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August 6, 2007

David Greenberg: Does George Bush Read Hegel?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Volt @ 9:58 am

David Greenberg, Slate Magazine, August 6, 2007

For a guy with a reputation as an intellectual slacker, George W. Bush has always professed a surprisingly strong interest in history—however politicized some of his takes on the past may be. Bush has likened the “war on terrorism” to the Cold War, compared the occupation of Iraq to that of Germany, endorsed the “stab in the back” theory of America’s defeat in Vietnam, and fancied himself Harry Truman redivivus, standing firm in pursuit of noble goals while getting trashed as the worst president ever.

For all this attention to the past, Bush’s study of history has recently taken a turn toward the philosophical, at least by his own standards. Instead of just grabbing for analogies to serve as talking points, Bush appears to have become a pensive, almost romantic thinker ruminating about the ultimate design of history. According to a series of recent articles, he has been summoning scholars to the White House, perusing chronicles of past wars, and mulling over his place in the grand scheme. “What lessons does history have for a president facing the turmoil I’m facing?” Bush asks the historians at his intimate sessions, according to the Washington Post’s Peter Baker. “How will history judge what we’ve done?”

In some ways, there’s less here than meets the eye. Throughout his term, Bush has made clear that he likes to read history, as do many politicians. Other presidents, too, have shuttled in scholars in order to skim off their insights about a crisis—Jimmy Carter turned to Christopher Lasch, author of The Culture of Narcissism, to make sense of his era’s malaise, and the elder George Bush hosted Theodore Roosevelt biographer David McCullough to glean the secrets of TR’s success. As for wondering how posterity will regard his actions—what leader hasn’t? When we’re feeling charitable, we refer to this kind of consideration of long-term consequences as “vision.”

What’s new and strange about Bush’s latest turn to history is that it doesn’t seem to stem from a desire to serve his policy-making—not even as PR. Historians’ insights, after all, can have little practical utility now. A historian can’t predict with more authority than any other informed observer whether jihadist radicalism will wax or wane, or whether a liberal democracy will eventually take root in Iraq. And while there’s no harm in asking a scholar like Alistair Horne, author of A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954-72, to parse the parallels between the Iraq war and France’s effort to suppress terrorism in Algeria, such parallels rarely yield neat prescriptions. Besides, the historians who furnish advice in these contexts usually filter it through their own prejudices. Writing in the Telegraph, for example, Horne blamed Bush’s Iraq misadventure on his decision “to heed too often the voices of the Zionist lobby.”

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What happened to the Stock Market last week?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Bart @ 8:58 am

Last week the market was dizzier than dubya trying to play Scrabble. We are in the heart of the second quarter earnings season and it seems that we have a crisis on our hands. The crisis stems from one word – SUBPRIME. This started because people who shouldn’t have been given mortgages were given them hand over fist by overeager bankers and mortgage brokers. Many of these loans and mortgages were given on a no-documentation or “no-doc” basis. This means that the borrower didn’t provide proof that they even made any money, they were just given the loan on their word. Now they can’t pay them back and the lenders are now screwed. What has made the whole thing worse, and affected the stock market like it has boils down to this: LEVERAGE. Here’s how leverage works- suppose you sit down to play blackjack, and are betting with $5 chips. However, each $5 chip you bet is paid off like you bet $50, so if you win or lose, it multiplies your winnings or losing by 10. This means you can make or lose a bundle very quickly. Bets like these can drive an individual to irrational behavior. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pd5zAbDKZEg)

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Paul Krugman: The Substance Thing

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 1:59 am



Paul Krugman, The New York Times, August 6, 2007

Two presidential elections ago, the conventional wisdom said that George W. Bush was a likable, honest fellow. But those of us who actually analyzed what he was saying about policy came to a different conclusion — namely, that he was irresponsible and deeply dishonest. His numbers didn’t add up, and in his speeches he simply lied about the content of his own proposals.

In the fifth year of the disastrous war Mr. Bush started on false pretenses, it’s clear who was right. What a candidate says about policy, not the supposedly revealing personal anecdotes political reporters love to dwell on, is the best way to judge his or her character.

So what are the current presidential candidates saying about policy, and what does it tell us about them?

Well, none of the leading Republican candidates have said anything substantive about policy. Go through their speeches and campaign materials and you’ll see a lot of posturing, especially about how tough they are on terrorists — but nothing at all about what they actually plan to do.

In fact, I suspect that the real reason most of the Republicans are ducking a YouTube debate is that they’re afraid they would be asked questions about policy, rather than being invited to compare themselves to Ronald Reagan.

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August 5, 2007

‘Springtime for Osama’?

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 9:00 am

AFP, August 2, 2007

A satirical musical about Islamist terrorism and Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden has sparked protests in Britain, with critics blasting it as tasteless.

“Jihad: The Musical,” which features songs including “I wanna be like Osama” and is described as “a madcap gallop through the wacky world of international terrorism,” is on at the Edinburgh Fringe festival this month.

But a petition has been launched on Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s Downing Street website.

“We the undersigned petition the prime minister to condemn the tasteless portrayal of terrorism and its victims in ‘Jihad The Musical,’ says the online protest.

The musical, by the Silk Circle Production company, had its world premier this week in the Scottish capital’s Fringe festival, famous for satirical and off-the-wall shows.

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Debunking the Hillary “Electibility” Myth

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 8:52 am

The Ostroy Report, August 4, 2007

I was listening to right wing radio on Saturday, as I often do to monitor the opposition. What I found was typical of our conservative friends these days: lots of praise for Sen. Barack Obama, lots more Hillary-bashing. If only those pesky Republicans knew just how transparent they are. You can always tell who they fear the most by how much praise they lavish on the other guy, in this case the junior Senator from Illinois, and Sen. Clinton’s chief rival in her bid to move back into the White House in 2008.

They love Obama, just as they once loved Hillary when they mistakenly assumed she’d win her party’s nomination but never the national contest. And now they’re calling him everything from hip and fresh to exciting and Kennedyesque. One conservative radio host referred to this political phenomenon as “old brand/new brand.” The prevailing and very public sentiment these days among right wing spinners is that 24 years of Bushes and Clintons is enough. That voters have tired of these two dynastic families occupying the White House for so long. Well, they’re half right. Americans may be sick and tired–disgusted is more like it–of the last seven, miserable years under King George–but I suspect they’d jump at the chance to bring back the good old days of peace and prosperity under Bubba, who even during his most tumultuous period enjoyed tremendous popularity/approval ratings.

To be sure, the only ones fed up with the Clintons are hardcore Busheviks; there’s certainly no groundswell of Democrats lamenting 92-’00. To the contrary, it’s most of America–including a majority of Republicans–who’d orgasmically kick Bush to the curb along with his 63% disapproval rating.

For years now all we’ve heard about is how Hillary Clinton is polarizing and unelectable. That she would never win the national election. It’s time to lay this myth to rest once and for all and demonstrate just how easily she could become the next U.S. president. To win, she needs 270 electoral votes. In 2004, John Kerry received 251. His near-win occurred at a time when Bush’s popularity and support for the Iraq war was much higher, and when he was still able to tap his post-911 currency while effectively playing the terrorism card. It was also before the GOP was rocked by unrelenting scandal. In short, Bush, the Republican party and the country was in a much different place.

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Alleged Virus Threat

Filed under: Uncategorized — Bart @ 1:08 am

Look out for this:

MIS is hearing reports about a malicious e-mail virus that claims to come from the Better Business Bureau.  Unless you have been in correspondence with the BBB on some matter, do not open any emails that claim to come from the BBB.  Simply delete them.

As a general reminder, it is never a good idea to click on links in email messages sent from unknown or unsolicited sources.  Be skeptical of any link within a message, particularly when it wasn’t something that you requested.

August 4, 2007

Osama’s Latest Plan

Filed under: Toon — Volt @ 9:58 pm

Frank Rich: Patriots Who Love the Troops to Death

Filed under: Uncategorized — Volt @ 9:51 pm



Frank Rich, The New York Times, August 5, 2007

Gerald Ford spoke the truth when he called Watergate “our long national nightmare,” but even a nightmare can have its interludes of rib-splitting farce.

None were zanier than the antics of Baruch Korff, a small-town New England rabbi who became a full-time Richard Nixon sycophant as the walls closed in. Korff was ubiquitous in the press and on television, where he would lambaste Democrats and the media “lynch mob” for vilifying “the greatest president of the century.” Despite Nixon’s reflexive anti-Semitism, he returned the favor by granting the rabbi audiences and an interview that allowed the embattled president to soliloquize about how his own faith and serenity reinforced his conviction “deep inside” that everything he did was right.

Clearly we’ve reached our own Korffian moment in our latest long national nightmare. The Nixon interviewed by the rabbi sounded uncannily like the resolute leader chronicled by the conservative columnists and talk-show jocks President Bush has lately welcomed into his bunker. For his part, William Kristol even published a Korffian manifesto, “Why Bush Will Be a Winner,” in The Washington Post. It reassured us that the Bush presidency would “probably be a successful one” and that “we now seem to be on course to a successful outcome” in Iraq. A Bush flack let it be known that the president liked this piece so much that he recommended it to his White House staff.

Are you laughing yet? Maybe not. No one died in Watergate. This time around, the White House lying and cover-ups have been not just in the service of political thuggery but to gin up a gratuitous war without end.

There is another significant difference as well. Washington never drank the Nixon Kool-Aid. It kept a skeptical bipartisan eye on Tricky Dick throughout his political career, long before the Watergate complex had even been built. The charmed Mr. Bush, by contrast, got a free pass; both Democrats and Republicans in Congress and both liberals and conservatives in the news media were credulous enablers of the Iraq fiasco. Now a reckoning awaits, and the denouement is getting ugly.

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Glenn Greenwald: Democrats Are Responsible for Bush’s Radicalism

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 6:39 pm

Glenn Greenwald, Salon, August 4, 2007

It is staggering, and truly disgusting, that even in August, 2007 — almost six years removed from the 9/11 attacks and with the Bush presidency cemented as one of the weakest and most despised in American history — that George W. Bush can “demand” that the Congress jump and re-write legislation at his will, vesting in him still greater surveillance power, by warning them, based solely on his say-so, that if they fail to comply with his demands, the next Terrorist attack will be their fault. And they jump and scamper and comply (Meteor Blades has the list of the 16 Senate Democrats voting in favor; the House will soon follow).

I just finished a discussion panel with ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero which was originally planned to examine his new (superb) book about the work his organization has done for years in battling the endless expansion of executive power and presidential lawbreaking. But the only issue anyone in the room really wanted to discuss — including us — was the outrage unfolding on Capitol Hill. And the anger was almost universally directed where it belongs: at Congressional Democrats, who increasingly bear more and more responsibility for the assaults on our constitutional liberties and unparalleled abuses of government power — many (probably most) of which, it should always be emphasized, remain concealed rather than disclosed.

Examine virtually every Bush scandal and it increasingly bears the mark not merely of Democratic capitulation, but Democratic participation. In August of 2006, the Supreme Court finally asserted the first real limit on Bush’s radical executive power theories in Hamdan, only for Congress, months later, to completely eviscerate those minimal limits — and then go far beyond — by enacting the grotesque Military Commissions Act with the support of substantial numbers of Democrats. What began as a covert and illegal Bush interrogation and detention program became the officially sanctioned, bipartisan policy of the United States.

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August 3, 2007

Brent Budowsky: Hillary Threatens the Use of Nukes in the Middle East

Filed under: Uncategorized — Volt @ 3:13 pm

Brent Budowsky, The Hill, August 3, 2007

It is a testament to the triumph of positioning politics over common sense and sound national security strategy that Hillary Clinton has now raised the possibility of a nuclear strike.

Let us be blunt: It would be a profound and catastrophic disaster for America to launch a nuclear attack, as Hillary Clinton suggests may be proper. When he rules out a nuclear attack, Barack Obama is 100 percent right — and when Hillary says she might do it, she is 100 percent wrong and for 100 percent the wrong reasons: her endless maneuvering and positioning.

Let’s be clear: If there is actionable intelligence about Osama Bin Laden in Afghanistan or Pakistan it would be proper to kill him through attacks via missiles or air power.

However, it is not necessary and would be a disaster to send American ground forces into Pakistan for such an attack. It is not necessary and would be a catastrophe of regional and worldwide dimension for the United States to launch a nuclear attack.

Parenthetically, it is ironic but predictable that one Michael O’Hanlon of the Brookings Institution appears to be backtracking fast and furious from his support of the Bush-Cheney escalation in Iraq, which he and Kenneth Pollack so unwisely and grotesquely endorsed in The New York Times and their round of the cable talkies.

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Extreme Dogfighting

Filed under: Uncategorized — Volt @ 3:01 pm

Paul Krugman: A Test for Democrats

Filed under: Uncategorized — Volt @ 6:51 am

Paul Krugman, The New York Times, August 3, 2007

It’s been a good Democrats, bad Democrats kind of week. The bill expanding children’s health insurance that just passed in the House makes you want to stand up and cheer. Reports that Senator Charles Schumer opposes plans to close the hedge fund tax loophole make you want to sit down and cry.

Let’s start with the good news: The House bill, which the Congressional Budget Office says would provide coverage to five million children who would otherwise be uninsured.

The bill is so good that it has Republicans spluttering. “The bill uses children as pawns,” declared Representative Pete Sessions of Texas. Yes, the Democrats are exploiting children — by providing them with health care.

The horror, the horror!

What’s especially encouraging is the way House Democrats were willing to take on the insurance companies. The bill pays for children’s health care in part by cutting subsidies to Medicare Advantage, a privatization scheme that yields big profits for insurers, but that the budget office estimates would cost taxpayers $54 billion in excess payments over the next five years.

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August 2, 2007

Great News. Grimgold

Filed under: Uncategorized — grimgold @ 10:57 pm

Agricultural Research Service Scientists Study Peanuts as Feedstock For Biodiesel

Move over, soybeans and corn: Peanuts may be elbowing their way into the biodiesel fuel market.

Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists are searching for economically feasible peanut varieties for that very purpose.

Agronomist Wilson Faircloth at the ARS National Peanut Research Laboratory at Dawson, GA, and Daniel Geller, a collaborative engineer at the University of Georgia, are testing a peanut called Georganic.

It’s not suited to current commercial edible standards for peanuts, but is high in oil and has low production input costs.

Georganic–or similar varieties–will likely be the future of peanut biodiesel because it can be planted and grown with just one herbicide application for weed control, compared to the three to four applications typically sprayed during a growing season for edible peanuts.

Additionally, these fuel peanuts are grown without fungicides, which are the greatest input cost in traditional peanut production.

To further reduce production costs and increase yield, the research team is also studying technology such as conservation tillage and selection of varieties with high tolerance to multiple diseases.

Currently, there are 24 peanut varieties being scrutinized in this biodiesel screening project, including Georganic, which was developed by ARS breeders in Tifton, Ga. Promising varieties also include DP-1 and Georgia-04S, a new high-oleic-acid, Spanish-type peanut.

Many old and new peanut varieties are being tested for field performance, and their oils are being analyzed for diesel performance characteristics.

It has been found that high-oleic-acid peanuts–a quality desired for extended shelf life of food products–also make the best biodiesel fuel.

Today, soybean oil is the primary oil used in the United States for biodiesel fuel production. Soybeans produce approximately 50 gallons of fuel per acre, while traditionally grown peanuts can produce approximately 120 to 130 gallons of biodiesel fuel per acre.

ARS is the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s chief scientific research agency.

For more information, call Sharon Durham at 301-504-1611

Candidate Al Franken on Dave Thurs nite

Filed under: Uncategorized — Bart @ 6:44 pm

Just thought you might want to catch that…

Newt Goes Off Message

Filed under: Uncategorized — Volt @ 6:13 pm

Julia Dahl, Salon, August 2, 2007

Newt Gingrich was looking fit and tanned as he stood before a sea of young conservatives this morning at the Young America’s Foundation National Conservative Student Conference. The weeklong event, held at George Washington University in Washington, is billed as an “entry point into the conservative movement,” and this year’s version featured speeches by Robert Novak, Michelle Malkin and, wrapping up the event Friday night, G. Gordon Liddy. With panels titled “Standing Up to the Left in Hostile Places” and “Liberal Bias in School Textbooks,” planners may have imagined that Gingrich would give a lively rah-rah-Republican presentation. They would have been wrong.

Prior to Gingrich’s arrival, the crowd — a mish-mash of polo shirts and pinstriped suits, platform heels and pashmina wraps — had been worked up by Republican Sen. James Inhofe, who taught them all about the “far left elitists” and their Chicken Little climate change hysteria. Inhofe’s PowerPoint included slides of polar bears and “environmentalists” like Leonardo DiCaprio and Barbra Streisand (boo!). He referenced Al Gore’s “science fiction movie,” and finished off the hour with some good news about the war: “A miracle is taking place now in Iraq,” he said, and explained that there is now zero anti-American propaganda in the country’s mosques and that American troops, instead of retreating to the Green Zone at night, are now “bedding down” with Iraqi families.

As 9 a.m. drew near, the students started to get restless, turning in their seats to see if Gingrich had come in. Finally, the former speaker of the House — who’d been introduced as “the most articulate communicator of conservative principles alive today” — made his way to the stage amid a standing ovation, thunderous applause and cheers.

He began benignly enough, using an anecdote about going to Disney World with his grandchildren to explain an epiphany he’d had about the value of not “thinking like a Republican.” From there Gingrich moved into waters the students surely did not expect. He cited the Detroit school system, where a black male is more likely to go to prison than graduate from high school.

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Texas Students Must Now Acknowledge God in Pledge to the Texas Flag

Filed under: Opinion — Volt @ 10:02 am

Melanie Markley, The Houston Chronicle, August 2, 2007

The revised Texas pledge:

Honor the Texas flag; I pledge allegiance to thee, Texas, one state under God, one and indivisible.

Texas students will have four more words to remember when they head back to class this month and begin reciting the state’s pledge of allegiance.

This year’s Legislature added the phrase “one state under God” to the pledge, which is part of a required morning ritual in Texas public schools along with the pledge to the U.S. flag and a moment of silence.

State Rep. Debbie Riddle, who sponsored the bill, said it had always bothered her that God was omitted in the state’s pledge.

“Personally, I felt like the Texas pledge had a big old hole in it, and it occurred to me, ‘You know what? We need to fix that,’ ” said Riddle, R-Tomball. “Our Texas pledge is perfectly OK like it is with the exception of acknowledging that just as we are one nation under God, we are one state under God as well.”

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