Saturday, July 23, 2005
"Child Abuse at Abu Ghraib" (A! of Watching the Watchers) and Bob Somerby's latest Daily Howler
Norway's Prime Minister's office says it plans to address the situation with the U.S. "in a very severe and direct way."
Could this mean losing yet another ally in the Iraq occupation? Amnesty International in Norway has said that Norway can no longer continue their occupation of Iraq, or their support of US policy in this matter.
And some countries, as Tom Tomorrow notes, actually listen to their activists.
While there isn't even an inkling of this in the US Mainstream media, all over the world people are beginning to read about the US abusing children at Abu Ghraib.
What's the above from? "Child Abuse at Abu Ghraib" by A! of Watching the Watchers. Remember this morning's post about Kate Zernike's "Government Defies an Order to Release Iraq Abuse Photos" in the Times? A!'s on that story.
What's Watching the Watchers? A new site added our to our permalinks. The panel approved that site, if I can digress for a moment (and when I can help myself from digressing). In addition there are two other sites that were added.
An e-mail came in from someone this week who was very upset. He'd recently started blogging.
He'd only picked a few sites to permalink to and The Common Ills was one of them. He felt that the entire internet ignored him.
I certainly have no control over the entire internet. But he is left and he was blogging about politics so if he'd dropped us a line before he deleted his blog, we would have mentioned him here. He felt that I was acting like an "A-list blogger" and making him jump through hoops and "hit a certain traffic volume" before I'd even "recognize" him.
I'm not a "blogger" because this isn't a "blog." I'm blog ignorant and we're a community with an online resource/review. We can be banned or be ignored or break this rule or take this stance because I'm blog ignorant (it's actually a blessing). I'm not sure how an "A-list blogger" acts (never got that memo) but I certainly wasn't trying to ignore someone starting out.
We're a resource/review so if someone's new, aboslutely we want to know about them. But I don't have the time to surf online. Nor do I have the time to visit blogs. I work long hours, I'm volunteering my personal time on issues that matter to me. At any given time, there are probably thousands of voices online that are making a difference. If a member sees one and e-mails to highlight it, it goes up. But as with Blogger A, a lot of people are going to be missed.
If someone wants to contact us at the public e-mail address* we're happy to highlight what they're doing.
No one should throw in the towel because we didn't notice them. To try to prevent that from happening, the panel's approved for links to left sites that are starting out. Shirley found two that are linking to us and they went up with Watching the Watchers (which, again, has panel approval). If you see any site that's starting out and they've linked to us, the panel said we'll operate under the belief that (if they're left) they must hold some (maybe all) of the beliefs we do so those sites can quickly be added. (For a complete list of guidelines on that, Eli, Keesha and Wally will be sending out an e-mail on behalf of the panel tomorrow.)
Blogger A mentioned two sites that went up on our permalinks and noted that we were catering to "the other big dogs." After I got over the, "Did he just call us a dog?" moment, I realized that handling that privately among members (via the gina & krista round-robin) may have left some people wondering about that. For any member or regular visitor that doesn't get the round-robin, we were pranked. Ron and another person's site were replaced with those two sites. (I've e-mailed Ron about this so I think it's okay to mention him here.) When it was first pointed out to me, I went and changed the links back. Then it appeared again (after the password had been changed). As with the corrections of some of my typos, this continued. I didn't have the time to deal with this once a week (or more). So the sites (which do good work) went up on the permalinks. It was the easiest way to address the situation.
That's the short story (as round-robin readers know). But we're not trying to be "A-list" because someone's idea of "A-list" and my idea of "A-list" would probably differ. For instance, Bruce Willis is considered an "A-list" star by film standards based on box office. Though effective in certain roles (especially ones that call for him to be damaged and not flashy), I don't consider him "A-list." If "traffic" is how Blogger A was determing "A-list," we've never cared about it here. There's no site meter announcing, "You are visitor ___." (No site meter I've put up. But as has been said in this space since December, I'm sure google has something up somewhere that counts visits. If so, I don't have access to it and don't care to.)
Rebecca who's become the most internet savy of all of the community members doing sites says that links matter. (More than traffic, according to her.) Certainly, we aren't trying here to be stingy or to avoid listing people because of any elitist rules. Whether you agree with everything someone on our permalinks writes, hopefully you can see that they are trying to address things that matter. That's always been the main criteria. And when I approved links to blogs in the old days, I based it on impassioned e-mails from members advocating for a site.
Unlike "the boogers of the blogs" (Gina and Krista's term), I never felt the need to scream and yell and bully someone in an e-mail for suggesting that we provide a link. Or to demand an apology from them via bullying them that their favorite site would never be mentioned here if they didn't pony up with an apology.
We aren't elitist here. The point (repeated over and over) is that we need more voices, not less.
So if a visitor sees this and knows of a site or does their own site, they're certainly able to e-mail to promote it. We've highlighted an essay that someone's e-mailed in on and needed votes for.
We highlighted a search engine that someone had developed and e-mailed in on. (Which we wouldn't do again due to member complaints of spy ware.) If you're running a site and you feel you're being ignored, we're the last ones to ignore you because we're set up as a resource/review.
We don't highlight neocons. That's been where I drew the line. A man e-mailed saying he was starting his own site around Memorial Day. He's probably a very nice person but we don't highlight neocons even if they say they're of the left.
Occasionally BuzzFlash (one of our first links on the permalinks, Democracy Now! was the other) will e-mail on an editorial. Usually at least one member has already e-mailed on that and it's already intended to go up but if a member hasn't e-mailed on it, it still goes up (usually with a "We'll note . . ." sentence). BuzzFlash does excellent work. In my mind, they're "A-list." So if they can do that, Blogger A should have considered doing that as well.
A! e-mailed on the Watching the Watchers story above. I farmed it out because I saw the e-mail at the end of a break from The Third Estate Sunday Review. (If I'd had the time, I would have gone myself. But Saturdays are not overflowing with time.) Dallas (thank you, Dallas, always) looked it up while hunting down links for The Third Estate Sunday Review to grab some text (otherwise it wouldn't have had an excerpt).
But people can do that. Especially with it being summer and a lot of members going on vacation, we'll miss things that might be of interest to members.
We are not elitist on my end. We're a resource/review and we're happy to note things of the left and things of note. (If anyone wanted to call The Common Ills elitist, it should be community members with their own sites because I'm really bad about doing entries on that. Usually because a member will e-mail in saying Rebecca or Mike or Betty or Cedric or Kat put up something amazing and but they won't provide text or link so I'll take the attitude of "Okay, tonight, I'll have time and go visit their site . . ." and reality is that there's never time.) (I've asked both Mike and Cedric, members who've recently started sites, to e-mail me their writing to try to prevent that.)
I'm "old school" as Cedric will tell you. I'm going by what I read in print for what I'm steering members to. The computer screen usually make my eyes water. And I like to be more mobile than in front of a screen. I can get on the treadmill or the stepper with a book or magazine. I can take a book or magazine with me and read it during the day at various intervals. Members are the one finding things online. And they're the ones who deserve credit.
But they're not going to find everything by themselves. So if someone written something that's important or that they're trying to get out there, we can note it here. When I say "blog ignorant," take me at my word.
I'm really sad that Blogger A felt that the entire internet ignored the work he was doing. There's no series of hoops that someone has to jump through here. You need to be of the left.
That's really all it takes to get mentioned in an entry.
Though there's no "elitist" attitude on my part, there is a luxury of not giving a damn. I don't have to worry that "booger of the blogs" unlinked from us (after we did first if I can "nah-nah-nah" it for a moment). I'm not trying to sell the content of others. (If I can "nah-nah-nah" it one more time.) And we're not dependent upon traffic or ad revenues. We were built up peer to peer and that gives us a luxury that others don't have. And this isn't something I make money off of so I'm able to not worry about demands others have. (And I'm comfortable enough finacially which is another luxury.)
But some people have demands on them and they have to take things very seriously. There was a piece, a parody fairy tale, about advice for blogging at The Third Estate Sunday Review (and there are only five minutes left in the break I'm on so look it up yourself) and the advice in that is something I stand behind. If you're speaking in your own voice, and fate's kind, you will be noticed. Fate was kind for us. And mistakes I made were actually nonmistakes and actually increased word of mouth. (Such as song lyrics and posts titled after them. I obviously care a great deal about music. As Shirley pointed out, it made it hard to find a post on a topic if the topic was the first line of lyric, so we stopped that. But there were people coming to this site blind because Carly or someone else's lyric was in a title.) (The Joni Mitchell "Christmas is sparkling . . ." especially added people to the mix.) So we got lucky and we had members (and visitors, think of West who was banished by "booger" due to calling attention to our site and four others) getting the word out.
But we're not elitist and I have no desire to shut down new voices. But "blog ignorant" means what it implies. I hope Blogger A starts back up and, if so, e-mails to call attention to his work.
On a good day, I'm able to go to BuzzFlash, The Daily Howler and Danny Schecheter's site. That's a good day for me. Most days I don't even have the time for that. So if a visitor stumbles onto this post and feels like there's no one paying attention to her or his work, s/he should e-mail and let us know about it.
To me the "elitist" are the gatekeepers. And that means, for someone who doesn't have the time to surf the net, the Cokie Roberts, et al. To a lot of people, Cokie Roberts is "A-list." To me, Amy Goodman is "A-list" because she's speaking in her own voice and not going for the obvious. I hope that's clear.
*Note: As members voted on in Gina & Krista's poll, there are now two e-mail addresses for this site. There is the public one (common_ills@yahoo.com) and there's a private e-mail address. Members should use the private e-mail address. I'll check that daily (several times). If I'm not in the mood for drive bys and flamers, I may skip a day on the public address. The private address is for members only. If you're a member who doesn't subscribe to the gina & krista round-robin, please e-mail at common_ills@yahoo.com and as soon as I can, I'll e-mail you the private address. I'm thinking that was Jess or Jim's suggestion (of The Third Estate Sunday Review). (And in too much of a hurry to check that out with them.) Whoever had the suggestion, it was a great suggestion and the account was created almost as soon as they came up with the idea. When Krista & Gina's poll results came back Wednesday, members agreed it was a great idea. So that's how we're doing it now.
I'm pushing the clock here but there's a Saturday Howler that Billie's e-mailed to note so let me note it. Somerby's dealing with a number of issues but we'll focus on Senator Overblown, McCain:
IMAGINE ALL THE SHILLING: Senator Straight-Talk couldn't grasp what the whole thing was about. He spoke with Imus Wednesday morning. Frankly, he was bollixed:
IMUS (7/20/05): I think [John Kerry] said Karl Rove ought to resign over this whole CIA leak thing. What's your view of what’s going on over there at the White House?
MCCAIN: Well, I think one thing is obvious. Karl Rove were--and others--were attempting to set the record straight with reporters that Vice President Cheney did not send Mr. Wilson, that it was done by the CIA and at the recommendation of Mr. Wilson's wife; that there were several other factual errors in Mr. Wilson's depiction of events. Now what happened after that, I don't know. I don't understand it, and I don't think you do either, that a journalist who didn't write a word is now in jail. And so—
IMUS: Judith Miller of the New York Times.
MCCAIN: So I don’t know.
Poor Straight-Talk! The straight-shooting solon couldn't understand something an eight—year-old schoolkid could grasp! Why was Judith Miller in jail? Duh! She'd been ordered to testify in a criminal probe, and had refused to do so. Whatever you think of the wisdom of her jailing, there's nothing complex or confusing about it, but Straight-Talk was pandering hard to the press--and pretending that this whole affair really doesn't make any sense. (He had a perfect rube to work with, of course. The hapless Imus says every day that he can't understand why Miller is in jail, since she never wrote a story.) But Straight-Talk did think one thing was "obvious;" he thought it was "obvious" that Rove was just trying to set the record straight when he spoke to reporters like Time's Matt Cooper. We don't know what makes Rove's motive so "obvious"--and Straight-Talk has the facts fuzzed-up himself; too lazy to read Wilson's column himself, he keeps saying and implying that Wilson claimed that Dick Cheney sent him to Niger (see THE DAILY HOWLER, 7/22/05). Could it be that Straight-Talk was spinning us blue? Could it be that "Straight" was talking it crooked? We were amazed when Straight-Talk said that Rove's motives were so "obvious"--but then, along came David Brooks to show what a Full Pander looks like.
Click here to read in full.
The e-mail address (public) for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
Air America weekend schedule guests include Tim Robbins, Herb Boyd, Ralph Neas, Dave Zirin, Stacy Bannerman & Maria Raha
So What Else is News • Sat 3pm-5pm ET
This weekend, singer/songwriter Mike Doughty moves on to Dave Matthews' label. Plus, Canada becomes the frontlines of the war against Wal-mart.
Ring of Fire • Sat 5pm-7pm ET, Rebroadcast Sun 3pm-5pm
Mike consults corporate cover-up expert Jackie Rion about the President’s knowledge of Rove’s perfidy, Bobby talks with attorney and DNA expert Barry Scheck, and author Steve Brouwer discusses how the neocons robbed us blind.
The Laura Flanders Show • Sat and Sun 7pm-10pm ET
Saturday: A report from the ACLU’s biennial conference and the latest on the Supreme Court fight to save our CONSTITUTION! Jamin Raskin, author and American University Law professor; John Judge, on 9/11 Commission Failure Briefings; David Swanson on the Downing Street Memo movement; and Maria Raha, author of "Cinderella's Big Score: Women of the Punk and Indie Underground."
Sunday: Laura brings you the truth, from families with folks at war and brave, honest veterans for peace. Karen Houppert, author of "Home Fires Burning: Married to the Military-for Better or Worse," and Stacy Bannerman, a human rights advocate and spouse of National Guard soldier who served in Iraq. Then Claude Anshin Thomas, a homeless Vietnam vet turned Buddhist monk and author of "At Hell's Gate: A Soldier's Journey from War to Peace."
The Kyle Jason Show • Sat 10pm-Midnight ET
Kyle delivers a double feature: Herb Boyd, author of "We Shall Overcome: The History of the Civil Rights Movement As It Happened" and Lee, the Lead Singer of "The Square Egg," Plus, if you've helped an individual or a group of people in anyway, Kyle wants to hear from you! Call 1-866-303-2270
Ecotalk • Sun 7-8 am ET
Betsy meets the woman behind a new PBS film called “The Fire Next Time,” about competing economic and environmental interests in a small town and the horrible effects of right-wing radio. She also talks to a woman who is protecting Asiatic bears from torture, and discusses the recently launched Exxpose Exxon boycott.
Mother Jones Radio • Sun 1pm-2pm ET
Washington correspondent Michael Scherer and People For the American Way president Ralph Neas on the nomination of John Roberts to the Supreme Court. Plus, consumer advocate John Cobarruvias and grandmother-turned-activist Jordan Fogal on how anti-consumer laws could affect you.
Politically Direct • Sun 3pm-4pm ET
David takes you back (or forward) to Revolutionary Times on Politically Direct this week, with guests Joe Trippi, former campaign manager for Howard Dean and author of "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" and Grammy Award winning singer/songer writer Steve Earle, host of AAR's "The Revolution Starts Now."
The Laura Flanders Show • Sat and Sun 7pm-10pm ET
Sunday: Laura brings you the truth, from families with folks at war and brave, honest veterans for peace. Karen Houppert, author of "Home Fires Burning: Married to the Military-for Better or Worse," and Stacy Bannerman, a human rights advocate and spouse of National Guard soldier who served in Iraq. Then Claude Anshin Thomas, a homeless Vietnam vet turned Buddhist monk and author of "At Hell's Gate: A Soldier's Journey from War to Peace."
The Revolution Starts...Now • Sun 10pm-11pm ET
Actor and activist Tim Robbins shares his favorite tunes. The flavor is political. Picks include: System of a Down, Eliza Gilkson, X, Tom Waits, P.J. Harvey, and Butch Hancock.
On the Real • Sun 11pm -1 am ET
This week live in the Greenroom is Time magazine editor Christopher John Farley's "Kingston By Starlight." Comedian Zooman drops in to yuck it up and Dave Zirin calls in to chat sports with Chuck and Gia'na.
If you're not famaliar with Dave Zirin (who'll be guesting on On the Real), read Mike's entry about Zirin guesting on Democracy Now!
Air America can be heard on XM satellite radio, online via Windows Media Player or Real Player and over the airwaves in many areas (I'm counting 67 but I'm sure my math is wrong; also note Alaska and Hawaii are areas broadcast in over non-satellite radio).
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
Randi Rhodes will be at NYC Town Hall Meeting today from 2 to 4 p.m. Will you?
NYC TOWN HALL MEETING
Torture & Lies: Who is Accountable?From Abu Ghraib to the Downing Street Minues
This Saturday from 2-4 pm join:
-Randi Rhodes
-Congressman Maurice Hinchey
- Former Congresswoman Liz Holtzman
- President of Democrats.com Bob Fertik
Discussions to include:
- Karl Rove/TraitorGate
- The Downing Street Minutes
- How to be heard in Washington
- Getting involved in your community, etc.
When:
Saturday, 7/23 from 2-4 pm
Where:
New York Society for Ethical Culture,
2 West 64th St., NYC
Admission: Free!
More info on the NYC event Events near you Host your own meeting
I'm sure this goes without saying but Randi Rhodes is the host of The Randi Rhodes Show which broadcasts Monday through Friday on Air America. (And Laura Flanders is back on The Laura Flanders Show this weekend, by the way.) If you're in the area, please consider attending. If you're not in the area but know someone who is, pass on the news. And if you're not in the area and know no one in the area, it's still worth noting because people haven't given up on this and those who haven't deserve credit.
(This is actually the fourth notice since it was also mentioned in a post on The Nation last night.)
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
NYT: "Government Defies an Order to Release Iraq Abuse Photos" (Kate Zernike)
The lawyers said in a letter sent to the federal court in Manhattan late Thursday that they would file a sealed brief explaining their reasons for not turning over the material, which they were to have released by yesterday.
The photographs were some of thousands turned over by Specialist Joseph M. Darby, the whistle-blower who exposed the abuse at Abu Ghraib by giving investigators computer disks containing photographs and videos of prisoners being abused, sexually humiliated and threatened with growling dogs.
The above is from Kate Zernike's "Government Defies an Order to Release Iraq Abuse Photos"
in this morning's New York Times.
In case you've forgotten, these are the photos that GOP spinners went into overtime to minimize.
Billie e-mails to note that both of her senators spun wildly on how unimportant these photos are.
Yet, court order be damned, they still haven't been turned over.
Zernike provides our spotlight story for today. If you only read one story in the Times today (or are only aware of one) make this the one.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
The Friday Hearing? The Plame outing? Is it being covered in today's papers?
Fitzgerald has spent considerable time since the summer of 2004 looking at possible conflicts between what White House senior adviser Karl Rove and vice presidential staff chief I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby told a grand jury and investigators, and the accounts of reporters who talked with the two men, according to various sources in the case.
A story on the outing of Valerie Plame! In the New York Times!
Uh, not so fast. It's from the Washington Post, Carol D. Leonnig and Jim VandeHei "Testimony By Rove And Libby Examined: Leak Prosecutor Seeks Discrepancies." Kara agreed to follow the Washington Post.
Kara: And take a look at this, Cheney's limboing even lower in public than usual. Josh White and R. Jeffrey Smith "White House Aims to Block Legislation On Detainees:"
The Bush administration in recent days has been lobbying to block legislation supported by Republican senators that would bar the U.S. military from engaging in "cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment" of detainees, from hiding prisoners from the Red Cross, and from using interrogation methods not authorized by a new Army field manual.
Vice President Cheney met Thursday evening with three senior Republican members of the Senate Armed Services Committee to press the administration's case that legislation on these matters would usurp the president's authority and -- in the words of a White House official -- interfere with his ability "to protect Americans effectively from terrorist attack."
Maria agreed to follow the LA Times and notes Douglas Frantz, Sonni Efron and Richard B. Schmitt "CIA Probe Moves from Leak Source to Perjury, Obstruction:"
According to lawyers familiar with the case, investigators are comparing statements to federal authorities by two top White House aides, Karl Rove and I. Lewis Libby, with testimony from reporters who have acknowledged talking to the officials.
The sources also said prosecutors are comparing the various statements to the FBI and the grand jury by Rove, who is a White House deputy chief of staff and President Bush's chief political strategist. Rove in his first interview with the FBI did not mention a conversation he had with Time magazine reporter Matthew Cooper, according to lawyers involved in the case. The White House aide has been interviewed twice by the FBI and made three appearances before the grand jury, they said.While no one has suggested that the investigation into who leaked Plame's name has been shelved, the intensity of the inquiry into possible perjury charges has increased, according to one lawyer familiar with events, who spoke on condition that he not be identified because he did not want to anger Fitzgerald.
Billie agreed to watch The Houston Chronicle online to see if anything went up. The only thing she's found is "Accounts differ on who told of agent's identity" Richard Keil (Bloomberg News):
These discrepancies may be important because Fitzgerald is investigating whether Libby, Rove or other administration officials made false statements during the course of the investigation. The Plame case has its genesis in whether anyone violated a 1982 law making it illegal to knowingly reveal the name of a covert intelligence agent.
The CIA requested the inquiry after Novak reported in a July 14, 2003, column that Plame recommended her husband for a 2002 mission to check into reports Iraq tried to buy uranium from Niger.
Dallas watched The Dallas Morning News website (and says "only for the community!") where he found Wayne Slater and G. Robert Hillman's "think piece if think piece means a chat as you hang out the laundry" entitled "Rove puts Bush's loyalty to test:"
The firestorm over the CIA leak has been dampened, at least temporarily, by President Bush's appointment of a Supreme Court justice, and Mr. Rove is not granting interviews.
White House press secretary Scott McClellan, having initially assured reporters that Mr. Rove was not involved, now declines to comment. He cites the investigation by special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald into leaks that led to columnist Robert Novak and then Time magazine identifying Ms. Plame, wife of former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, as a CIA operative.
White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card, who early in the administration said, "It's Karl's job to make sure that we understand the day after tomorrow," was more guarded this week, allowing only that Mr. Rove was doing his job.
Tony saw nothing online at The Des Moines Register.
Tony: Not surprising considering their editorial awhile back instructing "Public Shouldn't Prejudge Rove." They are a bunch of jerks. That might be too cruel, some are just idiots. If you live in an area with a better paper, which isn't hard, consider yourself lucky.
Rob asks if the NBC News employee suing for being molested by priests is in all the papers?
I don't know if it's in all the papers, but Billie mentioned it as did Dallas. Rob was watching the Boston Globe for us. Verdict? No news on Plame.
Rhonda reports that Rocky Mountain News is apparently too busy profiling the Focus on the Fool to even address the Plame issue today.
Despite having a special archive on the Plame outing, Trevor reports that the Baltimore Sun has no news of the hearing yesterday. He reports that they do carry the LA Times article.
Wally watched The Miami Herald and found that they at least carried the AP article on Friday's hearing, Donna De La Cruz's "Rove case bad for security, say ex-agents:"
In a hearing held by Senate and House Democrats examining the implications of exposing Valerie Plame's identity, the former intelligence officers said Bush's silence has hampered efforts to recruit informants to help the United States fight the war on terror. Federal law forbids government officials from revealing the identity of an undercover intelligence officer.
''I wouldn't be here this morning if President Bush had done the one thing required of him as commander in chief -- protect and defend the Constitution,'' said Larry Johnson, a former CIA analyst. "The minute that Valerie Plame's identity was outed, he should have delivered a strict and strong message to his employees.''
Rove, Bush's deputy chief of staff, told Time magazine reporter Matthew Cooper in a 2003 phone call that former ambassador Joseph Wilson's wife worked for the CIA on weapons of mass destruction issues, according to an account by Cooper in the magazine. Rove has not disputed that he told Cooper that Wilson's wife worked for the agency, but has said through his lawyer that he did not mention her by name.
Brent couldn't find any articles at the Toledo Blade covering the latest developments in the Valerie Plame case.
Donna De La Cruz's AP article on Friday's hearing is carried by The Philadelphia Inquirer.
No, it's not every paper in the country. No, it's not even the print edition. But if you're wondering how much coverage the hearing Friday or even the issue of outing of Plame is getting, the answers appears to be "not real much."
And you might find other stories. (Feel free to e-mail if you do.) This is what people were able to find online as the paper's latest editions should have been available. The hearing Friday should have garnered more than an AP article. But if others weren't up to writing their own piece, they should have been offering the AP article at their sites. Instead?
Join Gwen and Condi in singing "It's Only a Summer Scandal:"
Say, it's only a summer scandal
Bully Boy will soon have the handle
He's the king of the make-believe
Do you believe in me?
Yes, it's only a scandal de sum
Reporters move on if we play mum
King George of the make believe
Do you believe in me?
. . .
It's a Bully and Cheney world
Just as phony as it can be
But it wouldn't be make-believe
If you believed in me
(Again, the above is a bad rip-off of Harold Arlen & Ted Koehler's "It's Only a Paper Moon." And if you read The Daily Howler on Tuesday you know that Gwen Ifill referred to the outing of Plame as "a summer scandal.")
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
Friday, July 22, 2005
¿Rove y Libby engañaron a investigadores en filtración de la CIA?
¿Rove y Libby engañaron a investigadores en filtración de la CIA?
La agencia de noticias Bloomberg informa que las dos figuras centrales en la filtración de la identidad de la agente encubierta de la CIA Valerie Plame, podrían haber engañado a los investigadores intencionalmente. La agencia sostiene que el principal asesor del presidente Bush, Karl Rove y el jefe de personal de Dick Cheney Scooter Libby dieron explicaciones a un fiscal especial acerca de cómo los periodistas les informaron la identidad de la agente de la CIA, lo cual contradice lo dicho por los periodistas. Libby le dijo al fiscal especial Patrick Fitzgerald que se enteró por primera vez de la identidad de Plame a través del periodista de NBC Tim Russert. Bloomberg sostiene que Russert declaró ante el gran jurado federal que el no fue quien informó a Libby la identidad de Plame. Mientras que Rove le dijo a Fitzgerald que se enteró por primera vez de la identidad de la agente de la CIA a través del columnista Robert Novak. Sin embargo Bloomberg cita una fuente que dice que Novak le dio una versión diferente al fiscal especial.
Documento identificó a Plame como agente encubierta
Pasamos al escándalo de Karl Rove y la CIA. El Washington Post informa que un documento confidencial del Departamento de Estado fundamental para la investigación federal acerca de quién filtró el nombre de Valerie Plame como agente encubierta de la CIA, contenía información acerca de la agente en el párrafo marcado "(S)", que significa secreto. El Post lo denominó como una clara señal de que cualquier funcionario de gobierno que haya leído el documento debía saber que se trataba de información confidencial. El documento menciona a Plame por su nombre de casada, Valerie Wilson, y se dedica, casi en su totalidad, a explicar por qué los especialistas de inteligencia del Departamento de Estado no creían las afirmaciones de que Saddam Hussein había intentado recientemente comprar uranio a Níger, como había sostenido el esposo de Plame, el embajador Joe Wilson, luego de su misión de investigación al país africano. El documento fue entregado al entonces Secretario de Estado, Colin Powell, el 7 de julio de 2003, mientras se dirigía a África en un viaje con el Presidente Bush en un avión de Air Force One. La identidad de Plame fue revelada siete días después en una columna escrita por Robert Novak. Los fiscales están investigando el registro de llamadas realizadas en el viaje y han interrogado a varios funcionarios de Bush que viajaron con él.
Bush se retracta de despedir a involucrados por caso filtración de CIA
Volvemos a Estados Unidos, donde el presidente Bush parece haber retirado su promesa de despedir a cualquier funcionario involucrado en la revelación de identidad de la agente encubierta de la CIA, Valerie Plame. Existen pruebas claras de que los funcionarios de gobierno Karl Rove, principal asesor del presidente, y Scooter Libby, asesor personal de Dick Cheney, estaban implicados en el caso. Bush señala ahora que despedirá a cualquiera que haya “cometido un delito”, a pesar de que en declaraciones anteriores, tanto el presidente como el vocero de la Casa Blanca, Scott McClellan, habían prometido despedir a cualquier funcionario que estuviera “implicado” en la revelación de identidad de la agente de la CIA. Se trata de una diferencia importante, ya que ahora no se cuestiona el involucramiento de Rove, sino la existencia de un delito en virtud de la Ley de Protección de Identidad de Inteligencia, que por otra parte presenta importantes vacíos legales. En este caso, los fiscales deberán probar que Rove tenía conocimiento que Plame trabajaba como agente encubierta
Ex funcionarios de Inteligencia protestan por filtración de Plame
Mientras tanto, once ex funcionarios de inteligencia redactaron una carta abierta a los líderes del Congreso diciendo que la filtración de la identidad de Plame como funcionaria de la CIA pudo haber perjudicado la seguridad nacional y la capacidad del gobierno para recopilar información. Criticaron al Comité Nacional Republicano por hacer circular puntos de discusión acerca del escándalo, donde sostienen que Plame no trabajaba realmente como agente encubierta porque trabajaba en una oficina en Langley y no ameritaba protección desde el punto de vista jurídico. Los once funcionarios señalan que miles de funcionarios de inteligencia de Estados Unidos que trabajan diariamente en oficinas en la zona de Washington ocultan su identidad al igual que Plame cuando su identidad fue revelada.
Caso Rove: Cooper de la revista Time habla sobre declaración ante el Gran Jurado
Los programas de debate del domingo estuvieron dominados este fin de semana por la investigación de la revelación de la identidad de la agente encubierta de la CIA Valerie Plame. Uno de los protagonistas de la historia, el periodista de la revista Time Matt Cooper, estuvo en el programa de NBC "Meet the press" donde habló acerca de su declaración ante el Gran Jurado. Cooper también escribió un artículo publicado anoche por la revista Time, donde señala que el principal asesor del presidente Bush, Karl Rove, fue la primera persona en decirle a Cooper que Valerie Plame era funcionaria de la CIA. Cooper dijo que declaró esto ante el gran jurado la semana pasada y que Rove finalizó la conversación diciendo que, "ya he dicho demasiado". Cooper escribió que Rove no reveló el nombre de Valerie Plame pero le dijo en julio de 2003 que saldría a la luz pública información que cuestionaría la credibilidad de su esposo, el ex diplomático Joseph Wilson. Cooper escribió, "¿Rove me reveló el nombre de Plame, o me dijo que era una agente encubierta? No. ¿Fue a través de mi conversación con Rove que supe por primera vez que la esposa de Wilson trabajaba para la CIA y podría haber sido responsable de enviarlo a él (a Nigeria)? Sí.. ¿Dijo Rove que ella trabajaba en la 'agencia' en armas de destrucción masiva? Sí". Cooper continuó diciendo "cuando dijo que la información sería pronto revelada ¿estaba eso prohibido? No lo sé. ¿Es algo de esto un delito? Supera mi entendimiento". Cooper escribió que le había dicho antes al gran jurado que ya había hablado de Wilson y de su esposa con Lewis "Scooter" Libby, el jefe de asesores del vicepresidente Dick Cheney. Dijo que le preguntó a Libby acerca de la participación de la esposa de Wilson en el viaje a Nigeria y Libby respondió "Sí, yo escuché lo mismo". Todo esto planteó serios cuestionamientos acerca de si varios funcionarios del gobierno engañaron a la gente y a los investigadores en forma intencional sobre la vinculación de Libby y Rove. El portavoz de la Casa Blanca Scott McClellan dijo en octubre de 2003 que Rove, Libby y otro funcionario habían afirmado no estar involucrados en la revelación de la identidad de Plame.
Nuevos estudios demuestran que política de Estados Unidos radicalizó resistencia iraquí
Dos nuevos estudios cuestionan seriamente las afirmaciones del presidente Bush de que la resistencia en Irak está conformada por yihadistas con experiencia que aprovecharon la oportunidad para hacer de Irak su principal frente. Las dos investigaciones, una realizada por el gobierno saudita y la otra por un investigador israelí, dieron como resultado que la amplia mayoría de los combatientes extranjeros en Irak no son ex terroristas y que la propia guerra los radicalizó. Ambos estudios analizan los antecedentes y motivaciones de cientos de extranjeros que ingresan a Irak a pelear contra Estados Unidos
Ataques de Londres estarían vinculados a la Política de Irak, según principal grupo británico
Mientras el gobierno británico continúa la investigación masiva de los ataques de bomba coordinados en Londres este mes, uno de los más respetados académicos en política exterior, cuestiona las afirmaciones del primer ministro Tony Blair de que los ataques no fueron provocados por la participación de Gran Bretaña en las ocupaciones de Irak y Afganistán. Un nuevo informe de la organización Chatham House dijo que el principal problema para evitar el terrorismo en el Reino Unido es que el país "ocupa el asiento del pasajero en la guerra contra el terrorismo de Estados Unidos". El grupo está formado por prestigiosos intelectuales y ex funcionarios del gobierno. Tony Blair dijo el sábado que los coches bomba fueron motivados por lo que denominó una "ideología malvada" más que por la oposición a cualquier política. Blair denominó las sugerencias en contrario como un "malentendido de orden catastrófico". Sin embargo, Chatham House concluye en el informe que "sin duda" la invasión a Irak impulsó la "propaganda, el reclutamiento y la búsqueda de financiamiento" de la red Al-Qaeda, mientras que le proporcionó una zona ideal para el entrenamiento de terroristas. Continúa diciendo que "estar en el asiento del pasajero con un aliado poderoso demostró ser riesgoso en términos de la pérdida de vidas británicas, estadounidenses e iraquíes; de gasto militar y daño causado a la campaña antiterrorista."
Disparan a miembros sunitas del comité constitucional
Mientras tanto, tres miembros sunitas del comité para redactar la nueva constitución iraquí, murieron en una balacera mientras salían de un restaurante en Bagdad. Los sunitas del comité eran considerados figuras claves en el proceso constitucional organizado por Estados Unidos. Quince miembros sunitas se incorporaron al comité el mes pasado, siendo el primer órgano político en el país con importante representación sunita desde que el nuevo gobierno asumió en abril. Los grupos de la resistencia juraron matar a cualquier sunita que integrara el comité. Se informó que los miembros sunitas abandonaron el comité.
Mujeres perderán derechos en el "nuevo" Irak
Mientras tanto, el New York Times informa que el borrador de la nueva constitución iraquí restringe considerablemente los derechos de las mujeres, imponiendo la ley Sharia o coránica en temas como matrimonio, divorcio y herencia. Limita además su representación en el parlamento. El borrador garantiza derechos legales para las mujeres, en la medida en que no "violen la Sharia", es decir que las mujeres chiítas no podrán casarse sin el permiso de su familia, mientras que sus esposos se podrán divorciar simplemente manifestando su voluntad de hacerlo tres veces y en voz alta. El borrador también elimina una medida incluida en la constitución provisional que exige que las mujeres tengan al menos 25 % de representación parlamentaria. Está programado que el texto constitucional quede terminado para mediados de agosto.
Nuevo estudio indica que murieron 24.000 civiles iraquíes
Un nuevo informe independiente publicado el pasado martes indica que 24.000 civiles iraquíes han muerto violentamente desde que comenzó la invasión de Estados Unidos hace dos años. El estudio concluye que Estados Unidos y su coalición de fuerzas militares son responsables del 37% de las muertes, mientras que las fuerzas contra la ocupación y de resistencia son responsables de un 9%. Otro 36% de las muertes fueron resultado de la violencia criminal. Las cifras divulgadas la semana pasada por el Ministerio del Interior de Irak indican que entre agosto de 2004 y marzo de 2005 un promedio mensual de 800 civiles y policías murieron en ataques de la insurgencia. El informe fue elaborado por Iraq Body Count y Oxford Research Group.
Abogado de Padilla: acúsenlo o libérenlo
El abogado de José Padilla, un ciudadano estadounidense acusado de haber conspirado para detonar una 'bomba sucia' radiactiva, se presentó ante un tribunal federal de apelaciones el martes y exigió al gobierno de Estados Unidos que acusara a su cliente de algún delito o que lo liberara. Pero un abogado del gobierno de Bush le dijo al tribunal que el presidente debe tener autoridad para arrestar a terroristas sospechosos por tiempo indeterminado. El presidente Bush declaró a Padilla "combatiente enemigo", una designación que permite que las fuerzas militares tengan a alguien detenido sin presentar acusaciones, por tiempo indeterminado. Padilla está en la brigada de la Marina en Charleston, Carolina del Sur, y ha pasado los últimos tres años bajo arresto. El tribunal de apelaciones recibió el caso luego de que un juez de Carolina del Sur dictaminara que el gobierno debía acusar a Padilla de algún delito o liberarlo.
Caravana cubana Pastores por la Paz detenida en la frontera
La noticia viene de Texas, donde cientos de voluntarios de Pastores por la Paz, que se preparaban para realizar un envío masivo de ayuda humanitaria a Cuba, fueron detenidos en la frontera entre Estados Unidos y México y podrían permanecer allí varios días.
Funcionarios del Departamento de Comercio dicen que registrarán a todos los vehículos de la caravana y cada artículo de ayuda humanitaria, algo que no se hacía desde hace años, y solamente se permitirá pasar a través de la frontera de México aquellos bienes que Washington considere que son "licenciables". Los agentes de la frontera amenazan con remolcar los vehículos de la caravana y ya confiscaron algunas donaciones de ayuda, incluyendo computadoras. Algunos voluntarios atraviesan la frontera de México y Estados Unidos cargando sillas de ruedas, muletas y otros implementos médicos, mientras que otros realizan una protesta en la frontera. Hay 130 ciudadanos estadounidenses que viajan con la delegación, al igual que un camión y dos pequeños autos. Pretenden entregar 140 toneladas en ayuda. El gobierno de Bush extremó las restricciones contra Cuba en 2004, y utiliza fondos de Seguridad Nacional para investigar sospechosos de viajar a la isla.
Maria: Hello again. Francisco is planning on picking this up next week. When C.I. e-mails, I'm happy to this but in case anyone's getting tired of my picks, Francisco is planning to do this next weekend. In English, here are twelve headlines from Democracy Now! Let me say it again: "Read the headlines in English below and ask yourself 'Is there anyone I can pass this on to?'" A lot of you e-mailed to say you alerted at least one person that Democracy Now! is providing their headlines each day in Spanish and English for reading and listening to. Let's try again to get the word out.
Did Rove and Libby Mislead Investigators in CIA Leak?
The Bloomberg News Agency is reporting that the two figures at the center of the outing of CIA operative Valerie Plame may have intentionally misled investigators. The agency says that President Bush's senior advisor Karl Rove and Dick Cheney's Chief of Staff Scooter Libby both gave accounts to the special prosecutor about how reporters told them the identity of a CIA agent that are at odds with what the reporters have said. Libby told special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald that he first learned Plame's identity from NBC News reporter Tim Russert. Bloomberg says Russert has testified before a federal grand jury that he didn't tell Libby of Plame's identity. Rove, meanwhile, told Fitzgerald that he first learned the identity of the CIA agent from syndicated columnist Robert Novak. But Bloomberg cites a source saying that Novak has given a different version to the special prosecutor. Fitzgerald is investigating whether Libby, Rove, or other administration officials made false statements during the course of the investigation.
Memo Identified Plame as Undercover
Now to the Karl Rove/CIA scandal. The Washington Post is reporting that a classified State Department memo central to the federal investigation into who leaked Valerie Plame's name as an undercover CIA operative contained information about her in a paragraph marked "(S)" for secret. The Post calls it a clear indication that any Bush administration official who read it should have been aware the information was classified. In the memo, Plame is referred to by her married name, Valerie Wilson. Almost the entire memo is devoted to describing why State Department intelligence experts did not believe claims that Saddam Hussein had in the recent past sought to purchase uranium from Niger, as Plame's husband Ambassador Joe Wilson asserted after his fact-finding mission to the African nation. The memo was delivered to Secretary of State Colin Powell on July 7, 2003, as he headed to Africa for a trip with President Bush aboard Air Force One. Plame was unmasked in a syndicated column by Robert Novak seven days later. Prosecutors are reviewing the phone records from that trip and have questioned several of Bush's staffers who were on that trip.
Bush Backs Off Pledge to Fire Anyone 'Involved' in CIA Leak
Back in this country, President Bush on Monday appeared to backtrack on his pledge to fire anyone involved in the outing of CIA operative Valerie Plame. Amid clear evidence that two senior administration officials were involved--namely his senior advisor Karl Rove and Dick Cheney's Chief of Staff Scooter Libby--Bush now says he will fire anyone who "committed a crime." Earlier statements by the president and the White House spokesperson, Scott McClellan, had promised that anyone "involved" in the leak would be fired. The distinction is an important one given there is little debate that Rove is involved. But there is debate over whether he committed a crime under the Intelligence Identities Protection Act, which has significant loopholes. For example, prosecutors would have to prove that Rove knew Plame was operating undercover.
Former Intel Officers Protest Plame Leak
Meanwhile, eleven former intelligence officers have written an open letter to Congressional leaders saying the outing of Plame as a CIA operative may have damaged national security and the government's ability to gather intelligence. They blasted the Republican National Committee for circulating talking points about the scandal that allege that Plame was not really working undercover because she worked at a desk in Langley and legally merited no protection. The eleven point out that thousands of U.S. intelligence officers work at desks in the Washington area every day whose identities are shielded, as Plame's was when her identity was leaked.
Rove Watch: Time’s Cooper Speaks About Grand Jury Testimony
The Sunday talk shows this weekend were dominated by the ongoing investigation into the outing of covert CIA operative Valerie Plame. One of those at the center of the story, Time magazine reporter Matt Cooper, appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press" where he discussed his testimony in front of the Grand Jury. Cooper also has an article piublished last night by Time in which he says that President Bush's senior advisor, Karl Rove, was the first person to tell Cooper that Valerie Plame was a CIA officer. Cooper said he told that to a grand jury last week and that Rove ended the call by saying "I've already said too much." Cooper wrote that Rove did not disclose Valerie Plame's name, but told him in July 2003 that information would be declassified that would cast doubt on the credibility of her husband, former diplomat Joseph Wilson. Cooper wrote, "So did Rove leak Plame's name to me, or tell me she was covert? No. Was it through my conversation with Rove that I learned for the first time that Wilson's wife worked at the CIA and may have been responsible for sending him? Yes. Did Rove say that she worked at the 'agency' on 'WMD'? Yes," Cooper continues, "When he said things would be declassified soon, was that itself impermissible? I don't know. Is any of this a crime? Beats me." Cooper wrote he had previously told the grand jury he had also discussed Wilson and his wife with Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff. He said he asked Libby about Wilson's wife playing a role in the Niger trip, and Libby replied, "Yeah, I've heard that too." This all raises serious questions about whether several administration officials intentionally misled the public and investigators about the involvement of Libby and Rove. White House spokesperson Scott McClellan said in October 2003 that Rove, Libby and another official had assured him they were uninvolved in the leak.
New Studies Show Fighters in Iraq Radicalized by US Policy
This comes as 2 new studies are casting serious doubt on President Bush's claims that the resistance in Iraq is made up of career jihadists who have seized on the opportunity to make Iraq their central front. The two investigations--one by the Saudi Arabian government and the other by an Israeli think tank--have found that the vast majority of foreign fighters in Iraq are not former terrorists and became radicalized by the war itself. Both studies analyzed the backgrounds and motivations of hundreds of foreigners entering Iraq to fight the United States.
London Bombings Linked to Iraq Policy, Says Leading UK Group
As the British government continues its massive investigation into this month's coordinated London bomb attacks, one of Britain's most respected foreign policy thinktanks is challenging Prime Minister Tony Blair's claim that the bombings were not a result of British involvement in the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. A new report by the Chatham House organization said the key problem in the UK for preventing terrorism is that the country is "riding as a pillion passenger with the United States in the war against terror". The group is made up of leading academics and former government officials. On Saturday, Tony Blair said the bombers were driven by what he called an "evil ideology" rather than opposition to any policy. Blair called suggestions to the contrary a "misunderstanding of a catastrophic order." But in its report, Chatham House concludes there is "no doubt" the invasion of Iraq has "given a boost to the al-Qaida network" in "propaganda, recruitment and fundraising", while providing an ideal targeting and training area for terrorists. It goes on "Riding pillion with a powerful ally has proved costly in terms of British and US military lives, Iraqi lives, military expenditure and the damage caused to the counter-terrorism campaign."
Sunni Members of Iraq Constitutional Committee Gunned Down
Meanwhile, three Sunni Arab members of the committee drafting the country's new constitution were gunned down as they left a Baghdad restaurant on Tuesday. The Sunnis on the committee were seen as central figures in the U.S.-organized constitutional process. Fifteen Sunni members joined it last month, making it the first nationwide political body to include significant Sunni representation since the new government took power in April. Resistance groups have sworn to kill any Sunnis that took part. As we went to air, there were reports that the Sunni members were pulling out of the committee.
Women to Lose Rights in 'New' Iraq
Meanwhile, the New York Times is reporting that a draft of Iraq's new constitution would greatly curtail women's rights, imposing the Sharia or Koranic law in personal matters like marriage, divorce and inheritance. It also would limit their representation in parliament. The draft would guarantee legal rights for women, as long as they do not "violate Sharia," meaning that Shiite women could not marry without their family's permission and that husbands could divorce them simply by saying so out loud three times. The draft would also drop or phase out a measure included in the interim constitution requiring that women make up at least 25 percent of the parliament. The constitution is set to be finalized by mid-August.
New Study Says 24,000 Iraqi Civilians Killed
A new independent report released Tuesday puts the number of Iraqi civilians who died violent deaths in the two years since the US-led invasion began at more than 24,000. The study found that US and coalition military forces were responsible for 37% of the deaths, with anti-occupation forces and the resistance responsible for 9%. A further 36% were blamed on criminal violence. Figures obtained last week from the Iraqi interior ministry put the average civilian and police officer death toll in insurgent attacks from August 2004 to March 2005 at 800 a month. The report was done by Iraq Body Count and the Oxford Research Group.
Padilla Lawyer: Charge Him or Free Him
A lawyer for Jose Padilla, a US citizen accused of plotting to detonate a radioactive "dirty bomb,'' went before a federal appeals court Tuesday and demanded the U.S. government either charge his client with a crime or set him free. But a Bush administration lawyer told the court that the president must have authority to indefinitely detain terror suspects. President Bush declared Padilla an "enemy combatant,'' a designation that allows the military to hold someone indefinitely without charges. Padilla is in the Navy brig in Charleston, S.C., and has been held for the past three years. The appeals court received the case after a South Carolina judge ruled that the government must charge Padilla with a crime or release him.
Pastors for Peace Cuba Caravan Stopped at Border
This news from Texas. Hundreds of Pastors for Peace volunteers preparing to deliver a massive shipment of humanitarian aid to Cuba have been barred at the U.S.-Mexico border and could be held there for days. Commerce Department officials are saying they will search every vehicle in the caravan and every item of humanitarian aid, which hasn't been done for years, and they will only allow what Washington deems "licensable" goods to be allowed to cross into Mexico. Border agents are threatening to tow the caravan's vehicles and have already seized some aid donations, including computers. Some volunteers are walking across the U.S.-Mexico border carrying wheelchairs, crutches and other medical supplies. Others are holding a protest at the border. There are 130 U.S. citizens traveling with the delegation, as well as a truck and 2 small cars. They are attempting to deliver 140 tons of aid. The Bush Administration tightened restrictions against Cuba in 2004, and is using Homeland Security funds to investigate those suspected of travel to the island.
Schedule for this weekend's The Laura Flanders Show (Saturdays & Sundays) (and yes, she's back from vacation)
Who are the real constitutionalists? We are! Who really defends our laws? We do. This weekend, a report from the ACLU’s biennial conference. And the latest on the Supreme Court fight to save our Constitution. Jamin Raskin, American University Law professor and author of "Overruling Democracy: The Supreme Court vs. the American People." Plus John Judge, on 9/11 Commission Failure Briefings, David Swanson on the Downing Street Memo movement and Maria Raha, author of "Cinderella's Big Score: Women of the Punk and Indie Underground."
Yes, Laura Flanders is back. The Laura Flanders Show airs on Air America Radio Saturday and Sunday nights from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. EST. Note: Saturday and Sunday are two different shows. Sunday's show is not a rebroadcast of Saturday's show. You can listen online or you can check to see if there's a station in your area or if you have XM Satellite Radio, you can listen via that. (No, I didn't forget to list another satellite network. If you're thinking that, you obviously didn't listen to Randi Rhodes this week. Air America is now heard exclusively on XM.)
Laura Flanders is a community favorite so we note her shows. When Air America has something about their weekend shows up at their site, we note that as well. Thus far, there's nothing up. We'll rerun this entry on Saturday as a reminder. But Flanders is back from vacation so this is your heads up.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
"Torture and Lies: Who Is Accountable? From Abu Ghraib to the Downing Street Minutes" (The Nation)
Tomorrow, July 23, is the three-year anniversary of the meeting at Ten Downing Street in London, that was recorded in the now infamous minutes known as the "Downing Street Memo." Suggesting that the Bush Administration was intent on going to war with Iraq with or without intelligence on Saddam's WMD, the memo has given new impetus (and vindication) to antiwar critics of the invasion.
To highlight these disclosures, there are more than 150 events for tomorrow planned coast to coast. In New York City, The Nation and Democrats.Com are teaming up to present a public forum at the New York Society of Ethical Culture.
Torture and Lies: Who Is Accountable? From Abu Ghraib to the Downing Street Minutes
New York City Town Hall Meeting
Saturday July 23, 2:00 to 4:00pm
New York Society for Ethical Culture 2 W. 64th
St.Admission is free--Contributions are encouraged. No RSVPs
Sponsored by The Nation and Democrats.com
Speakers:
Rep. Maurice Hinchey
Hon. Liz Holtzman
Randi Rhodes, Air America host
Moderator: Bob Fertik, President of Democrats.com
And click [. . .] for info on the hundreds of other events planned around the country tomorrow.
And check out lots of new material at The Nation online.
Katrina vanden Heuvel hails new advances made by the Apollo Alliance.
Michael Klare warns of Bush's Iran war buildup.
David Corn illuminates more of the deceptions being employed in the Rove scandal.
Bruce Shapiro measures the stakes in John Roberts's nomination.
John Nichols says Bush has found a nominee that even Operation Rescue can love.
Ari Berman assails the GOP's new Minister of Agitprop.
Liza Featherstone says that Wal-Mart is no friend to civil rights.
Natasha Degen reflects on "Apple's America."
This Week on RadioNation Host Marc Cooper talks with Victoria de Grazia on "Irresistible Empire: America's Advance through 20th Century Europe," with Ian Williams about his book, "Rum: A Social and Sociable History of the Real Spirit of 1776," and with Peter Shanks about his new guide for activists and skeptics on "Human Genetic Engineering." Jon Wiener interviews New York Times reporter Linda Greenhouse about her new book "Becoming Justice Blackmun." Listen online or download RadioNation onto your computer--or your iPod.
Click on the XML button at: http://www.thenation.com
Finally, check out The Nation to post comments to our blogs, to view news-wire links updated twice each day, for info on nationwide activist campaigns, Nation History offerings and special weekly selections from The Nation magazine!
Sunday Chat & Chews
ABC's This Week has the following guests and topics:
Guests:
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.
The focus in Washington this week is on two men: John Roberts and Karl Rove. President Bush's nominee for the Supreme Court seems to be headed for confirmation, but what difference will he make on the court? Did Karl Rove leak classified information, and is special counsel Patrick Fitzgerald now looking into conspiracy or obstruction of justice charges? Senate heavyweight John McCain will join me in an exclusive interview to discuss the political fallout on the White House, as well as John Roberts' nomination and his upcoming confirmation hearings.
Plus, Sen. Patrick Leahy will join me in an exclusive interview to further discuss what the Democrats plan to do about the new details emerging regarding Rove's version of events in the controversy, as well as Judge Roberts' nomination to the Supreme Court. Since President Bush announced his pick on Tuesday, no Democratic senator has publicly come out against Judge Roberts and there's been no talk of a filibuster. Does this mean he'll face a relatively smooth confirmation process and avoid a political battle that was so widely expected?
Then, in our Voices this week, the unseen burdens of war. Stefanie Pelkey, a former captain in the U.S. Army, testifies on Capitol Hill next week on behalf of her husband, Capt. Michael Pelkey, who served in Iraq for six months in 2003. She will talk about the nightmare that followed him home -- post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Her husband committed suicide just two weeks after being diagnosed with the disorder. Now Stefanie is speaking out to try to help other military families who may be facing the same trauma, and because she doesn't want her husband's death to be in vain.
Finally, David Gergen, former presidential adviser, Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne, and ABC News' Linda Douglass will join me for a discussion on Karl Rove's political problems, the terror attacks in London, and John Roberts' nomination. And we'll remember the general synonymous with Vietnam, a Washington institution and the man who brought you the TV dinner.
NBC's Meet the Press has the following guests and topics:
FRED THOMPSON Adviser to Supreme Court Nominee John Roberts
Former Senator, R - Tennessee
SEN. DICK DURBIN (D-IL) Assistant Minority Leader, Democratic Whip
Judiciary Committee
DAVID GREGORY
NBC News White House Correspondent
WILLIAM SAFIRE
New York Times
STUART TAYLOR
National Journal
NINA TOTENBERG
National Public Radio Legal Affairs Correspondent
On Tuesday evening, President George W. Bush announced his nomination of Judge John Roberts for the Supreme Court. This Sunday, we will have an exclusive interview with the man the White House selected to advise Roberts through the Senate confirmation process, former Senator Fred Thompson (R-TN). Then, in another exclusive interview, we will get the Democrats' perspective on the Roberts' nomination from Assistant Minority Leader and Judiciary Committee member, Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL). Plus, the politics of the Roberts nomination, the outlook for his confirmation, the continuing CIA leak investigation, the future of Karl Rove and the protection of confidential sources. Insights and analysis from our political roundtable: David Gregory of NBC News, William Safire of the New York Times, Stuart Taylor of the National Journal and Nina Totenberg of NPR.
CBS's Face the Nation offers the following guests and topics:
Host:
CBS Evening News Anchor Bob Schieffer
Topics:
Supreme Court Nominee John Roberts and Terror Bombings In London
Guests:
Alberto Gonzales
U.S. Attorney General
Sen. Joe Biden
Democrat - Delaware
Judiciary Committee
Jan Crawford Greenburg
The Chicago Tribune
I trash the Chat & Chews because . . . well honestly, they make it so damn easy to. But I will note that it's not the usual booking frenzy of "We will all have the same guests!" for this Sunday.
Nina Totenberg is someone I enjoy on NPR so if I were going to watch one, it would probably be Meet the Press. If you're of the mind to watch one (or more) hopefully the above will help you make your choice (or choices).
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
Folding Star has not started blogging again
As most people know, Rebecca's on vacation. I had an e-mail from Mike that I completely misunderstood (no suprise there). I thought he was theorizing/philosophizing that with Rebecca on vacation, Folding Star would return to blogging. I assumed Mike was saying it was like the life cycle.
Mike was quoting an entries in this morning's e-mails.
I e-mailed Folding Star.
From the first paragraph of Folding Star's e-mail:
Nope, that's not me. Looks like someone else claimedthe title and web address. Let people know it's notme, would you?
Angela's Ashes isn't a book Folding Star would be reading. I'm not saying FS would find it a bad book, I am saying that FS would have read it a long, long time ago.
I'm hoping that the person who claimed both sites (mirror and original) is just a big fan of Folding Star and wanted the sites to continue. But I don't know that.
I don't know anything about this person.
I'd planned to leave both links up because it honestly made me very sad that FS wasn't blogging.
And FS had a place on our list as a community blogger. Januaray through July, FS was blogging.
I don't know who it is. They may be a fan of Folding Star's. (Folding Star is sure it's not a friend.) But they aren't Folding Star. And using FS's titles and not explaining upfront that they aren't Folding Star does puzzle me.
So both sites are removed.
You'll find links removed at other community sites as well.
It's not Folding Star and that's not clear from the posts but more importantly, we linked because it was Folding Star.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
Democracy Now: Labor, Corp. Tax Dodge, Lucius Walker; Bob Somerby, Delilah, Robert Parry, Jacqueline Bacon, Buzz's GOP Hyporcite of the Week...
This news from Texas. Hundreds of Pastors for Peace volunteers preparing to deliver a massive shipment of humanitarian aid to Cuba have been barred at the U.S.-Mexico border and could be held there for days. Commerce Department officials are saying they will search every vehicle in the caravan and every item of humanitarian aid, which hasn't been done for years, and they will only allow what Washington deems "licensable" goods to be allowed to cross into Mexico. Border agents are threatening to tow the caravan's vehicles and have already seized some aid donations, including computers. Some volunteers are walking across the U.S.-Mexico border carrying wheelchairs, crutches and other medical supplies. Others are holding a protest at the border. There are 130 U.S. citizens traveling with the delegation, as well as a truck and 2 small cars. They are attempting to deliver 140 tons of aid. The Bush Administration tightened restrictions against Cuba in 2004, and is using Homeland Security funds to investigate those suspected of travel to the island.
The Bloomberg News Agency is reporting that the two figures at the center of the outing of CIA operative Valerie Plame may have intentionally misled investigators. The agency says that President Bush's senior advisor Karl Rove and Dick Cheney's Chief of Staff Scooter Libby both gave accounts to the special prosecutor about how reporters told them the identity of a CIA agent that are at odds with what the reporters have said. Libby told special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald that he first learned Plame's identity from NBC News reporter Tim Russert. Bloomberg says Russert has testified before a federal grand jury that he didn't tell Libby of Plame's identity. Rove, meanwhile, told Fitzgerald that he first learned the identity of the CIA agent from syndicated columnist Robert Novak. But Bloomberg cites a source saying that Novak has given a different version to the special prosecutor. Fitzgerald is investigating whether Libby, Rove, or other administration officials made false statements during the course of the investigation.
- Man Shot on London Train as Hunt Continues
- Police to Begin Searching Bags on NY Subways
- Congress Moves to Make USA PATRIOT Act Permanent
- Palestinian Envoy Blasts Israeli Expansion
- Saddam Video Released
- Sunnis Resign From Iraq Constitution Committee
- Pentagon Confirms Prisoner Hunger Strike at Gitmo
- Syria Charges US Troops Fired on Border Guards
As the AFL-CIO, the nation's largest labor organization, heads to its convention, we host a debate on the future of organized labor. We speak with Karen Ackerman, political director of the AFL-CIO, Chris Chafe, Chief of Staff at UNITE HERE as well as Kim Moody, co-founder of the rank and file newsletter Labor Notes and professor at Brooklyn College. [includes rush transcript - partial]
We speak with Greg Leroy, author of the book "The Great American Jobs Scam: Corporate Tax Dodging and the Myth of Job Creation" that shows how - in case after case - false promises of good jobs and higher tax revenues by large corporations land them huge tax breaks and other subsidies from state and local governments.
Volunteers attempting to deliver tons of humanitarian aid and hurricane relief to Cuba were stopped at the U.S. - Mexican border Thursday. The volunteers are part of a Pastors for Peace caravan, a group which delivers shipments of humanitarian aid yearly to Latin American countries and Cuba.
A vigil is being held today in New York to commemorate the anniversary of the death of Palestinian human rights activist Farouk Abdel-Muhti. He was jailed for two years without charge. He died last summer just three months after being released. We play an excerpt of the documentary, "Farouk Abdel-Muhti: Political Prisoner.
SEELYE (3/16/99): Republicans have poked fun at Mr. Gore for directing a Presidential campaign to such seemingly small issues as lost bags at airports and such seemingly local issues as traffic congestion. Jim Nicholson, chairman of the Republican National Committee, has been particularly scathing, accusing Mr. Gore of trying to "do away with the internal combustion engine, the automobile," and calling him "an apologist for the President; he's a wasteful dreamer.
Today, the parties approach agreement on warming. But Gore, the guy who sounded the call, was ridiculed for his insight during Campaign 2000--the campaign that transformed American life. And did your fiery liberal heroes complain about this drumbeat of ridicule? Of course not! At THE HOWLER, we discussed this point again and again, but go ahead--just find someone else who did so! Today, they pander to you about Rove, then ask you to please send them twenty-five dollars. But their silence during that twenty-month war is what put King Karl into the White House. When you hear them yell about Rove today, remember what they did when it mattered.
Everyone agrees on warming--today. But then, everyone agreed during Campaign 2000 as well! Everyone agreed to mock Candidate Gore--and your heroes agreed to keep quiet.
VISIT OUR INCOMPARABLE ARCHIVES: As of 1998, every major car CEO agreed with Gore's widely ridiculed (and misstated) assessment (see THE DAILY HOWLER, 4/29/99). But so what? The ridicule continued for the next twenty months, driven by the Post and the Times--and fiery liberal heroes kept quiet. That's why Rove is where he is. By the way, won't you send them thirty dollars so they can pander to you a bit more?
Her pitiful attempt to distance herself from Bush v Gore didn't pass the smell test then, and today's lament doesn't, either.
NOW she's worried about the future of the judiciary? (Yes, "NOW" is worried, too!)
Although supposedly in a rush to leave on vacation, Rove e-mailed Stephen J. Hadley, then Bush's deputy national security adviser (and now national security adviser). According to the Associated Press, Rove's e-mail said he "didn't take the bait" when Cooper suggested that Wilson's criticisms had hurt the administration.
While it's not entirely clear what Rove meant in the e-mail, the significance is that Rove immediately reported to Hadley, an official who was in a position to know classified details about Plame's job. In other words, the e-mail is evidence that the assault on Wilson was being coordinated at senior White House levels.
Flaherty and other reparations opponents also create discrete groups in their historical narratives: North and South, slaveholders and those who had nothing to do with the institution at worst (and, at best, fought the system). The NLPC's characterization is typical: "Prior to and during the Civil War, the great majority of the population was located in the Northern states where slavery was outlawed In fact, many of those northerners were abolitionists and detested the institution of slavery."
This statement is flawed on many counts. As current lawsuits and corporate disclosures demonstrate, Americans living in the North -- businesspeople; financiers; those who owned property in the South by birth, marriage, or inheritance -- often supported and profited from slavery. Various prominent proslavery writers were Northerners. Mob violence was directed against abolitionists and free African Americans in Northern cities. The contention that the North was somehow an abolitionist stronghold may be comforting, but it is untrue. Reparations opponents attempt to minimize slavery's impact on the nations past and present, yet as the late African-American historian Nathan Irvin Huggins argued, we must acknowledge that there can be no accurate American history unless we "begin to comprehend that slavery and freedom, white and black, are joined at the hip."
Let's imagine for a moment that a member of the Bush Administration was pardoned by the president after being indicted for say, leaking a CIA undercover agent's name to the public. And let us also say for the purposes of this question that the Executive Clemency order was issued after the indictment was proffered but before the case was prosecuted. The very timing of this pardon would virtually steal the golden fleece of justice from American citizens before our Justice system could work its magic.
So then let's further imagine that the federal prosecutor had no choice but to challenge the legality of the executive branch's pre-empting the full and fair prosecution of the law.
Now, finally, here's the question to be posed to Judge Roberts...- "If the President issued this imaginary pardon BEFORE the conviction, and the resolution of this imaginary case came all the way down through the system to end up on your docket, how would you, as a Justice of the Supreme Court, likely rule?
It feels like the left has already thrown in the towel on fighting Judge John Robert's nomination. Everyone is so busy conceding that it could have been much worse, we've already forgotten the idea that it could have been much better.
Roberts' nomination reminds us why more of us need to question the alleged virtue of a having a "strict constructionist" on the Supreme Court.
What would America look like if the "strict constructionists" had their way? Let's look at the founder's intent and see what a "strict constructionist" America actually looks like.
In 1787, women and men who didn't own land couldn't vote. African-Americans had no rights. The Constitution doesn't address any sort of environmental rights.
In 1886, the "strict constructionists" on the Supreme Court in Plessy v. Ferguson declared that "separate but equal" didn't violate the Constitutions equal protection clause.
That was the wrong decision then and it remained the wrong decision until it was finally overturned by Brown v. The Board of Education in 1954 by "activist judges".
Lloyd e-mails to note Ruth Conniff's "Time for Tough Questions:"
Roberts's record also raises serious questions about whether he would protect the interests of individual American citizens from overwhelming corporate and government power. His opinion in Hedgepeth v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, upholding the decision that the arrest, search, handcuffing and detention of a twelve-year-old girl for eating a single French fry in a Washington Metro station did not violate her Fourth or Fifth Amendment rights is troubling. So is his opinion in Acree v. Iraq, that Iraqi citizens who had been tortured and falsely imprisoned could not pursue a claim against the Bush Administration-supported Iraqi government. His dissenting opinion in Rancho Viejo v. Norton appears to show contempt for the environmental and species-protection function of the Fish and Wildlife Service.
These and other issues deserve a thorough probing by members of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Let the tough questions begin.
And from yesterday:
NYC TOWN HALL MEETING
Torture & Lies: Who is Accountable?
From Abu Ghraib to the Downing Street Minues
This Saturday from 2-4 pm join:
-Randi Rhodes
-Congressman Maurice Hinchey
- Former Congresswoman Liz Holtzman
- President of Democrats.com Bob Fertik
Discussions to include:
- Karl Rove/TraitorGate
- The Downing Street Minutes
- How to be heard in Washington
- Getting involved in your community, etc.
When: Saturday, 7/23 from 2-4 pm
Where: New York Society for Ethical Culture, 2 West 64th St., NYC
Admission: Free!
More info on the NYC event Events near you Host your own meeting
I'm sure this goes without saying but Randi Rhodes is the host of The Randi Rhodes Show which broadcasts Monday through Friday on Air America. (And Laura Flanders is back on The Laura Flanders Show this weekend, by the way.) We'll note this again Friday and Saturday morning at Eddie's request. If you're in the area, please consider attending. If you're not in the area but know someone who is, pass on the news. And if you're not in the area and know no one in the area, it's still worth noting because people haven't given up on this and those who haven't deserve credit.
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