Saturday, January 30, 2010

Bring Back the Good Old Days of Reagan Conservatism ?


































We Tried Conservatism in the 80s. That Brand of Conservatism Did Not Work. We Tried Bush/Cheney Conservatism and Got a Trillion Dollar War based on Lies, a Republican Spending Spree and the Economy Lost $3 Trillion Dollars in Value: After Conservatism Robert Kuttner | September 21, 1991

After a decade of conservative rule, a fair tally of claims and achievements yields a mixed picture. The major conservative strength remains foreign policy, where the right takes credit for the collapse of global communism as a military force and of Marxism as an ideal. Liberals are correct to respond that the policy of containment had liberal origins, that communism collapsed more from its own weight than from the Reagan military buildup, that many ancillary foreign policies -- Iran-contra; misjudging Saddam; bungling the trade round -- were debacles. But polls keep showing that conservatives, deservedly or not, win broad support for their foreign policy, of which the Persian Gulf War is only the most recent example.

Domestic policy, however, is another story. If the experience of the 1980s does not bring total discredit to the ideological pretensions of the Reagan revolution, it comes close. The right was going to restore growth. The growth rate of the roaring 1980s barely equaled that of the awful 1970s. The right was going to reduce tax burdens. For most working Americans, overall tax rates rose, thanks to payroll tax increases. Conservatives would rely on deregulation to discipline and energize diverse industries, from savings and loans to airlines. The result mocks the aspiration. Even the decade's one genuine achievement, slaying inflation, was the work not of the White House but of the Federal Reserve, a task made more arduous by the Reagan budget policies and more painful than necessary by the Fed's own conservative monetarist methods.

The right was going to honor the traditional values of work and family. The income of most working families declined, even as the hours worked by mothers and fathers increased; the various indicators of family health -- divorce, illegitimacy, domestic violence -- kept deteriorating throughout the decade. Conservatives were going to make Americans secure in their homes. Crime rates kept soaring, homeownership declined, city streets grew more derelict. Reagan was going to balance the budget, increase rates of savings and investment, restore integrity to government, and on and on. In almost every case, the opposite occurred.

Yet, oddly, conservative ideology reigns. Conservative officeholders seem immune from voter retribution -- it turns out that Ronald Reagan wasn't the only one coated with teflon. Liberals, at least judging by much of the Democratic Party, remain unsure of first principles, nervous about what is sensible politics, and hamstrung by several realities: the legacy of the federal deficit, the parochial imperatives of legislative incumbency, the persistent allure of free market economics, and the lingering public suspicion of public remedy.

During the 1980s, Democrats for the most part did not get to write the script. But as part of a perceived incumbency in a divided government, they shared the blame for bad policies although not the credit for infrequent good ones. Republicans, in their eleventh year of tenure at the White House, continue to run against the government and continue to get away with it. A prominent Democratic senator, seriously weighing a campaign for President, told me that any activist policy he might propose, no matter how sensible or popular in its own terms, was vulnerable to the Republican charge that the government -- or worse, the Democrats in charge of the government -- would invariably screw it up. Or that the liberals would pick your pocket to pay for it.

The very corruption of government and politics in the 1980s, even though perpetrated under conservative auspices, was yet another windfall for conservatives. Ordinary working families feel dreadfully vulnerable, as Stanley Greenberg's article in this issue so potently documents. Yet because public life seems so distant and public remedy so improbable, the voter does not blame the incumbent administration or look to the "out" party for alternatives. Rather, the voter concludes that government in general is largely irrelevant, if not part of the problem; the corollary is that anyone who proposes using government to repair the damage -- say, a liberal Democrat -- is suspect as naive or disingenuous. Too many shell-shocked Democrats, by offering an uncertain trumpet, fail to disabuse voters of these suspicions. Yet, as Greenberg suggests, most such voters would respond positively to a rhetoric and a set of policies that acknowledged and addressed the economic anxiety of working families.

* * *

My account, thus far, is a blend of the ideological and the partisan. The fit is not perfect, for Republicans are not consistently conservative nor Democrats reliably liberal. Still, the past decade is about as close as American politics gets to the association of a governing party with an ideological creed. The Reagan and Bush(41) administrations proudly and stridently claimed the conservative label and it is surely fair to hold conservatism accountable for the results. Now that we have experienced conservative rule and a practical test of conservative principles, conservative ideology ought to be in ruins. As the conservative wave recedes, what remains of the core set of liberal principles? How can those principles help to expedite the conservative departure?

Historically, liberals have stood for a few essential propositions: the rule of law; personal liberty; political democracy; a threshold level of social decency; economic opportunity. As Stephen Holmes and Paul Starr show, in companion essays in this issue, even classical liberals recognized the importance of a competent state, as both a guarantor of rights and an engine of public good.

Dynamically, the liberal or reformist impulse has sought to expand the domain of these basic principles. If liberty and democratic deliberation are good for a small class of property-holders, they are even better for the whole of society. If education enhances civic virtue and, economic development, then it is too good to restrict to a narrow class of gentry. Liberals have always held that an economic floor above the level of destitution is a self-evident moral imperative in its own right, as well as prerequisite to a functioning political community; it was entirely in character for twentieth-century liberals to extend that floor to include such common amenities as universal pensions and health insurance. Liberals fight poverty not by being generous to the dependent poor, but by striving to eliminate the poor as a distinct class.

In other words, liberals, besides holding fast to a set of core principles, have generally believed in the idea of progress. That, historically, is why the words "liberal" and "progressive" have often been linked. The liberal idea of progress is not the sentimental or mechanical notion that history keeps unfolding to higher and higher levels, but rather the idea that public improvement and the expansion of core principles to a broader public are at least possible; and that enlightened leaders pursuing enlightened policies can help achieve a social broadening of core principles. This civic ideal, not just of liberty and democracy, but of steady public improvement, is what unites, say, Thomas Jefferson and John Kennedy across the centuries. It is not just "liberal," but emphatically American.

As Albert Hirschman explains in his splendid short book, The Rhetoric of Reaction, what unites conservatives is their skepticism that political intervention can yield social progress. Hirschman dissects three staple elements of conservative argument that have kept recurring ever since the French Revolution. He labels them Perversity, Futility, Jeopardy. The Perversity thesis, common to Edmund Burke and Charles Murray, holds that naive, even well-meant interventions often achieve their opposite. The French Revolution only led to tyranny. Efforts to improve the lot of welfare mothers via Aid to Families with Dependent Children only enslave them. Attempts to tax the rich only harm the poor. Seat belts, argued theorists opposed to regulation, will only encourage people to drive faster and possibly increase the accident rate while diminishing liberty.

The Futility thesis, according to Hirschman, holds that do-gooders are oblivious to deeper social laws that defy naive attempts at public betterment. (These laws are known only to the privileged conservative theorist.) Thus, Pareto claimed, echoed by George Stigler, that the distribution of income has a natural character which resists tampering. Finally, the Jeopardy thesis holds that naive attempts to expand prior reforms will only overwhelm them. Nineteenth-century reactionaries warned that attempting to expand the suffrage would wreck liberty. Neoconservatives similarly held that attempts to expand equality via affirmative action would only wreck the older ideal of equal justice as well as the liberal ideal of merit. These three rhetorical devices boil down to one: better to leave things alone.

As Hirschman so persuasively demonstrates, these rhetorical claims overreach at the level both of logic and of history. Why on earth should a social intervention yield the precise opposite of its intent? That is only one out of an infinite range of possibilities. Surely there have been cases where policy interventions did some good. Conservative rhetoric also ignores the possibility of social learning -- the prospect that people will learn from their mistakes and that leaders will make course corrections. As a creed, conservatism is pessimistic, most especially about public endeavor. In this sense, it contradicts the fundamental optimism of the American idea.

* * *

Against this background, contemporary conservatism has been persuasive, precisely because it claims (falsely) that conservatives are the true heirs to the liberal tradition. Where liberals once believed in free markets, freedom from an overweening state, equality rooted in individual rights, and economic possibility, they have now allegedly become socialists, statists, collectivists, stagnationists. This is a very damaging allegation. For, as countless political theorists have observed, the liberal tradition is the quintessential American tradition. There was never a true American conservatism, except as a chaotic and contradiction-ridden body of anti-liberalisms, since America was never a feudal, theocratic, or monarchic nation. It was, in Louis Hartz's oft-quoted phrase, "born free."

Friday, January 29, 2010

Republicans Are Really Really Serious About Deficit Reduction



















Senate Republicans Called For Commitment To PAYGO Before Voting Against It
In his State of the Union address last night, President Obama urged the Senate to adopt pay-as-you-go rules (PAYGO), which essentially stipulate that all spending increases will be offset by either cuts elsewhere or tax increases. “When the vote comes tomorrow, the Senate should restore the pay-as-you-go law that was a big reason for why we had record surpluses in the 1990s,” Obama said.

Today, the Senate followed through, and considering all of the deficit fearmongering that has been going on in Congress, you’d think that it would have passed by a fairly wide margin. But no. Instead, the rules passed on a party line vote of 60(D)-40.

And the blanket Republican opposition is particularly interesting considering that some Senate Republicans used to support PAYGO, even when it was opposed by their own party. For instance, in 2004, three current Senate Republicans — Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME), Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), and Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) — joined 47 Democrats in adopting PAYGO, against the majority Republicans’ wishes (although the rule was ultimately scuttled when Congress failed to pass a budget). The next year, the same three senators were joined by Sen. George Voinovich (R-OH) in a failed attempt to implement the rule.

Yet all four of them opposed the rule today. Here’s what they’ve had to say in favor of PAYGO in the past:

VOINOVICH: I just don’t understand how we can continue to go this way. We’re living in a dream world. This deficit continues to grow.

COLLINS: [PAYGO is] much-needed restraint for members of Congress as we wrestle with fiscal decisions.

SNOWE: I believe now is the time for both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue to commit to pay-as-you-go rules for both revenues and spending.

Just last year, Snowe approved of Obama’s advocating for PAYGO. And in the last few weeks, all of these Republicans have voiced concerns about the deficit and spending. So what changed? And why did all the supposed deficit hawks in the Senate — like Sen. Judd Gregg (R-NH) — vote against it as well? Could it be that they’re actually deficit peacocks, who “like to preen and call attention to themselves, but are not sincerely interested” in addressing deficits?

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Ditch the Democrats and Return us to Good Old Republican Control of Government



















Conservative Republican Government Ridden With Scandals
1) In March 2006, Claude Allen, Bush's top domestic policy aide, was arrested when he tried to return items he had shoplifted from Target for cash refunds. Allen, who made $161,000 a year, blamed stress from Hurricane Katrina.

2) In 2005, bloggers pricked up their ears when a reporter named Jeff Gannon asked a softball question at a Bush press conference. Some sleuthing turned up nude photos of Gannon—real name: James Guckert—on male escort websites.

3) Randall Tobias, Bush’s AIDS tsar, mandated that organizations must oppose prostitution in order to receive American aid. It later emerged that Tobias purchased services through the notorious D.C. Madam, though Tobias maintained he only bought “massages.”

4) The Interior Department’s Minerals Management Service would not seem to be the sexiest government agency. But a departmental investigation last year found that officials had “frequently consumed alcohol at industry functions, had used cocaine and marijuana, and had sexual relationships with oil and gas company representatives.”

Where’d the Money Go?

5) When testifying before Congress in 2007, L. Paul Bremer, the former head of reconstruction in Iraq, was unable to account for as much as $12 billion—about half of his budget—as the head of the Coalition Provisional Authority between May 2003 and June 2004. According to a report by Rep. Henry Waxman, contractors brought bags to meetings in order to collect shrink-wrapped bundles of money.


Lawsuit: DOJ Officials Should be Held Accountable for Politicizing Hiring Practices
(August 15, 2008)

Six attorneys rejected from civil service positions at the Justice Department filed a lawsuit against former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, Monica Goodling, and other top officials for allegedly violating their rights by taking politics into consideration in the hiring process.

The suit is an attempt to hold top officials accountable for the hiring scandal that ultimately led to Gonzales' resignation last year, said Daniel Metcalfe, attorney for the plaintiffs who is also executive director of the Collaboration on Government Secrecy at American University's Washington College of Law.

"My clients wish that they hadn't had to bring this lawsuit -- they would have greatly preferred to be working inside the Justice Department, where by all rights they deserved to be, defending the government in court rather than standing as victimized examples of government wrongdoing," said Metcalfe, a former longtime Justice Department official.

One of the rejected attorneys -- Sean Gerlich -- first filed suit against the department in June. Today's amended complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, broadens the suit to include Gonzales; Monica Goodling, former White House Liaison; Michael Elston, former chief of staff to then-Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty; and Esther McDonald, a former member of the Honors Program Screening Committee.

In it, the attorneys allege that top officials violated the applicants' privacy and due process through the politicized hiring process in the Honors Program and Summer Law Intern Program.

The suit alleges that in vetting candidates' political affiliations -- in part by Googling their names in connection with any political activity -- the officials violated privacy rules requiring that applicants' files maintain no additional information about the individuals' political activity. The department's failure to fully address this "reveal defendant Department of Justice's utterly unredeemable obliviousness to its legal obligations, and its remarkably recidivistic failures to meet them, in the first place," the complaint states.

Related Judge: Top Bush Aides Must Testify

Remember right-wing conservative hate monger Bill O'Reilly and what he told a young woman he would like to do with her using a falafel. That incident and this is indicative of the way he thinks about women, Kidnap top Dems, waterboard Speaker Pelosi
In his fantasy world where Obama hires him as a presidential adviser, O'Reilly explained the first thing he'd do is lavishly decorate his office. Thing two would be having the CIA director kidnap top Democrats and "waterboard" Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA).

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Conservative Con Artist James O'Keefe and Friends Arrested



















After Whining About Lack Of Media Coverage Of ACORN Videos, Hannity And Beck Silent About Arrest Of Videographer from Ellen at News Hounds

Glenn Beck and Sean Hannity could not get enough of the ACORN videos made by undercover filmmakers James O'Keefe and Hannah Giles, the young conservative activists who, posing as a pimp and prostitute, captured a number of low-level ACORN employees offering them advice about how to get loans for a brothel with under-age girls. Just about every time Beck and Hannity trumpeted the videos, they attacked the mainstream media for ignoring what they kept holding up as such an important story (never mind that ACORN has since been exonerated by the Congressional Research Service). So you'd think, then, that O'Keefe's arrest by the FBI after allegedly trying to interfere with the telephone system in Senator Mary Landrieu's office would be worthy of at least a mention on either Beck's or Hannity's show. But no. Neither show mentioned the arrest.


The Sanctity of Military Spending
Administration officials announced last night that the President, in tomorrow's State of the Union address, will propose a multi-year freeze on certain domestic discretionary spending programs. This is an "initiative intended to signal his seriousness about cutting the budget deficit," officials told The New York Times.

But the freeze is more notable for what it excludes than what it includes. For now, it does not include the largest domestic spending programs: Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. And all "security-releated programs" are also exempted from the freeze, which means it does not apply to military spending, the intelligence budget, the Surveillance State, or foreign military aid. As always, the notion of decreasing the deficit and national debt through reductions in military spending is one of the most absolute Washington taboos. What possible rationale is there for that?

The facts about America's bloated, excessive, always-increasing military spending are now well-known. The U.S. spends almost as much on military spending as the entire rest of the world combined, and spends roughly six times more than the second-largest spender, China. Even as the U.S. sunk under increasingly crippling levels of debt over the last decade, defense spending rose steadily, sometimes precipitously. That explosion occurred even as overall military spending in the rest of the world decreased, thus expanding the already-vast gap between our expenditures and the world's. As one "defense" spending watchdog group put it: "The US military budget was almost 29 times as large as the combined spending of the six 'rogue' states (Cuba, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Sudan and Syria) who spent $14.65 billion."

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) Two Faced Conservative Hypocrite



















Wallace ignored Cornyn's reconciliation votes, asked about "political repercussions" for Dems
Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace asked Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) about the "political repercussions" Democrats would face if they were to use reconciliation to pass health care reform. Wallace made no mention of any "political repercussions" Cornyn faced for embracing reconciliation in order to pass the Bush tax cuts and to allow drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

FACT: Cornyn supported Republican use of reconciliation to pass Bush tax cuts, oil drilling in ANWR

Cornyn supported passage of 2003 tax cuts through reconciliation. In 2003, Cornyn voted for the Senate version of the fiscal 2004 budget resolution that called for additional tax cuts to be considered under reconciliation and for the final version of the 2004 budget resolution. He also voted against an amendment to the Senate version of the budget resolution, proposed by Sen. Robert Byrd (D-WV), that would have stripped reconciliation instructions from the resolution. He subsequently voted for the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 itself. CBO estimated that the bill, as cleared by Congress, "would increase budget deficits ... by $349.7 billion over the 2003-2013 period."

Cornyn supported passage of 2005 tax cuts through reconciliation. In 2005, Cornyn voted for the final version of the fiscal 2005 budget resolution, which also called for tax cuts through reconciliation. He subsequently voted for the Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005 itself. CBO estimated that the bill, as cleared by Congress and signed by the president, would "reduce federal revenues ... by $69.1 billion over the 2006-2015 period."

Cornyn supported use of reconciliation to pass measure that would have allowed oil drilling in ANWR. Cornyn was one of 51 senators who voted against striking language allowing the reconciliation process to be used to open up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from the 2006 budget resolution and voted for a reconciliation bill that, as originally introduced in and passed by the Senate, included a provision to open up the refuge to drilling. (The bill as enacted did not contain such a provision.)




Cornyn, like most conservatives consistently ignore real science and believe in fairy tales. One of the reasons we're having the Great Recession is because conservatives spent money like there was no tomorrow and failed to rise revenue to pay for their spending. All the while letting Wall St use other people's money to gamble.

The oil in ANWR? Maybe enough to supply the state of California with gas for one year. Want better government that cares about the common good? Get rid of the Cornyns.

Before the Bush Recession
Supply Side Tax Cuts Failed to Deliver Jobs and Growth Between 2001 and 2007

In his final days in office, President George W. Bush told the American Enterprise Institute:

[T]he benefits of the tax cuts have been obscured by the recent economic crisis, no question about it. But when they finally take a look back at whether or not tax cuts were effective or not, it’s hard to argue against 52 uninterrupted months of job growth as a result of tax policy. And so my hope is, is that after this crisis passes—and it will—that people continue to write about and articulate a public policy of low taxes.

This and other efforts of the “Bush Legacy Project” to rehabilitate the last administration’s job creation image and defend its tax cuts ignore the stark reality that the Bush administration’s tax policies fostered the weakest jobs and income growth in more than six decades, and ignored alarming labor market trends in minority communities. This record of anemic job creation was accompanied by sluggish business investment and weak gross domestic product growth that characterized the period after the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 went into effect.

Yet conservatives continue to argue for another round of permanent tax cuts similar to those of the Bush administration. Even if all of the Bush tax cuts are allowed to expire as scheduled, the projected cost of the Bush tax cuts to the federal budget over the next ten years is $3.9 trillion, an average of 1.4 percent of the country’s total economic activity (GDP) per year. Those asking for more permanent tax cuts continue to justify the cost, claiming tax cuts create jobs.

But their analysis ignores what actually happened during the economic cycle that began in March 2001 and ended in December of 2007—which almost exactly coincides with the Bush presidency and the implementation of the Bush tax cuts. This period registered the weakest jobs and income growth in the post-war period. Overall monthly job growth was the worst of any cycle since at least February 1945, and household income growth was negative for the first cycle since tracking began in 1967. Women reversed employment gains of previous cycles. And for African Americans, the worst job growth on record was matched by an unprecedented increase in poverty.

Given this incredibly weak record, it is astounding that some conservative members of Congress held up—and eventually voted against—the Obama administration’s economic stimulus and recovery package because it did not contain additional permanent tax cuts. The anemic Bush economic cycle directly contradicts the idea that those tax cuts delivered broad-based economic growth and job creation—never mind the promise of long-term economic growth so quickly squelched by the onset of the recession beginning in December 2007.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Republicans Modern Masters of Smears and Propaganda



















ACORN Still Smeared With “Voter Fraud” In Fox Article
If you read the article, the last line sticks out like a sore thumb. It's like an article about Coca-Cola's, say, quarterly earnings, concluding with, “And by the way, drinking too much Coke causes cavities.” Overkill, anyone? But then again, on Fox, it seems no article is complete without a subtle or not-so-subtle swipe at the left, at President Obama, or at ACORN. However, as reported by the Drudge Report in December 2009, “The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) did not commit voter fraud, and it didn't misuse federal funding in the last five years, according to a recently released report prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS), a nonpartisan investigational arm of Congress.”
Imagine if NBC, CBS or CNN had their hosts - whether reporters or pundits - promote the ACLU, the Democratic Party or any number of labor unions - Chuck Todd: ‘The Tea Party gets a big benefit’ from Fox News’ promotion. Fox actively promotes a movement that believes President Obama is the new Hitler and urban myths about death panels and other assorted nonsense that no sane person would take seriously.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Prince Alwaleed bin Talal al-Saud Owns Part of Fox and Rightwing News Corp



















Prince Alwaleed bin Talal al-Saud Owns Part of Fox and Rightwing News Corp

This week, Prince Alwaleed bin Talal al-Saud of Saudi Arabia — the largest shareholder of News Corp outside the Murdoch family — endorsed Rupert Murdoch’s son James to succeed the elder Murdoch when he retires. Alwaleed, King Abdullah’s nephew, is Saudi Arabia’s richest person and the world’s 22nd wealthiest (Murdoch is number 132). He holds large stakes in many American companies, including Citi. The prince met with Murdoch last week to discuss a “future potential alliance with News Corp,” and he told Charlie Rose Wednesday about his respect for the Murdoch dynasty:

ALWALEED: I met with Mr. Rupert Murdoch and Mr. James Murdoch. We are always in tough. I’m second biggest shareholder there. And no doubt that News Corp is moving on all the fronts. You’ve seen how FOX rating is skyrocketing. … James is now managing Europe and Asia. … I’ll be the first one to nominate him to be the successor of Mr. Rupert Murdoch, god forbid if something happens to him. … I have full confidence in [James], full trust in him, and he’s capable. He’s really Rupert Murdoch in the making, and he’s almost there now.

Alwaleed came to most Americans’ attention following the 9/11 terror attacks when New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani turned down a $10 million donation from Alwaleed over a controversial comment he had made about U.S. foreign policy. As Media Matters noted, several Fox News personalities criticized Alwaleed at the time. Fox News host Sean Hannity called Alwaleed’s comment an “egregious, outrageous, unfair offense.” That was before Alwaleed purchased a seven percent stake in its parent company.
Imagine if Prince Alwaleed had bought 7% of CBS or the New York Times - rabid Right conservatives would be howling at the moon. Not a peep now since the prince is putting his billions behind a right-wing agenda.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Karl Rove is Still a Lying Sack



















Rove shelters Bush from any responsibility for 2009 increase in deficit
In his Wall Street Journal column, Karl Rove ignored the Bush administration's responsibility for the 2009 budget to attack the Obama administration over deficits. Rove also ignored several economic analyses that estimated relative employment increases under the stimulus in order to claim that the stimulus failed.

Rove argues Bush's fiscal responsibility ended January 20, 2009

Based on Bush's actions and economic conditions, CBO projected $1.2 trillion deficit for 2009 before Obama took office

$1.2 trillion projection based on legislation Bush passed before Obama's inauguration. In a budget report released on January 7, 2009, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) stated, "The ongoing turmoil in the housing and financial markets has taken a major toll on the federal budget. CBO currently projects that the deficit this year will total $1.2 trillion, or 8.3 percent of GDP." CBO further stated, "A drop in tax revenues and increased federal spending (much of it related to the government's actions to address the crisis in the housing and financial markets) both contribute to the robust growth in this year's deficit. Compared with receipts last year, collections from corporate income taxes are anticipated to decline by 27 percent and individual income taxes by 8 percent; in normal economic conditions, they would both grow by several percentage points. In addition, the estimated deficit includes outlays of more than $180 billion to reflect the cost of transactions of the TARP."

PolitiFact: "A third of the 2009 fiscal year had passed before Obama even took office." In assessing an earlier Rove claim -- that the Obama administration "will run up more debt by October than Bush did in eight years" -- PolitiFact.com stated that "debt rose by $2.5 trillion during the Bush years from 2001 through 2008; and it is expected to rise $3 trillion in the two years under Obama. But Rove's equation assumes Obama is responsible for all of the debt accumulated in 2009 and 2010." PolitiFact further stated that "the spending for 2009 was largely determined by a Congress controlled by Democrats and a Republican president," and noted, "The Congressional Budget Office estimated that the Obama administration inherited a deficit of more than $1.2 trillion the day it walked in the door."
Rove ignored estimates of relative employment increase credited to stimulus to say "the stimulus failed miserably"

Rove: Obama said stimulus "would create 3.7 million jobs," but by "Obama's standards, the stimulus failed miserably." In his column, Rove stated, "Mr. Axelrod claims the pork-laden stimulus package has been a success. But Mr. Obama told Americans that if it were passed, unemployment wouldn't rise above 8%. It is now 10%. The president also said it would create 3.7 million jobs, 90% of which would be in the private sector. By Mr. Obama's standards, the stimulus failed miserably."

Economists estimate stimulus "raised employment" by as many as 2 million jobs through December 2009. In a quarterly report issued January 13, the White House Council of Economic Advisers estimated: "As of the fourth quarter of 2009, the CEA estimates that the ARRA has raised employment relative to the baseline by between 1½ and 2 million. The CEA estimates for both the effects on GDP and employment are similar to those of respected private forecasters and government agencies." The CEA cited Moody's Economy.com estimates that the stimulus increased employment by 1.6 million jobs through the fourth quarter of 2009. From the CEA's quarterly report:

CBO undermines Rove's suggestion that health care reform will add to future deficits

Rove suggests health care reform will increase the federal deficit. In his column, Rove stated, "Mr. Axelrod boasts Mr. Obama's proposed health reforms will 'not add to the federal deficit.' But if that turns out to be true, it will only be because Massachusetts voters just elected a senator who promises to vote against those reforms."

CBO estimated House and Senate bills will reduce deficits. The CBO found that both the health care reform bill that passed the House on November 7, 2009, and the Senate bill that incorporated the manger's amendment would yield deficit reductions over the 2010-2019 period and in the decade after 2019.
When Rove was White House adviser he lied repeatedly as his boss and Congressional Republicans destroyed the economy ( Republicans did and still do think was fine to spend a trillion dollars to invade and rebuild Iraq). Rove like most of the Con movement knows no shame. They'll continue to lie because they have a deep hate for the kind of enlightened liberal democracy envisioned by our Founding Fathers.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Why Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rice Should Have Been Prosecuted for Treason



















They Knew...

Despite the Whitewash, We Now Know that the Bush Administration was Warned Before the War That Its Iraq Claims were Weak
by David Sirota and Christy Harvey

As the 9/11 Commission recently reported, there was “no credible evidence” of a collaborative relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda. Similarly, no weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq. With U.S. casualties mounting in an election year, the White House is grasping at straws to avoid being held accountable for its dishonesty.

The whitewash already has started: In July, Republicans on the Senate Intelligence Committee released a controversial report blaming the CIA for the mess. The panel conveniently refuses to evaluate what the White House did with the information it was given or how the White House set up its own special team of Pentagon political appointees (called the Office of Special Plans) to circumvent well-established intelligence channels. And Vice President Dick Cheney continues to say without a shred of proof that there is “overwhelming evidence” justifying the administration’s pre-war charges.

But as author Flannery O’Conner noted, “Truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it.” That means no matter how much defensive spin spews from the White House, the Bush administration cannot escape the documented fact that it was clearly warned before the war that its rationale for invading Iraq was weak.

Top administration officials repeatedly ignored warnings that their assertions about Iraq’s supposed Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) and connections to al Qaeda were overstated. In some cases, they were told their claims were wholly without merit, yet they went ahead and made them anyway. Even the Senate report admits that the White House “misrepresented” classified intelligence by eliminating references to contradictory assertions.

In short, they knew they were misleading America.

And they did not care.
They knew Iraq posed no nuclear threat

There is no doubt even though there was no proof of Iraq’s complicity, the White House was focused on Iraq within hours of the 9/11 attacks. As CBS News reported, “barely five hours after American Airlines Flight 77 plowed into the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld was telling his aides to come up with plans for striking Iraq.” Former Bush counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke recounted vividly how, just after the attack, President Bush pressured him to find an Iraqi connection. In many ways, this was no surprise—as former Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill and another administration official confirmed, the White House was actually looking for a way to invade Iraq well before the terrorist attacks.

But such an unprovoked invasion of a sovereign country required a public rationale. And so the Bush administration struck fear into the hearts of Americans about Saddam Hussein’s supposed WMD, starting with nuclear arms. In his first major address on the “Iraqi threat” in October 2002, President Bush invoked fiery images of mushroom clouds and mayhem, saying, “Iraq is reconstituting its nuclear weapons program.”

Yet, before that speech, the White House had intelligence calling this assertion into question. A 1997 report by the U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)—the agency whose purpose is to prevent nuclear proliferation—stated there was no indication Iraq ever achieved nuclear capability or had any physical capacity for producing weapons-grade nuclear material in the near future.

In February 2001, the CIA delivered a report to the White House that said: “We do not have any direct evidence that Iraq has used the period since Desert Fox to reconstitute its weapons of mass destruction programs.” The report was so definitive that Secretary of State Colin Powell said in a subsequent press conference, Saddam Hussein “has not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction.”

Ten months before the president’s speech, an intelligence review by CIA Director George Tenet contained not a single mention of an imminent nuclear threat—or capability—from Iraq. The CIA was backed up by Bush’s own State Department: Around the time Bush gave his speech, the department’s intelligence bureau said that evidence did not “add up to a compelling case that Iraq is currently pursuing what [we] consider to be an integrated and comprehensive approach to acquiring nuclear weapons.”

Nonetheless, the administration continued to push forward. In March 2003, Cheney went on national television days before the war and claimed Iraq “has reconstituted nuclear weapons.” He was echoed by State Department spokesman Richard Boucher, who told reporters of supposedly grave “concerns about Iraq’s potential nuclear programs.”

Even after the invasion, when troops failed to uncover any evidence of nuclear weapons, the White House refused to admit the truth. In July 2003, Condoleezza Rice told PBS’s Gwen Ifill that the administration’s nuclear assertions were “absolutely supportable.” That same month, White House spokesman Scott McClellan insisted: “There’s a lot of evidence showing that Iraq was reconstituting its nuclear weapons program.”
They knew the aluminum tubes were not for nuclear weapons

To back up claims that Iraq was actively trying to build nuclear weapons, the administration referred to Iraq’s importation of aluminum tubes, which Bush officials said were for enriching uranium. In December 2002, Powell said, “Iraq has tried to obtain high-strength aluminum tubes which can be used to enrich uranium in centrifuges for a nuclear weapons program.” Similarly, in his 2003 State of the Union address, Bush said Iraq “has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes suitable for nuclear weapons production.”

But, in October 2002, well before these and other administration officials made this claim, two key agencies told the White House exactly the opposite. The State Department affirmed reports from Energy Department experts who concluded those tubes were ill-suited for any kind of uranium enrichment. And according to memos released by the Senate Intelligence Committee, the State Department also warned Powell not to use the aluminum tubes hypothesis in the days before his February 2003 U.N. speech. He refused and used the aluminum tubes claim anyway.

The State Department’s warnings were soon validated by the IAEA. In March 2003, the agency’s director stated, “Iraq’s efforts to import these aluminum tubes were not likely to be related” to nuclear weapons deployment.

Yet, this evidence did not stop the White House either. Pretending the administration never received any warnings at all, Rice claimed in July 2003 that “the consensus view” in the intelligence community was that the tubes “were suitable for use in centrifuges to spin material for nuclear weapons.”

Today, experts agree the administration’s aluminum tube claims were wholly without merit.
They knew the Iraq-uranium claims were not supported

In one of the most famous statements about Iraq’s supposed nuclear arsenals, Bush said in his 2003 State of the Union address, “The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.” The careful phrasing of this statement highlights how dishonest it was. By attributing the claim to an allied government, the White House made a powerful charge yet protected itself against any consequences should it be proved false. In fact, the president invoked the British because his own intelligence experts had earlier warned the White House not to make the claim at all.

In the fall of 2002, the CIA told administration officials not to include this uranium assertion in presidential speeches. Specifically, the agency sent two memos to the White House and Tenet personally called top national security officials imploring them not to use the claim. While the warnings forced the White House to remove a uranium reference from an October 2002 presidential address, they did not stop the charge from being included in the 2003 State of the Union.

Not surprisingly, evidence soon emerged that forced the White House to admit the deception. In March 2003, IAEA Director Mohammed El Baradei said there was no proof Iraq had nuclear weapons and added “documents which formed the basis for [the White House’s assertion] of recent uranium transactions between Iraq and Niger are in fact not authentic.” But when Cheney was asked about this a week later, he said, “Mr. El Baradei frankly is wrong.”

Bush and Rice both tried to blame the CIA for the failure, saying the assertion “was cleared by the intelligence services.” When the intelligence agency produced the memos it had sent to the White House on the subject, Rice didn’t miss a beat, telling Meet The Press “it is quite possible that I didn’t” read the memos at all—as if they were “optional” reading for the nation’s top national security official on the eve of war. At about this time, some high-level administration official or officials leaked to the press that Ambassador Joseph Wilson’s wife was an undercover CIA agent—a move widely seen as an attempt by the administration to punish Wilson for his July 6, 2003 New York Times op-ed that stated he had found no evidence of an Iraqi effort to purchase uranium from Niger.

In recent weeks, right-wing pundits have pointed to new evidence showing the Iraq uranium charge may have flirted with the truth at some point in the distant past. These White House hatchet men say the administration did not manipulate or cherry-pick intelligence. They also tout the recent British report (a.k.a. The Butler Report) as defending the president’s uranium claim. Yet, if the White House did not cherry-pick or manipulate intelligence, why did the president trumpet U.S. intelligence from a foreign government while ignoring explicit warnings not to do so from his own? The record shows U.S. intelligence officials explicitly warned the White House that “the Brits have exaggerated this issue.” Yet, the administration refused to listen. Even The Butler Report itself acknowledges the evidence is cloudy. As nonproliferation expert Joseph Cirincione of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace recently pointed out, “The claim appears shaky at best—hardly the stuff that should make up presidential decisions.”

But now, instead of contrition, Republicans are insisting the White House’s uranium charge was accurate. Indeed, these apologists have no option but to try to distract public attention from the simple truth that not a shred of solid evidence exists to substantiate this key charge that fueled the push for war.
They knew there was no hard evidence of chemical or biological weapons

In September 2002, President Bush said Iraq “could launch a biological or chemical attack in as little as 45 minutes after the order is given.” The next month, he delivered a major speech to “outline the Iraqi threat,” just two days before a critical U.N. vote. In his address, he claimed without doubt that Iraq “possesses and produces chemical and biological weapons.” He said that “Iraq has a growing fleet of manned and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) that could be used to disperse chemical or biological weapons” and that the government was “concerned Iraq is exploring ways of using these UAVs for missions targeting the United States.”

What he did not say was that the White House had been explicitly warned that these assertions were unproved.

As the Washington Post later reported, Bush “ignored the fact that U.S. intelligence mistrusted the source” of the 45-minute claim and, therefore, omitted it from its intelligence estimates. And Bush ignored the fact that the Defense Intelligence Agency previously submitted a report to the administration finding “no reliable information” to prove Iraq was producing or stockpiling chemical weapons. According to Newsweek, the conclusion was similar to the findings of a 1998 government commission on WMD chaired by Rumsfeld.

Bush also neglected to point out that in early October 2002, the administration’s top military experts told the White House they “sharply disputed the notion that Iraq’s Unmanned Aerial Vehicles were being designed as attack weapons.” Specifically, the Air Force’s National Air and Space Intelligence Center correctly showed the drones in question were too heavy to be used to deploy chemical/biological-weapons spray devices.

Regardless, the chemical/biological weapons claims from the administration continued to escalate. Powell told the United Nations on February 5, 2003, “There can be no doubt that Saddam Hussein has biological weapons and the capability to rapidly produce more, many more.” As proof, he cited aerial images of a supposed decontamination vehicle circling a suspected weapons site.

According to newly released documents in the Senate Intelligence Committee report, Powell’s own top intelligence experts told him not to make such claims about the photographs. They said the vehicles were likely water trucks. He ignored their warnings.

On March 6, 2003, just weeks before the invasion, the president went further than Powell. He claimed, “Iraqi operatives continue to hide biological and chemical agents.”

To date, no chemical or biological weapons have been found in Iraq.
They knew Saddam and bin Laden were not collaborating

In the summer of 2002, USA Today reported White House lawyers had concluded that establishing an Iraq-al Qaeda link would provide the legal cover at the United Nations for the administration to attack Iraq. Such a connection, no doubt, also would provide political capital at home. And so, by the fall of 2002, the Iraq-al Qaeda drumbeat began.

It started on September 25, 2002, when Bush said, “you can’t distinguish between al Qaeda and Saddam.” This was news even to members of Bush’s own political party who had access to classified intelligence. Just a month before, Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.), who serves on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said, “Saddam is not in league with al Qaeda I have not seen any intelligence that would lead me to connect Saddam Hussein to al Qaeda.

To no surprise, the day after Bush’s statement, USA Today reported several intelligence experts “expressed skepticism” about the claim, with a Pentagon official calling the president’s assertion an “exaggeration.” No matter, Bush ignored these concerns and that day described Saddam Hussein as “a man who loves to link up with al Qaeda.” Meanwhile, Rumsfeld held a press conference trumpeting “bulletproof” evidence of a connection—a sentiment echoed by Rice and White House spokesman Ari Fleischer. And while the New York Times noted, “the officials offered no details to back up the assertions,” Rumsfeld nonetheless insisted his claims were “accurate and not debatable.”

Within days, the accusations became more than just “debatable”; they were debunked. German Defense Minister Peter Stuck said the day after Rumsfeld’s press conference that his country “was not aware of any connection” between Iraq and al Qaeda’s efforts to acquire chemical weapons. The Orlando Sentinel reported that terrorism expert Peter Bergen—one of the few to actually interview Osama bin Laden—said the connection between Iraq and al Qaeda are minimal. In October 2002, Knight Ridder reported, “a growing number of military officers, intelligence professionals and diplomats in [Bush’s] own government privately have deep misgivings” about the Iraq-al Qaeda claims. The experts charged that administration hawks “exaggerated evidence.” A senior U.S. official told the Philadelphia Inquirer that intelligence analysts “contest the administration’s suggestion of a major link between Iraq and al Qaeda.”

While this evidence forced British Prime Minister Tony Blair and other allies to refrain from playing up an Iraq-al Qaeda connection, the Bush administration refused to be deterred by facts.

On November 1, 2002, President Bush claimed, “We know [Iraq has] got ties with al Qaeda.” Four days later, Europe’s top terrorism investigator Jean-Louis Bruguiere reported: “We have found no evidence of links between Iraq and al Qaeda. ? If there were such links, we would have found them. But we have found no serious connections whatsoever.” British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, whose country was helping build the case for war, admitted, “What I’m asked is if I’ve seen any evidence of [Iraq-al Qaeda connections]. And the answer is: ‘I haven’t.’ ”

Soon, an avalanche of evidence appeared indicating the White House was deliberately misleading America. In January 2003, intelligence officials told the Los Angeles Times that they were “puzzled by the administration’s new push” to create the perception of an Iraq-al Qaeda connection and said the intelligence community has “discounted—if not dismissed—information believed to point to possible links between Iraq and al Qaeda.” One intelligence official said, “There isn’t a factual basis” for the administration’s conspiracy theory about the so-called connection.

On the morning of February 5, 2003, the same day Powell delivered his U.N. speech, British intelligence leaked a comprehensive report finding no substantial links between Iraq and al Qaeda. The BBC reported that British intelligence officials maintained “any fledgling relationship [between Iraq and al Qaeda] foundered due to mistrust and incompatible ideologies.” Powell, nonetheless, stood before the United Nations and claimed there was a “sinister nexus between Iraq and the al Qaeda.” A month later, Rice backed him up, saying al Qaeda “clearly has had links to the Iraqis.” And in his March 17, 2003, speech on the eve of war, Bush justified the invasion by citing the fully discredited Iraq-al Qaeda link.

When the war commenced, the house of cards came down. In June 2003, the chairman of the U.N. group that monitors al Qaeda told reporters his team found no evidence linking the terrorist group to Iraq. In July 2003, the Los Angeles Times reported the bipartisan congressional report analyzing September 11 “undercut Bush administration claims before the war that Hussein had links to al Qaeda.” Meanwhile, the New York Times reported, “Coalition forces have not brought to light any significant evidence demonstrating the bond between Iraq and al Qaeda.” In August 2003, three former Bush administration officials came forward to admit pre-war evidence tying al Qaeda to Iraq “was tenuous, exaggerated, and often at odds with the conclusions of key intelligence agencies.”

Yet, the White House insisted on maintaining the deception. In the fall of 2003, President Bush said, “There’s no question that Saddam Hussein had al Qaeda ties.” And Cheney claimed Iraq “had an established relationship to al Qaeda.” When the media finally began demanding proof for all the allegations, Powell offered a glimmer of contrition. In January 2004, he conceded that there was no “smoking gun” to prove the claim. His admission was soon followed by a March 2004 Knight Ridder report that quoted administration officials conceding “there never was any evidence that Hussein’s secular police state and Osama bin Laden’s Islamic terror network were in league.”

But Powell’s statement was the exception, not the norm. The White House still refuses to acknowledge wrongdoing, and instead resorts to the classic two-step feint, citing sources but conveniently refusing to acknowledge those sources’ critical faults.

For instance, Cheney began pointing reporters to an article in the right-wing Weekly Standard as the “best source” of evidence backing the Saddam-al Qaeda claim, even though the Pentagon had previously discredited the story. Similarly, in June, the Republican’s media spin machine came to the aid of the White House and promoted a New York Times article about a document showing failed efforts by bin Laden to work with Iraq in the mid-’90s against Saudi Arabia. Not surprisingly, the spinners did not mention the article’s key finding—a Pentagon task force found that the document “described no formal alliance being reached between Mr. bin Laden and Iraqi intelligence.”

When the 9/11 Commission found “no credible evidence” of a collaborative relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda, the White House denials came as no surprise. Cheney defiantly claimed there was “overwhelming evidence” of a link, provided no evidence, and then berated the media and the commission for having the nerve to report the obvious. Bush did not feel the need to justify his distortions, saying after the report came out, “The reason I keep insisting that there was a relationship between Iraq and Saddam and al Qaeda is because there was a relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda.”

That was the perfect answer from an administration that never lets the factual record impinge on what it says to the American public.
They knew there was no Prague meeting

One of the key pillars of the Iraq-al Qaeda myth was a White House-backed story claiming 9/11 hijacker Mohammed Atta met with an Iraqi spy in April 2001. The tale originally came from a lone Czech informant who said he saw the terrorist in Prague at the time. White House hawks, eager to link al Qaeda with Saddam, did not wait to verify the story, and instead immediately used it to punch up arguments for a preemptive attack on Iraq. On November 14, 2001, Cheney claimed Atta was “in Prague in April of this year, as well as earlier.” On December 9, 2001, he went further, claiming without proof that the Atta meeting was “pretty well confirmed.”

Nine days later, the Czech government reported there was no evidence that Atta met with an Iraqi intelligence agent in Prague. Czech Police Chief Jiri Kolar said there were no documents showing Atta had been in Prague that entire year, and Czech officials told Newsweek that the uncorroborated witness who perpetuated the story should have been viewed with more skepticism.

By the spring of 2002, major news publications such as the Washington Post, the New York Times, Newsweek and Time were running stories calling the “Prague connection” an “embarrassing” mistake and stating that, according to European officials, the intelligence supporting the claim was “somewhere between ‘slim’ and ‘none’.” The stories also quoted administration officials and CIA and FBI analysts saying that on closer scrutiny, “there was no evidence Atta left or returned to the United State at the time he was supposed to be in Prague.” Even FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III, a Bush political appointee, admitted in April 2002, “We ran down literally hundreds of thousands of leads and checked every record we could get our hands on, from flight reservations to car rentals to bank accounts,” but found nothing.

But that was not good enough for the administration, which instead of letting the story go, began trying to manipulate intelligence to turn fantasy into reality. In August 2002, when FBI case officers told Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz that there was no Atta meeting, Newsweek reported Wolfowitz “vigorously challenged them.” Wolfowitz wanted the FBI to endorse claims that Atta and the Iraqi spy had met. FBI counterterrorism chief Pat D’Amuro refused.

In September 2002, the CIA handed Cheney a classified intelligence assessment that cast specific, serious doubt on whether the Atta meeting ever occurred. Yet, that same month, Richard Perle, then chairman of the Bush’s Defense Policy Board, said, “Muhammad Atta met [a secret collaborator of Saddam Hussein] prior to September 11. We have proof of that, and we are sure he wasn’t just there for a holiday.” In the same breath, Perle openly admitted, “The meeting is one of the motives for an American attack on Iraq.”

By the winter of 2002, even America’s allies were telling the administration to relent: In November, British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said he had seen no evidence of a meeting in Prague between Atta and an Iraqi intelligence agent.

But it did not stop. In September 2003, on “Meet the Press,” Cheney dredged up the story again, saying, “With respect to 9/11, of course, we’ve had the story that’s been public out there. The Czechs alleged that Mohammed Atta, the lead attacker, met in Prague with a senior Iraqi intelligence official five months before the attack.” He provided no new evidence, opted not to mention that the Czechs long ago had withdrawn the allegations, and ignored new evidence that showed the story was likely untrue.

Even today, with all of the intelligence firmly against him, Cheney remains unrepentant. Asked in June about whether the meeting had occurred, he admitted, “That’s never been proven.” Then he added, “It’s never been refuted.” When CNBC’s Gloria Borger asked about his initial claim that the meeting was “pretty well confirmed,” Cheney snapped, “No, I never said that. I never said that. Absolutely not.”

His actual words in December 2001: “It’s been pretty well confirmed that [Atta] did go to Prague and he did meet with a senior official of the Iraqi intelligence service.”

In other words, Cheney hit a new low. He resorted not only to lying about the story, but lying about lying about the story.
Conclusion: They knew they were misleading America

In his March 17, 2003 address preparing America for the Iraq invasion, President Bush stated unequivocally that there was an Iraq-al Qaeda nexus and that there was “no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised.”

In the context of what we now know the White House knew at the time, Bush was deliberately dishonest. The intelligence community repeatedly told the White House there were many deep cracks in its case for war. The president’s willingness to ignore such warnings and make these unequivocal statements proves the administration was intentionally painting a black-and-white picture when it knew the facts merited only gray at best.

That has meant severe consequences for all Americans. Financially, U.S. taxpayers have shelled out more than $166 billion for the Iraq war, and more will soon be needed. Geopolitically, our country is more isolated from allies than ever, with anti-Americanism on the rise throughout the globe.

And we are less secure. A recent U.S. Army War College report says “the invasion of Iraq was a diversion from the more narrow focus on defeating al Qaeda.” U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi put it this way: “The war in Iraq was useless, it caused more problems than it solved, and it brought in terrorism.”

These statements are borne out by the facts: The International Institute of Strategic Studies in London reports al Qaeda is now 18,000 strong, with many new recruits joining as a result of the war in Iraq. Not coincidentally, the White House recently said the American homeland faces an imminent threat of a terrorist attack from a still-active al Qaeda operation in Afghanistan. Yet, the administration actually moved special forces out of Afghanistan in 2002 to prepare for an invasion of Iraq. Because of this, we face the absurd situation whereby we have no more than 20,000 troops in Afghanistan hunting down those who directly threaten us, yet have 140,000 troops in Iraq—a country that was not a serious menace before invasion.

Of course, it is those troops who have it the worst. Our men and women in uniform are bogged down in a quagmire, forced to lay down life and limb for a lie.

To be sure, neoconservative pundits and Bush administration hawks will continue to blame anyone but the White House for these deceptions. They also will say intelligence gave a bit of credence to some of the pre-war claims, and that is certainly true.

But nothing can negate the clear proof that President Bush and other administration official officials vastly overstated the intelligence they were given. They engaged in a calculated and well-coordinated effort to turn a war of choice in Iraq into a perceived war of imminent necessity.

And we are all left paying the price.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Sleazy Website, Michelle Malkin and Fox Promote False Voter Fraud Stories



















Conservatives using sketchy videos to suggest Dems guilty of voter fraud
Election watchdog site claiming to "transcend party lines" run by former GOP operative

-- As Massachusetts voters cast their ballots for the important Coakley-Brown election, conservatives and Republicans insinuate that Democrats are engaging in voter fraud despite offering little evidence to make their case.

Many are jumping on videos uploaded by the independent blog ElectionJournal.org that insinuate fraud. One video uploaded to YouTube, titled "More Coakley Electioneering In Boston," is ostensibly filmed outside the Boston polling center, "Robert and Theresa Parks Community Building," and shows a Coakley sign not far from the entrance.

"There is campaign signage clearly violating the 150-foot rule," says a voice in the video. "It is placed 10 feet from the door to the polling place."

But the video shows no date or time-stamp, nor does it address questions such as how long the sign was up for or who placed it near the door.
Story continues below...

Another video shows a woman who claims to be named Isabel Melendez (spelling may not be accurate), who they claim is a Democratic activist, holding absentee ballots on the street. But it offers no evidence that any wrongful or suspicious ballots were cast.

That didn't stop Fox Nation from using it to suggest "Voter Fraud in Massachusetts."

Blogger Michelle Malkin made it the centerpiece of a post titled "Massachusetts Senate race: Voter Fraud watch." Andrew Breitbart's Big Government Web site also mentioned it.

The conservative National Review responded with the headline: "You're Not Supposed to Get an Absentee Ballot in a Box of Cracker Jacks."

Conservatives and Republicans are reportedly preparing to level the fraud charge if Democrat Martha Coakley, who is just behind Republican Scott in recent polls, wins.

The Washington Independent's David Weigel writes that "around 150 conservatives are in town, armed with cameras, looking for fraud–mostly in Boston."

The Boston Herald reports that the conservative activist group Americans for Limited Government's president Bill Wilson sent out a mailer to supporters saying, "The ability to vote as dead people is a realistic concern" -- a likely reference to the allegation leveled against ACORN in the 2008 election.

"When you see the crowds and feel the enthusiasm, you get the feeling like the only way for [Scott Brown] to lose this is fraud," said Massachusetts GOP Minority Leader Bradley Jones.

But Massachusetts Secretary of State William F. Galvin, whose office is responsible for making sure elections run smoothly, isn't impressed.

"These are conservative groups who don’t know anything about this state," Galvin said, according to the Boston Herald. "I’ll put (Massachusetts’ record) up against any state. We guard the rights of voters here."

Stoking the flames of these allegations has been Ed Schultz, progressive MSNBC and radio host, who caught flack for saying he'd "cheat" to help Coakley win the election and "keep these [Republican] bastards out."

Schultz backtracked, but not before being inundated with accusations that he was encouraging voter fraud.

Election watchdog site claiming to "transcend party lines" run by former GOP operative

ElectionJournal.org, whose arbitrary videos conservatives are citing to accuse Democrats of voter fraud, presents itself as a nonpartisan organization but appears to be run by a long-time former Republican operative whose focus is elections.

"Vote fraud transcends party lines, international borders and appears in many different forms; vote buying, intimidation, tampering, forgery, absentee ballot, impersonation, petition, violence, registration," reads its description on Facebook.

Nowhere on the Web site does it claim to have any partisan or ideological affiliation, but its founder's name is listed as Mike Roman.

Archives from the George Washington University reveal that a man named Mike Roman was on 2008 presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani's exploratory committee, and has the following credentials.

Director of Election Day Operations at the RNC during the 2006 election cycle. Pennsylvania Election Day operations director during 2004. Prior to 2004, Roman worked for the Pennsylvania House Republican Campaign Committee. An elected Ward Leader in Philadelphia from 2002-06.

Politico's Jonathan Martin confirms this in a 2007 report titled, "Rudy's team."

Mike Roman most recently served as Director of Election Day Operations at the Republican National Committee during the 2006 election cycle and as the Pennsylvania Election Day Operations Director during 2004. Prior to 2004, Roman worked for the Pennsylvania House Republican Campaign Committee. Roman was also an Elected Ward Leader in Philadelphia from 2002 to 2006.

There's no indication on the Web site that it's in any way affiliated with the conservative or Republican establishment. It presents itself as an independent citizen-run organization. Its "About" section reads:

Electionjournal.org is an online community dedicated to raising public awareness of vote fraud and election irregularities. If an election is worth winning, then there is someone willing to steal it. We report it.

A Twitter feed belonging to a Mike Roman echoes his description on ElectionJournal.org as a "political strategist" and "private investigator." It links to Roman's Facebook page, where he lists ElectionJournal.org as one of his Web sites.

In further evidence of Roman's ties to -- or at least interest in -- the conservative establishment, Roman is Facebook "Friends" with popular right-wing blogger Eric Erickson of RedState.com, RNC chair Michael Steele, New Jersey Governor-elect Chris Christie and conservative media figure Andrew Breitbart, among others.

Roman lists a flurry of Republican organizations in his "pages" section, including GOPAC, Republican National Lawyers Association, New York Republican State Committee, among others.

He's also a "fan" of various Republican politicians, including Scott Brown.

While ElectionJournal.org lists both progressive and conservative Web sites on its blogroll, the content on its blog is predominantly critical of the Democratic Party and appears not to ever point out Republican transgressions.

One headline reads: "ACORN: Nonprofit but certainly Partisan. Legal Warnings and Political Strategy Revealed." Its most recent posts all suggest potential voter fraud issues and "electioneering" committed by Democrats.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

If Republicans Are the Party of Values How Come They Never Act Like It



















"I want to be fair here": Fox anchor Jarrett distorts Coakley remarks to portray her as "out of step"

On the January 17 edition of America's News HQ, anchor Gregg Jarrett said that Massachusetts Attorney General and Democratic Senate candidate Martha Coakley might be "out of step when she says things like terrorists are no longer in Afghanistan, or in the debate saying, quote, 'We need to get taxes up.' " Both attacks are distortions: The context of Coakley's Afghanistan comments makes clear that she was referring to Al Qaeda's presence in Afghanistan -- echoing numerous military experts' statements regarding Al Qaeda's diminished presence in Afghanistan, and the context of Coakley's tax comments indicates that she was referring to increasing tax revenues by getting people back to work.
Coakley is/was simply repeating what General Chrystal said about Al Qaeda's numbers in Afghanistan. The major problems there are from radical groups like the Taliban and from war lords that have been fighting each other and foreign occupiers literally for centuries. What does it say about Brown and Conservatives that they do not know these basic facts. Aren't they supposed to the the great experts on national security. Brown like the rest of the conservative movement adheres to a playbook of lies and distortions. Being honorable and honest is not part of Conservative values.

GOP Rallies Massachusetts Voters: "Our Dream of Depriving Millions of Health Care is Within Reach"

Firing up voters on the eve of the special election to fill the late Edward M. Kennedy's Senate seat, Republican candidate Scott Brown spoke at a campaign rally today, proclaiming, "With your help, our dream of depriving millions of health care is within reach."

"Let's send a message, Massachusetts!" Mr. Brown exhorted the crowd. "Let's tell people across the country that if they want health coverage, they are shit out of luck!"
Conservative embrace the culture of death and despair as they plead for the public to forget the miserable years of the Bush administration and conservative control of Congress.

GOP House hopeful Jim Russell praised racist practices, advocated eugenics in 2001 essay

GOP House hopeful Jim Russell praised racist practices, advocated eugenics in 2001 essay. A New York Republican hoping to displace the long-serving Democratic Rep. Nita Lowey will face an increasingly steep climb to electoral victory thanks to a revelation by Politico's Maggie Haberman, who dug up some of his published works and noted a number of distinctly racist elements in a 2001 piece published by the right-wing Occidental Quarterly.

Jim Russell, who enjoys the support of his state's Republican Party and conservative establishment, has maintained a strongly anti-immigrant stance in his campaign against Lowey, who defeated him in 2008.

The same could be said of his 2001 essay for Occidental [PDF link], titled "The Western Contribution to World History," which advises parents to establish "appropriate ethnic boundaries" for their children, and criticizes the film "Save the Last Dance" for depicting an interracial relationship.

He also opined against the racial integration of public schools and praised two individuals for their antisemitic ideas on how to limit the spread of Jews.


Russell even lauded some ideas behind the practice of eugenics, a radical ideology most commonly associated with Germany's Third Reich which seeks to preserve racial and ethnic purity.

WI GOP congressman supporting Ron Johnson surprised that Johnson supports Great Lakes oil drilling.

Ron Johnson, a wealthy business executive and leading Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in Wisconsin this year, is beginning to receive scrutiny for his far right views. He has been criticized recently for opposing an anti-sex offenders bill, the Child Victim Act, and for saying that he is “glad there’s global warming.” Last month, when asked if he would support drilling for oil in the Great Lakes, Johnson — who owns more than $100,000 in BP stock — replied, “I think we have to, get the oil where it is.”

The Tea party conservative Johnson was afraid that victims of sexual assault would get their day in court.

Conservative leader Beck's June programs were overloaded with violent, conspiratorial and paranoid rhetoric

Monday, January 18, 2010

Republican Senate candidate Scott Brown Exploits Rape Remark to Crowd Applause



















Republican Senate candidate Scott Brown Exploits Rape Remark to Crowd Applause
The most jarring moment, however, came during a rally Brown held with a cadre of famous Massachusetts athletes in which one attendee called for Coakley to have a "curling iron" shoved "up her butt."

The reference was to an assault case that Coakley's office oversaw, in which she was late to press charges against a man who had raped a toddler (Coakley later won grand jury indictments charging rape and assault and battery). Such nuance, however, fell short of a reasonable justification.

Democratic Party officials were quick to jump on reports of the comment as evidence of "bullying tactics" by Brown himself. Usually, tying a candidate to the angry screams of his or her crowd can be a difficult supposition. But on Sunday night, video emerged that seemed to show the state senator acknowledging the curling iron remark as it transpired. Hotline On Call was the first to post the footage but the Huffington Post obtained it separately as well. Video at link.
Just what America needs another Republican Senator with no honor and no ideas.

Fox Nation Continues Partisan Lie About Martha Coakley Statement
Fox Nation is doing its darndest to push their Republican candidate for MA senate, former Cosmo nude centerfold Scott Brown, to victory. For the third day, they have a lede which claims that his opponent, Martha Coakley, said something that she clearly didn’t. Backing up the headline is an audio segment of Coakley’s comments made during a radio interview. The lede, “Coakley: Catholics Shouldn’t Work in the ER” is straight out of Gateway Pundit (they of the Jennings smears) where Jim Hoft posted the same audio and same lie about what Coakley said. Not surprisingly, smearmeister Andrew Breitbart picked it up on his “Big Government” website. And like the cropped video which purported to show that Coakley said that there is no more terrorism in Afghanistan, this audio provides no context. What makes it worse is the accompanying commentary which is a lie. But what’s truth when you have some smearing to do.

The audio is taken from an interview that Coakley had with a Boston talk show host, WBSM’s Ken Pittman. After discussing Scott Brown’s proposed amendment to a Massachusetts law, which would have allowed Catholic hospitals to refuse emergency contraception to rape victims (it lost), Pittman asked her if she would pass a health care bill with a conscience clause which would allow those who oppose abortion (and other things not deemed correct by the religious right) to opt out. (Hmmm, could health care providers have a conscience clause that allows them to refuse treatment to big, fat, hateful rightwing blowhards like Rush Limbaugh?!) The following exchange took place:

PITTMAN: Right, if you are a Catholic, and you believe what the Pope teaches, you know, that any form of birth control is a sin. And you don't want to do that, that –
COAKLEY: No, but we have a separation of church and state here, Ken, let's be clear.
PITTMAN: Yeah, but in the emergency room you still have your religious freedom.
COAKLEY: The law says that people are allowed to have that. And so, then, if you -- you can have religious freedom, you probably shouldn't work in the emergency room

Martha Coakley did not say that Catholics should not work in the ER – but rather, that those who oppose the distribution of emergency contraception might not want to work in an ER where current law dictates that the medication be dispensed. If Fox Nation were “fair and balanced,” as claimed by their “statement of purpose,” they would provide some balance and journalistic integrity for their threads.
Since brown is lacking in the integrity department it only makes sense he should have supporters with a similar mind-set. It is Brown and his supporters position that the religious beliefs of hospital patients not be respected.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Glenn Beck Guest Host Eric Bolling Lies About Deficit and Obama




































Glenn Beck Guest Host Eric Bolling Lies About Deficit and Obama

Eric Bolling presented a chart titled "Obama's Checkbook" which purported to show the Obama administration's "new spending," but in fact included a variety of spending that was actually initiated during the Bush administration. Bolling also claimed that Obama has generated "$0" in revenue, despite citing the "new spending" that would occur if health care reform and cap and trade legislation were to pass, even though those programs actually increase revenues and are deficit reductive, according to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO).

Bolling includes $180 billion in "Obama's Checkbook" for AIG bailout -- but $150 billion authorized during Bush administration

Fed agrees to lend up to $85 billion to AIG in Sept. 2008. On September 16, 2008, the Federal Reserve Board, with the support of the Treasury Department, authorized the Federal Reserve of New York to lend up to $85 billion to the American International Group (AIG), stating that "in current circumstances, a disorderly failure of AIG could add to already significant levels of financial market fragility and lead to substantially higher borrowing costs, reduced household wealth, and materially weaker economic performance."

Fed increases AIG bailout by $37.8 billion in Oct. 2008. The Federal Reserve Board authorized the increase of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's loan to AIG by $37.8 billion on October 8, 2008.

AIG bailout reaches $150 billion in Nov. 2008. On November 10, 2008, the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department announced a restructuring of AIG's bailout, increasing its total loan package to $150 billion.

Obama administration adds $30 billion to AIG bailout in March 2009. On March 2, 2009, the Treasury Department stated that it would loan up to an additional $30 billion to AIG.
Bolling includes $115 billion in "Obama's Checkbook" for Fannie, Freddie bailout that Bush initiated

Gov't seized Fannie, Freddie in Sept. 2008, pledged up to $200 billion to them. On September 8, 2008, the federal government seized the government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Treasury agreed to provide up to $200 billion in capital to the two entities.
Bolling includes $83 billion in "Obama's Checkbook" for GM/Chrysler bailout -- of which Bush allocated $17.4 billion

Bush allocated $17.4 billion to GM and Chrysler in Dec. 2008. On December 19, 2008, President Bush made available $13.4 billion of TARP funds to General Motors and Chrysler and agreed to release an additional $4 billion to G.M. under this plan in February 2009.
Typical of Fox and a member of a unhinged Glenn Beck comrade. This kind of egregious lying, distortions and blame shifting has been going on for years. Said propaganda is what conservatives think is the alternative to the main stream media. That would be the main stream media too lazy to confront the right-wing media. It should be news, that major media outlets like Fox, The New York Post, The Weekly Standard etc simply make things up. But out of a strange loyalty among so-called journalists no one is attacking Fox for undermining the basic the basic tenets of journalistic integrity. They seem to think integrity is a joke, a value that can be trampled for the conservative cause.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Conservatives Talk Trash - Display Utter lack of Values



















Limbaugh stands by his Haiti remarks, tells critical caller she’s a ‘bigot’ with ‘tampons in her ears.’

Hannity Decides, Then Reports, On Weekly Standard Reporter's Fall
When Hannity asked McCormack for his version of events, McCormack was less sure than his host and it stands to his credit that he refused to say that he had been deliberately pushed to the ground by Michael Meehan (read his description of the incident in his Weekly Standard article here). When asked by Hannity about Meehan’s statement that he “clearly did not mean to cause John McCormack to trip and fall over that low fence” – Hannity’s exact words were, “Did you trip, or were you pushed?” – McCormack replied, “He knocked into me, which sent me into the fence, which sent me to the ground…so whether he intended to knock me into an area without a fence, that may be true…but the fact is, he knocked into me and I ended up on the ground because of it.” He continued, “…before I knew it, I got knocked into on my right side…I think it might have been a head-check, I’m not exactly sure how he hit me…and then he actually helped me up…in my view he was feigning concern… he continues to push up against me aggressively.”
So in short McCormack stalks a candidate to ask a question that has already been answered. Either in his clumsiness or cowardice he manages to conveniently take a fall. An event turned into the legend of the gallant right-wing stalker just trying to ask a question. If McCormack had tried the same thing with president Bush he would have been slammed to the ground and arrested by the Secret Service. Another day, another incident of bizarro world behavior by conservatives. What America should be asking is why yet another incident involving a conservative loon ends with him walking away instead of being put in jail.

Palin still defending thoroughly debunked "death panel" falsehood. Palin is setting quite the example for America's children. Parents tell them honesty is the best policy and Palin keeps on lying. If someone finds Palin's values please contact her at Faux Propaganda Network.