Daily Kos

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Hillary's misleading Euro subcommittee slur

Wed Mar 05, 2008 at 04:14:05 PM PDT

In the past week, Hillary has brought a new line of attack against Obama: that he has not used his chairmanship of the European Affairs subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations to conduct oversight on Afghanistan.

This charge is very misleading, and deliberately betrays an understanding of how Senate committees work, in several respects.  

Trent Lott diverted Katrina hospital ship from New Orleans

Fri Mar 10, 2006 at 04:23:08 PM PDT

The National Journal has an interview with Michael Brown in its new issue that discusses why the hospital ship USS Comfort was diverted to Mississippi when it had been bound for New Orleans, even though the governor of Mississippi had already told the US Navy and Northcom that he didn't need it.

Why?  Because Trent Lott got on the phone and started screaming like a spoiled baby.  From the story:

One of the problems that [NorthCom Cmdr. Timothy] Keating ran into, which I found embarrassing during Katrina, was with the USS Comfort. I had requested the ship, and it's moving into Mississippi, because Mississippi wanted it for medical purposes. So I gave the order through NorthCom to move that ship there. As it was making its way to Mississippi, Mississippi decided they no longer needed it. The Comfort is primarily a medical ship, so I made the decision, "Steam on to New Orleans, because we can use you in New Orleans for medical triage."

More below the fold...

Total Information Awareness: National Journal looks at where it went

Thu Feb 23, 2006 at 03:16:36 PM PDT

The National Journal has a story that just came out about what happened to John Poindexter's old Total Information Awareness project after Congress cut off its funding in 2003.  The answer: it didn't go anywhere.

Some excerpts:

Two of the most important components of the TIA program were moved to the Advanced Research and Development Activity, housed at NSA headquarters in Fort Meade, Md., documents and sources confirm. One piece was the Information Awareness Prototype System, the core architecture that tied together numerous information extraction, analysis, and dissemination tools developed under TIA. The prototype system included privacy-protection technologies that may have been discontinued or scaled back following the move to ARDA....

More below the fold...

White House stonewalling on Katrina investigations

Tue Jan 31, 2006 at 11:42:23 AM PDT

US News reports today on Congressional frustration with the Bush administration on the Senate's investigation of Katrina.  The article reveals a letter sent by Susan Collins and Joe Lieberman to the White House detailing their frustration with White House stonewalling:

"We have yet to receive the bulk of what we requested," the senators wrote, "and the committee is unable to fully understand and assess actions involving White House personnel during the preparations for and response to Hurricane Katrina." As reported last week, the senators also criticized a White House directive to other government agencies that all personnel before the committee should refrain from detailing their own communications with White House staff. Specifically, the senators wrote, Department of Homeland Security attorneys "have instructed witnesses not to answer any questions related to the White House, regardless of subject matter, context, or the position of the [White House] personnel involved in the conversation."

This, the senators said, "simply must cease."

Karl Rove lives in a pre-9/11 world

Fri Jan 20, 2006 at 03:35:11 PM PDT

Karl Rove in his speech today:

"Republicans have a post-9/11 view of the world. And Democrats have a pre-9/11 view of the world," Rove told Republican activists. "That doesn't make them unpatriotic, not at all. But it does make them wrong -- deeply and profoundly and consistently wrong."

Juxtapose this quote with this excerpt from a Washington Post story in December on the creation of the Department of Homeland Security:

UMass Mao library book story is a hoax

Sat Dec 24, 2005 at 12:24:44 AM PDT

(From the diaries -- Plutonium Page. Please spread the word.)

The story of the student who received a visit from homeland security agents because he had checked out Mao's Little Red Book has now been confirmed to be a fabrication.

From the newspaper that originally broke the story:

NEW BEDFORD -- The UMass Dartmouth student who claimed to have been visited by Homeland Security agents over his request for "The Little Red Book" by Mao Zedong has admitted to making up the entire story.

The 22-year-old student tearfully admitted he made the story up to his history professor, Dr. Brian Glyn Williams, and his parents, after being confronted with the inconsistencies in his account.

Had the student stuck to his original story, it might never have been proved false.

But on Thursday, when the student told his tale in the office of UMass Dartmouth professor Dr. Robert Pontbriand to Dr. Williams, Dr. Pontbriand, university spokesman John Hoey and The Standard-Times, the student added new details.

National Journal finds more Rohrabacher ties to Abramoff

Tue Dec 13, 2005 at 04:22:22 PM PDT

This week's issue of the National Journal has a short piece that adds a new dimension to the story of Dana Rohrabacher's connections to the Jack Abramoff scandal.  The key grafs:

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif., who famously provided a personal reference for Jack Abramoff in 2000 when the lobbyist was seeking financing to buy SunCruz Casinos, took a six-day trip to Malaysia in January 2002, accompanied by his wife and two of Abramoff's then-partners at the firm Greenberg Traurig. One of the lobbyists was Rohrabacher's former aide Tony Rudy.

The article then indicates that the trip cost $21,000 and the nature of the meetings that took place.  The article continues  (below the fold):

Did the White House even read the 9/11 Commission Report?

Mon Dec 05, 2005 at 05:30:41 PM PDT

If they did, not very closely.

Today the 9/11 Commission Public Discourse Project released a report updating progress on the Commission's recommendations...now 17 months after the initial report.

From the WaPo story on the 9/11 Commission press conference today:

Today's report card, which ranks 41 of the commission's recommendations by letter grades, is likely to mark the last official event of the panel, which recast itself as a private education group a year ago after it ceased to exist as the official independent Sept. 11 investigation.

From a Knight Ridder Story posted in the last hour:

"Protecting the American people at home is the president's highest priority," said Allen Abney, a White House spokesman. "The commission gave out 74 recommendations and this administration has acted on 70 of them."

41? 74? Did the White House EVEN READ THE DAMN REPORT???

Poll

Which is more infuriating?

15%7 votes
84%37 votes

| 44 votes | Vote | Results

CQ: Saudis getting waiver for US border security program

Fri Nov 04, 2005 at 10:56:16 PM PDT

In a story on the Department of Homeland Security's US-VISIT program written by Congressional Quarterly today (subscription only, no link), this anecdote is worthy of further circulation:

Several Border Patrol officers said they are worried the exemptions may leave airports and land borders open to terrorist infiltration. One Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agent at Dulles International Airport said he was recently told to waive the US-VISIT requirement for about 70 people arriving from Saudi Arabia who were affiliated with the Saudi royal family.

"People coming from known terrorist countries [are] to be fingerprinted and photographed for a reason," said the CBP officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "When you start making exceptions, you start losing the credibility of the program."

[more below...]

Times of London, FT: Secret prison in Poland and/or Romania

Wed Nov 02, 2005 at 03:15:09 PM PDT

This Times of London story just came out in the last hour:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/...

It basically narrows down the list of countries that could potentially hold the secret Eastern European prison mentioned in today's Washington Post story to two: Poland and Romania.

Key excerpts:

Hungary, Slovakia and Bulgaria rushed to issue denials of their involvement. But Frantisek Bublan, Interior Minister of the Czech Republic, said last night that the US had approached his Government a month ago about holding suspects on its territory, but Prague had refused.

Human rights groups point at Poland and Romania as two eastern European countries that have taken in America's "ghost detainees". They also claimed that the US was running out of countries willing to host its terror suspects.

....

David Addington: Cheney's Dick (and Lynne's Defender)

Sun Oct 30, 2005 at 06:32:50 PM PDT

According to this story in the National Journal (mentioned in an earlier post and at TPM in the last few hours) David Addington is in line to replace Scooter Libby as Cheney's chief of staff.  There's some good background on Addington in this story, about a number of issues, such as his role in the White House torture memo, and his role in deflecting requests by Congress and the GAO to learn about the energy task force in 2001:

As early as May 2001, Addington was the point person for the White House in deflecting requests by congressional Democrats and later the General Accounting Office (now named the Government Accountability Office) for information about the energy policy task force convened by Cheney's office.

...but I'd like to focus for a minute on a lighter, but equally sinister moment in his past...

The Irony of Plamegate: The System Worked

Fri Oct 28, 2005 at 04:10:53 PM PDT

I've been watching the reactions unfold on TV and in the blogosphere in the last few hours, and have felt a mix of emotions.  Vindication that Libby is getting nailed - after all, I told my parents in late 2003 that I had a hunch that he was the main culprit.   Unease that Turdblossom and others have eluded the net so far.  Pride that America's legal system includes public officials as fine as Patrick Fitzgerald.  And more than a hint of schadenfreude at what appears to be an administration in freefall and disarray.

But one other thought is gnawing at me, and crowding out all of the others: the idea that this outcome is exactly what the Bush Administration hoped to get, back in mid/late-2003 when they first realized that they had screwed up, and they first realized that this episode had the chance to unmask and expose their venality and lies - not just about Valerie Plame, but about the entire leadup to the war in Iraq.

LA Times: "White House Plans to Deflect"

Wed Oct 26, 2005 at 11:08:49 PM PDT

This LA Times story that just hit the wires lays out the Bush Administration game plan for after the indictments hit.  It's a must-read, in terms of figuring out now how to counter-react to their probable reactions.

http://www.latimes.com/...

Key grafs:


Some key elements of the post-investigation game plan have emerged, GOP advisors said:

Any indicted White House officials would immediately step down, and Bush would quickly name their successors. If Rove is indicted, more than one person might take over his many responsibilities.

The president and other White House officials would limit their public comments on the case. Outside interest groups and allies would do most of the talking.

More below the fold...

Top 10 things overheard in or near Karl Rove's prison cell

Wed Oct 26, 2005 at 04:45:08 PM PDT

From the Late Show with David Letterman, mid/late-2006...

(feel free to add your own additions to the list).

  1. "My name is not Karl.  It is now Mustafa Abdul Mohammed."

  2. "I'm tired of playing the Abu Ghraib pyramid game!!"

  3. "You look like John McCain's illegitimate black child."

  4. "Did Mark Hanna ever build a shiv?  I don't think so."

  5. "Maybe the New York Times will now compare me to Martin Luther King or Rosa Parks."

...more below the fold...
Poll

Which of these films/shows will best chronicle Rove's prison experience?

1%2 votes
21%26 votes
0%0 votes
0%0 votes
11%14 votes
11%14 votes
1%2 votes
8%10 votes
0%0 votes
4%6 votes
4%6 votes
34%42 votes

| 122 votes | Vote | Results

The Global War On Elevation

Thu Sep 01, 2005 at 05:29:34 PM PDT

Conditions are terrible and heartbreaking right now in New Orleans and the Gulf, so perhaps it's inappropriate to be thinking about the political consequences and ramifications of what is happening right now in the aftermath of Katrina.

But you know damn well that Rove & co. are thinking about this - trying to minimize the political damage and maybe even jujitsu this somehow into political advantage.  (Hence, the title of this post).  For that reason, I think we need to be preparing now to shape the political landscape in the weeks ahead and anticipate countermoves.

Right now, the indictments against the Bush administration can be summarized accordingly:

Bush offers Crawford ranch to house homeless New Orleanians (satire)

Wed Aug 31, 2005 at 11:50:08 AM PDT

Washington, DC - August 31 (Not AP) - Following a meeting of his Cabinet to discuss federal responses to Hurricane Katrina, President Bush announced that he will make his Crawford, TX ranch - approximately 550 miles away from New Orleans - available to accommodate families made homeless in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama in the wake of the hurricane.  

"In this time of national tragedy, we need all Americans to reach out and help those affected, the millions left homeless by this terrible disaster," he told reporters assembled outside the West Wing of the White House.  He then unexpectedly added, "We've got five bedrooms at the ranch house in Crawford, and another two in the guest house," the President said.  "So I've asked Governor Blanco to identify three or four families who are stuck in the Superdome right now to be driven to Crawford."

Natl Journal: stats on military service by senior Bush officials

Fri Jun 17, 2005 at 11:26:18 AM PDT

These statistics, found here:

http://nationaljournal.com/about/njweekly/stories/pdfs/0618numbers.pdf

...provide the first statistically-sound evidence that I've seen of the "do as I say, not as I do" administration.  To quote:

"Of the 100 top officials who were young men during the Vietnam War (ages 50 to 60 now), 38 have served in the military (active duty or Reserves), and 15 of them are in the Pentagon or VA.

Of the 160 top officials who are under 50, 10 (8 men, 2 women) served in the military.

Of the 49 top Bush officials who are under 40, only 2 served in the military."

The Intern program at Heritage - lessons for Dems

Mon Jun 13, 2005 at 07:30:31 PM PDT

This article in tomorrow's edition of the New York Times illustrates one of the major failing of the Democratic party and their allies in Washington over the last thirty years - the failure to nurture their young.

Next Generation of Conservatives (By the Dormful)
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/14/politics/14heritage.html

It describes the Heritage Foundation's summer internship program, and contrasts it with its liberal counterparts:

"It is an alternative with few rivals. The Brookings Institution, a centrist group more than 50 years older than Heritage, has no paid interns. Neither does the Progressive Policy Institute, which promotes a centrist version of liberalism. The Center on Budget and Policy Priority, a premier antipoverty group, has 10 paid interns. People for the American Way, a bulwark of Beltway liberalism, has 40 - but no dorm.

"There's no question that the right wing over the last 25 years did a much better job of creating a farm system," said Ralph G. Neas, the president of People for the American Way.


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