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Loose lips sink only liberal ships

It seems that MSNBC is thinking of hiring Rosie O’Donnell, and people are talking. Is MSNBC tilting leftward? Is someone out there finally going to serve the vast numbers of people who have no desire to feast on a one course meal of right wing red meat? But MSNBC has some strange concerns:

O’Donnell’s ”loose cannon” reputation, reinforced during her nine-month stint on ”The View,” apparently is a key stumbling block as the comedian-turned-TV talker negotiates with the network. Showcasing alternative political viewpoints to the conservative opinions espoused by Fox News has helped boost MSNBC’s recent ratings, ”but we still get nervous when we think about Rosie,” an MSNBC source told me Tuesday.

If this is true (the nervousness I mean) it seems strange. After all, when Ann Coulter suggests that various people or groups of people should be killed, or Glenn Beck suggests that a Muslim Congressman should be assumed to be a traitor, there is barely a ripple in the Force. And as we know, I barely skim the surface. Has Rosie ever suggested killing anyone? Surely MSNBC doesn’t fear that liberals are held to a different standard than the troglodytes?

I happen to believe that in this great country, we unwashed are just as tolerant of the right of liberals to tell the truth, albeit in rough and ready language, as we are of the right of the Neanderthals of the right (I know, that’s unfair to Neanderthals) to lie and spread hate. Actually, I think we’re probably more tolerant of the liberal brand of misbehavior, at least those of us who exist outside of the rarified atmosphere of the Beltway and media boardrooms. We don’t, for instance, pick on little kids.

If MSNBC truly is seeing the economic handwriting on the wall, and is going to try serving the unserved majority in this country, it will mark quite a turnaround. This is the network, after all, that took its top rated show (Phil Donahue) off the air because Phil dared to oppose the war in Iraq.

Groton Dems win big-still the minority on the Town Council

This is what comes of a political environment in which it’s almost impossible to find people willing to run for office.

The Groton Democrats appear to have elected all of their candidates to the Town Council and all of their candidates for the Board of Education (one Board of Ed candidate is on the edge, pending absentee ballot counts). We also increased our majority on the RTM, from what I’m told.

We only ran four candidates for the Town Council, and they all won. Since there are nine seats on the council we’re still in the minority. Next time around, maybe we’ll go over the top. If there are any politically aware Groton folks reading this who would like to run for office, believe me we want to hear from you.

A lot of people did a lot of work on this election and deserve some recognition. Natalie Billing, Betsy Moukawsher, Nancy Driscoll, Liz Duarte, and Karen Buffkin were among the hardest working. I’m sure I’ve missed some, for which I apologize.

Two spending measures won (the seniors-only swimming pool lost), so the Groton voters, who don’t like to be taxed, still like to spend money. We are now going to have the world’s most luxurious dog pound. Go figure. Friend of the blog, though a Republican, John Scott, lost. Whether he was a victim of the GGG Pac campaign of vindictiveness, I don’t know.

I was poll checking from 6:00 to 9:00 AM at the library in the first district, and it seemed to me that turnout was low but biased toward Democrats. I couldn’t be sure, because the first should be a heavily Democratic district anyway, though it sometimes amazes me how many Republicans live in the poorer areas. Apparently there was such a trend: Democrats turned out disproportionately, or maybe Republicans stayed home disproportionately. We can only hope that trend goes national in 2008.

Though I have my differences with some of our candidates, I decided this year that I’d vote for them all.

Kucinich impeachment resolution

I just watched the House of Representatives refer Dennis Kucinich’s Cheney impeachment resolution to the Judiciary Committee. You can peruse the resolution and various supporting documents here. The names of the intrepid co-sponsors can be found here. Each of them deserves our gratitude. I will note for the record that there is nary a Connecticut Congressperson among them. Perhaps prior service in the Connecticut legislature, where the leadership controls all, is not good training for future Congresspersons.

I’m not conversant enough with House Rules to be sure of exactly what happened. Kucinich got it to the floor on a privileged motion. I started watching in the middle, so I may have this wrong, but I think Steny Hoyer tried to get it tabled, which failed. Then they voted to refer it to the Judiciary Committee, where I expect it will die a slow and neglected death.

If I got this right, it’s a somewhat hopeful sign that most of the Dems (all but five) voted against the motion to table, (along with three Republicans, by the way), and just as many voted to refer it to Judiciary, rather than kill it outright. It would appear that no one wants to go back to their district and stand accused of voting against impeaching Cheney. Of course none of them actually voted to impeach him, since they will do everything the can to avoid that vote, regardless of how popular that would make them with the country.

And how popular would it make them? Well, today we learn the following:

…Bush reached an unwelcome record. By 64%-31%, Americans disapprove of the job he is doing. For the first time in the history of the Gallup Poll, 50% say they “strongly disapprove” of the president. Richard Nixon had reached the previous high, 48%, just before an impeachment inquiry was launched in 1974.

That’s right, he beats Nixon, who at least was competently evil. Maybe if the strongly disapprove number reaches 100% the Democrats will decide that maybe they should stand up to him.

In that same poll, by the way, 45% of the people in this country oppose going to war with Iran, even if they get nuclear weapons. That number would go up appreciably if the Dems would say out loud what everyone knows: that we are being played again, and the case for a war with Iran is as dishonest as the case they made to get us into Iraq. A little leadership on this issue could go a long way toward avoiding another disaster, but too many Democrats seem to feel the better course is to keep quiet.

Update: Re the impeachment resolution: see here for a different view. The numbers they cite weren’t what I saw on the screen, so there must have been a vote before tuned in. Personally, I don’t agree that people would be against impeaching Cheney. Everyone detests him. He’s no Bill Clinton, by a long shot.

Pity the Bush Administration when it can’t even find good liars

This is really embarrassing. How does this woman stand doing this every day? If you need proof that near competent (the best Bush ever managed to get) people are avoiding the sinking ship of this Administration, watch this video. The first rule of being a Republican Press Secretary is to lie and spin without looking and sounding like you’re lying and spinning. Poor Dana just can’t do it. Watch her as she tries to, among other things, tell us why Pakistan is different than Burma.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gVqFyrDLXYc&eurl=http://talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/058057.php[/youtube]

Not only is she terrible, but she skirts way too close to the truth. Why is Burma different than Pakistan? Because we don’t care if Pakistan has a dictator, so long as he does our bidding, or gives a good impression of doing so.

By the way, isn’t it interesting. We went into Iraq to remove a dictator who was abusing his own people and whom we thought had (but he didn’t have, did he?) weapons of mass destruction, a dictator, we should add, with whom we were once tight until he failed to behave as we wanted. Now we are tight with a dictator who abuses his own people and actually does have weapons of mass destruction. We sure have learned a lot, haven’t we.

Ashcroft (partially) deconstructed

There is no end to the sacrifices that I make in service to my readers. Case in point: I forced myself to read John Ashcroft’s Op-Ed piece in today’s New York Times, in which he argues for granting telecoms immunity from suit for co-operating with illegal eavesdropping on Americans..

I wish I had the time to thoroughly research all of the suspect legal assertions that he makes in this piece, but I just want to highlight a few. Here’s my favorite:

Longstanding principles of law hold that an American corporation is entitled to rely on assurances of legality from officials responsible for government activities. The public officials in question might be right or wrong about the advisability or legality of what they are doing, but it is their responsibility, not the company’s, to deal with the consequences if they are wrong.

I’ve never heard of such a principle. Not to put too fine a point on it, I don’t believe any such principle exists, unless he’s talking about qualified immunity. of which a bit more later. If such a principle existed, these suits would have been dismissed already. That’s not to say they won’t be, at some point, if Bush successfully pulls the states secret dodge, but I very much doubt that they will be, and am sure they should not be, dismissed on these grounds. It is simply not the case that the President of the United States has the right to legalize illegal acts by executive fiat, which is precisely what Ashcroft is proposing. This argument, like many Ashcroft makes, is a more sophisticated, or at least more obscurely phrased version of the “I was just following orders” defense that the Germans tried at Nuremberg. The fact is, there is a statutory defense-the telephone companies cannot be successfully sued if they acted pursuant to a court order or written certification from the Justice Department that the request was legal. The Justice Department has taken the position that the question of whether such a certification was made is itself a state secret, which suggests that it never happened. In other words, the phone companies should have asked for the certification. All they had to do was read the statute.

Next we have this:

As a practical matter, in circumstances involving classified intelligence activities, a corporation will typically not know enough about the underlying circumstances and operations to make informed judgments about legality. Moreover, for an initiative like the terrorist surveillance program — which the Office of Legal Counsel made clear was based on the Congressional authorization for the use of military force and the president’s war powers under the Constitution — a telephone company simply has no expertise in the relevant legal issues.

Actually, believe it or not, phone companies have access to extremely high priced legal talent, to whom the statutes of the United States are available 24 hours a day. It wasn’t hard to determine if the program was illegal. At least that’s what the judge thought, when he tossed out AT&T’s claim to qualified immunity. (PDF) Here’s what the conservative Republican judge who ruled on the issue had to say:

Moreover, because “the very action in question has previously been held unlawful,” AT&T cannot
seriously contend that a reasonable entity in its position could have believed that the alleged domestic dragnet was legal.

And, of course, we now know that Bush was pushing his program before 9/11, therefore before Congress passed the measure that Ashcroft and company distorted into authorization for their lawlessness.

In truth, it doesn’t take much of a lawyer to see that what they were doing was illegal. That’s not to say that Bush appointed judges won’t make it legal, but to do so they will have to ignore established principles of legal construction, the Constitution, and logic.

By the way, most of the legal stuff I’ve written in this post is just a regurgitation of the judge’s decision, which you can read at the link. Ashcroft should read it too. Maybe he’d learn something.

Congress out to prove its powerlessness

Today Congress filed criminal contempt charges against Harriet Meiers and Joshua Bolton.

A criminal contempt charge must be enforced by a U.S. Attorney. Bush has already mandated that this will not take place. The charges will languish, and Congress will do nothing.

Congress has the power of inherent contempt. It can tell its Sergeant at Arms to arrest and imprison a contemnor. It is rather obvious that given the lawlessness of this Administration, only unilateral action by Congress will work and only unilateral action stands a chance of restoring Congress to its rightful role in our system.

Alternatively, the Senate might hold up Mukasey’s confirmation until he at least agrees to appoint a special prosecutor to prosecute the contempt citations, and pledge not to interfere with that person. I suggest Patrick Fitzgerald.

Don’t expect Congress to do any of these things, or anything else even remotely effective. It is in the business of demonstrating its own impotence.

Signs of the Season?

This picture of a maple tree in our yard is unremarkable, except for the fact that it was taken today, November 4th. Not only have the leaves not fallen, they are still green. The lilac trees behind are also still completely green. My wife is still harvesting stuff from our garden. Has this ever happened before? I don’t recall the trees being green in November.

There are always going to be outlier years, but it seems pretty clear that this is not unrelated to global warming. It’s nice, in a short term way, but also a bit scary.

A holiday suggestion

As a public service and purely out of a disinterested concern for my readers, I write to suggest a gift that is sure to please everyone on your holiday list. Everyone on our list is getting one, I can assure you.

Everyone you know would surely love a copy of the Intellectual Devotional, American History, available at your favorite bookstore today. I would suggest that you purchase the book by the case.

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This endorsement is strictly on the merits and has nothing to do with the fact that my son was a Contributing Writer to the book, which is sure to be a classic. Nor does the fact that he may or may not (he tells us nothing) have a financial stake in the book have any bearing on my enthusiastic and unqualified endorsement of this major publishing event. All of these things are the farthest thing from my mind, which is proven by the fact that I just said they were. It’s a little like George Bush saying he doesn’t torture-it must be true or he wouldn’t say it.

So I urge my readers to do the right thing be those to whom they gift. Give them this book. Give them multiple copies. And for God’s sake, don’t be cheap about it. Pay full price.

Another Profile in Timidity

These have been dark days, as we watch the Democrats cave on one thing after another. But, paradoxically, they offer few new things to write about. How many times can you point out that the Democrats are wimps and not in tune with the rest of the country?

So, when all else fails: rant. Today’s subject is a representative of that group of people who actually could have prevented the criminals in charge of this country from committing their crimes, or turned on them when they did, but chose to do nothing when they could, and now seek to distance themselves from the disaster they helped create.

Latest example. Who else? Colin Powell, who finds the police state he helped create a little extreme.

There has, to date, been not one high ranking Bush official who has called the Administration out when he or she had the power to do so. Colin Powell could have legitimized opposition to the war when it mattered-when only us crazies were warning that it would be a disaster. He was well aware that the case for war was weak, and he was well aware of the probable consequences. Now that he’s been safely shunted aside he speaks out in measured tones, assisted by this former deputies who try to distance themselves and him from the catastrophe he caused.

John Dean on Mukasey

At TPM John Dean makes a good suggestion. Since the Democrats appear poised to cave on Mukasey, they should get at least a little spine and insist that he appoint a special prosecutor to look into possible war crimes. For that matter, they have a virtual smorgasbord of areas in which they could demand investigation. One would do.

It seems like every time the Democrats cave on something, I get a phone call from some Democratic fundraiser. I got one today, and declined to donate, since I was ticked off about Mukasey. If nothing else the wimpy Democrats have saved me a lot of money. There haven’t been many days lately when I don’t have an excuse to keep my wallet closed.