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Hillary and Obama on mercenaries

Hillary Clinton recently announced that, if elected, she would “ask the Joint Chiefs for their help in reducing reliance on armed private military contractors with the goal of ultimately implementing a ban on such contractors,”. When this first came across my RSS reader I thought it was great and intended to give Hillary credit for getting out front on the issue. Unfortunately, and as usual with Hillary, there’s more to the story.

Although she’s attacked Obama for not taking a similar position, in fact Obama introduced anti-mercenary legislation before the incident in Fallujah. Obama’s legislation would have subjected the mercenaries to U.S. criminal law, which sounds good at first blush, but may in fact provide helpful PR cover for the companies supplying the mercenaries without really curbing any abuses:

In February 2007, Obama introduced contractor reform and oversight legislation that has become the Democrats’ major plan in the Congress. Obama’s bill seeks to make all contractors subject to prosecution in US civilian courts for crimes committed on a foreign battlefield. The bill is not without its problems. In theory, FBI investigators would deploy to the crime scene, gather evidence and interview witnesses, leading to indictments and prosecutions.

Apart from the fact that it would be impossible to effectively police such an enormous deployment of private contractors (at present basically equal to the number of active duty US troops in Iraq), the legislation would give the private military industry a tremendous PR victory. The companies could finally claim that a legally accountable structure governed their operations, yet they would be well aware that such legislation would be nearly impossible to enforce. Perhaps that is why the industry has passionately backed this approach.

The problem, according to Jeffrey Scahill of the Nation, from whose article these facts are gleaned, is that both Hillary and Obama must rely on mercenaries to protect the thousands of people they both intend to leave in Iraq, should they ever really substantially withdraw troops. So both of them will be forced to leave a huge contingent of largely uncontrolled armed thugs in the country. That ought to win a lot of hearts and minds.

Neither Obama or Clinton are willing to consider the obvious solution of a truly complete withdrawal from Iraq. They are both willing to allow George Bush to bequeath a permanent Middle East headache to them and to this country. They either truly believe we should try to maintain our imperial sway, or are afraid to risk the wrath of the neo-cons, who got us into this mess in the first place. I’m not sure which of those is worse.

Another round lost to the crazies

Across the left side of the blogosphere, tempers are running high. Supporters of each candidate are damning the other, and threatening to withhold their votes should the other side prevail. In the heat of the moment we forget that the difference between them is slight, and that a McCain victory may seal the fate of this country for generations.

Look no further than the Supreme Court, for which the bell may already have tolled. The Court is apparently poised to rule in favor of the NRA, and, for the first time, and in spite of the language and historical context, find that the Second Amendment guarantees an individual’s right to “bear arms”. Justice Kennedy, the swing vote, is sure “that the amendment’s framers wanted to assure the ability of ‘the remote settler to defend himself and his family against hostile Indian tribes and outlaws, wolves and bears and grizzlies and things like that,’ as he phrased his concern with self-defense at one point”. Nowadays this apparently translates into the capability to blow away dozens of your fellow citizens.

The court is unfazed by the fact that by ignoring the introductory clause in the Amendment, it will be needlessly arming criminals. The government, which took a surprisingly reasonable (for the Bushies) position, pointed out that if the militia clause merely means that the type of arms Americans are allowed to bear are those of the same class that the 18th century militia bore, then the Amendment would now protect the right to bear machine guns. Counsel for the plaintiffs was surprisingly moderate too. He allowed that maybe you could forbid someone from bringing a gun to school. How reasonable. But then again, it was just a maybe.

This is an important battle lost to the crazies. There is hope, assuming we can replace one of these Supreme Idiots before they are allowed to do further harm. The Bill or Rights was originally not applied to the states. That is, it was considered a limitation on the federal government only. That’s why, for instance, many states had established churches long after the Constitution was adopted. States were free, as well, to limit speech as they saw fit. When the 14th Amendment was adopted, it was understood that certain rights established by the Bill of Rights were incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment and were thus binding on the states. E.g, no more established churches (I think they were all disestablished by that point, anyway) and no more suppression of speech. (That is now left exclusively to the feds, thank you very much). The protections in the Bill or Rights were not incorporated en masse, but on a case by case basis. The Second Amendment has never been incorporated into the 14th, and there are sound reasons to believe that it shouldn’t be, but of course those may cut no ice with the Roberts court.

This is a court that has steadily eroded those rights that we traditionally believe are at the true core of democracy. But they have no problem expanding a “right” that we can do without, and that no person with brains could imagine the founders intended that we have. I refuse to believe, for instance, that a man as fundamentally sane as James Madison would like the idea of giving individuals the absolute right to own and possess machine guns.

So if you are considering sitting this one out if your favorite moderate to centrist candidate doesn’t get the nomination, ask yourself this: How does the Republican establishment placate its nut job base? Take a look at the courts. They are half destroyed now. McCain will not hesitate to finish the job.

Who would have thought it

From the LA Times:

Freelance financial watchdogs who examined the paperwork on sub-prime home loans being sold to Wall Street had an inside view of the boom in easy-money lending this decade. The reviewers say they raised plenty of red flags about flaws so serious that mortgages should have been rejected outright — such as borrowers’ incomes that seemed inflated or documents that looked fake — but the problems were glossed over, ignored or stricken from reports.

Executives at the two main firms that hired the freelancers — Shelton, Conn.-based Clayton Holdings Inc. and San Francisco-based Bohan Group — say the reviewers weren’t there to find every potential problem with a sub-prime loan. Rather, the executives say, the job was to perform specific tests to help buyers determine how much to pay for a pool of loans. In some cases, the investors wanted only minimal testing, said Frank P. Filipps, Clayton’s chairman and CEO.

As always its hard to tell where gross negligence ended and criminality began. I can personally testify that some of these lenders had a fairly lax attitude toward fraud. Years ago I represented several people who had purchased “flipped” houses. In one case my clients were on SSI because they were mentally retarded. The house they bought for over $70,000.00 in New London had sold to the flipper a year before for less than $10,000.00 and it was worth every penny of that. According to the loan application provided to the nationally known subprime lender my client was making $5,000.00 a month working at the seller’s used car dealership, an obvious fraud of which my client was unaware. The appraisal came in at, if I recall correctly, over $80,000.00, and never mentioned the $10,000.00 sale price. Everyone involved was crooked.

In my naivete I contacted the lender before I brought suit, because, at first blush, it was as much a victim as my clients. It held $75,000.00 in paper that was bound to default on a house worth $20,000.00 at the very most. I figured that we could join forces to go after the folks who had defrauded us both. Much to my surprise, they were surprisingly unruffled by the situation. Later I concluded that the guy I spoke to (the head of the local branch) was in on the scam, but now I’m not so sure. Maybe they just didn’t really care, since they didn’t expect to be holding the paper by the time the loans went South.

Reality intrudes, but who cares?

Sometimes it seems that we inhabit parallel worlds, in one and the same time and place. There is the “real” world, in which actual things happen, and a virtual world, in which we all pretend to believe in various fantasies.

The real world intrudes big time into the front page of the New York Times today, and it’s instructive to compare the verities of the virtual world to the inconvenient realities from the real world.

The fifth anniversary of the biggest fantasy of them all, the Iraq War, is now approaching. WMDs and the Saddam-Al Qaeda connection have long been exposed as myths. But there were others, and some have engendered a sort of ironic present day, on the ground reality. Remember when we were told that Iraqi Oil would fund the entire war effort, with plenty to spare? How did that work out?

The sea of oil under Iraq is supposed to rebuild the nation, then make it prosper. But at least one-third, and possibly much more, of the fuel from Iraq’s largest refinery here is diverted to the black market, according to American military officials. Tankers are hijacked, drivers are bribed, papers are forged and meters are manipulated — and some of the earnings go to insurgents who are still killing more than 100 Iraqis a week.

“It’s the money pit of the insurgency,” said Capt. Joe Da Silva, who commands several platoons stationed at the refinery.

So, the fantasies have proven to be partly true. The oil is funding a war effort, just not ours. The secondary fantasy, that the war would be cheap in any event, has long been dispelled, with, of course, no repercussions to its proponents.

Meanwhile, now that even the Pentagon has acknowledged what realists always knew, that Saddam had no connection to Al-Qaeda, we have chosen to indulge in the fantasy that, whatever the reality was when we attacked, we are now fighting Al-Qaeda in Iraq. But the Times says: “No, not really”

Some American officials and politicians maintain that Sunni insurgents have deep ties with Qaeda networks loyal to Osama bin Laden in other countries. Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, whose members are mainly Iraqi but whose leadership has been described by American commanders as largely foreign, remains a well-financed and virulent force that carries out large-scale attacks.

But there are officers in the American military who openly question how much a role jihadism plays in the minds of most people who carry out attacks. As the American occupation has worn on and unemployment has remained high, these officers say the overwhelming motivation of insurgents is the need to earn a paycheck.

Nor do American officers say they believe that insurgent attacks are centrally coordinated. “As far as networked coordination of attacks, we are not seeing that,” said a military official familiar with studies on the insurgency.

Opposition to the occupation and fear of the Shiite- and Kurdish-dominated government and security forces “clearly are important factors in the insurgency,” the official said. “But they are being rivaled by the economic factor, the deprivation that exists.”

Maj. Kelly Kendrick, operations officer for the First Brigade Combat Team of the 101st Airborne Division in Salahuddin, estimates that there are no more than 50 hard-core “Al Qaeda” fighters in Salahuddin, a province of 1.3 million people that includes Baiji and the Sunni cities of Samarra and Tikrit.

He said most fighters were seduced not by dreams of a life following Mr. bin Laden, but by a simpler pitch: “Here’s $100; go plant this I.E.D.”

“Ninety percent of the guys out here who do attacks are just people who want to feed their families,” Major Kendrick said.
The First Brigade’s commander, Col. Scott McBride, concurs. “I don’t know that I’ve ever heard one person say, ‘I believe in a caliphate,’ ” he said.

Meanwhile, the Sainted General Petraeus has all but admitted that his vaunted surge was a modest military success (probably a transient success, at that) but a total failure in achieving the fantasy objective of uniting historically warring factions.

But all this is occurring in the real world, and it will not be allowed to intrude on the virtual world in which John McCain will be allowed to campaign. In John McCain’s world, the “surge” is a success, we are fighting Al-Qaeda, and victory can be achieved so long as we…, well, here even his fantasy view becomes a bit murky. Apparently it involves staying in Iraq forever.

But never mind, no one will confront McCain with the uncomfortable realities of the war he helped create and sustain. When it comes to our public discourse, we play by the rules of the virtual world, and though we recognize the existence of that other, real world, we refuse to let it intrude into the virtual world in which we conduct our discourse. In the virtual world, people like George Bush, Dick Cheney, John McCain, William Kristol, Frederick Kagan, Paul Wolfowitz, et. al. are considered experts to whom we should defer, despite the fact that they are always proven wrong by developments in the real world. They are treated with respect, while those who insisted and still insist that the real world is…well, “real” are still ignored or marginalized.

Just for fun

Pictures made entirely from food.

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(As always, you can get bigger views by clicking on an image).

The Cassandra Effect

Paul Krugman has a blog, and today he takes note of a phenomenon that is, unfortunately, not confined to economic prognostication:

Dean Baker is mad at Robert Rubin for suggesting that “few, if any” people saw the financial meltdown coming.

I’d say that there are two levels to this. First, a lot of people — including Dean, me, Calculated Risk, and others — saw that there was a huge housing bubble. It remains amazing that so many alleged experts failed to see the obvious.

In the larger sense, though, Dean is right. Even now, those who saw the risks are somewhat marginalized in public discussion, while those who airily dismissed all the warnings are still treated as men of good judgment.

This is an echo of the way in which those who led us into the Iraq war have been treated. Bill Kristol, as just one for instance, who has been wrong about all things Iraq, is still considered an expert, and has been rewarded with a column at the times. Those who predicted the disaster that has happened have been systematically ignored.

It is unclear why this happened, though judging by the Cassandra myth, it is not a new phenomenon. Those who were right, and are still being ignored, do have something in common. They were all saying things that ran counter to the prevailing media narrative, and in the case, at least, of folks like Dean Baker, counter to the interests of the corporate types who control the media. They were, in other words, saying things that the media didn’t want to hear, and didn’t want you to hear. They’ve now been proven right, but that makes no difference because they are still saying things that the media would rather you not hear.

Free John Stewart!

I have mentioned before that I watch very little TV. I tape the Daily Show and Colbert on my computer, edit out the commercials, and my wife and I watch it. That’s pretty much the extent of our TV viewing. Since I don’t watch the commercials I guess I have no standing to complain, but the First Amendment retains some feeble signs of life, so I will sound off anyway.

My wife and I have noticed a dismaying pattern on the Daily Show lately, which seems to have accelerated lately. Time was when Stewart’s guests were a mix of Hollywood types and political figures and writers from across the spectrum. Even before the writer’s strike that was changing, but since he’s come back, the pattern seems clear. No one from the left need apply. This week was typical. Grover Norquist, Ronald Kessler and Dana Perino made the grade, along with a uniformed general whose name I can’t remember. It wouldn’t be so bad if Stewart took them on, but he rarely does, usually throwing puffballs.

My wife conjectures that Stewart is following instructions from his corporate masters. Whatever the cause, it is getting a bit tiring to watch the sorry excuses for human beings that he inflicts on his audience every day. A little fairness and balance would be appreciated. If this keeps up we’ll be down to the Colbert show as our only connection to the mass media.

Thanking John Wheeler and Dee Harrell

I’ve added a link at the side to a page with a few pictures taken at the Appreciation Dinner we had tonight for Dee Harrell and John Wheeler. A good time was had by all, and there aren’t two people in the party who deserved the recognition more.

Friday Night Music-Chuck Berry

Johnny B. Goode, introduced by Trini Lopez I believe. Check out those girls dancing in cages. Definitely a period piece.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0YUA3yTUss[/youtube]

Joe Courtney does right on FISA

Joe Courtney has been sticking to his guns on the FISA bill, despite the Republican attempts to tar him with their scurrilous ads. This was posted on Kos, but since I know some of my readers don’t frequent many blogs, I’m reposting it here:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_nrZ8cg0bY[/youtube]

It’s nice to be able to take pride in your Congressman.