Another Law Being Broken?

Ken AshfordBush & Co., Iraq1 Comment

Department Of Defense Directive 1344.10, Section E3.3.9 (August 2, 2004) states that an armed services member on active duty shall not:

…Participate in any radio, television, or other program or group discussion as an advocate for or against of a partisan political party, candidate, or cause.

Today, Robert Novak writes:

At the same time, the Bush administration is going directly to the public with its war message. Raul Damas, associate director of political affairs at the White House, has been on the phone directly to Republican county chairmen to arrange local speeches by active duty military personnel to talk about their experiences in Iraq.

Seeing as how these group discussions are being set up by the Bush Administration associate director of political affairs, and are intended to promote the Bush war policy, this looks to be a rather blatent violation of the DoD directive.

More from Robert Schlesinger.

On The L.A. Terrorist Plot

Ken AshfordWar on Terrorism/Torture, Wiretapping & SurveillanceLeave a Comment

The headlines this morning were all about how Bush was going to defend the NSA wiretap program by giving examples of how it thwarted terrorist plots.

Sadly, Bush isn’t doing that.  Instead, he’s giving some details about a 2002 al Qaeda plot to fly an airplane into a Los Angeles skyscraper, but he’s giving credit to international cooperation.

The president said the plot was derailed when a Southeast Asian nation arrested a key al Qaeda operative. Bush did not name the country or the operative.

…But the White House would not say whether the 2002 plot was thwarted as a result of the National Security Agency program to eavesdrop on the international emails and phone calls of people inside the United States with suspected ties to terrorists.

So why is Bush bringing this up now?  Fear factor, my friends.  Straight from the playbook.

Kindergarteners Banned From NASA

Ken AshfordWar on Terrorism/TortureLeave a Comment

NasakidsWell, not American ones.  Just foreign exchange students.

The kindergarten class at Lakewood’s Taft Elementary was planning a field trip to NASA Glenn Research Center. It’s a popular trip because it’s free, because the NASA staff already has age-appropriate tours that fit well with school curriculum, and, well, it’s outer space, for pete’s sake. They’ve got rocket ships.

And NASA works the education angle hard. According to the agency, “A major part of the NASA mission is ‘To inspire the next generation of explorers . . . as only NASA can.’” And of course they talk about math and science. NASA says about 400 school groups took tours last year.

But school principal Margaret Seibel says this year’s trip for Taft kindergarteners — we’re talking 6-year-olds here — had to be canceled due to homeland security concerns.

Since new security regulations went into effect in May 1, 2005, access to the Visitor Center is restricted to United State citizens. All others might be terrorists.

No tourists from France, no exchange students from Tokyo and, no foreign national kindergarteners on field trips.

“I was told they would not make any exceptions,” Seibel says.

Because two kids in the kindergarten class are not U.S. citizens, the teacher had to cancel the trip.

The good news, though:

[T]he agency is “looking at a policy revision” that might allow kindergarteners onto the federal reservation for field trips. She says they’re “hoping to have language” in order in a couple of weeks.

Racism 2006

Ken AshfordRaceLeave a Comment

In his post about the thinly-veiled racism underyling the conservative outrage about the King funeral, Digby channels the right wing (slightly editted for clarity sake):

Fuck the blacks. They don’t vote for us anyway.

But then, there’s always some good reason to fuck the blacks isn’t there?

Hiring minorities is a problem because:

1955 – They are an inferior race
1965 – They aren’t good workers
1975 – They make old white customers uncomfortable
1985 – Affirmative action means their diplomas are bogus
1995 – They are a litigation risk for discrimination

[And now….]

2006: They don’t know how to behave in public.

UPDATE:  Could the embarassment of Bush at the King funeral have led to this?:

Claude A. Allen, the president’s domestic policy adviser, turned in his letter of resignation today at the White House, the Bush administration acknowledged tonight.

This may have been an inauspicious week for the highest-ranking African-American staffer in the White House to call it quits – the day after the president appeared at the memorial service for Coretta Scott King, and at a time when Bush is attempting to improve his administration’s relations with the black community.

MORE:  From a commenter at FireDogLake:

Is there a hotline for black people to call to get eulogy approval? Or approval on how to behave during a hurricane? Or for approval on how many kids we have? Or for what we name our kids? That would make my life so much easier, even though I don’t work, but I still have kids and they don’t have fathers, but I digress.

As an uneducated black woman, and by uneducated I mean that I want to learn how not offend the likes of Kate O’Beirne, Tucker Carlson, Chris Matthews, Don Imus, Matt Drudge and any other offendables, even if they themselves have made racist comments or done things to hurt the world. Oooops, I should remember my place. Sorry about that last dig. I did not mean it.

Evangelical Infighting

Ken AshfordEnvironment & Global Warming & Energy, GodstuffLeave a Comment

Good:

Despite opposition from some of their colleagues, 86 evangelical Christian leaders have decided to back a major initiative to fight global warming, saying "millions of people could die in this century because of climate change, most of them our poorest global neighbors."

Read the full statement of by the leaders of the the Evangelical Climate Initiative.

Here’s the summary:

  • Claim 1: Human-Induced Climate Change is Real
  • Claim 2: The Consequences of Climate Change Will Be Significant, and Will Hit the Poor the Hardest
  • Claim 3: Christian Moral Convictions Demand Our Response to the Climate Change Problem
  • Claim 4: The need to act now is urgent. Governments, businesses, churches, and individuals all have a role to play in addressing climate changestarting now.
  • Signatories

The interesting sidenote to this item is that this represents an increasing divide in the evangelical community.  The signatories are striking out against the powerful National Association of Evangelicals.

What Are We Talking About?

Ken AshfordWiretapping & SurveillanceLeave a Comment

With national discussion still on fever-pitch about the legality of the NSA wiretapping, one thing to keep in mind is that nobody really knows exactly what the so-called "terrorist surveillance program" actually entails.

Kevin Drum looks at two developments:

(1)  The Bush Administration finally briefed a House subcommittee Wednesday on the NSA’s domestic spying program, causing Democrat Bud Cramer (a former Alabama D.A.) to leave the reservation:

"It’s a different program than I was beginning to let myself believe," said Alabama Rep. Bud Cramer, the senior Democrat on the Intelligence Committee’s oversight subcommittee. "This may be a valuable program," Cramer said, adding that he didn’t know if it was legal. "My direction of thinking was changed tremendously."

(2)  On the other hand, current and past judges of the FISA court have doubts about the program’s legality and constitutionality:

Twice in the past four years, a top Justice Department lawyer warned the presiding judge of a secret surveillance court that information overheard in President Bush’s eavesdropping program may have been improperly used to obtain wiretap warrants in the court, according to two sources with knowledge of those events.

The revelations infuriated U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly — who, like her predecessor, Royce C. Lamberth, had expressed serious doubts about whether the warrantless monitoring of phone calls and e-mails ordered by Bush was legal….Both judges expressed concern to senior officials that the president’s program, if ever made public and challenged in court, ran a significant risk of being declared unconstitutional, according to sources familiar with their actions.

Sadly, by contrasting these two stories, Kevin misses the boat.

Unlike Kevin, I don’t find this discrepency "curious".  Rep. Cramer thinks the program is "valuable".  Well, so do I.  I assume it is (at least until there is evidence to the contrary). 

The FISA judges doubt the legality and constitutional of the program.  Well, so do I.

There is no inherent contradiction in the views.  And just because there is value to a program does not mean it is legal or even constitutional. 

There would be some value, for example, in rounding up and interring every Arab-American if the goal is to decrease the risks of a terrorist attack.  But doing so would be simply illegal and unconstitutional.  Kevin wrongly conflates the what is "valuable" with what is legal.  An amateur mistake, and he ought to know better.

Guess Who Said It?

Ken AshfordWiretapping & SurveillanceLeave a Comment

Here’s the quote:

The Founders well understood the difficult tradeoff between safety and freedom. “Safety from external danger …

The Founders warned us about the risk, and equipped us with a Constitution designed to deal with it…

Many think it not only inevitable but entirely proper that liberty give way to security in times of national crisis-—that, at the extremes of military exigency, inter arma silent leges. Whatever the general merits of the view that war silences law or modulates its voice, that view has no place in the interpretation and application of a Constitution designed precisely to confront war and, in a manner that accords with democratic principles, to accommodate it.

Who said it?  The answer (below the fold) may surprise you…

Read More

Damon Sez Goodbye

Ken AshfordRed Sox & Other SportsLeave a Comment

Johnny Damon takes out a full-page ad in the Boston Globe (replicated here) to say goodbye and thanks to the Red Sox fans.  Nice touch, and he didn’t have to do it.

However, Matt Rivers at Over The Monster, the Red Sox blog, aren’t not moved:

My thoughts on the ad? Allow me to speak directly to the former center fielder:

Screw you Damon.

With all of your talk lately about how great it is to be a Yankee, and how much you enjoyed discussing "The Yankee Way" with George Steinbrenner, I’m surprised you found time for the full-page spread in this morning’s paper. Do you really think this will stop anyone from booing your ass when the Yankees come to town?

Honestly, you’re sounding less and less like the kid picked last in kickball, and more like the hot girl who just figured out she shouldn’t have dumped her boyfriend. Insulting our intelligence with your "I got shafted by my team" ruse and then rushing to appease us with propaganda is laughable. I’m not buying your act Johnny, not anymore. Sell that "Yankee Legacy" garbage on the NY fans, but not to me.

C’mon, guys.  Lighten up.

Bush Knew Abramoff, Spoke Knowingly About Abramoff’s Kids

Ken AshfordAbramoff ScandalLeave a Comment

More White House lies exposed.

Bush has said that he didn’t know Abramoff:

"You know, I, frankly, don’t even remember having my picture taken with the guy. I don’t know him."

But Think Progress has obtained emails from Abramoff himself (sent to Kim Eisler, an editor at Washingtonian magazine) which suggest an entirely different story.

In the emails, Abramoff describes meeting Bush “in almost a dozen settings,” and details how he was personally invited to President Bush’s private ranch in Crawford, Texas, for a gathering of Bush fundraisers in 2003. Abramoff did not attend, citing a religious observance.

Abramoff emailed Eisler about his invitation to Crawford and his decision not to attend:

NO, IT WAS THAT I WOULD HAVE HAD TO TRAVEL ON SATURDAY (SHABBOS). YES, I WAS INVITED, DURING THE 2004 CAMPAIGN. IT WAS SATURDAY AUGUST 9, 2003 AT THE RANCH IN CRAWFORD

…[A]ccording to Eisler, Abramoff told him that the two have met almost a dozen times, shared jokes, and spoke about details of Abramoff’s family:

HE HAS ONE OF THE BEST MEMORIES OF ANY POLITICIAN I HAVE EVER MET. IT WAS ONE IF [sic] HIS TRADEMARKS, THOUGH OF COURSE HE CAN’T RECALL THAT HE HAS A GREAT MEMORY! THE GUY SAW ME IN ALMOST A DOZEN SETTINGS, AND JOKED WITH ME ABOUT A BUNCH OF THINGS, INCLUDING DETAILS OF MY KIDS. PERHAPS HE HAS FORGOTTEN EVERYTHING. WHO KNOWS.

Coretta Scott King Funeral Fallout

Ken AshfordRaceLeave a Comment

BushfuneralshameWingnuts are indignant at the fact that the funeral for Coretta Scott King was "marred" by politics, virtually ignoring the fact that King herself (even after her husband’s death) was an outspoken leader on political and social issues, including her opposition to the Iraq War.

The photo at the right is when Rev. Lowry talks about poverty and finding no "weapons of mass destruction".  Laura Bush is not amused.

The Talent Show says it precisely:

Face it conservatives, Coretta Scott King was a liberal. While civil rights heroes like the Kings were leading a non-violent struggle for equality, your political heroes were finding new ways to court southern racists away from the Democratic party. The Republican journey to victory was fueled by the votes of bigots, so it’s a little late in the game to start acting like you have the right to speak for the leaders of a movement you fought against.

Pam Spaulding points out the wingnuts’ hypocrisy, seeing as how politics were injected into the funeral of Ronald Reagan by Thatcher:

And surely it is hard to deny that Ronald Reagan’s life was providential, when we look at what he achieved in the eight years that followed.

Others prophesied the decline of the West; he inspired America and its allies with renewed faith in their mission of freedom.

Others saw only limits to growth; he transformed a stagnant economy into an engine of opportunity.

Others hoped, at best, for an uneasy cohabitation with the Soviet Union; he won the Cold War – not only without firing a shot, but also by inviting enemies out of their fortress and turning them into friends.

UPDATE:  The Carpetbagger makes an excellant point, namely, why is the right so offended by what was said at the King funeral?

For example, Carter talked about the "color of the faces" of the Katrina victims.  He received a standing ovation from the crowd, including Bush himself.  How could that be a swipe at Bush?

Carter also talked about how MLK and Coretta were electronically surveilled illegally:

Why, exactly, was this over the top? The King family was the target of secret government wiretapping and other surveillance. It was not only an example of government abuse, it was also no doubt a strain on the family and was yet another hurdle for the Kings to overcome.

As I see it, if the conservative critics are going to complain, they should elaborate on why they were offended. It’s not as if they agree with the secret surveillance of the King family, right? Why, then, should they be so defensive about Carter’s criticisms of secret government wiretapping? Is there a certain legally-dubious surveillance program they’re defensive about?

He adds:

Several speakers honored King, celebrated her life, and honored the values and principles to which she dedicated her life. The fact that those values and principles happen to be diametrically in opposition to Bush and his conservative agenda was an inconvenient coincidence for a clearly-uncomfortable president, but the point of the eulogies wasn’t to attack Bush; it was to pay tribute to King and her beliefs.

ANOTHER UPDATE:  For all the wingnuts who think they know how a proper funeral for a civil rights leader should be, perhaps they ought to listen to the words of Dr. King himself, on the subject of what he would like said at his own funeral:

I’d like somebody to mention that day, that Martin Luther King, Jr., tried to give his life serving others. I’d like for somebody to say that day, that Martin Luther King, Jr., tried to love somebody. I want you to say that day, that I tried to be right on the war question. I want you to be able to say that day, that I did try, in my life, to clothe those who were naked. I want you to say, on that day, that I did try, in my life, to visit those who were in prison. I want you to say that I tried to love and serve humanity.

Yes, if you want to say that I was a drum major, say that I was a drum major for justice; say that I was a drum major for peace; I was a drum major for righteousness.

Yup.  Even the dead sometimes what their eulogies to be about political and social issues.

In any event, the idea that white conservatives should tell black civil rights leaders how to behave at funerals is offensive.  I guess Reverand Lowry strayed from the plantation.

FINAL WORD:  Blogometer has a nice round-up of the blogosphere’s sharp exchange on the King funeral, and tries to explain how "the right" and "the left" view the King legacy:

But the fight goes deeper than the usual partisan divide, and is more specific than overall racial differences. It’s not black and white per se; it’s about the very nature of Dr. King’s legacy and how the right and left understand it.

For the right, non-violence was King’s effective means to the worthy end of achieving racial equality; to the left, non-violence and racial equality are integral to one another. Just as conservatives understand King’s legacy to be about the civil rights movement, liberals understand his legacy to be about peace more broadly. No conservative considers him or herself heir to the legacy of Bull Connor and George Wallace, but a significant percentage of liberal bloggers do. The right feel they too are the heirs of King’s legacy; conservatives often hold up his famous declaration that people should "not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character" as an argument against racial quotas, even though King had expressed support for affirmative action policies.

Small But Important Development In The NSA Wiretapping Issue

Ken AshfordWiretapping & SurveillanceLeave a Comment

The New York Times is reporting that Representative Heather A. Wilson, a House Republican whose subcommittee oversees the National Security Agency, broke ranks with the White House on Tuesday and called for a full Congressional inquiry into the Bush administration’s domestic eavesdropping program.

The "defection" (if you can call it that) of a single Republican on this issue is not news — as the NYT suggest, she is not the only Republican with "discomfort" about the program.  But this might be important:

By withholding information about its operations from many lawmakers, she said, the administration has deepened her apprehension about whom the agency is monitoring and why.

In other words, her "beef" isn’t just about the legal basis for the program per se, but also her apprehension that the program is NOT what Bush Administration says it is (it may not be a "terrorist surveillance program").

"HEH" UPDATE:  Here’s what Bush said about Heather Wilson in 2002:

The thing I appreciate, Heather, is she is there for the right reason: to serve the people, to represent the people of New Mexico…I’m proud of the fact that Heather puts our country first, that she understands the importance of our nation and what it stands for.

Let’s hope so.

Science, Politics And Liars

Ken AshfordBush & Co., Science & TechnologyLeave a Comment

A week or two ago, the New York Times reported about a NASA climate scientist who claimed he was stifled by the Bush Administration:

The top climate scientist at NASA says the Bush administration has tried to stop him from speaking out since he gave a lecture last month calling for prompt reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases linked to global warming.

The scientist, James E. Hansen, longtime director of the agency’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said in an interview that officials at NASA headquarters had ordered the public affairs staff to review his coming lectures, papers, postings on the Goddard Web site and requests for interviews from journalists.

Dr. Hansen said he would ignore the restrictions. "They feel their job is to be this censor of information going out to the public," he said.

Hansen’s nemesis was George Deutsch, a NASA public affairs guy appointed by Bush, who prevented Hansen from speaking about global warming on NPR.  According to reports, Deutsch called NPR "the most liberal" media outlet in the country, and said his job was "to make the president look good".

Last October, Deutsch created a controversy by insisting that the word "theory" be inserted in the NASA website following the words "Big Bang" wherever they appeared.

So, again, politics trumps science.

Fortunately, there’s a happy twist to the story.  Deutsch has been outed as a liar:

I investigated this further, and through the Association of Former Students, I learned that George Deutsch never graduated from Texas A&M, and the last record of him was from June 9, 2004, when he withdrew.

At this point, while I am unaware of whether Deutsch graduated from college at all, it is clear that he did not graduate from A&M, and he may have intentionally misled people to believe that he did. The idea that NASA let a 24-year-old journalism major, with no experience in science or technology, other than writing a few articles about video games, determine what scientists were able to communicate to the public was pretty bad. The fact that he was censoring scientific information on global warming and the big bang made things more interesting, especially since he was a political appointee doing this to prevent challenges to the Bush administration’s policies. But now, finding out that he did not even graduate from Texas A&M, and may not have graduated from college at all, is absolutely outrageous. George Deutsch, as I wrote before, needs to be removed from this post immediately.

GOP Ethics Reform Off To A Questionable Start

Ken AshfordRepublicansLeave a Comment

In order to extricate itself from the taint of curruption left by DeLay and Abramoff, the GOP voted Rep. John Boehner to be the majority leader in the House last week.

Boehner’s legislative work has focused on helping small businesses, i.e., fighting minimum-wage increases, supporting small-business tax breaks and tax-free savings accounts to help cover insurance costs.

Boehner’s primary residence is in West Chester, Ohio, but for $1,600 a month, he rents a two-bedroom basement apartment near the House office buildings on Capitol Hill owned by a guy John Milne.

Who is John Milne?  Why, he’s a D.C. lobbyist whose clients include small businesses and insurance companies — coincidentally, the very people that Boehner champions.  Ooops.