Category Archives: Political

read between the lines, Einstein

Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, September 17, 2006; Page A01  

An overhaul in how states and localities record votes and administer elections since the Florida recount battle six years ago has created conditions that could trigger a repeat — this time on a national scale — of last week’s Election Day debacle in the Maryland suburbs, election experts said. 

In the Nov. 7 election, more than 80 percent of voters will use electronic voting machines, and a third of all precincts this year are using the technology for the first time. The changes are part of a national wave, prompted by the federal Help America Vote Act of 2002 and numerous revisions of state laws, that led to the replacement of outdated voting machines with computer-based electronic machines, along with centralized databases of registered voters and other steps to refine the administration of elections.

 

But in Maryland last Tuesday, a combination of human blunders and technological glitches caused long lines and delays in vote-counting. The problems, which followed ones earlier this year in Ohio, Illinois and several other states, have contributed to doubts among some experts about whether the new systems are reliable and whether election officials are adequately prepared to use them.

Here’s the link to the whole story

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/16/AR2006091600885.html?nav=hcmodule

It doesn’t take a genius to figure this one out, folks.  If spending $90 million in 40 days on attack ads and a drop in gasoline prices from $3/gal to $2/gal isn’t enough to keep the GOP in power, the Republicans will simply use their good buddies at Diebold to steal the elections the way they did in Florida in 2000 and in Ohio in 2004.  Anyone want to bet that as a pattern there will be no problems in safe GOP districts and lots of problems in areas where Dems vote?  The next story you read will be a grassroots movement to change the Constitution to eliminate term limits on the Presidency.  All Hail the new Caesar, George the First. 

told you so

Millions spent to dig dirt on Democrats

Washington Post
Sunday, September 10, 2006; Page A01
 

Republicans are planning to spend the vast majority of their sizable financial war chest over the final 60 days of the campaign attacking Democratic House and Senate candidates over personal issues and local controversies, GOP officials said.  

The National Republican Congressional Committee, which this year dispatched a half-dozen operatives to comb through tax, court and other records looking for damaging information on Democratic candidates, plans to spend more than 90 percent of its $50 million-plus advertising budget on what officials described as negative ads.

here’s the link to the whole story.  Note the prominence of Oklahoma’s Tom Cole.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/09/AR2006090901079.html?nav=rss_politics

This makes me SO angry at our government

By Dahlia Lithwick, Slate Magazine Senior Editor
Posted Thursday, Feb. 16, 2006, at 3:22 PM ET

It’s an immutable rule of journalism that when you unearth three instances of a phenomenon, you’ve got a story. So, you might think three major reports on Guantanamo Bay, all released within a span of two weeks, might constitute a big story. But somehow they do not.

Guantanamo Bay currently holds over 400 prisoners. The Bush administration has repeatedly described these men as “the worst of the worst.” Ten have been formally charged with crimes and will someday face military tribunals. The rest wait to learn what they have done wrong. Two major studies conclude that most of them have done very little wrong. A third says they are being tortured while they wait.

No one disputes that the real criminals at Guantanamo should be brought to justice. But now we have proof that most of the prisoners are guilty only of bad luck and that we are casually destroying their lives. The first report was written by Corine Hegland and published two weeks ago in the National Journal. Hegland scrutinized the court documents of 132 prisoners—approximately one-quarter of the detainees—who have filed habeas corpus petitions, as well as the redacted transcripts of the hearings that 314 prisoners have received in appearing before military Combatant Status Review Tribunals—the preliminary screening process that is supposed to ascertain whether they are “enemy combatants,” as the Bush administration claims. Hegland’s exhaustive review concludes that most of the detainees are not Afghans and that most were not picked up on the battlefield in Afghanistan. The vast majority were instead captured in Pakistan. Seventy-five of the 132 men are not accused of taking part in hostilities against the United States. The data suggests that maybe 80 percent of these detainees were never al-Qaida members, and many were never even Taliban foot soldiers.

Most detainees are being held for the crime of having “associated” with the Taliban or al-Qaida—often in the most attenuated way, including having known or lived with people assumed to be Taliban, or worked for charities with some ties to al-Qaida. Some had “combat” experience that seems to have consisted solely of being hit by U.S. bombs. Most were not picked up by U.S. forces but handed over to our military by Afghan warlords in exchange for enormous bounties and political payback.

But weren’t they all proved guilty of something at their status review hearings? Calling these proceedings “hearings” does violence to that word. Detainees are assumed guilty until proven innocent, provided no lawyers, and never told what the evidence against them consists of. That evidence, according to another report by Hegland, often consists of little beyond admissions or accusations by other detainees that follow hundreds of hours of interrogations. (A single prisoner at Guantanamo, following repeated interrogation, accused over 60 of his fellow inmates—or more than 10 percent of the prison’s population. Some of his accounts are factual impossibilities.) Another detainee “confessed” following an interminable interrogation, shouting: “Fine, you got me; I’m a terrorist.” When the government tried to list this as a confession, his own interrogators were forced to break the outrageous game of telephone and explain it as sarcasm. A Yemeni accused of being a Bin Laden bodyguard eventually “admitted” to having seen Bin Laden five times: “Three times on Al Jazeera and twice on Yemeni news.” His file: “Detainee admitted to knowing Osama Bin Laden.”

Mark Denbeaux, who teaches law at Seton Hall University in New Jersey, and attorney Joshua Denbeaux published a second report several days after Hegland. They represent two detainees. Their data on the evidence amassed against the entire detainee population jibes with Hegland’s. They evaluated written determinations produced by the government for the Combatant Status Review Tribunals; in other words, the government’s best case against the prisoners, in the government’s own words.

The Seton Hall study found that 55 percent of the detainees are not suspected of having committed any hostile acts against the United States and that 40 percent of the detainees are not affiliated with al-Qaida. Eight percent are listed as having fought for a terrorist group, and 60 percent are merely accused of being “associated with” terrorists—the lowest categorization available. They confirm that 86 percent were captured either by the Northern Alliance or by Pakistan “at a time in which the United States offered large bounties for capture of suspected enemies.” They quote a flier, distributed in Afghanistan at the time of the sweeps that reads: “Get wealth and power beyond your dreams … You can receive millions of dollars helping the anti-Taliban forces catch Al Qaida and Taliban murderers. This is enough money to take care of your family, your tribe, your village for the rest of your life. Pay for livestock and doctors and school books.”

While some of the evidence against the detainees appears damning—11 percent are said to have “met with Bin Laden” (I suppose that includes the guy who saw him on TV)—most are accused of “associating with terrorists” based on having met with unnamed individuals, used a guesthouse, owned a Casio watch, or wearing olive drab clothing. Thirty-nine percent possessed a Kalashnikov rifle—almost as fashionable in that part of the world as a Casio. Many were affiliated with groups not on the Department of Homeland Security’s Terrorist watch list.

The third report was released today by the U.N. Commission on Human Rights. Five rapporteurs spent 18 months investigating conditions at Guantanamo, based on information provided by released detainees or family members, lawyers, and Defense Department documents. The investigators were not scrutinizing charges. They were assessing humanitarian conditions. They declined to visit the camp itself when they were told they’d be forbidden to meet with the prisoners. Their 41-page document concludes that the government is violating numerous human rights—including the ban on torture and arbitrary detention and the right to a fair trial. The investigators were particularly bothered by reports of violent force-feeding of hunger-strikers and interrogation techniques including prolonged solitary confinement; exposure to extreme temperatures, noise, and light; and forced shaving. It concludes: “The United States government should close the Guantanamo Bay detention facilities without further delay” and recommends the detainees be released or tried.

And why doesn’t the government want to put these prisoners on trial? The administration has claimed that it needs these men for their intelligence value; to interrogate them about further 9/11-like plots. But as Hegland reports, by the fall of 2002 it was already common knowledge in the government that “fewer than 10 percent of Guantanamo’s prisoners were high-value terrorist operatives,” according to Michael Scheuer, who headed the agency’s Bin Laden unit from 1999 until he resigned in 2004. Three years later, the government’s own documents reveal that hundreds of hours of ruthless questioning have produced only the quasi-comic, quasi-tragic spectacle of weary prisoners beginning to finger one another.

The government’s final argument is that we are keeping them from rejoining the war against us, a war that has no end. But that is the most disingenuous claim of all: If any hardened anti-American zealots leave Guantanamo, they will be of our own creation. Nothing will radicalize a man faster than years of imprisonment based on unfounded charges; that’s why Abu Ghraib has become the world’s foremost crime school. A random sweep of any 500 men in the Middle East right now might turn up dozens sporting olive drab and Casio watches, and dozens more who fiercely hate the United States. Do we propose to detain them all indefinitely and without charges?

The only real justification for the continued disgrace that is Guantanamo is that the government refuses to admit it’s made a mistake. Releasing hundreds of prisoners after holding them for four years without charges would be big news. Better, a Guantanamo at which nothing has happened in four years. Better to drain the camp slowly, releasing handfuls of prisoners at a time. Last week, and with little fanfare, seven more detainees were let go. That brings the total number of releasees to 180, with 76 transferred to the custody of other countries. Are these men who are quietly released the “best of the worst”? No. According to the National Journal one detainee, an Australian fundamentalist Muslim, admitted to training several of the 9/11 hijackers and intended to hijack a plane himself. He was released to his home government last year. A Briton said to have targeted 33 Jewish organizations in New York City is similarly gone. Neither faces charges at home.

Guantanamo represents a spectacular failure of every branch of government. Congress is willing to pass a bill stripping courts of habeas-corpus jurisdiction for detainees but unwilling to probe what happens to them. The Supreme Court’s decision in Rasul v. Bush conferred seemingly theoretical rights enforceable in theoretical courtrooms. The right to challenge a government detention is older than this country and yet Guantanamo grinds on.

It grinds on because the Bush administration gets exactly what it pays for in that lease: Guantanamo is a not-place. It’s neither America nor Cuba. It is peopled by people without names who face no charges. Non-people facing non-trials to defend non-charges are not a story. They are a headache. No wonder the prisoners went on hunger strikes. Not-eating, ironically enough, is the only way they could try to become real to us.

U.S. Torture Exposed

Iraqis are seething and I don’t blame them. Here are the new pictures of Iraqis being or who have been tortured by Americans at the infamous Abu Ghraib prison and these photos are running 24/7 on Al Jazeera and other Mideast TV stations. Put yourself in their shoes and you’d be up in arms, literally, just as they are.

WARNING! THESE PHOTOS ARE GRAPHIC AND VERY UNPLEASANT. THEY ARE SHOCKING. IF YOU ARE SENSITIVE AND ABHOR VIOLENCE YOU WILL NOT LIKE WHAT YOU SEE.

HERE IS THE LINK:

Photos of U.S. Torture

(My thanks to John X for passing along this link)

Unimpeachable

By SCOTT SHANE
Published: February 11, 2006
By The New York Times

WASHINGTON, Feb. 10 — A C.I.A. veteran who oversaw intelligence assessments about the Middle East from 2000 to 2005 on Friday accused the Bush administration of ignoring or distorting the prewar evidence on a broad range of issues related to Iraq in its effort to justify the American invasion of 2003.

Here’s the link to the full story:

X Spy Outs Bush

The stink of Bush’s lies about the so-called War on Terror is even beginning to choke Republicans:

By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
Published: February 11, 2006
The New York Times

WASHINGTON, Feb. 10 — When Representative Heather A. Wilson broke ranks with President Bush on Tuesday to declare her “serious concerns” about domestic eavesdropping, she gave voice to what some fellow Republicans were thinking, if not saying.

In interviews over several days, Congressional Republicans have expressed growing doubts about the National Security Agency program to intercept international communications inside the United States without court warrants. A growing number of Republicans say the program appears to violate the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the 1978 law that created a court to oversee such surveillance, and are calling for revamping the FISA law.

Ms. Wilson and at least six other Republican lawmakers are openly skeptical about Mr. Bush’s assertion that he has the inherent authority to order the wiretaps and that Congress gave him the power to do so when it authorized him to use military force after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

We will hear more about Rep. Wilson, I think. She’s an Air Force Academy grad, a veteran and a former intelligence officer who is in a hot race in a swing district against New Mexico’s sitting attorney general.

Here’s the link to the full story

GOP Rep. Stands Up

I found this interesting

By ERIC LICHTBLAU
Published: February 8, 2006
The New York Times

WASHINGTON, Feb. 7 — A House Republican whose subcommittee oversees the National Security Agency broke ranks with the White House on Tuesday and called for a full Congressional inquiry into the Bush administration’s domestic eavesdropping program.

The lawmaker, Representative Heather A. Wilson of New Mexico, chairwoman of the House Intelligence Subcommittee on Technical and Tactical Intelligence, said in an interview that she had “serious concerns” about the surveillance program. By withholding information about its operations from many lawmakers, she said, the administration has deepened her apprehension about whom the agency is monitoring and why.

Ms. Wilson, who was a National Security Council aide in the administration of President Bush’s father, is the first Republican on either the House’s Intelligence Committee or the Senate’s to call for a full Congressional investigation into the program, in which the N.S.A. has been eavesdropping without warrants on the international communications of people inside the United States believed to have links with terrorists.

Something tells me we will hear more from this woman in the near future. This is a smart move for a Congresswoman from libertarian leaning New Mexico. Seems bipartisan and tough, standing up to a lame duck president before the midterm elections when all stops are out. She just maybe could catapault into national attention at a time when there’s getting to ba a vacuum/vacuous leadership in her party. Who knows? If they could talk about Condi Rice running in ’08, why not this woman? Maybe at least a VP candidate to run against a Hillary Dem ticket.

Here’s the link to the entire story:

New York Times Online

Here’s another little tease from Slate online magazine about what goes on under the Bush admin. that makes me crazy:

Knight Ridder reports that the State Department has “sidelined key career weapons experts and replaced them with less experienced political appointees.” The changes have come during a reorganization of various offices and created something of an uproar among career bureaucrats. “The process has been gravely flawed from the outset, and smacks plainly of a political vendetta against career Foreign Service and Civil Service (personnel) by political appointees,” said a “group of employees” in a rare letter of complaint to superiors late last year.

Corruption is Bipartisan Now

By Allan Lengel
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 12, 2006; Page A05

A former aide to Rep. William J. Jefferson (D-La.) pleaded guilty yesterday to bribing the congressman to promote high-tech business ventures in Africa.

Brett M. Pfeffer, 37, of Herndon, a former president of a McLean investment firm, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Alexandria to conspiracy to commit bribery of a public official and aiding and abetting the bribery of a public official in 2004 and 2005.

Although this has absolutely nothing to do with the lobbyist scandal going on with the GOP, they’ll conflate it and say it isn’t a GOP problem, it’s just a few bad eggs in both parties. Yeah, OK. Wonder what the odds were that the Dem they’d catch up with would be from Louisiana? LOL As far as I know, in Jefferson Parish, they make fun of any politician who doesn’t get rich in office and think he’s a fool and refuse to vote for him. Where’s James Carville when you need him?

Dumb and Dumber

From The Rolling Stone (Online)

The GOP just doesn’t get it.
The party is mired in the stench of K Street corruption. So who are the two men tapped to compete for Tom DeLay’s leadership post?

Let’s meet bachelor #1:
DeLay’s wingman Roy Blunt. The only problem with Blunt, as Bloomberg reports it, is that he “served as the Republicans’ official liaison to K Street. In one meeting at the Capitol last April, he rounded up some 200 lobbyists to talk with top Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, about the party’s agenda.”

And bachelor #2?
Ohio’s John Boehner. This quote from R.I.N.O. Representative Chris Shays of Connecticut says it all: “The problem John faces is that he’s so close to K Street.”

The Daily Show copy writes itself, doesn’t it?

These are the two guys running to replace Tom DeLay in the House Republican leadership. Here’s a little example of the shenanigans of these guys from The Washington Post:

Both camps this week have been pointing to the other’s well-documented connections and activities, some of which are the stuff of legends. They include Blunt’s failed effort to insert a provision benefiting Philip Morris USA into the massive bill creating the Department of Homeland Security and Boehner’s distribution of checks from tobacco concerns in 1995 to lawmakers on the House floor. Also of note are both men’s prodigious fundraising activities, some of which involve individuals and clients with ties to Abramoff.

He's a dick

My friend, John X, writes:

It’s a good thing Cheney is OK after his trip to the hospital.

If something had happened to Cheney, George Bush would have become
President.

I’m reserving my judgment until I hear from Pat Robertson whether this hospital visit is the wrath of God for something the dick did or didn’t do.

political fix for the junkies

Now, it’s official. It’s OK to talk about the war in Iraq and even to have some criticisms, but we have to do it the president’s way, we’ve been warned.

From today’s New York Times

WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 – President Bush issued an unusually stark warning to Democrats today about how to conduct the debate on Iraq as midterm elections approach, declaring that Americans know the difference “between honest critics” and those “who claim that we acted in Iraq because of oil, or because of Israel, or because we misled the American people.”

Wonder what he thinks about us debating the bribery and corruption scandal wracking his party? Here’s the latest to go under with Jack Abramoff’s little cash for vote deal with Tom DeLay:

By Jeffrey H. Birnbaum and James V. Grimaldi
of The Washington Post
Updated: 11:16 p.m. ET Jan. 9, 2006

One of Washington’s top lobbying operations will shut down at the end of the month because of its ties to disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff and former House majority leader Tom DeLay.

Alexander Strategy Group, which had thrived since its founding in 1998 thanks largely to its close connections to DeLay (R-Tex.), will cease to operate except for a relatively small business-development division, Edwin A. Buckham, the former top DeLay aide who owns the company, said yesterday.

I liked what Dahlia Lithwick wrote for Slate Magazine about the start of the Alito hearings: “He told the committee that he grew up too poor to afford a judicial philosophy.”