifice from one Jose Padilla, whose initial capture was hailed as a close brush with a potentially deadly and ‘dirty’ chemical oblivion. Imminent doom being the value-pick of our political marketplace at the time, our government’s hand was forced, and Jose’s threshold for pain had to be established, his capacity to swallow fear evaluated, his ‘animal’ skill set in the product testing labs enhanced. During this period in 2002, Padilla was denied access to his lawyer, and the government admitted that their information on him wasn’t enough to prosecute on. He was tortured for the purpose of extracting information that could then justify his next status as a “material witness”, and when nothing panned out, he became an “enemy combatant”.

John Ashcroft: “We have captured a known terrorist who was exploring a plan to build and explode a radiological dispersion device, or ‘dirty bomb,’ in the United States.”

Paul Wolfowitz: “There was not an actual plan. We stopped this man in the initial planning stages.”

“(Administration officials)…said that the Justice Department was eager to showcase the Padilla case after weeks in which the FBI had been battered in Congress for missing potential warning signals of the Sept. 11 attacks.” (Sources 1, 2)

A reasonable plan had been established for quite some time regarding the disposal of his body, but of course the judicial activists in charge of our Supreme Court threw a monkey wrench into the works. Padilla was a US citizen, and that superseded his “enemy combatant” status, which required the government to either charge him with a crime or let him go. And a panic seemed to erupt all at once, as the assumption that Padilla’s corpse could be tossed into the incinerator and forgotten was not only contradicted, but in fact, his corpse would have to instead be presented for public inspection in a short amount of time.
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The Shadow Government

In honor of the release of CIA documents revealing some of our more shady actions, I wanted to share this documentary called “The Shadow Government”, which appeared on PBS in the mid 1980s amidst the Iran-Contra scandal. Larry Johnson, the former CIA agent who blogs over at No Quarter wrote about the documents that were released: “…The report highlighted the following major crimes and misdeeds:

  1. The use of the mafia in a failed attempt to assassinate Fidel Castro.
  2. The illegal wiretapping of American newsmen.
  3. Analysis of domestic groups and political protesters.
  4. Unauthorized opening of mail of U.S. Citizens.
  5. Drug and behavior-alteration testing that probably resulted in the suicide of at least one U.S. citizen.
  6. Imprisonment of a Soviet defector without due process for more than two years.”

Here is the documentary:

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NBA Draft 2007

The Celts got smacked around once more by the ping-pong curse, and so the #5 pick on Thursday night is what we’ve ended up with after posting the 2nd worst record. As depressing as it was to watch the western conference scoop up two more top picks, the upside to all this is, at least it’s not 2006! This #5 pick in particular is worth something. The Boston Globe has a piece on Al Thornton and also a slide show with all of the possibilities for the Celts in this draft (there’s an obvious error on the first page).

One option was to trade the pick, Theo Ratliff and Gerald Green to Phoenix in exchange for Shawn Marion, and out of the 15 or so they have for you to vote on at the end, it’s the one I chose. When the results showAcie Earl up I’m once again ashamed to be a member of ‘Celtic Nation’, as out of 9000+ votes, “Trade Paul Pierce” ends up in third place with over 12%. I’ve been calling people idiots for years now when they say this, and have realized that Pierce needs to learn how to fly in order to please the hoopleheads.

There was a time when I’d have a definite opinion about who we should pick, and a month ago I was all about getting Al Thornton, the senior out of Florida St. Then a couple of weeks ago I decided we needed the best defender available, which would most likely be Corey Brewer out of Florida. At this point my only conviction is that Ainge cannot not draft the Chinese guy. In this draft class there is one way in particular to ensure a stomach ulcer , and taking him at #5 would be just that. For the love of God (or Joseph Smith if it helps you see the light) Danny…turn this pick into a player who can earn 20+ minutes a night the second he walks onto the floor.

And then FIRE DOC RIVERS ALREADY, with the plan being to lure either Rick Carlysle or Jim O’Brien back to Boston. The team then learns how to earn minutes on the defensive end, get stops in the 4th quarter and get past the first round of the playoffs. I think it can all happen as long as there’s no Chinese guy at #5, and…well, at least if Danny doesn’t screw up the first part, it’ll only be a matter of time before Doc proves once again that he’s not cut out for this. (Bill Simmons on the draft)

Posted in Al Swearengen, Sports | 4 Comments

If Republicans still controlled Congress…

This hearing on the air quality in New York City in the days and weeks following 9/11 would have never taken place. Christie Todd Whitman wouldn’t have had to sit at a table and answer questions under oath. She wouldn’t have had to view tapes of her statements attesting to the safe level of contaminants in the air on the days following the attacks, and wouldn’t have then been challenged with the conflicting scientific readings acquired by the city’s own environmental agency during that same time period. There would be no justice for the citizens who trusted the government’s word, breathed the air and now suffer from debilitating respiratory illnesses, some of which insurance will not cover.

And how about “The Hero”, Mayor Guliani? Republican blood surely runs through those veins, as his contribution to this lingering tragedy has been to “write a letter urging Congress to pass a law capping the city’s liability at $350 million”. Not a single hearing was held on the aftereffects of 9/11 while Republicans ran the Congress. How can a government lie about the air quality in NYC, allow thousands of workers at the site to operate without respiratory gear, and then refuse to even investigate how such a thing could happen? The photo ops were really all that mattered to the leaders who were in charge during this time, and if they are allowed to just skate on the abdication of their responsibility for ensuring public safety, what hope is there for us?

Matt Taibbi (Rolling Stone Magazine) wrote a scathing piece on Rudy Guliani about a month ago, and really manages to sum up the issue here in a single paragraph:

Although respiratory-mask use was mandatory, the city allowed a macho culture to develop on the site: Even the mayor himself showed up without a mask. By October, it was estimated, masks were being worn on site as little as twenty-nine percent of the time. Rudy (Al: and the EPA) proclaimed that there were “no significant problems” with the air at the World Trade Center. But there was something wrong with the air: It was one of the most dangerous toxic-waste sites in human history, full of everything from benzene to asbestos and PCBs to dioxin (the active ingredient in Agent Orange). Since the cleanup ended, police and firefighters have reported a host of serious illnesses — respiratory ailments like sarcoidosis; leukemia and lymphoma and other cancers; and immune-system problems.

That’s the bottom line here, and not a single leader who played a part in this has had the courage to simply tell the truth or (God forbid) offer an apology to the thousands of real heroes who were too busy removing human remains from the pile to consider whether or not their government was holding up its end. Now those very same people are too busy dying, with medical bills they’re unable to pay and a body that is unable to work for a living.

If the Americans who voted in November hadn’t sent the Republican Party packing, those heroes who can’t afford to feed their kids or purchase the medication they need to have a fighting chance for survival, would have been ignored for another two years! We’d never have had video clips like these: Rep. Bill Pascrell (NJ-08) questions Whitman on the EPA Inspector General’s report:In a second round of questioning, Rep. Pascrell questions Suzanne Y. Mattei, Former New York City Executive of the Sierra Club and author of a book on this subject, about some of the claims of EPA officials, particularly the claim that it was dangerous “on the pile” but safe “off the pile”:
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Posted in Al Swearengen, History, Justice, Politics, Video | 28 Comments

Woke Up This Morning…

Pacific Ocean Sunset

“Writing in his masterwork Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft in 1922, Max Weber showed that the “bureaucratic class” (Beamtentum) manipulated state secrets in order to undermine democratic institutions. By wielding security classifications, they could claim an information monopoly and render the parliament impotent. Weber later revealed that he was thinking in particular of the General Staff and their political machinations in the last years of World War I. Germany had been turned into all but a military dictatorship, and Weber’s study showed, correctly,Robber Shot that the claims of state secrecy were the single most effective tactic used to destroy the nascent Wilhelmine parliamentary democracy. Now, Max Weber never met Dick Cheney, but Cheney is just the man he had in mind; he is for America today what Ludendorff was in the third Oberste Heeresleitung in 1918. We all know what security classifications mean to Dick Cheney. You invoke them to keep your lurid dealings with oil executives, defense contractors and foreign potentates out of public sight. But then when you have a political adversary in the crosshairs, security classifications count for nothing. And today we learn just how literally true this is.” (Harpers)

  1. Is Bush Planning to Nuke Iran?
  2. Librarians Describe Life Under An FBI Gag Order
  3. The Jefferson Bible
  4. linuxsucks.org, runs Linux
  5. Ariz. woman’s face branded with ‘snitch’
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RIP – Rod Beck

beck(SF Chronicle) The Giants issued a statement from owner Peter Magowan on Sunday saying, “When our partnership group took over the Giants in 1993, all of San Francisco was treated to a wonderful 103-win year. Nobody who was a part of that will forget Rod’s 48 saves. When we reached our dream of the playoffs in 1997, it was only fitting that Rod was on the mound for the final out that clinched the National League West.”

The next season, having gone to the Cubs as a free agent, he saved a career-high 51 games, including Chicago’s 5-3 victory over the Giants in a one-game play-in for the National League wild card. Beck’s velocity declined over the years, especially after he underwent “Tommy John” elbow surgery in 2002. By the time he signed with the Padres in 2003, he barely hit 83 mph with his fastball. However, when closer Trevor Hoffman went down with a shoulder injury, Beck converted 20 consecutive save opportunities.

Posted in Sports | 3 Comments

Health Care Industry Lobbyists View SiCKO (Moore takes questions)

He screened the film for health care industry lobbyists, and they respond to him. I wish a discussion like this could take place on political television…right now there’s virtually none of this on Meet the Press or the other big shows. It’s all about the politicians, the stars. These lobbyists are doing the job they’re paid to do, and the corporations are doing the job their shareholders expect them to do. The press, when you add in the professional political bloggers, is quite good in print, but once audio and video are thrown into the mix, the quality diminishes. The horse race for 2008 and geopolitics seem to dominate too much of the output. This leads to domestic issues of great consequence being ignored in comparison. For this reason and probably many others, I’m glad Michael Moore exists and that he’s as good of a filmmaker as he is. SiCKO is only relevant in a society like ours – being dictated to as we are through our televisions – where only a fool would continue to believe in the status quo getting around to fixing anything that’s broken. A brouhaha over whether it’s actually broken at all is about as far as the status quo can manage to get. By design we’re conditioned to assume that this is the way of the world…millions of fools, myself included, are too fucking busy to have it any other way.

Also, be sure to check out the health care video I posted the other day.

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Crispin Glover

This guy played the father of Michael J. Fox on ‘Back to the Future’, and the film he was appearing on Letterman for was a piece of crap called ‘River’s Edge’. For the life of me I couldn’t figure out why this one received good reviews, as it definitely ruined a Monterey Friday night for me about 10 years ago. Bad script, bad acting and they took a crowbar to the thing so they could jam a lot of odds and ends into it. Many of those involve Dennis Hopper, who inexplicably has dresser drawers stuffed full of marijuana and likes to dance with mannequins.

It’s supposed to be a film that portrays how immoral and oblivious the new generation of American kids really are. Crispin Glover plays a kid who appears to be very into speed, though you never see his character doing whatever would make a person act so wired, scatterbrained and certain. It’s a lot worse in real life for this guy, as this appearance is a train-wreck. He decided it would be a good idea to load up on acid before the show. I’ll let you decide how he did. Below the fold you’ll find his return appearance about five years later, and Dave really wants to talk about this first one. Continue reading

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Fortune Cookies

fortuneEither in school or on TV (or maybe I read about it), there was a study performed where 50 or so people were in a room and given a horoscope that was color-coded based on what the person’s sign was. This one pager was packed with text, meaning the horoscopes were more detailed than even the ones found in certain magazines. At the end of the reading period, a high percentage (I want to say over 90%) thought that it accurately described their situation in life. The whole point of the experiment was to determine whether people will bend their perceptions to accommodate what they are reading, and the answer turned out to be ‘yes’. They determined that this was true, because everyone in the room had the exact same horoscope, just on a specific color of paper based on their birthday.

I include this disclaimer because for the most part I think the concept is bullshit, but at the same time useful if it causes human beings to look inward and get to know themselves. That’s always a good thing. Then there are moments like tonight when I get to feeling like there might be something to it. I think of these moments as instances where God is telling me to stop doubting its own existence. If that is the case, then I want to thank God for not getting this point across with an Old Testament type of injury, like one meant to scare me into believing. And as far as that goes, I don’t think a God that does exist would be doing any of those horrible things to anyone in the first place. Meaning, if I have any faith at all in regards to ‘God’, it’s that he or she is not as much of a maniac as the holy books tell it.

This is more God’s style right here – Chinese food tonight for the family is house special fried rice, beef teriyaki and sesame chicken. Our cat Cleo will eat some of the beef and a few of the shrimp in the rice, and this combination is one that both of the boys can enjoy. With twins this can be a tricky thing come dinner time. Anyways…there are four fortune cookies, which I distribute. They are spot on for each of us, and if one had ended up in a different hand, they wouldn’t have made any sense.

Sam – Your reputation is your wealth.
Max – Your emotions are right on the surface, but that’s okay.
Heather – A day of worry is more exhausting than a week of work.
Papa – Minds are like parachutes. They only function when they are open.

Posted in Al Swearengen, Religion | 1 Comment

Let Them Stay

Voices of US War Resisters in Canada

Posted in Military, Video | 4 Comments

Nirvana & The Meatpuppets – Oh Me, Plateau

Oh Me, then Plateau – RIP Kurt

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