100 days, and who’s the meanest SOB at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave

On 23 Mar, Sarah wrote:

You know, it occurs to me that if a President sets his agenda in his “first 100 days,” as one Bush ad claims, then the claims of Richard Clarke and Paul O’Neill are pretty telling.

Do I smell a response ad brewing…

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An interesting bit of back-and-forth is happening vis-a-vis the Bush administration’s bizarre attempt to paint the Clinton White House as unresponsive to terrorism, while simultaneously claiming to have
continued the same robust policy that administration had put in place.

This schizophrenia has been a recurrent theme since 9/11, as the Bushies cannot seem to make up their minds whether to attack the Clintonistas as laying a red carpet for al Qaeda or not.

For example, White House Communications Director Dan Bartlett, last night on PBS’s NewsHour said Bush

…also did another important step and that was to keep Dick Clarke and his counter intelligence team in place for the very reason of having the continuity, institutional knowledge necessary to make sure that there was no effort to drop the ball in the middle of a transition. That’s highly unlikely to happen in an administration to keep such a large organization intact in the White House.

And yet V.P. Cheney yesterday said

The fact is, what the President did not want to do is to have an ineffective response with respect to al Qaeda. And we felt that up until that point that much of what had been done vis-a-vis al Qaeda had been totally ineffective: some cruise missiles fired at some training camps in Afghanistan that basically didn’t hit anything. And it made the U.S. look weak and ineffective. And he wanted a far more effective policy for trying to deal with that. And that process was in motion throughout the spring.

Richard Cohen, in today’s Washington Post writes:

Back in 2002 … Vice President Cheney’s chief aide,Lewis “Scooter” Libby … in a New Yorker interview … listed terrorist attacks on U.S. or allied interests going back to 1993 and concluded that America had shown only weakness in response. “The Americans don’t have the stomach to defend themselves,” he quoted an imaginary Osama bin Laden as saying. “They won’t take casualties to defend their interests. They are morally weak.”

Yet this morning on “Good Morning America” Richard Clarke went on the offensive against his critics:

In the Reagan Administration, 300 Americans died in Lebanon and there was no retaliation. In the Bush I Administration, almost 300 Americas died on Pan Am 103 and no retaliation. Yet for this much smaller threat, we had done a great deal.

So the debate rages on as to who has the biggest cahones, and we have yet to learn just what effect any of this is having on the electorate.

This promises to be a very interesting election year.

Bill Maher column

My friend Shauna just sent this to me, and I thought y’all might like
it.
-nic

from salon.com
New rule
You can’t be a Washington outsider if you’re already president.

– – – – – – – – – – – –
By Bill Maher

March 13, 2004 | Hearing President Bush these days constantly complain
about “the politicians” and John Kerry being part of a “Washington
mind-set,” and saying things like “I got news for the Washington crowd” is
like hearing Courtney Love bitch about junkies.

“Washington insider” is by definition a function of one’s proximity to the
president. That’s you, Mr. Bush. You’re ground zero. Ever wonder, sir, why
everyone stands and they play music when you enter a room? When you’re given
check-writing privileges by the Federal Reserve, you just might be a
Washington insider.

Lemme try to explain it to you in a different way: You’re not “Mr. Smith
goes to Washington” — you’re the Washington part. We need a Mr. Smith to
mess with you. You’re not on a mission you reluctantly accepted, like the
old farts in “Space Cowboys.” You campaigned for this job, and now you’re
doing it again.

And having been the Grand Poobah for three years, it’s a little late to be
selling yourself as some fish-out-of-water cowboy visiting the big city on
assignment. You’re not McCloud, you’re the grandson of a senator and the son
of a president and CIA director. For 15 of the last 22 years you’ve had a
key to the White House. The last thing that happened in Washington without
the Bushes getting a piece of it was Marion Barry’s crack habit. “The
Exorcist” happened in Georgetown, but Satan had to run it by Jim Baker
first.

So knock off the regular-guy act — and by the way, that also goes for John
Forbes Kerry, the other white meat. Two Skull and Bones preppies, these guys
are, from Nantucket and Kennebunkport, who use the word “summer” as a verb
and probably had monogrammed beer bongs in college.

Please, John Kerry: Stop rolling up your sleeves at campaign rallies like
you’re about to man a register at Costco. You’re a Boston Brahmin who
married not one but two eccentric heiresses — you’re not Joe Sixpack,
you’re Claus von Bulow. I think your current wife is great, but hello, she
inherited the Heinz fortune! She’s the ketchup lady! — which explains why
sometimes he’s gotta smack her on the bottom to get her to come.

Look, fellas, we’ve got almost eight months till the election. That’s a long
time to hold in your gut. To pretend you’re something you’re not. Let’s just
be real and admit that finally, and unfortunately, true class warfare has
come to America.

Yale class of ’66 vs. Yale class of ’68.

Some food for thought

Just a few things to think about today:

Chris Patten, the last British Governor of Hong Kong, and current European Union External Affairs Commissioner, recently appeared on Charlie Rose (March 4, 2004). Among his insightful comments:

We do fairly well when we wage wars against proper nouns – countries, alliances. Any war against a collective noun such as “terrorism” or “drugs” is a bit dodgy and unlikely to be won or lost in the classical sense.

A discussion board about his appearance on the show may be read here:
http://boards.charlierose.com/board/topic.asp?ti=6154

An interesting interview with Patten may be found here:
http://mathaba.net/news/print.shtml?cmd[40]=i-42-495ad5d77e996cc9824ae0363aab5bc3

He has a few things to say about the recent bloodletting at the BBC.

A similar point is made in the speech “TERRORISM AND THE RULE OF LAW” by Nicholas Cowdery AM QC (President, International Association of Prosecutors Director of Public Prosecutions, NSW, Australia) at the International Association of Prosecutors 8th Annual Conference
Washington, DC – 10-14 August 2003

Instead of following the criminal justice path, the war paradigm was invoked – the war on terrorism – and it has continued. It is, however, difficult to control and direct. As will be seen, it has enabled the rule of law to be bypassed in a number of respects. By definition, such a war may have no end and the measures introduced along the way may be with us forever.

Although war was declared on an abstract noun, real places and real people were attacked, including sovereign states. On the military front Afghanistan was overcome and a new government installed; Iraq was later invaded and occupied.

Where does the war against terrorism head next? What consequences is it having for the rule of law?

Oh that we had such critical thinkers presenting these this kind of analysis to American audiences.

Oh that we had American audiences that would listen if they did…

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On a slightly different topic, the NASA Spirit probe sent back a wonderful picture looking back towards Earth:
http://www.astrobio.net/news/article872.html

Just a bit humbling!

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Lastly, The Note, over at ABC News, brought an article from The Washington Post to my attention today:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A58663-2004Mar14.html

In it, Dan Balz and Jim VandeiHei write:

Republicans express more optimism about their prospects in three other Midwestern states: Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa, where they hope cultural issues will trump economic issues.

In Iowa, a year of Democratic campaigning has left Bush damaged. In Wisconsin, the Bush campaign is running ads from the southern reaches of Madison to the rural lakes and woods country of Rhinelander to undo the impact of job losses and the damage Bush
sustained during the Democratic primaries. But Republicans connected to the Bush campaign say all three could tilt to the president in the fall.

One can only guess what they mean by “cultural issues”… Does anyone still doubt that Bush endorsed the anti-marriage amendment as an election year ploy?

They’re at it again! Please ask your state senator to vote no on AJR 66

AJR 66, the Republican sponsored anti-marriage amendment to the
Wisconsin State Constitution is going to be put to a vote on Tuesday or
Wednesday in the State Senate.

Once again, I ask all of my friends to contact your state senator and
implore them to vote no on this important amendment!

Here are some links you can use to locate your senator’s phone number or
address, or send an email to them:

To make a phone call, look up his or her name and number here:
http://www.legis.state.wi.us/waml

Click here to send an automatic email (that you can personalize):
http://capwiz.com/federationlgbt/mail/oneclick_compose/?alertid=5302126

Thanks in advance for your help in this important matter!

A new list, and some good news

Hey there – Nic writing! I realize that I seem to inundate my friends,
pretty much the same group of friends, with more or less politically
related messages from time to time.

Rather than continue to wade through my address book every time I send
one of these missives, I have taken it upon myself to create a mailing
list for the purpose. Hence this list, rant_at_postilion.org.

If you are receiving this message it means that you can blame me for
putting you on the list. You can remove yourself at any time by
following the instruction at the bottom of every message from the list
– as I fully expect half of you to by this time tomorrow (don’t worry I
won’t take it personally). If you have foolish friends who wish to be
added to the list, forward one of these messages to them, and they can
subscribe.

All replies to the list will go to me (which I guess I deserve).

So, now that that is out of the way, here are some interesting stories
you may have missed:

My friend Andy alerted me to these stories:

Kerry and the Electoral College…. looks pretty good at this point 🙂
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2004/03/projected_elect.html

Ivins: In Search of Adults
http://alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=18037

Oh yes, and David Riemer, running to replace the republican troglodyte
currently running Milwaukee County, is having an art auction/fund
raiser Monday, March 8, at the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design:
Frederick Layton Gallery
278 East Erie Street
5:30 – 7:30 p.m. (auction 6:30)

Many fine artists and galleries have contributed works to this event.
Any contribution will be gleefully accepted. We will be there, we hope
that many of you can make it as well. Regime change begins at home,
and this year that means City and County as well as National.

Best regards,
-nic

Oh, and for those of you who haven’t read my Journal from Iowa (Dean
Campaign – Iowa Caucuses), or haven’t looked at it since it was
happening, I have fully edited and updated it with photos. You can
find it here:
http://politics.postilion.org/deanjournal.html

along with all of my other political rants at:
http://politics.postilion.org/

The Tornado Touches Down

Dear friends and relatives, here is some news from the leading edge of the Democratic Presidential race — live from Milwaukee, WI!

My friend Geri came to Milwaukee yesterday, and what a whirlwind she is! Her plane landed at 7:30 a.m., and by 9 she was up in Shorewood organizing and distributing VHS tapes and DVDs.

Geri is a project co-ordinator for National Grass Roots for Dean.

This is a group un-affiliated with the official Dean for America campaign, and is made up of about 40 leaders and a hundred or so supporters. When they come up with a project, they reach out to the hundreds of thousands of on-line Dean supporters to draw people in to volunteer.

Geri produced an 18 minute video on Howard Dean, showing clips of him discussing policy, talking with supporters and segments of his interviews on Meet the Press and ABC-News. This is a video specifically targeted to undecided voters in Wisconsin.

Anyhow, this video was posted on the Internet in a format that could be burned onto DVDs by supporters all over the country. Over a hundred people downloaded this, and started to burn DVDs, sending the DVDs to one Keith Schmitz in Shorewood, to be distributed to undecided voters.

Then, on Wednesday night, someone came up with the idea to raise money on-line to get a couple of thousand VHS tapes made. Overnight over $4,000 was raised, and Keith had 3,500 tapes duplicated at a local firm.

So, Geri and Keith started out yesterday taking boxes of tapes up to Dean HQ and instructing the canvassers how to use them: Only give them to undecided voters, not people supporting the other guys; try to get a pledge from the voter “will you give us fifteen minutes of your time to watch this tape?”; never leave the video if no-one is home; etc.

They then started to canvass in Shorewood, and soon a television news crew was following them around. Channel 12, the local ABC affiliate, aired a very nice 2 minute story on this grass roots effort on both their 6&10 p.m. newscasts! Wonderful! You can find the story here.

In any event, things have been exciting and hectic around here! Lanya, from North Carolina, a friend of Geri’s from the campaign was up in Fond Du Lac to campaign, and was going crazy with the local rganization, so she drove down here yesterday evening to stay with us and work in Milwaukee. She is going to canvass at gay churches, black barber shops and grocery stores, and other targeted “markets” today. She is a bundle of energy, not quite as frenetic as Geri, but every bit as committed!

I’ll let you go now, but first a quick little story:

Geri came by here at about 1:30 yesterday afternoon to go to Abu’s Middle Eastern restaurant for lunch, a block and a half from our house. No sooner had we ordered than Lars, a former co-worker of mine, came in with his mother. Lars knows that I worked Iowa for Dean, and asks “Are you going to work on the Dean campaign today?” Geri shoots back “He’s having lunch with the Grass Roots campaign!” Lars went on to explain that he and another friend were going to be distributing videos on canvass, so I introduced Geri as the producer of the video. She gave him the rap on how to handle the distribution, etc. etc. After we finish eating, she chases him down to make him take twoboxes of tapes (100
units) with him as he goes!

This is just a snapshot of the mayhem we are living with here in Milwaukee right now. The primary is Tuesday, and then the storm will pass, but for right now we are in the midst of it, and it’s a hoot!