If you’re going to go in and try to topple Saddam Hussein you have to go to Baghdad. Once you have got Baghdad, it’s not clear what you do with it. It’s not clear what kind of government you would put in place of the one that is currently there now. Is it going to be a Shia regime, a Sunni regime or a Kurdish regime? Or one that tilts toward the Baathists, or one that tilts toward the Islamic fundamentalists? How much credibility is that government going to have if it’s set up by the United States military when it is there? How long does the United States military have to stay to protect the people that sign on for that government, and what happens to it once we leave?

— Sec. of Defense Dick Cheney, 1991, explaining why
the US would not invade Baghdad

Friday, April 8, 2005

Why I Am Not a JPII-ian

I finally read the piece Top Dog sent me by Joe Conason, John Paul’s Duality. His last words exactly sum up my feelings about “JPII”:

Immune to cynicism, this great and good man served us all as the tireless apostle of peace and reconciliation—which is why so many people who disagreed with John Paul II will continue to read him, admire him and honor his memory.

I was a convert to the Church late in life, but not long after I entered the Church John Paul II provided the watershed for my finally falling away from it.

Buried under Weenie Waggers
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Sunday, April 3, 2005

It's Not Easy Being Republican

It’s been a long time. So much work, so many places visited. So little time for politics.

After a two-month absence that has taken me to NYC twice, sandwiched around visits to Tucson, Bangkok and Burma, I’m frankly glad for some extended pound time. Although I must admit it was a useful exercise to view Dubya from a distance. And watch the squirming.

These have been trying times. It cannot be easy being George.

Spending goes up faster under Republican presidents than under Democratic ones. And the economy grows faster under Democrats than Republicans. What grows faster under Republicans is debt.

This is a man who’s only achievement is the scale of his underachievement. Daddy got him into the National Guard so he wouldn’t have to risk his life in Vietnam and he couldn’t even handle showing up for that. Started companies that immediately headed south, but used his VP dad’s connections to bail them out. And in the ultimate fraud, got daddy’s friends on the Supreme Court to appoint him president. After the 2004 debacle, no wonder he felt he had a mandate. Rigged tallies showed he actually got more votes!

Yes, it’s not easy being George. But he’s not alone. He has the Republican party to back him up.

Remember, this is the party that has staked the high moral ground. Which is why the revelations of the past few weeks have been so shocking.

Take the story that the White House had provided press credentials to a shill named Jeff Gannon whose sole goal was to throw softball questions at Dubya. Only one problem. In his spare time, Gannon was working as a male hooker (gasp!). And Jeff Gannon wasn’t even his real name. Can you spell S-E-C-U-R-I-T-Y R-I-S-K? This from the same gang that continually belittles Democrats as being “weak on defense.” You know, the ones that didn’t give us 9/11.

So where does the Republican Party really stand on the issue of homosexuality? Is it okay? If not, then why was Dick Cheney’s lesbian daughter his campaign manager?

Speaking of campaign managers, if homosexuality is such a sin, they why was Republican Congressman David Drier, who has been outed by several sources, allowed to run Arnold’s successful scam of the CA electorate?

And if homosexuality is such a sin, then why do they seek the approval of the openly gay Log Cabin Republicans? (I refuse to even spell the word ‘oxymor’ whoops! here’wink

And if homosexuality is such a sin, then why do they tolerate such closet queens as Matt Drudge?

And if homosexuality is such a sin, then why do they hire someone like Scott McClellan?

But let’s move on.  If family values are such a Republican value, then why do they embrace Newt Gingrich, who has divorced many wives, including serving one with papers while she was in the hospital?

And if Republicans are so pro-family values, then which Republican made admitted gambling addict William Bennett a party spokesman? And does he still have a job?

And if Republicans are so family-friendly, then how come they pilloried Bill Clinton for sexual harrassment while now giving a pass to Bill O’Reilly?

And if Republicans are so against illegal drug use, then why do they continue to listen to Rush Limbaugh, a proven drug addict.

And if Republicans are really pro-life, then why did Dubya, while governor of Texas, sign into law a bill allowiing hospitals to cut off life support when the hospitals decided that someone was a goner, even over objections of family members?

And if life is so important to Tom DeLay, then how come he pulled the plug on his own father?

No, it’s not easy being Republican. But at least the GOP is still the small government/good-for-business party, right?

Well actually, that’s not true, either, as statistics released by the White House itself show. Read on…

 

More GOP Than the GOP
by Michael Kinsley

 

April 3, 2005

 

It was the TV talker Chris Matthews, I believe, who first labeled Democrats and Republicans the “Mommy Party” and the “Daddy Party.” Archaic as these stereotypes may be, they do capture general attitudes about the two parties. But we live in the age of the one-parent family, and it is Mom, more often than Dad, who must play both roles.

It has not escaped notice that the Daddy Party has been fiscally misbehaving. But it hasn’t really sunk in how completely the Republicans have abandoned allegedly Republican values — if, in fact, they ever really had such values.

Buried under Weenie Waggers
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Tuesday, March 29, 2005

The Return of the Dog

The dog’s back.

I don’t normally quote the NY Times, since they are so freqently on the ass-end of stories of importance. But occasionally something real slips through the cracks. Here is one of those. Read it carefully, and then memorize the name of Eric Lichtblau. And if you see him begging on the street in the next few years, remember this piece.

Buried under Doggy Style
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Sunday, January 16, 2005

The Tent of Occupation

Fallujah people suffered under Saddam and they liberated their own city. They did not do so to live under occupation.

I wonder what it will take to snap America out of its hypnosis about Iraq. Or are we in advanced Matrix-style deep embryonic sleep? With the Pentagon openly pondering El Salvador-style death squads and indefinite internment of terrorist suspects in ‘friendly’ foreign countries, you’ve got to wonder if there is any conscience operating on a large scale at this moment in time. One thing I sense for sure: Global pillage has replaced global village. I’m earmarking my tsunami dollars for the nearest Iraqi tent city. That’s a tsunami I caused.

Here’s Robert Fisk’s latest on Fallujah. We have, I’m afraid, adopted Israeli scorched-earth methods of occupation. Iraq is Palestine. And another generation of Americans is going to have to grow up with widespread memories of war crimes. Pray without ceasing whether or not you believe.

Buried under Dogs of War
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Saturday, January 15, 2005

CDC Warning: New Disease hits America!

Many victims have contracted it after having been screwed for the past 4 years…

The Center for Disease Control has issued a warning that affects all Americans. While rumours abound that a majority are infected, critics doubt the credibility of these numbers although warn, we are all at risk of suffering it’s consequences.

Buried under Stupid Dog Tricks
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Friday, January 14, 2005

The Unholy Roman Empire

America, we have a problem. The Holy Roman Empire is back. Not that it ever went away. But like a California mudslide, it has come back down out of the hills and unbudgingly inserted itself in the central stream of American life and governance. It is no longer a looming problem. It no longer requires daily bulletins about its immanence. It’s here in full Code Red gravity. As proof, I submit the following obituary from last week’s Philadelphia Inquirer. Then, I ask you to think in a non-combative and constructive way—if such is possible—about the coalition of fundamentalist Christians—both evangelical Protestants and dogmatic Catholics—that is the molten core constituency of our second-term President.

 

Buried under Weenie Waggers
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Thursday, January 13, 2005

CBS blows Bush

CBS did not "break" this Chicken-Hawk George story…

Greg Palast has no problem calling a whore a whore. And that's precisely what CBS has become with their latest whitewash of Rathergate and Bush's National Guard disservice.

 

Buried under Housebroken
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