There are days when I know that the media can't collectively be this stupid, that they slant and emphasize stories to create false balance even when there's no story to the story. This is one of those days.
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http://atrios.blogspot.com/2006_10_15_atrios_archive.html#116119545670283004
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Add to myYahoo!Thanks to Avedon Carol, Attaturk, and Echidne for helping out while I was gone, and they should free to keep posting if they have any left over brilliant thoughts that didn't make it up yet. Had a bit more time to check in than I expected to because of, you know, rain.
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http://atrios.blogspot.com/2006_10_15_atrios_archive.html#116119536826877955
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Add to myYahoo!The candidacy of Carl Romanelli, the Green who made a run for the Senate in Pennsylvania, may not have succeeded. The Pennsylvania courts ended his bid last month; a disappointment for the Santorum campaign, since that means he won't be...
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People from the Old Media, like me, instinctively prefer a centrist style of civilized debate. Of course we do, say Halperin and Harris. We are the gatekeepers of the old order. The shrill voices of the New Media -- the bloggers and talk-radio hosts and other partisan megaphones that Halperin and Harris describe as the "Freak Show" -- don't just threaten our beloved center. They might eventually put us out of business.
The reason, David Ignatius, you are eventually going to be put out of business is because you forgot your business. You rival the GOP Rubber Stamp Congress in looking the other way when it comes to the disaster this administration has wrought. Cheney's energy policy, drafted by big oil? Well, how important could that be. Lying about estimates for the cost of the prescription drug plan? Numbers are confusing. 800 signing statements undoing the will of Congress? Um, signing statements? Lying to the nation and to the international community to take this country into a misguided, expensive, poorly planned and even more poorly executed war? Lying to the nation to take us to war? That's not my beat.
The media's failure, YOUR failure David Ignatius, to demand any accountability at all for this president and for the Congress that has propped him up, is the seed you planted for your own destruction. Your failure to recognize and point out the radical right that has taken over the Republican party is not the fault of us great unwashed liberal bloggers, the legions of the shrill. Your failure is all yours. What you wrought by pushing the agenda of the Clinton haters and the Gore detractors was this unmitigated catastrophe known as the Bush administration.
Some of your colleagues have seen it. Thomas Ricks, Dana Priest, Paul Krugman, Bob Herbert, E.J. Dionne. These reporters and writers have remained relevant, will remain relevant, because they are committed to the truth. Not to the dreck of "he said, she said" purporting to be balance. The truth.
And, David Ignatius, if you cared to look a little deeper even for today's column, you might have found some of that truth. You write:
So what's working this campaign season? As I read this year's races, the centrist approach seems to be making something of a comeback. I base that judgment on a sampling of several dozen campaign ads that have been gathered by washingtonpost.com (available at http://projects.washingtonpost.com/...). This survey shows that even in some of the key tossup races, many candidates are looking for that warm and fuzzy place in the middle of the political landscape.
Those ads you feature? Those moderate candidates you love so much, who are appealing to your "centrist" heart? Harold Ford. Claire McCaskill. Jon Tester. Deval Patrick. Look at the pages of those shrill bloggers who are ruining your career and driving the country to the extremes. Hmmmm. Funny that some of our favorite candidates would be . . . well, so . . . moderate.
So, David, do you mind if I call you David? Some unbidden advice for becoming relevant. Wake up. Do your research. Talk to us. Talk to the voters. Talk to anybody outside of your usual circle of beltway buddies. It's not about being a political moderate. It's about doing your damn job.
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Add to myYahoo!NORML's Paul Armentano has an op-ed in today's Examiner pointing out that the U.S. is spending $1 billion dollars a year to incarcerate people for marijuana offenses. The figure comes from the latest report released by the U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics.
The new report is noteworthy because it undermines the common claim from law enforcement officers and bureaucrats, specifically White House drug czar John Walters, that few, if any, Americans are incarcerated for marijuana-related offenses. In reality, nearly 1 out of 8 U.S. drug prisoners are locked up for pot.
Another $8 billion is spent on arresting them.
Of course, several hundred thousand more Americans are arrested each year for violating marijuana laws, costing taxpayers another $8 billion dollars annually in criminal justice costs.
What's the message here?
Marijuana isn’t a harmless substance, and those who argue for a change in the drug’s legal status do not claim it to be. However, pot’s relative risks to the user and society are arguably fewer than those of alcohol and tobacco, and they do not warrant the expenses associated with targeting, arresting and prosecuting hundreds of thousands of Americans every year.
If you live in a state where a marijuana reform initiative is on your ballot this year, your vote is needed to end this waste of money.
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Add to myYahoo!In writing about the foreign policy of the United States over the past several years, I often feel as if I'm caught in an endless loop. The same issues arise time and time again. I and others offer numerous facts and many arguments to demonstrate how and why the standard assumptions are wrong and profoundly destructive. We offer examples from history, including recent history, to support our points. No one in the foreign policy establishment, and very few bloggers, even acknowledge what we've said. Then, three or six months or a year later, the identical issues come up still one more time, only now countless additional people have been killed and maimed. So I and others offer further facts and supplement our arguments with more details -- and once again, our modest offerings have no impact that is even noticeable.
Here is the most recent example of this phenomenon. It is one that clarifies once more some of the major points that those of us who oppose the aggressively interventionist foreign policy of the United States have been making since before the invasion of Iraq began. On May 14, 2005, I published an essay entitled, "Embracing Ignorance on Principle: And Still, We Will Not See." (I wrote a number of similar pieces well before this one, but I think this article summarizes the central points more effectively.) I stated the general theme of that article at the very beginning:
A recent pair of articles illustrates very powerfully the significant, and dangerous, differences between much of the reporting about Iraq in the American press and in the European press. Reading the articles side by side also reveals the enormous failures of comprehension of Iraq's history and culture exhibited by most Americans, including by the American government.I examined an article by James Bennet in the New York Times, and one by Patrick Cockburn published in the London Review of Books. In introducing the Cockburn piece, I wrote:
Perhaps the point of greatest significance is that its author, Patrick Cockburn, has been reporting from Iraq since 1978. This makes all the difference in the world, but it is a difference our government seems determined to ignore, as a matter of some unstated principle. While Bennet relies on history from everywhere else in the world -- from Vietnam, from Greece, from Northern Ireland -- Cockburn appreciates and understands the central importance of the history of Iraq itself. One might be pardoned for not having thought that this stunningly obvious point would require explanation and justification, but such is the nature of our disastrously failed foreign policy -- a failure which is all too comprehensible, if one knows where to look for the reasons.After examining the two articles, I offered some observations about the conclusions that were indicated:
The U.S., and most of the American media, have been and remain resolutely determined to look at the wrong history. They act as if Iraq's own history, including its long, bloody history of ethnic strife (pace Wolfowitz), is entirely irrelevant. It is hardly a mystery why they are then unable to grasp what is right before their eyes. They look at events in Iraq (to the extent they do look at them, which is far from comprehensive as Cockburn makes very clear) through the prism of ideas they have gleaned from other countries' histories -- and the reality of Iraq itself never assumes solid shape before them.I repeat a critical point, one which those who seek only narrow partisan advantage are determined to avoid. Bush is a uniquely calamitous leader in numerous ways. Certainly, the abomination of the Military Commissions Act places him firmly in the annals of damnation, where one will find those leaders who have betrayed their own country's founding principles in ways that are never to be forgiven. And Iraq is an especially destructive episode in our history, and in the history of the Middle East as well as the world more generally.
This determined refusal to look at and understand the relevant facts, including the crucially relevant history, is a significant part of the reason why Bush's repeated mantra that "everyone wants freedom," and moreover that everyone wants freedom in roughly the same form that we enjoy it, is so hollow and so unconvincing. It was not true in Vietnam, and it is not true in Iraq. Peoples' attitudes, objectives, alliances and enmities are uniquely shaped by their particular history -- not by ours, or by no history at all. And it is the latter that is unavoidably implied by the attitude revealed by Bennet in his article, and by the Bush administration: they seem to believe that "freedom" and "democracy" are abstractions that are plucked by people from the sky overhead -- and then applied by everyone in precisely the same manner, regardless of history, geography, culture and every other aspect of their specific lives.
...
[T]his is yet another reason why I maintain, as I explained yesterday, that we should leave immediately, or as close to immediately as we can -- and set a time limit of six months at the outside, for example, for the withdrawal of all U.S. troops. Not only are we a significant source of the ongoing violence, but we continue to refuse to learn about the nature of the Iraqis themselves, and what their perspectives and their aims are.
Because we are determined to remain ignorant of the actual nature and consequences of our own actions, and because this state of ignorance appears to be ongoing and unchangeable, the degree of the disaster will only increase. This is why we must leave now. The longer our withdrawal is delayed, the greater the devastation will be.
Ignorance is never bliss -- and it is especially not bliss when a huge military force is deployed against another nation, one which never seriously threatened us, and when we engage in torture, murder and devastation on a huge and unforgivable scale. Our actions are only made worse when they are supposedly "justified" by the indiscriminate use of terms such as "liberation" and "freedom," when those otherwise laudable and even glorious goals are used in a manner devoid of context and lacking in any specific meaning.
FOR the past several months, I?ve been wrapping up lengthy interviews with Washington counterterrorism officials with a fundamental question: "Do you know the difference between a Sunni and a Shiite?"There are additional grisly details, but that gives you the idea. Stein concludes:
A "gotcha" question? Perhaps. But if knowing your enemy is the most basic rule of war, I don?t think it?s out of bounds. And as I quickly explain to my subjects, I?m not looking for theological explanations, just the basics: Who?s on what side today, and what does each want?
...
But so far, most American officials I?ve interviewed don?t have a clue. That includes not just intelligence and law enforcement officials, but also members of Congress who have important roles overseeing our spy agencies. How can they do their jobs without knowing the basics?
...
A few weeks ago, I took the F.B.I.?s temperature again. At the end of a long interview, I asked Willie Hulon, chief of the bureau?s new national security branch, whether he thought that it was important for a man in his position to know the difference between Sunnis and Shiites. "Yes, sure, it?s right to know the difference," he said. "It?s important to know who your targets are."
That was a big advance over 2005. So next I asked him if he could tell me the difference. He was flummoxed. "The basics goes back to their beliefs and who they were following," he said. "And the conflicts between the Sunnis and the Shia and the difference between who they were following."
O.K., I asked, trying to help, what about today? Which one is Iran ? Sunni or Shiite? He thought for a second. "Iran and Hezbollah," I prompted. "Which are they?"
He took a stab: "Sunni."
Wrong.
...
Take Representative Terry Everett, a seven-term Alabama Republican who is vice chairman of the House intelligence subcommittee on technical and tactical intelligence.
"Do you know the difference between a Sunni and a Shiite?" I asked him a few weeks ago.
Mr. Everett responded with a low chuckle. He thought for a moment: "One?s in one location, another?s in another location. No, to be honest with you, I don?t know. I thought it was differences in their religion, different families or something."
To his credit, he asked me to explain the differences. I told him briefly about the schism that developed after the death of the Prophet Muhammad, and how Iraq and Iran are majority Shiite nations while the rest of the Muslim world is mostly Sunni. "Now that you?ve explained it to me," he replied, "what occurs to me is that it makes what we?re doing over there extremely difficult, not only in Iraq but that whole area."
Some agency officials and members of Congress have easily handled my "gotcha" question. But as I keep asking it around Capitol Hill and the agencies, I get more and more blank stares. Too many officials in charge of the war on terrorism just don?t care to learn much, if anything, about the enemy we?re fighting. And that?s enough to keep anybody up at night.Stein's article reveals this profound, determined ignorance in a manner that is especially stark and appalling. But I emphasize once again two critical issues: this ignorance is the inevitable and logical result of the basic premises that drive our foreign policy, and our government's blindness about the rest of the world has been staggeringly obvious for years -- and in fact, for many decades.
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Add to myYahoo!In writing about the foreign policy of the United States over the past several years, I often feel as if I'm caught in an endless loop. The same issues arise time and time again. I and others offer numerous facts and many arguments to demonstrate how and why the standard assumptions are wrong and profoundly destructive. We offer examples from history, including recent history, to support our points. No one in the foreign policy establishment, and very few bloggers, even acknowledge what we've said. Then, three or six months or a year later, the identical issues come up still one more time, only now countless additional people have been killed and maimed. So I and others offer further facts and supplement our arguments with more details -- and once again, our modest offerings have no impact that is even noticeable.
Here is the most recent example of this phenomenon. It is one that clarifies once more some of the major points that those of us who oppose the aggressively interventionist foreign policy of the United States have been making since before the invasion of Iraq began. On May 14, 2005, I published an essay entitled, "Embracing Ignorance on Principle: And Still, We Will Not See." (I wrote a number of similar pieces well before this one, but I think this article summarizes the central points more effectively.) I stated the general theme of that article at the very beginning:
A recent pair of articles illustrates very powerfully the significant, and dangerous, differences between much of the reporting about Iraq in the American press and in the European press. Reading the articles side by side also reveals the enormous failures of comprehension of Iraq's history and culture exhibited by most Americans, including by the American government.I examined an article by James Bennet in the New York Times, and one by Patrick Cockburn published in the London Review of Books. In introducing the Cockburn piece, I wrote:
Perhaps the point of greatest significance is that its author, Patrick Cockburn, has been reporting from Iraq since 1978. This makes all the difference in the world, but it is a difference our government seems determined to ignore, as a matter of some unstated principle. While Bennet relies on history from everywhere else in the world -- from Vietnam, from Greece, from Northern Ireland -- Cockburn appreciates and understands the central importance of the history of Iraq itself. One might be pardoned for not having thought that this stunningly obvious point would require explanation and justification, but such is the nature of our disastrously failed foreign policy -- a failure which is all too comprehensible, if one knows where to look for the reasons.After examining the two articles, I offered some observations about the conclusions that were indicated:
The U.S., and most of the American media, have been and remain resolutely determined to look at the wrong history. They act as if Iraq's own history, including its long, bloody history of ethnic strife (pace Wolfowitz), is entirely irrelevant. It is hardly a mystery why they are then unable to grasp what is right before their eyes. They look at events in Iraq (to the extent they do look at them, which is far from comprehensive as Cockburn makes very clear) through the prism of ideas they have gleaned from other countries' histories -- and the reality of Iraq itself never assumes solid shape before them.I repeat a critical point, one which those who seek only narrow partisan advantage are determined to avoid. Bush is a uniquely calamitous leader in numerous ways. Certainly, the abomination of the Military Commissions Act places him firmly in the annals of damnation, where one will find those leaders who have betrayed their own country's founding principles in ways that are never to be forgiven. And Iraq is an especially destructive episode in our history, and in the history of the Middle East as well as the world more generally.
This determined refusal to look at and understand the relevant facts, including the crucially relevant history, is a significant part of the reason why Bush's repeated mantra that "everyone wants freedom," and moreover that everyone wants freedom in roughly the same form that we enjoy it, is so hollow and so unconvincing. It was not true in Vietnam, and it is not true in Iraq. Peoples' attitudes, objectives, alliances and enmities are uniquely shaped by their particular history -- not by ours, or by no history at all. And it is the latter that is unavoidably implied by the attitude revealed by Bennet in his article, and by the Bush administration: they seem to believe that "freedom" and "democracy" are abstractions that are plucked by people from the sky overhead -- and then applied by everyone in precisely the same manner, regardless of history, geography, culture and every other aspect of their specific lives.
...
[T]his is yet another reason why I maintain, as I explained yesterday, that we should leave immediately, or as close to immediately as we can -- and set a time limit of six months at the outside, for example, for the withdrawal of all U.S. troops. Not only are we a significant source of the ongoing violence, but we continue to refuse to learn about the nature of the Iraqis themselves, and what their perspectives and their aims are.
Because we are determined to remain ignorant of the actual nature and consequences of our own actions, and because this state of ignorance appears to be ongoing and unchangeable, the degree of the disaster will only increase. This is why we must leave now. The longer our withdrawal is delayed, the greater the devastation will be.
Ignorance is never bliss -- and it is especially not bliss when a huge military force is deployed against another nation, one which never seriously threatened us, and when we engage in torture, murder and devastation on a huge and unforgivable scale. Our actions are only made worse when they are supposedly "justified" by the indiscriminate use of terms such as "liberation" and "freedom," when those otherwise laudable and even glorious goals are used in a manner devoid of context and lacking in any specific meaning.
FOR the past several months, I?ve been wrapping up lengthy interviews with Washington counterterrorism officials with a fundamental question: "Do you know the difference between a Sunni and a Shiite?"There are additional grisly details, but that gives you the idea. Stein concludes:
A "gotcha" question? Perhaps. But if knowing your enemy is the most basic rule of war, I don?t think it?s out of bounds. And as I quickly explain to my subjects, I?m not looking for theological explanations, just the basics: Who?s on what side today, and what does each want?
...
But so far, most American officials I?ve interviewed don?t have a clue. That includes not just intelligence and law enforcement officials, but also members of Congress who have important roles overseeing our spy agencies. How can they do their jobs without knowing the basics?
...
A few weeks ago, I took the F.B.I.?s temperature again. At the end of a long interview, I asked Willie Hulon, chief of the bureau?s new national security branch, whether he thought that it was important for a man in his position to know the difference between Sunnis and Shiites. "Yes, sure, it?s right to know the difference," he said. "It?s important to know who your targets are."
That was a big advance over 2005. So next I asked him if he could tell me the difference. He was flummoxed. "The basics goes back to their beliefs and who they were following," he said. "And the conflicts between the Sunnis and the Shia and the difference between who they were following."
O.K., I asked, trying to help, what about today? Which one is Iran ? Sunni or Shiite? He thought for a second. "Iran and Hezbollah," I prompted. "Which are they?"
He took a stab: "Sunni."
Wrong.
...
Take Representative Terry Everett, a seven-term Alabama Republican who is vice chairman of the House intelligence subcommittee on technical and tactical intelligence.
"Do you know the difference between a Sunni and a Shiite?" I asked him a few weeks ago.
Mr. Everett responded with a low chuckle. He thought for a moment: "One?s in one location, another?s in another location. No, to be honest with you, I don?t know. I thought it was differences in their religion, different families or something."
To his credit, he asked me to explain the differences. I told him briefly about the schism that developed after the death of the Prophet Muhammad, and how Iraq and Iran are majority Shiite nations while the rest of the Muslim world is mostly Sunni. "Now that you?ve explained it to me," he replied, "what occurs to me is that it makes what we?re doing over there extremely difficult, not only in Iraq but that whole area."
Some agency officials and members of Congress have easily handled my "gotcha" question. But as I keep asking it around Capitol Hill and the agencies, I get more and more blank stares. Too many officials in charge of the war on terrorism just don?t care to learn much, if anything, about the enemy we?re fighting. And that?s enough to keep anybody up at night.Stein's article reveals this profound, determined ignorance in a manner that is especially stark and appalling. But I emphasize once again two critical issues: this ignorance is the inevitable and logical result of the basic premises that drive our foreign policy, and our government's blindness about the rest of the world has been staggeringly obvious for years -- and in fact, for many decades.
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Add to myYahoo!From the NYTimes this morning:As predicaments go for champions of family values, few can top the embarrassment suffered by Representative Curt Weldon when federal agents raided the home of his daughter, a Washington lobbyist, in search of evidence that[...]
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http://www.firedoglake.com/2006/10/18/the-odor-from-capitol-hill/
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Add to myYahoo!These Republicans will say anything. Ten American troops were killed today. The US death toll this month is soaring. All the GOPers can do is play politics. This is an outrage:
Sen. Conrad Burns says he believes President Bush has a plan to win the war in Iraq but is keeping it quiet, a statement Democrats pounced on Wednesday as reminiscent of comments made during another divisive war.That's right. Keep the plan a secret among yourselves. Don't worry about the carnage. The Republicans have let Bush get away with this Iraq disaster for too long.
Burns, at a debate Monday with Democratic challenger Jon Tester, said he believes Bush has a plan to win - but added: "we're not going to tell you what our plan is."
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Add to myYahoo! President Clinton gave a speech today being hosted by The Center for American Progress at Georgetown University. He's calling it the "Common Good" which articulates the alternative to "compassionate conservative. "In both the civic and faith realms, a commitment to the common good means pursuing policies and community actions that benefit all individuals and balance self-interest with [...]
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http://www.crooksandliars.com/2006/10/18/bill-clinton-the-common-good/
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