January, 2008 archive
Huck 1
It’s fun watching the Republican establishment run from Huckabee.
John Cole has as interesting take on it. Huckabee is their own Frankenstein’s monster:
I Get Mail 0
Yeah, well, I know it was a mass email:
Dear Frank,
I count the past year of campaigning for the presidency as one of the most rewarding in a career of public service.
Unfortunately, I am withdrawing from that campaign tonight.
But there is no reason to hang our heads this evening — only the opportunity to look towards a continuation of the work we started last January: ending the Iraq War, restoring the Constitution, and putting a Democrat in the White House.
I know a lot of you came to this email list through a shared desire to return our nation to one that respects the rule of law, and I want to make one thing clear to all of you:
The fight to restore the Constitution and stop retroactive immunity does not end with my Presidential campaign. FISA will come back in a few weeks and my pledge to filibuster ANY bill that includes retroactive immunity remains operative.
You’ve been an invaluable ally in the battle, and I’ll need you to stick by my side despite tonight’s caucus results.
So, one more time, thank you for all of your efforts throughout the course of this entire Presidential campaign.
We made a real difference in shaping the debate, and we’ll continue to do so in the coming days, weeks and years.
I’ll never forget you, and what we’ve fought for, together, over the past year.
Chris Dodd
Chris Dodd is the only candidate to whom I’ve ever contributed during a nominating race.
Part of the reason is that I usually haven’t had any money to spare, at least until I got fired by my Previous Employer (Take that! Previous Employer!).
Part of the reason is that he was the only candidate who has put his reputation and influence where his mouth is to defend the Constitution of the United States from the depridations of the Current Federal Administration.
And he learned from his Daddy’s mistakes and stayed squeaky clean throughout his public career.
Fare thee well, Mr. Dodd.
More from Susie.
Isolation 0
Eugene Robinson on the Washington biosphere:
Well, dammit, I know what is like to worry about a troop. And not to have health insurance.
Frankly, both situations pretty much suck.
And neither is going to be solved as long as Republicans continue to play with our lives so as to make the rich richer, and the poor poorer.
Put Down That Camera and Back Away Slowly 0
Phony security gone wild:
Kim and Trevor Sparshott were ordered to stop taking photos because they were causing a security threat.
They were thrown out of the centre after they took out a camera to snap the look on the youngsters’ faces when they turned up unexpectedly.
(After mounting a complaint campaign, they got the ban lifted.)
This ranks right up there with confiscating toothpaste and shampoo as a pretending to provide security while doing nothing.
Via Geek News Central.
As Elections Near . . . 1
. . . Fact Check dot org always becomes more active. Today’s crop:
Dems:
- It attributes to The Washington Post a line saying Obama’s plan would save families about $2,500. But the Post was citing the estimate of the Obama campaign and didn’t analyze the purported savings independently.
- It claims that “experts” say Obama’s plan is “the best.” “Experts” turn out to be editorial writers at the Iowa City Press-Citizen – who, for all their talents, aren’t actual experts in the field.
- It quotes yet another newspaper saying Obama’s plan “guarantees coverage for all Americans,” neglecting to mention that, as the article makes clear, it’s only Clinton’s and Edwards’ plans that would require coverage for everyone, while Obama’s would allow individuals to buy in if they wanted to.
.
Repubs:
In another ad Huckabee claims to have signed the most broad-based tax cut in Arkansas history. But as we’ve noted repeatedly, he signed bigger tax increases than cuts.
Support the Troops, Bushie Style 0
Pah!
The Army has temporarily halted bonus payments for more than 20 enlistment, re-enlistment and service extension programs pending enactment of authorizing legislation. […]
Of course, no one he knows personally is over there. And no one he knows personally, I am certain, lives from paycheck to paycheck.
Empty Suit, Reprise (Updated) 0
The gift that keeps on giving. From Fact Check dot org (emphasis added):
A Romney spokesman said he didn’t mean what he said as fact, calling the statement “a metaphor.” We call it a ludicrous exaggeration.
Didn’t mean what he said or didn’t know what he was talking about? Inquiring minds want to know. (Oh, all right. Probably the person who wrote the script didn’t know what he or she are talking about, but we’ve already seen what happens when presidents read uncritically from scripts written by others.)
Follow the link to Fact Check dot org for the highlights of the last 1,000 years.
Get FactCheck dot org on your cell phone.
Addendum, Later That Same Day:
Another empty suit on the empty suit:
Via Booman.
Digby:
Man, Romney makes me ashamed of my country:
“We’ll try and represent ourselves and our nation well also to our kids because I think, I think kids watch the White House and there have been failures in the past in the White House — if you go back to the Clinton years and recognize that — that I think had an enormous impact on the culture of our country”
Oh, where to start? Well, for starters, I suppose Romney’s saying that the “enormous impact” of Monica’s blowjob “on the culture our country” was responsible for Trent Lott’s racist defense of Strom Thurmond, the substance abuse problems of Jeb Bush’s daughter, the meth-fueled extramarital sex sessions of the former Reverend Ted Haggard, Larry Craig’s widening stance, Bush/Iraq war supporter Brittney Spears’ shaved head, and maybe even Cheney’s inebriated behavior around loaded shotguns. Or maybe Romney has in mind serial adulterers in his own party like Scaife, Gingrich, Hyde, and Giuliani. Who knew a little fellatio was so insidious that it could cause David Addington and Alberto Gonzalez to countenance torture, or Tom Delay to use the Office of Homeland Security to help subvert the legislature of Texas? Or perhaps Romney had in mind the slimy christianist activists who Judge Jones accused of lying to a court of law during Kitzmiller v. Dover. Yes, this is all the Clintons’ fault.
Computer Annoyances 0
The five most annoying PC programs, according to the Download Squad. Follow the link for their rationales:
1. Adobe Acrobat Reader
2. iTunes
3. Real Player
4. Internet Explorer
5. Microsoft Outlook
(Aside) Since I don’t use Windows, none of these annoy me (full disclosure: except for work, when I sometimes use the Acrobat Reader).
I do use Real Player for Linux, but it’s an implementation of the Helix player with a Real Player label, and it is decidely not annoying. No pop-up reminders, no services that start stealthily in the background and phone home to Seattle, no advertising. Just a nice little player for stuff in Real Player formats.
The Acrobat Reader does come in a *nix flavor, but I use KPDF, which is much faster and lighter.
Via Geekazine.
The Enemy Below . . . 0
. . . is the Current Federal Administration:
Congress overhauled mine safety rules after the January 2006 blast at the Upshur County mine. There were two other high-profile fatal mine accidents that year, and an August collapse in Utah killed nine miners.
But the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration has yet to implement some of the standards established by the laws, and the United Mine Workers union, which represents some of the 42,000 miners who work in the nation’s 670 underground coal mines, blames the agency and mine owners for the delays.
Party Discipline 0
Many of my Democratic friends are extremely upset that the Democratic majority in the House and Senate has not been able to change the course of the nation.
For example.
It is indeed upsetting. At the least, there might be some satisfaction in seeing Senator Reid call the Republicans’ bluff and force them to actually stand in the podium to defent their odious policies of
- domestic spying,
- making up wars,
- selling the country to the highest bidder, and
- making the rich richer and the poor poorer.
Concomitantly (I’ve waited a year to work that into a post), it remains that, because of the extraordinary party discipline of the Republican Senate, the Democrats don’t have the votes in the Senate to break a filibuster.
Where does this discipline come from?
Find the answer here.
They are just following orders.
Also posted on Kos.