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Tuesday, May 17, 2005
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Fluffya WiFi
There's still time to post
your questions to Philadelphia CIO Diana Neff on WiFi, here. Like, why
isn't Internet access a basic thing like water and treated as a public
utility, instead of being treated like a straight-to-video movie and
sold by cable weasels?
- Lambert
[corrente]
10:02:44 PM
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Queen of Hearts.
Various reports indicate that Frist will be bringing the
controversial re-nominations of Brown and/or Owen to the full Senate
tomorrow, at which point the Senate debate on these judges will begin.
The question then becomes when, and how, the debate will end. Frist has
indicated that he will, in fact, seek to overrule the Senate
Parliamentarian and force the nominations through the Senate by
ignoring both the rules on Senate debate and the rules for changing Senate rules; the nuclear option, as it has come to be known. Via TAPPED, this May 4th column by the AEI's Norman Ornstein is remarkably good in laying out what, precisely, makes the "nuclear option" so nuclear. It's worth referring to again: Let
us put aside for now the puerile arguments over whether judicial
filibusters are unprecedented: They clearly, flatly, are not. Instead,
let's look at the means used to achieve the goal of altering Senate
procedures to block filibusters on judicial nominations. Without
getting into the parliamentary minutiae--the options are dizzying,
including whether points of order are "nested"--one reality is clear.
To get to a point where the Senate decides by majority that judicial
filibusters are dilatory and/or unconstitutional, the Senate will have
to do something it has never done before. Richard Beth of the
Congressional Research Service, in a detailed report on the options for
changing Senate procedures, refers to it with typical understatement as
"an extraordinary proceeding at variance with established procedure."
To make this happen, the Senate will have to get around the clear rules
and precedents, set and regularly reaffirmed over 200 years, that allow
debate on questions of constitutional interpretation--debate which
itself can be filibustered. It will have to do this in a peremptory
fashion, ignoring or overruling the Parliamentarian. And it will
establish, beyond question, a new precedent. Namely, that whatever the
Senate rules say -- regardless of the view held since the Senate's
beginnings that it is a continuing body with continuing rules and
precedents -- they can be ignored or reversed at any given moment on
the whim of the current majority. There have been times in the
past when Senate leaders and presidents have been frustrated by
inaction in the Senate and have contemplated action like this. Each
time, the leaders and presidents drew back from the precipice. They
knew that the short-term gain of breaking minority obstruction would
come at the price of enormous long-term damage -- turning a
deliberative process into something akin to government by the Queen of
Hearts in "Alice in Wonderland." Rule XXII is clear about
extended debate and cloture requirements, both for changing Senate
rules (two-thirds required) and any other action by the Senate,
nominations or legislation (60 Senators required). Ignored in this
argument has been Senate Rule XXXI, which makes clear that there is
neither guarantee nor expectation that nominations made by the
president get an up-or-down vote, or indeed any action at all.
It reads: "Nominations neither confirmed nor rejected during the
session at which they are made shall not be acted upon at any
succeeding session without being again made to the Senate by the
President; and if the Senate shall adjourn or take a recess for more
than thirty days, all nominations pending and not finally acted upon at
the time of taking such adjournment or recess shall be returned by the
Secretary to the President, and shall not again be considered unless
they shall again be made to the Senate by the President." By
invoking their self-described nuclear option without changing the
rules, a Senate majority will effectively erase them. A new precedent
will be in order--one making it easy and tempting to erase future
filibusters on executive nominations and bills. Make no mistake about
that. This has long ago ceased to be about the merits of a
handful of (ironically activist) judges. As has been amply demonstrated
elsewhere, Republicans were brutal in holding up Clinton nominations in
recent years based on the whims of even a single Republican Senator.
Their current bluster and outrage is simply manufactured. The
rules of the Senate will be purposefully and deliberately broken,
because ninety-five percent compliance with the President, and with the
allied James Dobsons of the world, is not good enough. Frist requires
Democrats to countenance any action the President wishes; in a choice
between the institutions of this country and the wishes of his
President, Frist has already made his choice. We shall see who follows.
[Daily Kos]
10:01:23 PM
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Junk Bond Market Down 19% this Year. “Distressed
debt, bonds that have plunged in price because of troubles at the
issuer, have lost 19 percent this year, according to Merrill Lynch, after posting gains of 25 percent in 2004.
The Federal Reserve has raised interest rates to 3 percent from 1.25
percent in June 2004 to keep inflation in check as oil and other costs
rise. Rising rates usually hurt the shakiest companies because they
are the first to lose access to financing when money supply gets
tighter. [BOPnews]
8:43:34 PM
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The media storm .
I'm really disgusted with the Newsweek retraction, of course, but this is, after all, the same magazine that wimped out on the Iran-Contra story back when the environment wasn't nearly as hostile as it is now.Magpie at Pacific Views: Missing the point entirely: That's not exactly news when we're talking about the 'mainstream' media in the US. And, as an excellent piece by Brian Montopoli points out, missing the point is the big story in how the media is covering the Newsweek scandal. Kevin Drum, noting that the Newsweek
story made the front page of the NYT and the LAT, and page 3 of the
WaPo, while the LAT put the Downing Street memo on page 3, the WaPo
buried it on page 18 (after two weeks!), and the NYT still hasn't
covered it: "That's some top notch news judgment, guys." Too right.
Still, Kevin says Froomkin reckons the Downing Street memo is a UXB that may still provide some fireworks. And, there's a big piece about it The New York Review of Books dated 9 June. And, of course, read everything that Digby says.
[The Sideshow]
8:42:18 PM
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Canadian Flip.
Something unusual has happened in Canada--a moderate Conservative
politician who ran for party leadership has crossed the aisle to join
the Liberals. Prime Minister Paul Martin said he met with Ms. Stronach
-- who had been an outspoken and moderate...
[Centerfield]
7:44:26 PM
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Ah, common sense. As usual, common sense comes pouring out of the pen of Molly Ivins.
AUSTIN, Texas -- As Riley used to say on an ancient
television sitcom, "This is a revoltin' development." There seems to be
a bit of a campaign on the right to blame Newsweek for the
anti-American riots in Afghanistan, Pakistan and other Islamic
countries. Uh, people, I hate to tell you this, but the story about Americans
abusing the Koran in order to enrage prisoners has been out there for
quite some time. The first mention I found of it is March 17, 2004,
when the Independent of London interviewed the first British citizen
released from Guantanamo Bay.
For the record, one faked memo doesn't mean that the Shrub served
honorably in the National Guard, and nor does it mean that it was him
instead of Kerry actually fighting in Vietnam, either. Also, that one
teacher that didn't like you in high school isn't the reason that the
rest of them flunked you.
For further reading, skippy makes a similiar argument. [Pandagon]
7:43:01 PM
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Maybe it's the accent....
But damn,
Galloway has a tongue like a knife
.
Psst...
check this out
. It's the Senate report, released on a lazy Sunday afternoon, which
backs up Galloways statements about the U.S. being the biggest
"sanction-buster."
Some key parts:
United States imported about 525 million barrels of Iraqi oil on which $118 million in illegal surcharges were paid.
That means U.S. imports financed about 52 percent of the illegal surcharges paid to the Hussein regime
. [...]
During the surcharge period, Bayoil became the largest provider of
Iraqi oil imports into the United States, importing over 200 million
barrels. At a time when other companies around the world were sharply
decreasing their purchases of Iraqi oil due to Iraq’s surcharge
demands, Bayoil increased both its total purchases and its share of
Iraqi oil exports, at one point buying about 20 percent of all Iraqi
oil sold under the Oil-for-Food program. [...]
Although Saddam Hussein obtained about $228
million from the illegal surcharges, Iraq’s direct and open oil sales
to Jordan, Turkey, Syria, and Egypt, generated 40 times as much illicit
income -- over $8 billion. These oil sales were in violation of U.N. sanctions and were known to the United States
and other U.N. member countries, but little was done to stop them. [...]
The report finds that the U.S. agencies didn't conduct "any oversight"
of Bayoil, even though (because?) it was the nation's #1 oil importer.
Thanks to Hunter at dkos for pointing out the
link.
- Georgia
[akou: a blog by georgia]
6:12:32 PM
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Ethics Gauntlet. Dems throw it down
"Democrats are setting forth the new ethical standard containing these six principles:
* Ban Members from accepting any gifts from lobbyists.
* Ban Members from secretly working with corporate lobbyists to write legislation.
* Ban lobbying by Members of Congress and high level staff for two years after leaving Congress.
* Enforce the ban on Members and staff soliciting privately-funded travel.
* Ban lobbyists from arranging and financing travel.
* End the 'K Street Project' - ban Members and staff from threatening lobbyists with official actions. [Oliver Willis - Like Kryptonite To Stupid]
6:11:34 PM
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Texas lawmakers approve legal late-term abortion for the wealthy. Two last-minute amendments
added to a routine agency reauthorization bill in Texas furthered the
cause of giving rights to the wealthy that are denied to the rest of us.
One amendment, passed 117-19, would change state law
that now requires parental notification for minors who seek abortions.
An attempt last week to pass a similar House bill failed when opponents
raised a technicality. Gov. Rick Perry has said he would sign consent legislation.
The House also voted, 118-16, to allow the board to strip a
physician's license if he or she performs a third-trimester abortion on
any woman unless a doctor has found that the procedure is necessary to
save the woman's life or that carrying the child to term would cause
severe paralysis or mental damage.
The latter amendment is particularly divisive, since doctors who
serve poorer people and therefore most likely work for less money
themselves and clinics like Planned Parenthood the run on shoestring
budgets cannot afford to pay lawyers to defend them and will have to
discontinue late-term abortions pretty much altogether. And it punishes
poor women who need late-term abortions for being poor, since they
cannot afford to pay the heavy fees that it takes to acquire a
psychiatrist to attest to your delicate mental health.
It's amazing sometimes how the abortion laws can be so closely
tailored to the needs and wants of the well-off men who dominate our
government. These are basically laws intended to make sure that teenage
daughters don't get to choose for themselves and also to make sure that
if wives or mistresses of the same wealthy men need an abortion, they
can just pay for the psychiatrist and doctor to get one and it's all
technically legal. [Pandagon]
6:10:09 PM
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Want to Stop the Riots? Investigate Gitmo.
The truth about whether U.S. troops desecrated the Quran is still
unknown. Yes, under intense pressure, Newsweek retracted its story. But
the specific allegation that U.S. soldiers placed the Quran in a toilet
has actually never been proven or disproven. Did those events really
take place or not? Does the ...
[Think Progress]
4:52:36 PM
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Weird spin .
Pakistan dismisses Newsweek retraction on KoranISLAMABAD
(Reuters) - Pakistan dismissed on Tuesday as inadequate an apology and
retraction by the Newsweek magazine of a report that U.S. interrogators
at Guantanamo Bay had desecrated the Koran. The report in the
magazine's May 9 issue sparked protests across the Muslim world, from
Afghanistan, where 16 people were killed and more than 100 injured, to
Pakistan, India, Indonesia and Gaza. "The apology and retraction are not enough," Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed told Reuters. "They should understand the sentiments of Muslims and think 101 times before publishing news which hurt feelings of Muslims."Christ, did the White House tell them what to say? Maybe
the administration should think 101 times before deliberately carrying
out policies that are intended to insult Muslims, instead. Just a
suggestion.
[The Sideshow]
8:41:55 AM
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Government APPROVED Koran report OK, I'm no fan of Isakoff. But like Olbermann reported last night,there is something fishy with the Newsweek retraction.
Today, on Good Morning America, the editor of Newsweek seemed baffled at why the White House pressured them so much. I'm waiting for a transcript, but he said a senior Pentagon official was shown the article and approved it. As I understood it, it wasn't the source, but the Pentagon itself that approved the contents of the report.
Which kind of makes you wonder why the White House is saying Newsweek is guilty of "irresponsible journalism." If you have a source, then run that source by the Pentagon, and it approves your work....well, that seems like seal of approval, doesn't it?
I smell distraction tactic. How convenient that the White House is feeding the media frenzy just when the Senate released a report implicating the U.S. in the Oil-for-Food scandal. - Georgia [akou: a blog by georgia]
8:41:06 AM
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Scotty Should Be Fired
No, not because of this. (Well, ok, maybe because of that). But more so because of this.
WASHINGTON
(CNN) -- Claims in a recently uncovered British memo that intelligence
was "being fixed" to support the Iraq war as early as mid-2002 are "flat out wrong,"White House press secretary Scott McClellan said Monday. McClellan insisted the process leading up to the decision to go to war was "very public"
-- and that the decision to invade in March 2003 was taken only after
Iraq refused to comply with its "international obligations." "The
president of the United States, in a very public way, reached out to
people across the world, went to the United Nations and tried to
resolve this in a diplomatic manner," McClellan said. "Saddam Hussein was the one, in the end, who chose continued defiance. And only then was the decision made, as a last resort, to go into Iraq." However, McClellan also said he had not seen the "specific memo," only reports of what it contained.
See? It's a Fristian tactic. "I didn't see it (or her), but I am
omnipotent and I can say unequivocally that the memo is wrong (or the
girl is not brain dead, not brain dead, I tell you!)"
Well, those that DID see the memo had this to say: A former senior U.S. official called it "an absolutely accurate description of what transpired" during the senior British intelligence officer's visit to Washington. He spoke on condition of anonymity. A White House official said the administration wouldn't comment on leaked British documents..."
The administration doesn't comment on leaked British documents...unless
it does comment on them. And only then, only if they didn't see them.
That's company
- Georgia
[akou: a blog by georgia]
8:40:18 AM
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Freedom on the march . Yeah, right.The
bodies of hundreds of pro-democracy protesters in Uzbekistan are
scarcely cold, and already the White House is looking for ways to
dismiss them. The White House spokesman Scott McClellan said those shot
dead in the city of Andijan included "Islamic terrorists" offering
armed resistance. They should, McClellan insists, seek democratic
government "through peaceful means, not through violence".But
how? This is not Georgia, Ukraine or even Kyrgyzstan. There, the
opposition parties could fight elections. The results were fixed, but
the opportunity to propagate their message brought change. In Uzbek
elections on December 26, the opposition was not allowed to take part
at all. And there is no media freedom. On Saturday
morning, when Andijan had been leading world news bulletins for two
days, most people in the capital, Tashkent, still had no idea anything
was happening. Nor are demonstrations in the capital tolerated. On
December 7 a peaceful picket at the gates of the British embassy was
broken up with great violence, its victims including women and
children. So how can Uzbeks pursue democracy by "peaceful means"? Take
the 23 businessmen whose trial for "Islamic extremism" sparked recent
events. Had the crowd not sprung them from jail, what would have
awaited them? The conviction rate in criminal and political trials in
Uzbekistan is over 99% - in President Karimov's torture chambers,
everyone confesses. So why did the White House make
such a tepid response to the murder of 745 protesters by police in
Uzbekistan? Well, obviously, because they are "with us" in the war of
terror. And that's worth a lot of bucks.
(via) [The Sideshow]
6:41:44 AM
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As If She Wanted To Change Her Skin.
Guest post by hilzoy Via kos, a quote from Seymour Hersh: "I get a call
from a mother. She wants to see me somewhere in northeastern America. I
go see her. There's a kid that was in the unit, the...
[Majikthise]
6:40:07 AM
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© Copyright
2005
Michael Mussington.
Last update:
6/1/2005; 1:34:16 AM.
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