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Impeach Dick, then George

A new poll finds that 54% of Americans favor impeaching Dick Cheney, against a mere 46% that favor impeaching Bush. There’s something to be said for going after Dick first. He’s so massively unpopular. That 54% number could easily increase if it was tied to the argument that impeaching Cheney was a way to put pressure on Bushco to stop the war.

Dennis Kucinich has introduced an impeachment resolution against Cheney, consisting of three articles. Robert Greenwald produced this video supporting the resolution, which has now, apparently, picked up 13 co-sponsors.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HEzPVP6EVRk[/youtube]

The charges barely scratch the surface. He masterminded a criminal conspiracy in the Plame affair, which is in fact a criminal violation, as opposed to the abuse of office in the three charges. There is, for better or worse, no law against politicians lying to the American people.

In the past I’ve opposed impeachment mostly for practical reasons-that it would be a political loser for the Democrats. That might still be true, but I’ve pretty much come around to the view that it’s something they should do. It could be managed well, if they could frame the issues right. One way, perhaps, is to argue that Bush has forced them into it by consistently refusing to bow to the will of the majority of the American people. If the only way to stop a war is to impeach the president, then that’s what needs to be done. Both Bush and Cheney have committed high crimes and misdemeanors sufficient to impeach a hundred presidents. The Libby pardon is only the latest, but perhaps the clearest. It is so obvious that Bush did it to protect himself. And, as others have pointed out, no less an expert than James Madison said using the pardon power to hide your own criminality warranted impeachment:

In the same [Virginia ratifying] convention George Mason argued that the President might use his pardoning power to “pardon crimes which were advised by himself” or, before indictment or conviction, “to stop inquiry and prevent detection.” James Madison responded:

[I]f the President be connected, in any suspicious manner, with any person, and there be grounds tp believe he will shelter him, the House of Representatives can impeach him; they can remove him if found guilty..

Finally, isn’t it strange that impeachment has no traction in Washington, given the numbers above. There was never a point when anywhere near that number of people wanted Clinton impeached. Partly, that’s because the Republicans unwittingly (at least I hope unwittingly-could they have seen this coming?) inoculated Bush by making the impeachment remedy suspect, because the Clinton charade was so patently political. But the Democrats could overcome that by carefully framing the issue as a situation in which they’ve been forced to act.

Yet more spam protection

As I mentioned a few days ago I am being inundated with comment spam. It doesn’t appear on the blog, as it is blocked by a spam filter I installed some time ago. However, it does screw up my statistics, because each spam is counted as a unique visit. The raw numbers unnecessarily boost my ego, after which it is crushed by the reality.

I just installed another plug-in, called Bad Behavior, which allegedly keeps the spam totally at bay. It keeps track of the number of blocked spams at the bottom of the page, in case anyone is curious. I’m hoping it works, and doesn’t inconvenience any real people. If anyone has trouble accessing the comments, please email to me at the link on the upper right hand corner of the homepage and let me know.

Bushco spins the Times

I am going to climb out on a limb and say that the legal “debate” about the Bush commutation will die down more quickly than the public debate. Yesterday the Times published an article (Bush Rationale on Libby Stirs Legal Debate) that contained quotes from individuals who apparently could pretend with a straight face that they believed that Bush took his own arguments seriously.

Now, I’m not saying that there aren’t any judges who will be so outraged at what Bush did that they might use is as a basis for what they would want to do anyway. But it isn’t precedent, and few judges are likely to treat it as such. If I were a defense lawyer I might try using it too, but I sure wouldn’t expect much success. And as to the now-corrupt Justice Department, it will simply ignore the issue and continue to push for harsh sentences for people who don’t know the president. This is a ginned up, complete non-issue, not worth writing about. which can only distract from the main issue.

Still, it could be worse. Oh, wait, it is. Look at what the Times swallows whole:

Before commuting the prison sentence of I. Lewis Libby Jr., President Bush and a small circle of advisers delved deeply into the evidence in the case, debating Mr. Libby’s guilt or innocence and whether he had in fact lied to investigators, people familiar with the deliberations said.

That process, in weeks of closely held White House discussions, led to the decision to spare Mr. Libby from a 30-month sentence rather than grant a pardon. But Mr. Bush, defending the move Tuesday, left the door open to a pardon in the future.

The White House deliberations in the case of Mr. Libby, a key architect of the war in Iraq who served as chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney, were scattered throughout Mr. Bush’s regular business over the past several weeks, an administration official said.

That description, along with the accounts of two Republican allies of the White House, illuminated a process that was almost clinical, with a detailed focus on the facts of the case, which stemmed from an investigation into the leak of a C.I.A. operative’s identity. Mr. Libby was accused of lying to investigators and was convicted on four felony counts, including perjury and obstruction of justice.

Guess who provided this information to the Times. Well, you’ll have to keep guessing, “Because the deliberations were so closely held, those who spoke about them agreed to do so only anonymously”. That is, of course, a non-reason for being anonymous. The reason is equivalent to saying that they are anonymous because it suits their purposes. I wonder if these are the same White House aides who said that Bush was reading Camus or casually discussing the Nicomachean Ethics?

Don’t these people know when they’re being used? Isn’t this how this whole thing started-with White House spin being planted by anonymous White House sources?

Let’s be clear. Bush did not spend weeks debating the rights and wrongs of pardoning Libby. He may have spent weeks figuring out the best way to do it, or the best time to do it. He may have spent weeks trying to finds some other way of keeping Scooter’s mouth shut. But he did not-I repeat, did not, spend a minute examining the merits of the case against Libby or stop to think about how a pardon would jibe with his “tough on crime” policies. This was the decision of the head of a criminal enterprise who feels the heat coming just a little too close-nothing more and nothing less. And to answer my own question, these people are perfectly aware that they are being spun. They apparently think that what they are told by White House spinners is “news” because it is being spun by insiders. Their job, as they see it, is to pass the spin along, unfiltered by any pesky examination of the facts.

Fortunate Son

John Fogerty sang about George Bush before there was a George Bush. It took me forever to find a decent video version. This does not appear to be lip synced and the sound is decent.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-5XgI244xo[/youtube]

Seems like a fitting song for this 4th of July.

The 4th in Groton

I have posted a page of pictures from the Groton Parade, which you can access at the link on the upper right hand side of the homepage.

Sad to say, good parades are among the many indirect victims of television. Since people do not have to look to other folks in their community for entertainment anymore, institutions like community bands and fife and drum corps are a thing of the past. I’m personally uninspired by a parade consisting mainly of motor vehicles (e.g., modern fire trucks, police cars, ambulances, and even latter day Mustangs), and advertisements for local businesses or religions.

Be that as it may, I was there to show support for our very own Groton Federation of Democratic Women, which personed a float (well, I can’t say “manned”, can I?)trumpeting the achievements of the Democratic Party, as you can see here by clicking on the picture and enlarging it.

That’s it for me for the Fourth. I’m taking the rest of the day off. I was going to complain about the New York Times’ ludicrous story about the legal implications of the crime Bush committed Monday, but I’m not going to ruin the rest of my day by thinking about it.

Olbermann outraged

Keith Olbermann on the Libby pardon:

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

Southern Justice

This reads like something out of the early Sixties South. Read it all, it’s chilling:

In a small, still mostly segregated, section of rural Louisiana, an all white jury heard a series of white witnesses called by a white prosecutor testify in a courtroom overseen by a white judge in a trial of a fight at the local high school where a white student who had been making racial taunts was hit by black students. The fight was the culmination of a series of racial incidents starting when whites responded to black students sitting under the “white tree” at their school by hanging three nooses from the tree. The white jury and white prosecutor and all white supporters of the white victim were all on one side of the courtroom. The black defendant, 17-year-old Mychal Bell, and his supporters were on the other. The jury quickly convicted Mychal Bell of two felonies – aggravated battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated battery. Bell, who was a 16-year-old sophomore football star at the time he was arrested, faces up to 22 years in prison. Five other black youths await similar trials on second-degree attempted murder and conspiracy charges.

On the morning of the trial, the DA reduced the charges from second-degree attempted murder to second-degree aggravated battery and conspiracy. Aggravated battery in Louisiana law demands the attack be with a dangerous weapon. The dangerous weapon? The prosecutor was allowed to argue to the jury that the tennis shoes worn by Bell could be considered a dangerous weapon used by “the gang of black boys” who beat the white victim.

The all-white jury which was finally chosen included two people friendly with the district attorney, a relative of one of the witnesses and several others who were friends of prosecution witnesses.

Bell’s parents, Melissa Bell and Marcus Jones, were not even allowed to attend the trial despite their objections, because they were listed as potential witnesses. The white victim, though a witness, was allowed to stay in the courtroom. The parents, who had been widely quoted in the media as critics of the process, were also told they could no longer speak to the media as long as the trial was in session. Marcus Jones had told the media, “It’s all about those nooses” and declared the charges racially motivated.

The Day gets it, eight months too late

In an Editorial today, the New London Day takes Joe Lieberman to task for his support of the Iraq War. It has not yet clued itself in to the fact that Joe now has bigger fish to fry; having destroyed Iraq for no reason, he is now gunning for Iran, spreading disinformation as he goes. But, should we give credit to the Day for printing some of the truth about Joe?

No wonder President George W. Bush has a kind word and a smile every time he runs into Connecticut’s Joe Lieberman. The junior senator from Connecticut is one of the few who has constantly beaten the drums that the invasion of Iraq was a valid event. The deaths of thousands of Americans and Iraqis, the ever-growing danger in the Middle East, the Iraq civil war, the new troubles in Israel — all seem to have no effect on Sen. Lieberman.

Now, Sen. Lieberman has topped his support for the war with the notion that the troop surge is working in Iraq.

He disputes directly the conclusion of Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, the ranking Republican on the Foreign Affairs Committee, and instead holds to the same line as President Bush: that patience in staying the course will lead to a successful conclusion. He also seems to ignore the facts.

This is not simply an honest difference of opinion. It is a conclusion one can reach only by ignoring most of the empirical evidence. The situation in Iraq grows worse because there is no solution that does not require a long-term commitment of American forces and a huge presence of troops now. Even the majority in the Congress who advocate a reduction in forces acknowledges that United States troops will be in Iraq for a long time.

Better intelligence has toppled the underlying principle of the Bush explanation about going to war. There was no major weapons production that threatened the United States in the near term. The second Bush justification for this unnecessary and harmful war also sits in ruins: that Saddam Hussein was a bad guy. While there’s no denying the dictator’s evil ways, it’s legitimate to ask whether Iraq is better off now than before? Is the Middle East better off for having toppled Saddam Hussein?

Perhaps we should give the Day at least faint praise. But, before we do, here’s the concluding paragraph of the editorial:

Iraq is a catastrophe, a solemn and sad series of violence, death, destruction and religious warfare. Sen. Lieberman is one of the few in Congress who don’t seem to get it.

Pot, meet kettle. This editorial caused me to head into the Day archives (easily done, thanks to the Groton Public Library) to re-read this editorial, titled “Lieberman for U.S. Senate“. It seems like ages ago, doesn’t it? A lot of muck has flowed under the bridge since then. Nonetheless, there were lots of us who “got it”, even back then. But not the Day. Not when it might have counted.

Re-reading the Day’s endorsement makes you wonder what planet they were on. In typical Day fashion it asserts that Ned Lamont is not qualified to be a Senator because he is not a Senator, and that Joe is, because he is. It caricatures Ned’s positions, and implicitly diminishes the importance of the war as an issue. But I urge you to read this in light of Lieberman’s activities in the past few months:

Mr. Lamont and Sen. Lieberman are Democrats. Sending Mr. Lamont to the Senate probably also wouldn’t make much difference in the outcome of the debate over the war, on which both candidates appear to be naïve. Sen. Lieberman clings to the notion that the war can be won, while Mr. Lamont proposes that it will be a simple matter to get out. Neither of these views seems realistic or particularly useful in addressing the present predicament.

Mr. Lamont would dispute the point about Sen. Lieberman’s party loyalty, arguing that Mr. Lamont is a “truer” Democrat than Sen. Lieberman. But other than in the case of the war, that is a phony argument. On matters other than the war (a big issue, to be sure), Sen. Lieberman is as much a Democrat as Mr. Lamont professes to be, voting with his party most of the time. In fact, Sen. Lieberman has become more loyal to his party line in the last several years, since his unsuccessful campaign for the presidency in 2004.

Now, you see, those of us who “got it” were perfectly aware that Lieberman would remain a “Democrat” only so far as it was in his personal interests to do so, and no farther. If we look at matters “other than the war”, over the past seven months, we see, among other signs of Joe’s increased loyalty, that he has reneged on a pledge to investigate the criminal response to Katrina, raised money for Republicans, circulated White House spin points on Iran , voted to filibuster a proposed vote of no confidence of Alberto Gonzalez, minimized the lawlessness at the justice department, recently suggested that the Administration should wiretap more Americans, and taken every opportunity to question the patriotism of Democrats and their supporters. None of these positions is in line with Democratic policy, may the gods be praised.

None of this should come as a surprise to anyone who listened to Joe, or watched what he was doing last year with any discernment. The Day could reasonably have argued that party loyalty is not important, but it didn’t. It argued that Lieberman would be more loyal than Lamont. It could not reasonably argue that there would be no difference in the outcome of the Iraq debate if Lamont were there instead of Lieberman, but it did. (If Joe were not there, there would be no veneer of bipartisanship to this horrible outrage, and the Democrats would not be staring at the possibility of a turncoat Lieberman rendering them a numerical minority) The Day could not reasonably claim that Lamont’s stand on the war was simplistic, but it did because it was the only way it could make its argument look facially valid. The Day could not reasonably claim, as it implicitly did, that the Iraq war was such a trivial issue that the ability of Joe Lieberman to bring home the bacon should overshadow it. The Day could not reasonably buy into Lieberman’s hollow claims to be “angry” at the way the Bush Administration pursued policies that he continuously supported, but it did.

So, we can share the Day’s anger at the fact that Lieberman doesn’t “get it”. But, at some point, the Day itself should come clean about why it didn’t “get it”. We don’t know how much the press’s delegitimization of Ned Lamont (like the Day, most of the media portrayed Ned as a lightweight, which he decidedly was not) cost him at the ballot box, but it couldn’t have helped.

SPEAKING OF THE DAY: The paper has named a new Executive Editor, one Timothy C. Dwyer, who comes to us fresh from the Washington Post, trophy wife in tow. Many people believe that today’s Washington Post is the same paper that brought down Richard Nixon. Sadly, no. It is now the paper that gives aid and comfort to the powerful. Witness its support throughout for Scooter Libby. The paper that brought down one corrupt government is now propping up another.

Of course this doesn’t mean that Mr. Dwyer will take a similar “up with criminals so long as they’re in power” approach to the news business. Who knows, perhaps his departure from that institution is a sign that he doesn’t like where it’s going. We can only hope that his coming will mark an improvement in the paper, which, for all my griping, really is a pretty good rag. Every time I get disgusted with the Day, I think about the Bulletin, which today, the day after the President of the United States obstructed justice in front of 6 billion people, chose to headline a story about the Norwich City Council’s FOIA troubles. Libby didn’t even make it above the fold. Below the fold? I’m not sure. The most I ever read is what’s visible through the window on the dispensing machine.

A benefit for Groton residents

If I meet my own expectations, I will soon post something about the New London Day. How’s that for a surprise? I stopped off at the Groton Public Library to do a little research, as I expected to have to use a back issue of the Day to make a point, and as you may know, the Day restricts the hoi polloi to no more than two weeks of on-line access.

Well, frabjous day! (no, not The Day-oh never mind), I discovered that the Groton Public Library has lifted all of us Grotonites from the ranks of the hoi polloi, and I felt it my duty to pass this word along to my fellow Grotonites who might still be in darkness. The GLP has paid for all Groton card holders to have access to the Day back to 1999. Instructions as follows:

Go to www.seconnlib.org

Click on the Groton Public Library Homepage link

Click on “Magazines, Newspapers & Databases” on the left side of the page.

Click on “Newspapers”

Click on “The Day”

Enter your GLP or Mystic/Noank Library barcode number (No spaces)

Type keywords in the search boxes according to instructions. Make sure you change the start date if appropriate.

We get comments

To the casual observer, it may seem like I’m not getting many comments lately. I have of late been berated for my inability to discern the relative merits of music videos, but otherwise my readership has been largely silent-or so it may look.

In fact, I have been fairly inundated with comments from diverse sources, all of which have been blocked by my alert spamcatcher. I can actually view these comments, and, because in this sphere I am as a God, I can inflict them on my helpless readers should I so choose. As I assume that all my readers are satisfied with the sizes and shapes of their bodily parts, I do not so choose.

Today, however, the filters caught a message that I can’t quite figure out. It purportedly comes from this quite respectable left wing blog, called The Politics Blog. Oddly enough, the comment is supposedly affixed to the “Contact Me” page that you can access at the upper right of my home page. The “Contact Me” page doesn’t accept comments, so far as I know. Even more oddly, the comment is in what appears to be Latin:

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Integer mollis egestas dolor. Etiam molestie. Morbi.

On the other hand, maybe it’s Romulan, Esperanto, or inspired gibberish. It’s definitely not Church Latin, take my word. There’s not a single “Et cum spiritu tuo” in there.

There are free on-line translators from English to Latin, but I couldn’t find anything that went the other way. I have, therefore, referred this to one of our local Democrats, who is a former Latin teacher. If there’s anyone out there who cares to take a crack at it, I’d love to hear from them. Assuming it’s not obscene, I’ll post the translation as soon as I get it.

Since the subject is Latin, I append hereto the funniest Latin Lesson ever filmed:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIAdHEwiAy8[/youtube]

UPDATE: That was quick. A commenter says that the post is “pseudo Latin…layout for printer’s dummies”. So, nothing clever or funny. Oh well. What’s troubling about this is that whoever was responsible hijacked a real website’s URL.