From Pine View Farm

April, 2008 archive

Is Clinton Still a Democrat? 0

Inquiring minds want to know.

Share

Drink Liberally 0

Tomorrow, starting at 6 p. m., Tangier Restaurant, 18th and Lombard, just a block from where the hippies meet on South Street, Philadelphia.

Barring a relapse, I might actually be there.

Not that that’s any kind of a draw.

Probably more like a threat.

Share

Lies, Damned Lies, and Bushies 0

Circling the wagons. God forgive that a Bushie and the truth should be found in the same room:

Hidden behind that appearance of objectivity, though, is a Pentagon information apparatus that has used those analysts in a campaign to generate favorable news coverage of the administration’s wartime performance, an examination by The New York Times has found.

The effort, which began with the buildup to the Iraq war and continues to this day, has sought to exploit ideological and military allegiances, and also a powerful financial dynamic: Most of the analysts have ties to military contractors vested in the very war policies they are asked to assess on air.

Those business relationships are hardly ever disclosed to the viewers, and sometimes not even to the networks themselves. But collectively, the men on the plane and several dozen other military analysts represent more than 150 military contractors either as lobbyists, senior executives, board members or consultants. The companies include defense heavyweights, but also scores of smaller companies, all part of a vast assemblage of contractors scrambling for hundreds of billions in military business generated by the administration’s war on terror. It is a furious competition, one in which inside information and easy access to senior officials are highly prized.

More comment here:

Who knew that the biggest threat of the 21st century was telling the American people the truth? The question is, will a media obsessed with flag pins and hair cuts devote any time to covering a story that damns the Bush administration, their own military analysts, and of course, themselves?

Share

Can’t Wait for Tuesday 0

Delaware has already had its primary, but, because we here in upper Delaware are in the Greater Philadelphia Co-Prosperity Sphere, the local media have been all Pennsylvania primary all the time, not just the local rag that I read, but the more local rag headquartered just down the road.

Unlike Mithras, I am not personally invested in the Pennsylvania primary (though I know how I would like it to turn out, just like I know who I would like to see win the Phillies game tonight).

Like Mithras, I can’t wait for it to be over.

Share

The Question 0

From Steven D.:

How can you parody these people?

Share

Elitism 0

Jim Hoagland:

An election system built on private donations to buy enormous blocks of television time long ago became elitist. The innovation this election offers is that if Hillary Clinton fails, for the first time in 20 years someone who did not go to Yale will be elected president. At last, Harvard Law again has a fighting chance. Elitist? Who, us?

Share

Best Part of Spring 0

The dogwoods are starting to bloom.

In two days, the area will be ablaze with dogwoods.

Share

Torture Is Their Pornography (Updated) 0

From the Guardian:

In his new book, Torture Team, Philippe Sands QC, professor of law at University College London, reveals that:

· Senior Bush administration figures pushed through previously outlawed measures with the aid of inexperienced military officials at Guantánamo.

· Myers believes he was a victim of “intrigue” by top lawyers at the department of justice, the office of vice-president Dick Cheney, and at Donald Rumsfeld’s defence department.

· The Guantánamo lawyers charged with devising interrogation techniques were inspired by the exploits of Jack Bauer in the American TV series 24.

· Myers wrongly believed interrogation techniques had been taken from the army’s field manual.

The lawyers, all political appointees, who pushed through the interrogation techniques were Alberto Gonzales, David Addington and William Haynes. Also involved were Doug Feith, Rumsfeld’s under-secretary for policy, and Jay Bybee and John Yoo, two assistant attorney generals.

Via Le Show.

Addendum, 4/21/2008:

Froomkin:

Career military men know better than anyone that torture violates American principles, puts American soldiers at risk and just plain doesn’t work. But when the White House adopted torture as an interrogation tactic, senior military officials didn’t resist.

One reason, of course, is that many who might have objected to Vice President Cheney’s torture cabal were bypassed or moved out of the way. Others just followed orders.

But a new report suggests that at least one man who couldn’t be entirely bypassed — and who should have known better — fell victim to another tactic: He was duped.

Follow the link for a discussion of whose fault this was.

Share

Unexpected Visit 1

As I mentioned earlier, First Son is home from Afghanistan.

He was unexpectedly in the area this weekend, because of a crisis in First Daughter-in-Law’s family.

It was good to see the two of them.

We have honorable soldiers doing their jobs honorably.

Sadly, they were sent to do those jobs by persons without honor.

My son has served and will continue to serve with honor.

He lives up to his oath to the Constitution of the United States of America, unlike those who sent him.

When are you going to do something about those who dishonor his service by asking him to fight and die for lies?

Share

News Break 2

I took a break from the news for the last couple of days.

No podcasts.

No radio in the vehicle, except for the Citizens Radio Service.

Not much radio at home.

Pretty, much, if it wasn’t in the local rag, I didn’t pay attention to it.

And, you know what? nothing changed.

The nation is still ruled by incompetent liars. (Well, not exactly. They are incompetent and they are liars, but, then again, they are very competent liars).

Good lives are still being thrown away for a lie.

People who call themselves Christians continue to embarrass those who are. (You know, I’ve pretty much observed, if you have to advertise that you are a believer–regardless of the creed–you probably are a hypocrite and a liar, but that’s another story.)

Voodoo economics is still the Republican way.

The rich are still getting richer–or, at least, thrown a life ring–and the poor, still getting poorer.

And Hillary Clinton, who apparently fears people who care enough about the course of this nation to, you know, like, actually get involved in citizen politics, still gives me the willies.

Share

Bushonomics 0

Over at the Group News Blog.

Share

Your Government at Work 0

From the Booman Tribune. Follow the link to see the answer to the question at the end of the excerpt. And ask yourself, “Why didn’t they do this in a neighborhood of poor white folk?”

We all know how insane black people are to believe conspiracy stories like the one that AIDS was invented by white people to kill blacks. That’s one of the issues good patriotic whites have with the Rev. Wright. He acted like every crazy, angry black man who ever crossed their paths, and which they are still telling stories about, whether it happened to them personally or not.

Of course, patriotic white Americans do tend to forget a few minor problems with this narrative. Minor things like slavery, the Klu Klux Klan, lynching and the infamous Tuskegee experiments when poor black men with syphilis were left untreated for decades just to see what course the disease might take, even though there were treatments available to them. They weren’t even told they had syphilis, merely that they were being treated for “bad blood.” In fact, they were unknowing and unwilling participants in a study to see how bad their symptoms would get before they died from the disease the good doctors conducting the study refused to inform them they suffered from.

Those days are long gone, fortunately. These days the federal government researchers would never deliberately lie to black people in order to get them to participate in an unethical scientific study. Not in the 21st century! Or would they? (Tip of me hat to the field negro and Francis Holland)

Share

Why Did I Start Watching This Hockey Game? 0

It’s going into the second overtime and I have to go to Coatesville tomorrow.

Share

Laryngitis 0

I went into church to do treasurer stuff after coming back from the cooling tower place today (the pay period ended Tuesday). The pastor dropped by (the parsonage is right next to the church and my little yellow truck kind of stands out–like a tuxedo at the beach).

Pastor: How are you doing?

Me: Better. But this thing doesn’t want to go away.

Pastor: I can tell.

Me: You should have heard me teaching a class with no voice a week ago Wednesday.

Pastor: That’s rough. I’ve had to give sermons like that.

Me: Don’t worry. I wasn’t listening.

Pastor (who, by the way, is also a Linux geek): (. . . . . .)

Oh, well. You had to be there.

Share

The Candidates Debate 1

Josh Marshall:

Share

Stray Thought 12

A cinnamon raisin bagel is not a proper bagel.

It’s an abomiination a cookie.

Share

Windows Features Missing from Linux 1

Gosh, I don’t know how I live without these:

  • That silly animation that runs while Windows is copying a file, together with its wild estimations of time to complete: 30 seconds remaining, 2 minutes, 9 minutes, 25 minutes, 37 minutes, 30 seconds.
  • The registry
  • Virus checking software
  • The window that comes up when a program crashes and sends the crash dump to Redmond, to give them a much needed laugh. Linux programs instead lay a small binary turd file in situ. After a while you end up with quite a large collection of these, decorating your directories.
  • Automatic updates fixing vulnerabilities in Outlook Express. Who uses Outlook Express these days? Why?
  • Windows genuine disadvantage
  • The Windows pause, by which I mean that increasingly prevalent nothing-happening-for-no-reason delay that intrudes between the user poking and the software flinching.

Share

The Candidates Debate 1

Tonight.

Me, I’ve watching the Phillies.

But the first thing I’ll do tomorrow after bringing in the daily Inky will be to turn to the back of the Metro section to see what’s in the obits.

Share

The Return of Herbert Hoover 0

The story goes that Herbert Hoover (a typical Republican failure as a President, except that he was an honest man and therefore would find no home in today’s Republican Party, but that’s a different issue–see the previous post) was walking down the street with Ogden Mills, his Secretary of the Treasury, in 1930.

This was back when Presidents were allowed to walk down the street.

Mr. Hoover said, “Can I borrow a nickel to call my friend.”

Mr. Mills said, “Here’s a dime. Call both of them.”

Now, instead of a chicken in every pot, we have pot in every chicken:

Police in Magnolia, Arkansas, say it wasn’t the fried chicken in Savalas Vantoli Stewart’s car that gave off a funky smell.

Instead, officers who pulled over Stewart on Friday night say they found a side dish of marijuana hidden in a recently purchased box of chicken.

Share

Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire 0

It’s a Bushie thing–that is, lying, not to protect one’s sorry anatomy, but lying as a tool of governance:

I feel like Syvester Jr. I want to put a bag over my head and wait for them to all go away.

Share