Talking is cheap, people follow like sheep ...
... Even though there is nowhere to go ...
I've got a new "Think Again" column, "The Viral Center," here.
I'm going to Sundance today, thanks to the Creative Coalition, and you know, with the time difference, we'll have guest-star Altercators Monday through Wednesday. I'm looking forward to see the movie version of Brian Morton's brilliant, "Starting Out in the Evening," and also to seeing my friend Deb Kogan's kid starring in his first movie, Joshua, though I may not because they ignored my email requesting tickets.
Speaking of
Sundance (last year), didn't I tell you about Little Miss Sunshine? Also, Thank You
for Smoking. That dog blowjob movie didn't do as well as I
hoped, though. (And by the way, if you
are a Nadergnome and
go see that Nader movie, and manage to make it all the way into hour four of
your hero's life story -- you
know, the one where he
helps cause the Iraq war
and becomes Bush's Best Friend for Life -- and you decide you can't live another
second without telling me how much you hate me, how about maybe you get a life
instead? K? Just a suggestion ...)
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White House Correspondents: Yes, we are gerbils on spin-wheels.
Quote of the
Day: "They don't want anyone knocking the president. He's really over the
coals right now, and he's worried about his legacy," added Little, a
longtime Las
Vegas
resident.
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Credit Where It's Due Department:
1) Harry Reid: "This morning, I'd like to be clear: The President does not have the authority to launch military action in Iran without first seeking Congressional authorization."
2 Nancy Pelosi: "The president knows that because the troops are in harm's way, that we won't cut off the resources. That's why he's moving so quickly to put them in harm's way."
3) National Review for the hed: "Time Inc. Lays Off 289 Persons of the Year."
Speaking of which, Time could have kept a bunch of people
and fired Joe Klein. If they had, they would have saved a lot of money by not
bothering with this
column and instead reprinted this two-month-old
column by Tom Edsall, which said much the same thing better,
sooner and, I'm
guessing, a hell of a lot cheaper. (They could also fire Krauthammer, Kristol
and Sully and run old speeches by Joe McCarthy, and Roy Cohn, and then probably
keep all 298 people for the $.
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Live Doper Rush Limbaugh makes racist dick joke about Obama, here.
Media ignored
unanswered questions about Bush's new domestic surveillance program.
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KUCINICH COULD REVIVE FAIRNESS DOCTRINE [SOURCE: TVWeek, AUTHOR: Ira Teinowitz]
Rep Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) will head the Domestic Policy panel of the House Government Reform Committee. Even before that announcement was made, Rep. Kucinich raised some eyebrows when he told a media reform conference in Memphis that his panel would hold hearings on reviving the Fairness Doctrine and on media ownership issues. The Fairness Doctrine, adopted in 1949 by the FCC and generally abandoned during the Reagan administration in the 1980s, required stations airing information on controversial issues of public importance to offer contrasting points of views. From the 1970s to the early 1980s it was interpreted as also requiring stations that presented attacks or criticism to seek out and provide equal time for the other side. Any plans to revive it would likely spark a major fight with broadcasters. Recently when President Bush announced his Iraq policy in a prime-time speech, the Democratic Party response by Illinois Sen. Richard Durbin wasn't aired by most broadcasters. The Fairness Doctrine could have required broadcasters to air that response. An aide to the congressman declined to confirm plans for hearings and specifically whether any would be held on the Fairness Doctrine. She said that while media issues will be a high priority, it won't be the panel's only focus.
ATTORNEY GENERAL MUM ON SPY PROGRAM COURT ORDERS [SOURCE: C|Net News.com, AUTHOR: Anne Broache]
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales' appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee Thursday yielded little new information about the Bush administration's sudden revelation that it would seek court approval for its domestic eavesdropping activities. At a Department of Justice oversight hearing scheduled before the government announcement on Wednesday, Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and ranking Republican Arlen Specter (PA) said they were pleased to hear that future activities associated with a controversial National Security Agency operation known as the Terrorist Surveillance Program would undergo review by judges on the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. But many critical questions about the scope and content of the court orders remain unanswered, committee members said.
Name: Charles
Pierce
Hometown: Newton,
MA
Hey Doc -
She talks kinda lazy/and people say she's crazy ... You know, I like this starting-posts-with-lyrics thing.
One of the great things about being a Who fan always has been the arguments you can have with other Who fans. Let me say to the two blokes who responded: a) I am sorry that I have only bought Who's Next in five of its 390 iterations since 1971 (Pete doesn't need my money that badly), and b) no, neither of the Entwistle tracks on Who Are You cuts "Success Story." In fact, absent the monumental title track, that whole album is a particular disappointment to me. Moon's half-dead. Daltrey's not much more than a bellow. Pete's writing is falling into an extraordinarily prolix period, and most of the songs sound half-finished at best.
Anyway ...
To my mind, there's some real journalistic finagling going on in that Newsweek piece that argues that the generals have been given a pass for the unfolding catastrophe in Iraq. At one point, the authors -- John Barry and Evan Thomas -- discuss the "myth" that has grown up around General Eric Shinseki's famous prediction that securing the sandbox would require several hundred thousand soldiers. (This, as the authors point out, was dismissed as "outlandish" by Paul Wolfowitz, who could screw up a two-car funeral if you spotted him the hearse.) Barry and Thomas report that Shinseki never raised this concern in meetings with the president -- "the real time for truth-telling," according to the authors -- and they source this claim to "two participants who did not want to be identified discussing presidential meetings." Then, as the cherry on top, they quote Shinseki himself as saying he should have "pressed harder with the president." Shinseki tells them, "Probably that's fair."
Well, just a minute here.
1) Where's the "myth" that's grown up around Shinseki's comments? He told the Congress exactly what he did. Wolfowitz -- and half the administration, if memory serves -- did indeed ridicule the notion. He was clearly right. They were clearly wrong. What Barry and Thomas regard as "myth" likely refers to the fact that people who were right have been using Shinseki's congressional testimony like a tackhammer on the people who were wrong.
2) What is with this bizarre sourcing? Nobody EVER "wants to be identified discussing presidential meetings." That's how you get fired. My spidey-sense tells me that this particular tidbit came out of Ye Olde White House Ratf**king Shoppe. Since there's no reason ever again to believe anything that comes out of that bottomless well of lies and poison, Barry and Thomas owed their readers a bit more precision.
3) Using Shinseki's quote to support the anonymous slander that he choked in the clutch seems indefensible. I suspect at this point Shinseki regrets not having tied the president to a chair until he listened to common sense. Was Shinseki talking about "pressing harder with the president" in those particular meetings? (And good luck with that, by the way.) If not, this is just cheap.
OK, so impeaching C-Plus Augustus is a political non-starter for the moment, as is the golden dream of packing him and ol' Shoot-'Em-In-The-Head off to the moons of Neptune. But who's to say we can't do something about their pet Attorney General? It was a tough week for our buddy, Thumbscrews J. Coatholder. Suddenly, almost as if there were a Democratic Congress empowered to do actual oversight, he remembers that, back in '02, he'd left that pad of FISA warrants under his copy of Waterboarding Illustrated. (Found it! Good job.) And now there's this nasty bit of featherbedding whereby he's managed to get both Dianne Feinstein and Patrick Leahy gumming his leg. Read that item. The stonewalling alone ought to be enough the begin hearings on his removal from office. He is not the White House counsel. He is the Attorney General of the United States. He works for us, not for his patron. And yet he's never made that transition. He's as much a creature of the political operation of this White House as John Mitchell was a creature of Nixon's, and he's at the very center of almost everything that, in a more sensible universe, would constitute impeachable offenses against this president.
And, no,
this is not the norm. Beyond the example of Elliot Richardson, there's the precedent of Janet Reno who,
after all, preposterously gave Ken Starr
permission to go sniffing for presidential DNA in his investigation of a phony scandal involving
a failed land deal. From first to last, this Attorney General has behaved like the
second-string in-house lawyer he always
has been. Recall that, for example, during his nomination hearings before the Senate, he was
asked by Russ Feingold whether the president had the inherent power to order warrantless
searches of Americans, and Thumbscrews
declined to answer what he called a "hypothetical," even though he knew full well how non-hypothetical
the question really was. How you can be
that contemptuous of Congress and not
be in contempt of Congress is not for
small minds to ponder, I guess. But accountability has to start somewhere. It might as well
start with him.
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Name: Steve
Hometown: New Jersey
Eric,
I think the one poll that sticks out is Bush's approval number of 39% (I had to keep checking it because I thought I was seeing things). Considering what Bush has singlehandedly done to the country and the world, I'd be doing back flips over that number if I was him.
But seriously, what could 39% of the country possibly be thinking? Thirty-nine percent!
I'd hate to think of the circumstances under which we'd see that number slide down to where it belongs, if that's at all possible.
Scary if you
ask me.
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I saw
D'Souza on Colbert this week and nearly fell out of my seat. I have never
heard such a string of falsehoods
laid out as fact. My favorite was this..." Well, Roosevelt
gave away Eastern
Europe at Yalta,
and then the Russians invaded Afghanistan..."
Nice four decade jump. I
guess he didn't read the recent revelations that then President Carter was
doing covert ops over there, which happened to be what the Russians were saying at the
time and using as their reason to invade. Dr. Alterman, you're a published
author ... how do these guys get
published?
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Name: Grant Miner
Hometown: Costa Mesa, CA
Reading the
Air Force's sanctimonious
statement regarding the servicewoman who posed for a Playboy centerfold, I
can't help but remember Col. Kurtz's observation from "Apocalypse
Now": "We train young men to drop fire on people, but their
commanders won't let them write 'f*ck' on the side of their airplane because
IT'S OBSCENE!"
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Name: Mark Cashman
Hometown: Yonkers, NY
Re: David Broder: I sent him this after reading his useless column today:
"That is not a goal worth one American life. And if it turns out that's what all this amounts to, then we will have no choice."
And what then? And how long will you
go on saying that? You keep moving the goalposts. Another six months. Another
six months. Condoleezza Rice, when asked at the recent Senate hearing about
what we would do if al-Maliki doesn't step up, refused to answer the question.
She said it was unwise to think about a Plan B when you're trying to make Plan
A work. That's exactly the approach the administration took when it invaded.
Assume the best and make no plans for the worst. Idiots. Nothing about this war
was ever worth one American life. As long as influential commentators like you
continue to enable this pig-headed, arrogant adolescent in the White House,
more unnecessary American deaths will ensue. Recognize it and say it. Bush will
not change course unless he is forced to.
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Name: Terry
Hometown: Cheyenne
Thanks you for saying "Retire, already," re Broder.
I'm always
up for a tip about a good new musical artist, and will check her out. Have you
ever been into Jane Siberry? I figure the circles of your life have brought you
in touch with such musical sophistications long before me, but she is new to me. I have just received a two-CD retrospective of her
stuff, and my head is way into it. I'm wondering if she falls into the McLean
"this world was never meant for one as beautiful as you" Vincent
category, in that other than the exquisite song "Calling All Angels," her stuff isn't widely known. I also
see she just changed her name to Issa. She's going to be at Joe's Pub in NY
next December.
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—E.A.
The opinions voiced in these columns are those of the individual authors and do not represent the views of Media Matters for America or any other organization or institution with which any author may be affiliated.


