Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Clinton and Nukes

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

“What in the world was Sen. Hillary Clinton thinking when she attacked Sen. Barack Obama for ruling out the use of nuclear weapons in going after Osama bin Laden? And why aren’t her supporters more concerned about yet another egregious example of Clinton’s consistent backing for the mindless militarism that is dragging this nation to ruin? So what that she is pro-choice and a woman if the price of proving her capacity to be commander in chief is that we end up with an American version of Margaret Thatcher?”

Robert Scheer

Old Time Crime

Saturday, June 30th, 2007

Old timers like myself will have a vague pin-prick of recollection at the name Egil Krogh… Watergate, Nixon, plumber…? Yep. He writes in the NY Times today that he did wrong. He learned from it and cautioned the current occumpants who –of course– didn’t listen.

In early August 1971, I attended a secret meeting in Room 16, a hideaway office in the basement of the Old Executive Office Building, across the street from the White House. Huddled around the table were G. Gordon Liddy, a former F.B.I. agent; E. Howard Hunt, a former C.I.A. agent; and David R. Young Jr., a member of the National Security Council staff. I was deputy assistant to the president.

Two months earlier, The New York Times had published the classified Pentagon Papers, which had been provided by Daniel Ellsberg. President Nixon had told me he viewed the leak as a matter of critical importance to national security. He ordered me and the others, a group that would come to be called the “plumbers,” to find out how the leak had happened and keep it from happening again.

Mr. Hunt urged us to carry out a “covert operation” to get a “mother lode” of information about Mr. Ells-berg’s mental state, to discredit him, by breaking into the office of his psychiatrist, Dr. Lewis Fielding. Mr. Liddy told us the F.B.I. had frequently carried out such covert operations — a euphemism for burglaries — in national security investigations, that he had even done some himself.

I listened intently. At no time did I or anyone else there question whether the operation was necessary, legal or moral. Convinced that we were responding legitimately to a national security crisis, we focused instead on the operational details: who would do what, when and where.


The Break-In That History Forgot

Edwards: Policy Hardball

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

Dean Baker is one of the economists we pay great attention to. He likes John Edwards, a lot.

John Edwards may not end up as president, or even as the Democratic nominee, but he is having far more influence on the substance of this campaign than any other candidate. His strong opposition to the Iraq war (reversing his Senate vote in support of the war), has pushed the other leading Democratic contenders to also highlight their opposition to the war.

His proposal for universal health care, which allows businesses and individuals to buy into a government-run, Medicare-type system, was largely lifted by Senator Obama, and will certainly have a large impact on the plan that will eventually be put forward by Senator Clinton.

Last week, Edwards put forward a proposal on prescription drugs that is likely to set another benchmark for the other top candidates. Edwards proposed setting up a prize fund that would be used to buy up the patents for some important breakthrough drugs. The patents would then be placed in the public domain. This will allow the drugs to be sold as generics. With new drugs being sold in a competitive market, they will cost just a few dollars per prescription.

Baker on Edwards at Truthout

Dem Debate

Monday, June 4th, 2007

I missed the debate yesterday, too caught up in a couple of interviews on BookTV and Bill Moyers. (His interview of Maxine Hong Kingston about her new volume Veterans of War, Veterans of Peace (2006), with clips from some of the veterans-authors was particularly moving.)

Others in the neighborhood have posted their takes on the debate.

Hillary Clinton changed the Democratic Presidential race last night in ways that will make her a more formidable candidate in the primaries while making the Democratic Party a stronger bet to improve their majorities in 2008. And she did it despite her refusal, again, to correct the most serious blunder of her Senate career. She “won” the debate without winning me.

Here’s Scarecrow at Firedoglake

Juan Cole has thumbnail sketches of the anti-war positions.

John Aravosis at AmericaBlog picked up on gay civil rights.

Logan Murphy at Crooks and Liars has a clip on Darfur and moral authority

Digby thinks Clinton did well
, thinks they all did, but has some advice for Kucinich.

Presidential Polls

Monday, May 28th, 2007

I went to Golden Gate Fields today to watch the ponies run. Number 9 in the 8th race started out late, caught up and thrillingly led, then faded, coming in at Show. So these polls of presidentials strike me. What on earth do we know on any given day about what will be in months to come? That being said, we do take an interest in what is being expressed here — not so much for showing a lead or a falling behind for the expression of interest measured in those with their eyes glued to the glasses.

Democrat Barack Obama is the top 2008 presidential contender in the United States, according to a poll by Zogby International. At least 46 per cent of respondents would support the Illinois senator in head-to-head contests against four prospective Republican nominees.


Obama Leads All Repubs

Presidential Waste Timber

Monday, May 14th, 2007

Gingrich: ‘Great possibility’ I’ll get in race.

Oh good, that makes how many divorces for the party of family failures?

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Mitt Romney Lost My Vote on Sunday
By RAY HANANIA

Sometimes, political candidates are better off avoiding appearing on national television.

Take the case of former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney…

Obama and Repubs

Sunday, May 6th, 2007

This is a pretty damned interesting article.

DISILLUSIONED supporters of President George W Bush are defecting to Barack Obama, the Democratic senator for Illinois, as the White House candidate with the best chance of uniting a divided nation.

And it’s not just your average middle of the road butter the bread on both sides millionaire Republican, it’s some of the neo-con cabal.

…last week a surprising new name joined the chorus of praise for the antiwar Obama – that of Robert Kagan, a leading neoconservative and co-founder of the Project for the New American Century in the late 1990s, which called for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein.

Sarah Baxter in TimesOnLine via RawStory.