For Bush, it's from bad to worse

Which is worse?

  • Getting a B.J from Monica

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Killing a hundred thousand people

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    0

pastafarian

Electoral Member
Oct 25, 2005
541
0
16
in the belly of the mouse
Prior to the Big Excuse, the Reichstage fire of September 11, Secretary of State Colin Powell and National Security Advisor, Condoleezza Rice, were unequivocal: Saddam Hussein was no threat - to America, Europe or the Middle East.

On February 24, 2001 in Cairo ,Egypt, Powell told reporters: "He (Saddam Hussein) has not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction. He is unable to project conventional power against his neighbours."
He said that it was the US policy of "containment" that had effectively disarmed him.
In an interview on May 15 2001, Powell said that Saddam Hussein had not been able to "build his military back up or to develop weapons of mass destruction" for "the last 10 years" because "we have been able to keep him in a box.".

In July, 2001, Condoleezza Rice said when asked about Iraq in an interview: "Saddam does not control the northern part of the country," she said. "We are able to keep his arms from him. His military forces have not been rebuilt."
 

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
18,399
95
48
Reichstag fire
Encyclopædia Britannica Article

Page 1 of 1



burning of the Reichstag (parliament) building in Berlin, on the night of Feb. 27, 1933, a key event in the establishment of the Nazi dictatorship and widely believed to have been contrived by the newly formed Nazi government itself to turn public opinion against its opponents and to assume emergency powers. Adolf Hitler had secured the chancellorship after the elections…

interesting and appropriate analogy ..pasta..!!! (nice job)




............and not once did they say the "situation" changed.......so all one can (and quite accurately) presume that the only thing that changed was the bush-neanderthal mindset as it went about developing a web of lies/deceit via a propanganda machine that would make the likes of Hitler green with fecking envy.

My goodness......if I were "american" I would be some dissed off for being taken for such a ride. .......and quite willingly paint a big S on my forehead. (unless .......as did happen......I saw through the crap from the onset)
 

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
18,399
95
48
Questions Remain About the Arguments for War

By Terry M. Neal
washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Thursday, November 3, 2005; 11:59 AM



Did administration officials willfully ignore and circumvent the established intelligence apparatus and embrace only what they wanted to hear to make the case for war in Iraq? And, if so, how far up the chain does responsibility go? And did those officials seek to punish--not just refute--those who challenged them, as Joe Wilson, the husband of outed CIA agent Valerie Plame, has suggested?

New reporting and the recent condemnation of the vice president's and defense secretary's handling of the pre-war intelligence raise questions about how the administration may have manipulated information to convince the American public of the need to go to war. While it remains unclear whether the administration deliberately misled the nation, the slow drip of reports demands a congressional inquiry.

The Senate Intelligence Committee has blamed the U.S. intelligence community for assembling "deeply flawed" evidence about Hussein's weapons capabilities and threat. Democrats allege the committee has done nothing to pursue the second phase of the report, which was to be an examination of the administration's role in making the case for war.

Invoking a rare parliamentary procedure this week, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (Nev.) forced the Senate into a closed session to pressure Senate Republicans to follow through on that promise. Republicans agreed to form a six-senator, bipartisan task force that will report by Nov. 14 on "the intelligence committee's progress of the phase two review of the prewar intelligence and its schedule for completion."

Much of the media coverage in Washington this week centered on whether Senate Democrats are motivated by a search for the truth or are just grandstanding. The opposition certainly sees an opportunity to exploit a weakening of the majority. But whatever the case, the need to fully understand how the case for war came to be made on a legion of inaccurate claims is the main issue -- not who makes the most long-term political gains.

In this month's edition of Pat Buchanan's "American Conservative" magazine , Philip Giraldi , a former CIA officer, suggests that the leaking of CIA operative Valerie Plame's name is part of a much larger scandal involving how the administration pitched the war and punished its critics.

"From the beginning, there has been little doubt in the intelligence community that the outing of CIA officer Valerie Plame was part of a bigger story," Giraldi wrote. "That she was exposed in an attempt to discredit her husband, former ambassador Joseph Wilson, is clear, but the drive to demonize Wilson cannot reasonably be attributed only to revenge. Rather, her identification likely grew out of an attempt to cover up the forging of documents alleging that Iraq attempted to buy yellowcake uranium from Niger."

Giraldi's article follows a startling series of reports from the left-leaning Italian newspaper La Repubblica. The newspaper has asserted that Italian intelligence officials loyal to Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi conspired to take advantage of the White House's eagerness to make the case of for war in Iraq.

According to La Repubblica, Italian intelligence chief Nicolo Pollari met with then deputy national security adviser Stephen Hadley on Sept. 9, 2002, and passed along documents--that turned out to have been forged--about Iraq's attempt to purchase uranium in Niger.

In their eagerness to make the case for war, administration critics say that top White House officials circumvented the normal intelligence checks and balances and funneled the information through the Defense Department's Office of Special Plans, which had been set up by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and then-deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz to develop alternative sources of intelligence.

In his Jan. 28, 2003, State of the Union speech, Bush referenced the British government as the source of the Niger uranium claim. The reference was included in the speech, despite the fact that U.S. intelligence had warned administration officials that the information was unreliable. It turns out the British received the same flawed documents that the Italian had peddled to the White House.

The United Nations's International Atomic Energy Agency later declared the Niger documents to be crude and obvious fakes.

The Office of Special Plans was run by Douglas Feith, a long-time Cheney ally and confidante. Rumsfeld, Vice President Dick Cheney, Wolfowitz, and Cheney's former chief of staff I. Lewis Libby, who was indicted last week on perjury and obstruction of justice charges for his role in the Plame leak case, all played prominent roles in the Project for a New American Century, which was advocating war with Iraq back as early as 1998, when several members of the group signed a letter to President Clinton urging him to attack Iraq.

Later, the PNAC neoconservatives played a central role in advocating the use of ground troops to attack Iraq, either through the Office of Special Plans or the White House Iraq Group, a secretive internal group established to help sell the war.

The American Conservative article also raises questions about the role played by another prominent neoconservative, Michael Ledeen, who was "the Office of Special Plans' man in Rome," and served as a liasion between Hadley and Italian intelligence, according to Giraldi.

[Read The Christian Science Monitor's special project on the neocons here.]

So, while the Libby indictment provides for sexy headlines, what many view as equally troubling is the questions that are still emerging about the facts used in Bush's 2003 State of the Union speech.

Bush asserted in that speech, "the British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa." The famous 16 words and the address overall, more than anything else, built domestic support for the war. But that assertion and the larger impression that it meant to create--that some American city could go up in a mushroom cloud at the hands of Hussein--was false, as the administration later acknowledged.

A number of factors--from the continued violence in Iraq to the indictment Libby--have combined to keep the subject alive. And Senate leaders are now tasked with completing Phase 2 of the investigation.

This week, the Italian government categorically denied La Repubblica's report that it was responsible for the Niger uranium claim. And U.S. administration officials this week downplayed the Pollari-Hadley meeting, characterizing it as nothing more than an 11-minute courtesy call.

U.S. officials who attended that September 2002 meeting don't recall the issue coming up, Frederick Jones, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council, told the Associated Press this week. "No one who was present at the meeting remembers yellow cake (uranium) being discussed nor any documents being passed."

Questions remain and recollections vary. Still unanswered is whether administration officials deliberately misled the nation to war. Congress should try to answer that question, regardless of which party ultimately benefits.
 

pastafarian

Electoral Member
Oct 25, 2005
541
0
16
in the belly of the mouse
Go to www.media.matters.org. It boggles the mind how the useful idiots like O'reilly and Limbaugh et al and their brain-dead acolytes deny,deny,deny. Is it more funny than scary? Too close to call? Think of the innocent dead and maimed and it's pretty clear.

If a person who has been trying to answer the "Did they lie?" question doesn't know by now, then they're not going to believe it ever, even if W were to come to their house and admit it.

" Still unanswered is whether administration officials deliberately misled the nation to war. Congress should try to answer that question, regardless of which party ultimately benefits."

Richard Clarke, Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, Scott Ritter, Hans Blix , the CIA, Joe Wilson, the grad student whose 1990 paper in was plagiarized as providing evidence for Saddams WMD's and many others know that the question of "administration officials deliberately misled the nation to war" has been answered fifty different ways.

Oh yeah, for those who Fox has a news channel, the answer is "Yes."
 

Reverend Blair

Council Member
Apr 3, 2004
1,238
1
38
Winnipeg
RE: For Bush, it's from b

I don't think that Fox and those deluded enough to perpetuate the lies heard on Fox and from the Bush White House can afford to admit the lies, Pastafarian. To do so they would have to admit that their entire doctrine was nothing more than a failed lie.
 

pastafarian

Electoral Member
Oct 25, 2005
541
0
16
in the belly of the mouse
You're right, Rev and things are going to start getting REALLY ugly when they start circling the wagons to hide the fact that their whole ideology is unravelling.
I'm just awestruck at the shameless, bald-faced hypocrisy, is all.
 

Reverend Blair

Council Member
Apr 3, 2004
1,238
1
38
Winnipeg
RE: For Bush, it's from b

I was just watching the WTO thing going on in Argentina. 100,000 peaceful demonstrators speaking out against george Bush have effectively ended any chance of the FTAA ever being accepted in South America. The people of the world have spoken, and Georgie just lost another battle.

Martin is going to look like an idiot promoting the Bush trade-as-imperialism doctrine in a few hours. Hugo Chavez and his followers have neutered the corporatist agenda in South America.
 

Hard-Luck Henry

Council Member
Feb 19, 2005
2,194
0
36
Re: RE: For Bush, it's from b

Reverend Blair said:
I was just watching the WTO thing going on in Argentina. 100,000 peaceful demonstrators speaking out against george Bush have effectively ended any chance of the FTAA ever being accepted in South America. The people of the world have spoken, and Georgie just lost another battle.

Martin is going to look like an idiot promoting the Bush trade-as-imperialism doctrine in a few hours. Hugo Chavez and his followers have neutered the corporatist agenda in South America.

Today the embattled President arrives in South America, which has become yet another foreign policy headache after Iraq. Our correspondent says Bush is disliked there more than anywhere outside the Arab world
Mr Bush’s problems in Latin America are in some ways no different from those he encounters almost everywhere in the world. His portrayal in the Latin American media as a unilateralist, war-mongering, half-witted religious bigot would be instantly recognisable to viewers and readers of television and newspapers in Europe or the Middle East.

But in this region, that image is overlaid with historical vestiges of powerful anti-American sentiment, a traditional mistrust of Yankee power laced with a lingering fear — in the past, at least, justified — of covert US activity aimed at toppling domestic governments.

Bush heads into bandit country

==========================================================
 

pastafarian

Electoral Member
Oct 25, 2005
541
0
16
in the belly of the mouse
That's great news, RB, I hope we can pull out of NAFTA.

Paul Krugman is always a good read:
Defending Imperial Nudity

Hans Christian Andersen understood bad rulers. "The Emperor's New Suit" doesn't end with everyone acclaiming the little boy for telling the truth. It ends with the emperor and his officials refusing to admit their mistake.

I've laid my hands on additional material, which Andersen failed to publish, describing what happened after the imperial procession was over.

The talk-show host Bill O'Reilly yelled, "Shut up! Shut up! Shut up!" at the little boy. Calling the boy a nut, he threatened to go to the boy's house and "surprise" him.

Fox News repeatedly played up possible finds of imperial clothing, then buried reports discrediting these stories. Months after the naked procession, a poll found that many of those getting most of their news from Fox believed that the emperor had in fact been clothed.

Imperial officials eventually admitted that they couldn't find any evidence that the suit ever existed, or that there had even been an effort to produce a suit. They insisted, however, that they had found evidence of wardrobe-manufacturing-and-distribution-related program activities.

After the naked procession, pro-wardrobe pundits denied that the emperor was at fault. The blame, they said, rested with the C.I.A., which had provided the emperor with bad intelligence about the potential for a suit.
:D
 

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
18,399
95
48
November 5, 2005
Iraq Conflict Not Worth Fighting, Say Americans









(Angus Reid Global Scan) – Many adults in the United States believe their federal administration should not have launched the coalition effort, according to a poll by CBS News. 64 per cent of respondents believe the result of the war with Iraq was not worth the loss of American life and other costs.

The coalition effort against Saddam Hussein’s regime was launched in March 2003. At least 2,037 American soldiers have died during the military operation, and more than 15,300 troops have been injured.

In his Oct. 29 radio address, U.S. president George W. Bush ruled out any changes to current policies, saying, "The best way to honour the sacrifice of our fallen troops is to complete the mission and win the war on terror." 50 per cent of respondents believe U.S. troops leave Iraq as soon as possible, even if Iraq is not completely stable, while 43 per cent think the soldiers should stay in Iraq.

Yesterday in Argentina, Bush discussed his strategy, saying, "My job is to set clear goals and deal with the problems we face. Now, look, we’ve got an ongoing war on terror. And my administration is working with friends and allies to find these terrorists and bring them to justice before they strike us again. We’re fighting the terrorists in Iraq." 62 per cent of respondents disapprove of the way Bush is handling the situation in Iraq.

Polling Data

Do you think the result of the war with Iraq was worth the loss of American life and other costs of attacking Iraq, or not?

Nov. 2005
Oct. 2005
Sept. 2005

Worth it
31%
32%
33%

Not worth it
64%
64%
61%

Don’t know
5%
5%
6%



Should the United States troops stay in Iraq as long as it takes to make sure Iraq is a stable democracy, even if it takes a long time, or should U.S. troops leave Iraq as soon as possible, even if Iraq is not completely stable?

Nov. 2005
Oct. 2005

Stay as long as it takes
43%
36%

Leave as soon as possible
50%
59%

Don’t know / No answer
7%
5%



Do you approve or disapprove of the way George W. Bush is handling the situation with Iraq?

Nov. 2005
Oct. 2005
Sept. 2005

Approve
32%
32%
36%

Disapprove
62%
64%
59%

No opinion
6%
4%
5%



Source: CBS News
Methodology: Telephone interviews with 936 American adults, conducted from Oct. 30 to Nov. 1, 2005. Margin of error is 3 per cent.

Other poll highlights: 57 per cent say things going badly for U.S. in Iraq, 48 per cent say Iraq will never become a democracy, 38 per cent say the Bush administration hid "important elements" when discussing the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

too little too late??? How many had to die before they started to rethink their positions???
 

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
18,399
95
48
The Bush administration, with its crony corporations in tow, essentially sallied forth into the world with the collective mentality of a plunderer, ready to strip-mine the planet. While its plans for global – and energy – domination (as well as the military conquest of space) have been aimed at forever, its business plans seemed more focused on tomorrow and the day after. For a while, it looked as if the President and his friends might even make it back to Crawford for a life of Mai Tais and brush-cutting without the economic chickens coming home to roost. This now looks less likely.

Mark Engler takes up a distinctly under-attended subject – just how bad for business (at least as measured by the post-Cold War presidencies of Bush the Elder and Bill Clinton) this administration might prove to be. He also explores the question of whether significant sectors of the business community will turn on the administration's war in Iraq and allied policies. Though largely forgotten, it happened once before – in the Vietnam era. ~ Tom


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Bush's Bad Business Empire: Making the World Unsafe for Microsoft and Mickey Mouse

By Mark Engler


The Bush administration has a reputation for creating an unusually business-friendly White House. Put Dick Cheney's secretive Energy Task Force and massive tax cuts together with corporate lobbyists writing regulations for their own industries, and you've made an argument that seems pretty persuasive.

There are reasons, however, to consider a contrary notion: Maybe George Bush and Dick Cheney aren't very good capitalists at all.

George W. Bush's history as a failed businessman is well known. Dick Cheney, portrayed by conservatives as a brilliant ex-CEO and by progressives as a Halliburton shill, also has a suspect past. While he certainly increased Halliburton's profile in four-and-a-half years as its chief, his foremost accomplishment was the $7.7 billion acquisition in 1998 of Dresser Industries, a rival that turned out to be plagued with staggering asbestos-related liabilities. In the wake of Cheney's reign, multiple Halliburton divisions sought bankruptcy protection and the company's stock price plunged. Rolling Stone magazine reported in August 2004, "Even with the bounce Halliburton stock has received from the war, an investor who put $100,000 into the company just before Cheney became vice president would have less than $60,000 today."

Many analysts hold the Vice President accountable for the downturn, arguing that Dresser's asbestos problems, which cost Halliburton billions, were predictable. Less harsh critics nonetheless question his success as a business leader. For instance, Jason E. Putman, an energy analyst at Victory Capital Management, argues that, as Halliburton chief, "[o]verall, Cheney did maybe at best an average job." Newsweek's Wall Street editor, Allan Sloan, is less complimentary, suggesting Cheney was a "CEO who messed up big-time."

When it comes to Iraq, we hear a lot about the government largesse flowing toward Halliburton, Bechtel, and a handful of other favored firms. Less often do we consider the possibility that the administration's "war on terrorism" has been a major business blunder. If you start, though, with the lackluster corporate records of Bush and Cheney, the administration's foreign policy comes into quite a different focus. Even if you believe that the White House is designing its overseas crusade to benefit U.S. corporations, there's no reason to assume that it has been doing so successfully.

Increasingly, the business press is suggesting that corporate leaders, who once hoped the current administration would push the corporate globalization of the Clinton years to new heights, now fear another fate from the international order Bush has created. Tax cuts and deregulation on the domestic front have been obvious bonuses, but otherwise many U.S. multinationals face a troubling scene. The White House's failed CEOs have pursued a global agenda that, at best, benefits a narrow slice of the American business community and leaves the rest exposed to a world of popular resentment and economic uncertainty.

When it comes to the interventions of Bush, Cheney, Condi, and the neocons in the global economy, "at best an average job" might be a charitable judgment, and "messed up big-time" could be closer to reality. Those business people who have yet to join the majority that opposes the president's handling of his war in Iraq – or the increasing chorus of conservative critics who have begun questioning the administration's foreign policy – may soon have a long list of reasons to get on the bandwagon, starting with the bottom line.

Not KFC's War

In recent years, KFC has had some trying moments in the Muslim world. In early September, a bomb exploded inside one of the company's fried-chicken outlets in Karachi, Pakistan. It was not the first time the chain had been targeted. In May, a Shia mob, angered by U.S. backing for President Pervez Musharraf and by reported abuses at Guantánamo Bay, set fire to another KFC outlet – one decked out with large images of Colonel Sanders set atop fields of stars and stripes. Two other branches were destroyed shortly after the U.S. attack on Afghanistan in 2001.

The woes affecting KFC go well beyond one fast-food chain – McDonald's, too, has been attacked in Pakistan and Indonesia – and the torching of fast-food outlets is only the most dramatic sign of the new business climate being fostered by a changing American foreign policy. If Clinton's diplomatic affairs could be described as a sustained effort to make the world safe for Mickey Mouse, Microsoft, and popcorn chicken, the Bush/Cheney agenda represents something altogether more dangerous for business.

The Clinton administration served as a steady advocate for building a cooperative, "rules-based" international economy – a multilateral order known to critics as "corporate globalization." The Bush administration, while purporting to be interested in issues like "free trade," has offered up a very different set of policies. Aggressive and unilateralist, it has fashioned a new model of "imperial globalization" which has even put multilateral institutions like the World Trade Organization, decried by globalization activists, in jeopardy. Rather than working through such bodies, the current administration has regularly shown intransigence in international negotiations around trade and development; it has focused on tying its aid for other countries directly to its militarist prerogatives; and it has tried to deny war-weary "Old Europe" its traditional role as a junior partner in the globalization endeavor. In the process, it has begun dismantling an international order that served multinational corporations very well in the booming 1990s, and facilitated their rise over the past 30 years.

In short: If Bush is an oil president, he's not a Disney president, nor a Coca-Cola one. If Cheney is working diligently to help Halliburton rebound, the war he helped lead hasn't worked out nearly so well for Starbucks.

A Bungled-Brand America

Whether the administration's bold gamble for U.S. global dominance will prove profitable either in the near future or in the long run, the business costs of this approach are already becoming evident. For starters, the new wave of anti-Americanism sweeping the planet goes far beyond KFC bombings in South Asia or widespread hostility in the Middle East. In Asia, the South China Morning Post has noted that a "strong, growing hostility" toward the United States has complicated Disney's expansion plans in the area. The Bush imperial foreign policy, moreover, is inspiring consumer backlash even among traditional allies.

In December 2004, Jim Lobe of Inter Press Service reported on a survey of 8,000 international consumers released by the Seattle-based Global Market Insite (GMI) Inc. The survey noted that


"one-third of all consumers in Canada, China, France, Germany, Japan, Russia, and the United Kingdom said that U.S. foreign policy, particularly the ‘war on terror' and the occupation of Iraq, constituted their strongest impression of the United States... 'Unfortunately, current American foreign policy is viewed by international consumers as a significant negative, when it used to be a positive,' comments Dr. Mitchell Eggers, GMI's chief operating officer and chief pollster."

Brands the survey identified as particularly at risk at the time included Marlboro cigarettes, America Online (AOL), McDonald's, American Airlines, Exxon-Mobil, Chevron Texaco, United Airlines, Budweiser, Chrysler, Barbie Doll, Starbucks, and General Motors.

More recent assessments have verified these trends. Indeed, in past months, a litany of stories in the financial press featured unnerving questions for business. Typical were the British Financial Times in August (World Turning Its Back on Brand America) and Forbes in September (Is Brand America In Trouble?).

A U.S. Banker magazine article from August relaying the results of an Edelman Trust Barometer survey of global elites found that "41 percent of Canadian elites were less likely to purchase American products because of Bush Administration policies, compared to 56 percent in the UK, 61 percent in France, 49 percent in Germany and 42 percent in Brazil."

It's not just snooty foreigners who are negative, either. American business leaders themselves have been starting to link economic woes to imperial policy. The previously mentioned U.S. Banker article warned, "[T]he majority of American CEOs, whose firms employ eight million overseas, are now acknowledging that anti-American sentiment is a problem." And a 2004 Boston Herald story, headlined Mass. Execs: Iraqi War Hurting; U.S. competitiveness becoming a casualty, pointed to the "sixty-two percent of executives surveyed by Opinion Dynamics Corp. [who] said the war is hurting America's global competitiveness."

Regularly featured in stories about America's image problems is a group of corporate executives who have come together as Business for Diplomatic Action (BDA). While avoiding an explicit stance on the Iraq war, the BDA argues:


"The costs associated with rising anti-American sentiment are exponential. From security and economic costs to an erosion in our ability to engender trust around the world and recruit the best and brightest, the U.S. stands to lose its competitive edge if steps are not made toward reversing the negativity associated with America."

Compared to the adverse impacts of Bush's imperial globalization, the administration's efforts at Karen-Hughes-style brand rehabilitation are laughable – and the BDA knows it. Taking diplomatic matters into their own hands, BDA spokespeople flatly state, "Right now the US government is not a credible messenger."

A Quagmire for Corporations

Is the problem just one of perception, or have the wages of war cut into business profits? In June 2004, USA Today reporter James Cox wrote about how financially ailing companies are pointing to the war as the culprit:


"Hundreds of companies blame the Iraq war for poor financial results in 2003, many warning that continued U.S. military involvement there could harm this year's performance. In recent regulatory filings at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), airlines, home builders, broadcasters, mortgage providers, mutual funds and others directly blame the war for lower revenues and profits last year."

Among those complaining, Hewlett-Packard claimed that the occupation of Iraq has created uncertainty and hurt its stock price; meanwhile, media companies Hearst-Argyle Television, Sinclair Broadcast Group, and Journal Communications bemoaned the number of TV and radio ads pre-empted by war news.

While fingering the war might be just a convenient excuse for some underperforming executives, the level of grumbling is noteworthy, as are the comments of outspoken fund managers profiled by Cox:


"'The war in Iraq created a quagmire for corporations,' David J. Galvan, a portfolio manager for Wayne Hummer Income Fund, says in his letter to shareholders.

"Vintage Mutual Funds concludes that ‘the price of these commitments (in Iraq and Afghanistan) may be more than the American public had expected or is willing to tolerate'…

"In an SEC filing, Domenic Colasacco, manager of the Boston Balanced Fund, calls the ongoing U.S. occupation ‘sad and increasingly risky.'"


Of course, we know that reconstruction companies are posting profits. Sales of gas masks and armored Humvees are also up. But such war-supported companies are a small minority. On the other hand, the diverse businesses in the tourism industry have taken a huge blow. Delta Air Lines, JetBlue, Orbitz, Priceline.com, Morton's steakhouses, Fairmont Hotels & Resorts, and Host Marriott, to name just a few, have blamed disappointing returns on the war. Travel industry leaders have warned:


"The US is losing billions of dollars as international tourists are deterred from visiting the US because of a tarnished image overseas and more bureaucratic visa policies... 'It's an economic imperative to address these problems,' said Roger Dow, chief executive of the Travel Industry Association of America, tourism's main trade body... Mr. Dow stressed that tourism contributed to a positive perception of the US... 'If we don't address these issues in tourism, the long-term impact for American brands Coca-Cola, General Motors, McDonald's could be very damaging.'"

Economic Nightmares Foretold

Every year, the global business elite gathers at a resort in Davos, Switzerland for the World Economic Forum. In the high-flying Clinton years, a feeling of exuberance pervaded the globalists' gathering – protests outside their meetings notwithstanding. By January 2003, however, the mood in Davos had already darkened perceptibly. Economic optimism was waning. The coming war in Iraq, in particular, was causing concern. Corporate leaders showed little more enthusiasm than the protestors outside for the impending unilateralist invasion. Analysts fed their misgivings, citing "the threat of war as the biggest question mark hanging over global growth prospects."

Around the same time, progressive economists Dean Baker and Mark Weisbrot detailed a possible worst-case scenario in a policy report entitled The Economic Costs of a War in Iraq. Beyond the costs of anti-Americanism abroad, they focused on three additional areas of concern: A war-related oil shock that might cost the American economy hundreds of thousands of jobs over a seven-year period; a heightened risk of terrorist attacks in the U.S. which might result in increased security costs, slowing the growth of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP); and a likelihood that increased oil prices would drag the developing world into a deep recession.

I asked Baker how relevant the report's concerns have proven. Though he emphasizes that the worst did not come to pass, he notes worrying signs. Oil prices have indeed skyrocketed, owing largely to increased demand from China and India, but exacerbated by Iraq's AWOL oil. Moreover, as each new intelligence estimate predicts that we are less, not more, secure because of the Iraqi occupation, the risk of an economy-crippling attack grows. Already, Baker points out, the hours we spend waiting in security lines at the airport or delayed in city subways represent costly economic losses.

Then, of course, there is the as yet unrealized possibility that spreading guerilla warfare and terrorism will include escalating sabotage against vast and largely indefensible stretches of oil pipeline in the Middle East. It is this scenario among others that caused professor of Middle Eastern history and Informed Comment blogger Juan Cole to liken Bush's Iraq debacle to "throwing grenades around in the cockpit of the world economy."

Such costs, foretold before the invasion, suggest that the pre-war pessimism in Davos was well justified. And such a modest list hardly exhausts the possible economic "downsides" to Bush administration policies in Iraq and beyond. The debate about Congressional spending, for one, deserves at least passing mention. Whether fiscal conservatives are right that Iraq- and tax-cut-bloated deficits are necessarily bad for business, or whether Military Keynesianism has actually been helping to soften a periodic economic downturn, the idea of war without sacrifice should sound fishy to any account-minded executive. Take direct war costs running in the hundreds of billions, add in medical bills for disabled veterans, then throw in the costs of National Guard reservists being pulled from small businesses, and pretty soon you're talking real money. At some point the overvalued dollar, which our creditors in the central banks of China and Japan have decided to let ride for the time being, will have to come down and is likely to bring the economy with it. When that happens, Colonel Sanders won't be the only one to feel the pain.

Will Business Turn?

Back in August of the 2004 election cycle, the Kerry campaign distributed a list of 204 business executives who supported the candidate's policies. It was a nice try, but, as Bloomberg News reported, the Democrat trailed Bush badly in corporate support. Fifty-two chief executives from major companies had by then donated to Kerry; 280 to the president's re-election campaign. (Business being business, "at least three executives on Kerry's list also gave the maximum $2,000 to Bush's re-election campaign.")

A year has passed since the elections. Approval ratings for the victorious president continue to sink to all-time lows, and "staying the course" remains official Washington policy for Iraq. In this context, it's not surprising that Republican "realists" like Brent Scowcroft (who warned in a Wall Street Journal op-ed before the war that "it undoubtedly would be very expensive – with serious consequences for the U.S. and global economy") are making noise again. And it would make perfect sense if an increasing number of those Bush CEOs were by now pining for a return to Clinton-style multilateral globalization of a sort still held out by the defeated Senator from Massachusetts and many other Democrats.

Neither of these alternative camps will seem particularly appealing to progressives, but they pose a genuine threat to the imperial globalists who seem incapable of extracting themselves from Iraq. Indeed, intra-party rivalry among the Republicans – which is likely to increase as we enter an election year – could play a vital role in turning White House hawks into dead ducks. All the better if this avian transformation is sped by dissatisfaction from corporate leaders reevaluating the costs of Bush foreign policy and deciding that empire just doesn't pay.

November 4, 2005
 

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
18,399
95
48
Bad Judgement?? An understatement.

was amused by the chattering class's attempt to analyze the "bad week" the president had. All the chatter tended toward the superstitious view that fate had dealt the president a series of blows for which, of course, he was not responsible.

However, as Shakespeare's Cassius says to Brutus, "The fault lies not in our stars but in ourselves."

In short, the president has and has had only one problem: his own bad judgment. Unfortunately, bad judgment is virtually incurable. Judgment is the personal assessment of the facts, of situations and of courses of action those situations require. In poker terms, it's knowing when to hold and when to fold. In personnel terms, it's knowing whom to trust and whom to choose for a particular job.

It was bad judgment to allow Dick Cheney to accumulate and assert so much power. Cheney is the only vice president in American history who created his own national-security staff. It was bad judgment to rely on Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld for directing the war in Iraq, because his stubbornness and intellectual shortcomings led to the series of debacles. It was bad judgment to rely on Ahmad Chalabi, a convicted swindler, for so much Iraqi "intelligence." It was bad judgment to allow a cabal of neoconservatives (defined as liberals with guns) to kidnap his administration's Middle East policy.

Most of all, it was bad judgment to take the nation to war based on what everybody now knows was 100 percent false information. The question that now needs to be asked is, Was that false information known to be false or at least dubious at the time? I believe it was known. I believe the Bush administration deliberately misled both the American people and Congress.

I could go on. Almost everything that has gone wrong in the Bush administration is a result of his own bad judgment, from broken borders and appointing loyal but incompetent people, to prematurely claiming victory in Iraq, to his wacko Social Security scheme, to the mushrooming federal deficits and federal trade deficits, to actually encouraging the offshoring of American jobs.

Sometimes the president appears to be a puppet operated by Cheney and Karl Rove. It is revealing of the depth of cynicism that infects the national press that they praise Rove as a genius. He is not a genius. He is an unscrupulous manipulator of public opinion, whose modus operandi is to use third parties to smear the opposition and to raise false issues in the campaigns. Without a lap-dog press, he would not be so successful.

The bad news is that the president has three more years of his term to serve. I've often said that we Americans get the kind of government we deserve, but the real question is, Can we survive the kind of government we deserve? It turns out that the judgment of a narrow majority of the voters is as bad as that of the president. I include myself, as I foolishly voted for Bush in the first election, though certainly not in the second.

There are some signs that the Democrats are at last stirring from their apathy. Their using the closed Senate session to force the Republicans to undertake an investigation into intelligence that they had promised but delayed for 21 months is a good sign. They need to scuttle some of their old ideologues like Ted Kennedy and John Kerry, who seem to think the mainstream of upper-class Boston is the mainstream of America. Surely there must be some Democrats who are not leftist ideologues and neototalitarians, not to mention pompous windbags.

The fate of nations and empires always hinges on the judgment of their leaders. As animals, the human race ranks as the smartest and the cleverest, but it is certainly not infallible. I believe it was Thomas Jefferson who observed that humans had better pray that God is more merciful than just.

In the waning year of our Lord 2005, that's not a bad suggestion.
 

Jo Canadian

Council Member
Mar 15, 2005
2,488
1
38
PEI...for now
 

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
18,399
95
48
Politically Deflated Bush Faces a Resistant World

by Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar



In case you haven't noticed, it's been awhile since a top US official has delivered one of those wordy sermons to China or Russia about their responsibility to fix their governments, fight political corruption and protect human rights.

With President George W Bush being forced to deal with rising domestic criticism of his administration's performance at home and abroad, it has become much more difficult for him and the leading officials in his administration to promote the notion that his values and policies should serve as the standard that other governments should follow.

Indeed, while the disastrous response to Hurricane Katrina tarnished the image of what once upon a time was supposed to be world's most powerful and competent government, the so-called Plamegate scandal that has already led to the indictment of one White House official has raised the specter of Watergate-style political corruption, adding to a long list of cases of sleaze and fraud involving Republican figures with ties to Mr. Bush.

And the Bushies could not serve in the role of the world's moral authority in the same week that the Washington Post reported that CIA was running secret camps in eastern Europe where it was interrogating terrorist suspects. These news, together with Abu Ghraib, only raised more questions about the credibility of the US in upholding human rights and the rule of law in its conduct in the war on terrorism.

And so the politically deflated Mr. Bush, with his approval ratings at home reaching a historic low of below 40 per cent will meet Latin American heads of state this week and prepare for his trip to Asia, where he will take part in a summit with the region's leaders in South Korea, followed by a visit to China. He and his aides are probably discovering that they have to deal now with more than just the slow erosion in American "soft power" and US ability to market its professed values worldwide.

The US reservoir of "hard power" also seems to be depleting. The growing mess in Iraq, and the increasing signs that the administration has failed to achieve its goals there, challenges the axiom that has been accepted by many observers since the end of the Cold War – that the world's only remaining military power could continue to maintain its role as an undisputed political hegemony.

At the same time, the ballooning US budget and trade deficits that are financed by the central bankers of China, Japan and Korea are weakening the enormous leverage that the US held over the other major economies and which, in the past, allowed it to play a leading role in liberalizing the global economy.

At a time when he is one of the least popular figures in the hemisphere, Mr. Bush was bound to feel the combined impact of the expanding deficit in "soft" and "hard" power during the Summit of the Americas in the Argentine town of Mar de Plata.

The neo-liberal economic model of American-style free market has lost its appeal in Latin America, where left-of-center governments are in control in Brazil and Argentina and another leftist figure could get elected as the next president of Mexico. Even more disturbing to Washington is the growing popularity of Venezuela's populist President Hugo Chavez, who has been using his country's rising oil profits to promote his anti-American and anti-globalization message.

The US plan of forming a Free Trade of the Americas (FTAA) is regarded in Latin America today as nothing more than an illusion. And there are mounting anxieties in Washington that the possible elections of leftist governments in Bolivia and Nicaragua could help Mr. Chavez and his ally, Cuba's Fidel Castro, in stirring up anti-Americanism in the hemisphere that could certainly be fueled by the emergence of indigenous Indian political parties in the region. While Mr. Bush's America is finding itself more isolated than ever on its own strategic and economic backyard, with China and the European Union (EU) increasing their trade and investment links to the region, Beijing is continuing to boost its economic and political leadership role in East Asia – a development which will be highlighted during the East Asia Summit in Malaysia, from which the US is being excluded.

At the same time, the Chinese and Russians have been strengthening the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) as part of a strategy to challenge American presence in Central Asia. While some American neoconservative strategists have been toying with the idea of "using" India and "unleashing" Japan as part of an effort to "contain" China, it's becoming clear that while New Delhi and Tokyo are interested in enhancing their ties with Washington, they will resist being dragged into a US-engineered confrontation with Beijing.

Moreover, the Bush administration has yet to come up with a coherent approach towards China and its inconsistent policies reflect the opposing pressures it faces from ideological and interest groups in Washington. Hence the China-bashing coalition of neoconservative hawks, economic nationalists and Christian Right activists is pressing Mr. Bush to get tough with the Chinese while Corporate America and free-traders are calling on the administration to engage China. The result is a policy mess in Washington.

Ironically, it's China that has become the leading diplomatic player in the effort to help the Bushies resolve the North Korean nuclear crises. At the same time, the Bushies have been forced to lobby for cooperation from the Europeans in trying to manage the current confrontations with Iran and Syria.

That Washington is discovering it has no other choice but to rely on diplomatic assistance from China and the EU is a reflection of the constraints that seems to be operating now on American global power. As more and more Americans recognize that reality, it's possible that Washington could take steps to adjust to the new global balance of power. If that won't happen, American adjustment could prove to be more costly, as China, the EU and other more powerful and assertive global powers choose to challenge Washington instead of cooperating with it.
 

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
18,399
95
48
sleeping giant ....stirs???? Is it too late??

The Sleeping Giant Stirs

“We will not walk in fear, one of another. We will not be driven by fear into an age of unreason, if we dig deep in our history and our doctrine; and remember that we are not descended from fearful men. Not from men who feared to write, to speak, to associate, and to defend causes that were for the moment unpopular... We can deny our heritage and our history, but we cannot escape responsibility for the result." Edward R. Murrow - May 9, 1954


By Ernest Partridge
Co-Editor The Crisis Papers

11/09/05 "ICH " -- --

“The Americans will always do the right thing” Winston Churchill once remarked, “after they’ve exhausted all the alternatives.”

The American public may be running out of alternatives. If so, the Bush Administration and the Republicans have reason to be very worried.

It is all too easy to despair over the ignorance and gullibility of “the American mind.” This is a public, after all, a majority of which rejects the theory of evolution – the central coordinating concept of the biological sciences. In addition, the National Science Foundation reports that more than a third of Americans believe in UFOs and that astrology “has scientific merit.”

And yet, amazingly, at many crucial moments in our history, public opinion has somehow moved toward a wise and appropriate point of view.

For example, public support for the Vietnam war eroded until eventually the war was unsustainable. Richard Nixon’s landslide re-election in 1972 was no use to him when, less than two years later, the full extent of his “crimes and misdemeanors” became known and he was forced from office.

Throughout his presidency, Bill Clinton was hounded by a hostile press, while $70 million of taxpayers’ money was expended in search of a crime to fit the punishment. Eventually he was caught in a sexual indiscretion. It was then widely assumed that Clinton’s public approval scores would drop into the basement. Instead, “the hunting of the president” backfired as Clinton’s high approval scores held steady, while those of his tormentor, Kenneth Starr, plummeted.

And so right now, something remarkable is taking place. At long last, however belatedly, the public is beginning to appreciate the shallowness and incompetence of George Bush and the unparalleled mendacity and corruption of his administration. Moreover, it has arrived at this realization on its own, despite the determination of the captive mainstream media to hide these manifest failures from the public, through distraction, non-reporting, and occasionally through outright lies.

For five years, the Rovian smoke and mirrors have worked spectacularly well. A majority of the public was persuaded that Saddam Hussein had Weapons of Mass Destruction, was somehow behind the 9/11 attacks and was an active agent of al Qaeda. At the same time, the skeletons of Bush’s past – his AWOL from the Air National Guard, his business failures, his insider trading, his suspected drug use – were all kept hidden in the closet. A package of lies about Al Gore was concocted to “prove,” ironically, that Gore was a “serial liar.” John Kerry, an authentic war hero, was successfully portrayed as a coward and a fake.

Thus did the Bush message machine vanquish the Democratic opposition and reduce it to pathetic impotence. However, there was one adversary that Bush, Inc. could not defeat: reality. And at long last, reality is retaliating and the public is taking notice.

The failure of Bush’s FEMA to deal with the Katrina catastrophe can not be hidden forever from the public. Nor can the loss of manufacturing jobs and their export overseas. Nor can the rising price of gasoline and the obscene profits of the oil companies. Nor can the upward redistribution of national wealth from the producers to the owners of that wealth. Nor can the corruption and the consequent indictments or investigations of the malefactors: DeLay, Safavian, Frist, Libby, Abramoff, and now Tomlinson. Nor can the horrendous tales of torture in Bush’s Gulag. Nor can the shredding of our Constitution and the loss of our “inalienable rights.” Nor can the mounting casualties from the Iraq war, as they return home in caskets (“transfer tubes”) or with broken minds and bodies. And despite the media conspiracy of silence, the evidence of election fraud can not be suppressed. The unthinkable is becoming thinkable.

Moreover, the public has a memory. The weak but growing voice of the independent progressive media and internet has recorded and now broadcasts the lies in the voices of the liars: “Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction." (Cheney, August, 2002) "We know where [the WMDs] are. They are in the area around Tikrit and Baghdad." (Rumsfeld, May, 2003). "We found the weapons of mass destruction." (Bush, May, 2003).

Despite their self-congratulatory myth of rugged individualism, Americans are herd animals; they look around, then follow the crowd. When Bush’s approval scores were in the high eighties and the media were meekly and uncritically passing on the official lies, few dared to resist. Troublesome news, such as election fraud, foreign opposition, citizen protests, the looting of the treasury, and the Downing Street memos, were absent from the print and broadcasts of the mainstream media. Those in the media who did resist, like MSNBC’s Ashleigh Banfield and Phil Donanue, soon found themselves out of a job. Their example was not lost on the survivors. But now the beast is wounded and just a few of the bolder predators are coming out of the woods to investigate. At last, the hidden issues are beginning to come into play.

And the public? Ever so gradually, public opinion has shifted and now the critics and skeptics are in the majority. No longer can dissenters be successfully branded as traitors who “hate America.” More and more of us are remembering that America was born out of resistance to tyranny and has flourished through dissent and open debate. Protest is once again becoming fashionable, and there is a whiff of possible success in the air. The message of the American people to the media? “Lead, follow, or step out of the way. You have made yourselves irrelevant.”

When asked the secret of success in show business, George Burns replied: “sincerity – if you can fake that, you’ve got it made.” For five years, it worked for Bush and his gang, but now the public is finally seeing through the fakery. And once the politician loses his grip on the fakery – once he has lost the trust of the public -- he can never get it back.

And so, Bush’s approval and trust ratings are now in the mid-thirties, and heading south. According to the latest Washington Post/ABC poll, two-thirds of the public has a negative opinion of Bush’s ethics and believes that the country is headed in the wrong direction. Sixty percent believes that the Iraq war was a mistake. A majority doubts Bush’s honesty and integrity, and believes that Bush misled the country prior to the invasion of Iraq. And amazingly, a majority would want to see him impeached if it were proved (as is likely the case) that Bush lied to get the U.S. into the war.

Significantly, many GOP politicians and the media are beginning to sense that support of Bush and his administration is distinct liability – a liability that can cost the politicians their offices, and the media their audiences. Moreover, as the demise of the Miers nomination attests, the religious right is finally beginning to realize that they’ve been had, cynically kept on the GOP reservation with promises, such as the repeal of Roe v. Wade, that the GOP dare not fulfill.

Is it over for the Bush Administration? Don’t count on it. As I wrote at the outset: “at many crucial moments in our history” the American public gets it right. “At many crucial moments,” not all. There are no guarantees. And the Busheviks still have formidable weapons at their disposal as they struggle to maintain their grip on power.

Accordingly, this is no time for the opposition to sit at the sidelines, content to be spectators of the self-inflicted decline and fall of Bush, Inc. This malignant regime may not go over the precipice unless it is pushed.


What then is the ordinary citizen to do? The question requires a separate essay – several, in fact. But here are some brief suggestions.

Regarding election Fraud: Spread the word, person-to-person. Do your part to make respectable a skepticism of past elections and the demand for election reform. If the conspiracy of media silence is sustained and the paperless machines and secret software remain in place, the GOP won’t lose no matter what the voters have to say about it. If the fraud is exposed, they can’t win. It is just possible that if the polls forecast a Democratic blowout – say, twenty-plus percent – the GOP won’t dare to reverse the outcome. But beware: fake polls are not out of the question.

Thankfully, there is one institution that remains independent of Bushevik control: the criminal justice system. Thus the aforementioned criminal indictments, present and forthcoming. Herein may be the best hope for the restoration of honest and verifiable elections. In the United States, elections are administered at the local and state level. Surely there must be some prosecutors somewhere in the realm prepared to investigate this crime with the powerful instruments of subpoena, discovery and perjury threat. So let us, as concerned citizens, demand criminal investigation and prosecutions of the crime of voting fraud.

Put pressure on the media. Boycott the offending corporate media and their sponsors, and tell them that you are doing so. Demand that they investigate malfeasance of office and report “all the news that’s fit to print” about issues of public concern. And if they won’t, make them irrelevant. As Sinclair Broadcasting learned in the last election, if right-wing propaganda results in a loss of market-share, the management must answer to the stockholders.

Support the alternative independent media and the progressive internet – the last, best hope of a free press that the founders of our republic insisted was indispensable to a republic of free citizens.

Encourage progressive candidates to oppose the “GOP-lite” Democrats in the primaries. Even if the “Democrats in Name Only” (DINOs) win, they will be given a message: “represent us, or next time your done for!”

And write your Senators and Congress members, repeatedly. Send a constant stream of letters to the editor. Add your feet and voices to the public protests. Organize!


At the close of the 1970 movie, “Tora, Tora, Tora,,” Admiral Isoruko Yamamoto warns his staff: "I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve." The words are those of the screenwriter, not the Admiral: there is no evidence that Yamamoto ever said this. No matter, the words fit our times.

Today, the great American public stirs. But will it awake? In the captive corporate media, there is no Edward R. Murrow or Walter Cronkite in evidence who will protest the evil issuing from the White House and the Congress, much less a media management willing to give them a microphone. There is no John Dean from inside this malignant regime that will step forward and volunteer to break open this criminal conspiracy – at least, not yet.

It is up to us, the American public, and it is possible that we the people are finally beginning to wake up. But there are no guarantees that we will prevail, restore our Constitution and our rights, and win back our country.

This is no time for each of us to stand alone, looking after our own diminishing self-interests, and privately but uselessly lamenting our fates. Echoing Jesus of Nazareth, Mohandas Gandhi spoke the truth that transcends political and religious boundaries: "He who loses his life will gain it; he who will seek to save it shall lose it. Freedom is not for the coward or the faint-hearted."

and what is taking so long???
 

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
18,399
95
48
The American body politic laid low

Washington (George) led the way in political rhetoric. Now Washington (DC) leads the way in crises and scandals

Henry Porter
Sunday November 13, 2005
The Observer


Watching Dick Cheney on US TV, I tried to remember a quote from George Washington's farewell address in which he outlined all the dangers which might encircle the new republic. So I looked up the speech and found myself captivated by the beauty of the language and by Washington's wisdom and knowledge of human nature. It is right to call it one of the great works of civilisation.
Language is the man. Washington's virtue, his learning, courage and experience shine in every phrase of that address, just as President Bush's inadequacy is laid bare whenever he tries to explain his policies. If a politician cannot write or speak fluently, you can bet he or she is not thinking fluently, perhaps not even thinking at all.

I would guess Bush falls into the latter category. He has plenty of reflexes, of the loony patriotic and religious kind, but no reflection. When you listen to him stumbling at the microphone, there is no sense of anything but the most average of intellects. It is not that he is lacking Washington's powers of expression; it is that he has nothing to say, for, in truth, the interior dialogue of George W Bush is little more than random flares of static.

Vice President Dick Cheney doesn't speak much but when he does, he is clear-headed to a point of chilliness. He knows where he's going and how to get there. He is one of the more terrifying figures ever to ascend to a position of power in America.

The quotation I was trying to remember comes when Washington warns of the dangers of parties and factionalism. 'They are likely to become potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government; destroying afterwards the very engines which have lifted them to unjust dominion.'

No one can yet claim that Washington's grim prediction has been realised, but controversies surrounding the Vice President should alert us to the danger of at least the perception of conflicts of interest.

Cheney represents an administration that stands accused of barbaric capitalism, unflinching greed for oil, the exploitation of nature, the violation of the American wilderness, the torture of untried prisoners, the bombing of innocent civilians and the lies that preceded the war in Iraq. He is seen as the heartless embodiment of the military-industrial complex, a phrase, incidentally, invented by President Eisenhower in his valedictory address in 1961, at just about the time a young Cheney flunked Yale and went to work as a power lineman.

It is worth remembering what Eisenhower said, because he also saw the dangers of potential conflicts of interest, but more specifically than Washington. 'This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience... in the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes.'

Cheney has been around a long time. He embedded early, serving under Donald Rumsfeld in the Nixon and Ford administrations, as a congressman for Wyoming, Secretary of Defence under the first Bush and finally Vice President to the second Bush. This relentless political and technocratic career was interrupted once when he went off in the Nineties to head Halliburton, the products and service provider to the oil industry and military, and made himself $60-$70 million, in what could be perceived as an advance payment for the billions Halliburton has earned during George W's presidency.

Eisenhower was right. The weight of the power of the combination does endanger liberty. In its focus on profit and military might, it could be seen as careless of all humane considerations. To know this, you only have to look at last week's statements from the White House after the Washington Post revealed the existence of a secret network of facilities in eastern Europe in which terror suspects were being interrogated. After a week almost as bad as Tony Blair's, the President assured the US public that his government had not authorised the use of the torture in this re-purposed gulag.

The Vice President has laid himself open to criticism. Lewis Libby, his chief of staff, stands indicted for leaking Valerie Plame's name to the New York Times and then lying about it.

Cheney cannot rid himself of claims that contracts have been steered Halliburton's way. And it is widely assumed that his membership of the National Petroleum Council, an oil- man's club, is responsible for the administration's resistance to energy conservation and the general hostility to climate scientists.

But it is Cheney's campaign to go to war against America's former ally and armaments customer, Saddam Hussein, which might be the undoing of him. There is a new, rigorous standard being applied in Congress, almost totally absent in the last four years. Senator Harry Reid, the Democrat minority leader, ambushed the Republicans with a demand to go into closed session, having made a speech about the Republican's prevarication on the investigation of the intelligence which led to war.

How did the Bush administration set out its case for war? he demanded in the name of the American people. Who did it listen to and who did it ignore? How did senior administration officials manipulate and manufacture intelligence presented to Congress? How did the administration co-ordinate its efforts to attack individuals who dared to challenge its assertions? Did this come from Cheney's office?

Blair survived similar probes, but here the anger is more intense because most Americans trusted and believed Bush when he said Iraq harboured al-Qaeda terrorists. They could barely credit his brass neck when, wearing his goofiest expression, he admitted: 'We have no evidence Saddam was involved in 9/11.' He looked like a juvenile offender unable to comprehend his crime or the pain it had caused.

The mood has swung since I was last here in May. The mainstream media then were so in awe of the White House's vindictiveness and Teutonic discipline that few dared step out of line. But journalists have taken heart from the polls which are registering a deep concern in the American people, even among some Republicans, who have finally grasped the unwholesome nature of their government: 57 per cent of Americans believe Bush deliberately misled the public before the war; 70 per cent believe Cheney was responsible. And 79 per cent believe the indictment of 'Scooter' Libby is a serious matter. At the height of Lewinsky affair, only 65 per cent thought it was serious matter.

There is a long way to go. It is impossible to predict the outcome of the multiple crises and scandals gripping the administration. But the fact remains that there is almost no greater crime for a President than taking the country to war on falsified evidence. That penny has dropped with the American people and they want answers to Senator Reid's questions.

George Washington's ideals can still be heard in the speeches of men like Reid and his fellow Democrat, Robert Byrd, who made the most moving appeal in the Senate before the invasion. 'To contemplate war,' he said, 'is to think about the most horrible of human experiences. Yet, this chamber is, for the most part, silent - ominously, dreadfully silent. There is no debate, no discussion, no attempt to lay out for the nation the pros and cons of this particular war. There is nothing.'

At least that is no longer true.
 

Ocean Breeze

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 5, 2005
18,399
95
48
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051125/ap_on_go_co/iraq_massachusetts_dems_2


some serious rethink happening. This makes four...

Good sign.

So much more constructive to admit to having rethought the situation and previous decision than to keep on lying to oneself or "staying the course"........in a stubborn manner due to some pride or ???

even the mainstream media is starting to nibble around the fact the bush is in serious trouble.

Interesting that there have been no coded terror alerts. ;-) So much for THAT system. They abused it, and now it is meaningless.