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For The Trees
Who is our economy FOR, anyway? About the Authors: Dave Johnson John Emerson Richard Reich Thomas Leavitt
Recent Posts: BEST OF STF: Dave's: Articles not at STF: The ATLA Speech on building a progressive infrastructure Lowering the Bar The Attack on Trial Lawyers and Tort Law Who's Behind the Attack on Liberal Professors On the Right and their communications infrastructure: Why Republicans Win Win or Lose The "Conventional Wisdom" Machine Some History of the Conservative Movement HOW TO FIGHT BACK An Amplifier Of Our Own Don't Blame the Democrats How They Do It 1 2 3 4 Getting Rolled Other: You're Gonna Get Drafted Scalia and Self-Government Who is Our Economy For? Voting Machine Story Link Collection What's Wrong with this Picture? (Voting Machines) Like Meat in the Supermarket Get Active Thin Line 1 2 3 Fixing Social Security Seeing the Forest I, II, III "Incredibly Positive News" The Breadth of It The Republican Crony Club Moon Bush Ralph Nader is a Scab John's Best Of: Kerry Smear Page Bandar Bush 9/11 Commission Report Damages Bush -- if you read it Florida Goon Squad Intimidated the Supreme Court The Use and Abuse of George Orwell Zizka's Archives (John's previous identity) Zizka Sampler News Sources: AlterNet BuzzFlash Common Dreams Cursor Drudge Retort Information Clearing House Smirking Chimp TruthOut What REALLY Happened Links to Other Weblogs: |
![]() 8/07/2004 A Role for Bloggers After All - Part II Part I is here. Connecting the Dots Bloggers are connecting the dots and bringing out stories the press does not see or will not cover. At the convention I was almost completely isolated from incoming information other than whatever I am covering at the moment. I just did not have time to follow the news the way I usually do. This is not like my usual blogging environment, with time to read the morning news and several other blogs. I grab some news off of the internet. I get information from talking to other bloggers. This is significant. A LOT of what I usually write about comes from detailed following what's in the media, (and what the Right is printing and saying.) There was almost no opportunity for any of that at the convention, and I can see how in the Washington or New York top-level journalist life there is little opportunity either. So - special role of Blogging #2 – we bring important stories to the attention of the readers, and our readers include media and political circles. During the convention Pakistan announced that it had captured a major al Queda figure. You and I know, because we read blogs, that The New Republic and others had previously carried the "July Surprise" story that the White House had ordered Pakistan to capture high al Queda officials during the convention, for entirely political reasons. But when CNN covered the story of the capture during the convention there was no mention of this at all. I read a few blogs complaining about CNN's failure to cover this most important aspect of the story, but with my convention experience at the time, it occurred to me that this was likely because they just didn't know that the "July Surprise" had been predicted. This is not an excuse, because it is their job to know. This failure is something they should be compensating for, but the transformation of news from a public service to a commercial venture has brought with it certain shortcomings, apparently including less than adequate research departments. And, as we all know (because we read blogs and are so much more well-informed than almost everyone else), these shortcomings are being used to the political and financial advantage of certain politicians and their cronies. This is where we come in. Bloggers are connecting the dots. Bloggers are keeping important stories alive. Another aspect of this comes from thinking about my years in tech marketing. Tech editors can make or break a product, so marketers are always pitching product stories to them. They receive hundreds of press releases and calls, and you have to put a great great spin and cast your story a certain way to even get a foot in the door toward getting a story. I can see that news editors would have the same problem. The UFO Society, and the people who can prove that the Trilateral Commission faked the Apollo moon project using movie studios, are in line in front of us, telling the editors how important their story is. So when someone shows up with a story about how we shouldn't trust voting machines that have no way for the voter to verify that their vote was correctly recorded, the editor will probably roll his or her eyes, thank us, and have a good laugh at our expense. But bloggers are the reason the voting machines story is reaching the mainstream. We kept at that story and kept at it and kept at it. And through the "marketplace" nature of weblogs, the story spread, and spread, and was discussed, and we found new ways to explain it, and eventually it rose to prominence. It rose up in the marketplace of the weblogs. Other stories, like the Trent Lott story and the Bush National Guard Service story were repeated and repeated in the weblogs until they just couldn't be ignored by the national media. Bloggers are making up for some of the current shortcomings of the major media by connecting the dots and bringing important stories to the public's attention. End of Part II of my post-convention blogging report. More to come. A Role for Bloggers After All (I) Post-Convention Blogging Report There has been lots of talk about blogger "coverage" of the convention. Some had expectations that there would be breakthrough, inspired commentary; others wondered at our amateurish appearance and prose. So why were we invited? No one has yet stated what, to me, is the obvious. (Perhaps there has been a conscious decision to avoid being crass – but if that's the case they wouldn't have invited me.) Money. There it is. Expectations of brilliance and innovation are fine, but bloggers raised lots of money for the party. And volunteers. Money and volunteers. And publicity. After the rise of Howard Dean, bloggers were going to be in the Show. Money and volunteers and publicity. There it is. I came to the convention with few expectations, but arrived to find myself part of the story. The first event I attended was a blogger gathering at a bar on Sunday night, and there were reporters there interviewing us because bloggers at the convention was a STORY! NEWS! One of my first convention posts included a picture of a TV news crew filming a reporter interviewing a blogger who was interviewing the reporter. With a war on and other serious things they could be covering, this struck me as absurd, which led me to think that the whole phenomenon of blogging might have already outlived its usefulness. But that changed. I came to believe that there is a very important role for the webloggers in the political process. I think is the most important ongoing value of the new phenomena of blogging is that bloggers offer observations without the media filter. This is not better or worse than what we get from the media. The value is the difference. This is a resource for political professionals. Bloggers are able to give the political leadership a way to tap into opinion that is there but is not yet salient. I think bloggers offer Washington and local leadership an additional channel for learning what the public is thinking – or, even better, what the public WILL BE thinking. The huge number of weblogs and the number of people choosing which blogs to read on a given day offers a true "marketplace" method of learning what that segment of the public considers important. While I think it is important that our readers have access to this perspective, I think that this is especially valuable to the political class. Smart People - Marketplace I read somewhere that there are over three million weblogs! Of course, many of these have about nine readers, but it says something about the 36 webloggers who received credentials to work at the Democratic convention. The webloggers who were at the convention were there because they have risen through a "marketplace" of internet users deciding to read their weblogs instead of other weblogs. Through this marketplace process the "Convention Bloggers" have reached a point where they were noticed and invited to the convention. Some of the webloggers were invited for obvious reasons – large numbers of readers (and generating large donations to candidates and the party.) Some of these weblogs might have traffic numbers that seem less than impressive, but have contributed in one way or another to the process. (There were hundreds of weblogs at the same "level" as Seeing the Forest, and I am not claiming to have any superior insight or readership here. I also got lucky, no question about it.) Possibly relevant to their invitations, these are weblogs that are read by members of Congressional and party staff, and elected officials. (I learned from different sources that STF is read by very well-placed people in the political structure. I have been surprised to find STF listed at Gary Hart's weblog, then Howard Dean's, then John Kerry's and so many others.) Here is what I am getting at: The bloggers I met at the convention were all people who are very smart, who make very sharp observations, who communicate well through written words and who have an audience. This is fine, but the question here is, isn't this the role of the media? You read over and over that webloggers are not part of the media culture. But what does this mean, and is this a good thing, if true? The media culture. Webloggers were given press passes for the convention. This meant we had access to special areas set aside for the media to get their work done, and special access to events, through separate entrances, special seating areas, etc. I have experience working with the media, but not as the media. My first experience inside the media culture was going to the Press floor at the convention, and then into the Press Filing Room. It was immediately clear that this is a very thick culture – thick like how cop culture is thick. And a think culture will have an effect on a person. Everyone wants to fit in to any group they find themselves in, and walking into this area as "one of them," picking up the little glances, trying to read the expressions, looking at how they were dressed and when they talked or didn't or any of the thousands of other ways humans get signals immediately made me very self-conscious. It was clear I was an "outsider." A young person entering this culture and wanting to rise up in the profession – and in hierarchy of the group – is certainly going to be strongly influenced. I was immediately immersed rather than slowly introduced. I was standing next to Sam Donaldson and Wolf Blitzer and talking to David Corn and E.J. Dionne in the first hours and days of my media life, which I doubt the journalism student experiences. So I think my observation of the likely effect of the power of the culture has merit. One observation of the culture was the respect paid to each other and to the people they interact with – candidates, officials, etc. These are people you are going to be working with tomorrow – every tomorrow. AND many of these people are in positions to assist or harm your career. It would have to be very difficult to break through this and ask embarrassing questions, and I think this may have something to do with why they do not. If you are able to, the Republicans work to make sure that you don't get the opportunity. And it was confirmed to me at what you would probably agree are the highest levels of the profession, in Washington right now if you DO manage to get past all of this and ask embarrassing questions, the Republicans WILL work very hard to harm your career. Press people are very, very arrogant. Some of this is actually from consciously defending their role as public servants -- informers of the public. This is a very important role in a democracy and there are always undemocratic elements challenging that. The media culture has the quality of a clear "inside" and "outside," or "us and them" aspect of the experience. A press badge actually means you cross certain lines – like to the "press area." So you have the physical separation from "regular" people. Another thing you have is special access. I went to an event where Howard Dean and Michael Moore were speaking, and when I arrived the line was many, many blocks long to enter an event that was already full. But I was able to walk right in and get a seat. This is necessary, because each reporter reaches hundreds or thousands of people, but it also means that you are a person of special privilege. These are things that are absolute requirements of getting the job done – and the job is supposed to be informing the people. But they also necessarily will affect the story you write. Professional Training There are several things a professional journalist learns. One is the importance of removing yourself from the story. Another is to attempt to have objectivity. (Nedra skipped that class.) The culture, special status and training all add up to filters applied to what is written. Here Come the Bloggers So along come the bloggers, offering a voicing of what regular people are thinking – well, some of us, anyway – without the filters that journalistic professionalism demands. It Helped Dean Dean's campaign was reading blogs and was able to understand that there was widespread feeling that had not yet reached the point of being understood by the political structure. To understand this, think back a couple of years to the frustrations of all Democrats with the Party leadership. But this is a two-way street. Politicians respond to the public. The Party leadership HAS responded. But two years ago they were not receiving the information. In Washington's "inside the beltway" environment they really do have trouble understanding what people are feeling. The Dean phenomona demonstrated to them -- the ones paying attention -- just how far they have been from their constituencies. (I was told that two years ago a very high official in the Kerry campaign had said there won't be a single vote that comes from the Internet.) Blogging provides a way for elected officials and staffs to guage public opinion, at least of those actively informed enough to be reading blogs – a second channel from the media, which when functioning is extremely important. So, special role of Blogging #1 – we provide observations without the filters that the mainstream media uses. I am not saying this makes our observations better, just different, and this is important. I think bloggers are a special kind of information filter. At the convention I realized that bloggers serve a much more important role in the political process than I had thought before the convention. This is the end of Part I of my post-convention blogging report. More to come. Update - Part II is up. I Want You All To Be As Afraid As You Can Be Bush Warns Americans They Are 'Still Not Safe'. Contrast this with a real leader, in a time of real emergency. FDR comforted the country in his inauguration address, saying, "the only thing we have to fear is fear itself." (By the way, looking for a good reference for FDR's quote, I discovered that the Right is sponsoring a number of websites accusing FDR of responsibility for the Pearl Harbor attack! What are they up to now, teaching kids this stuff? Some of the sites also accuse Kennedy of "lying" about the Cuban Missile Crisis.) 8/06/2004 Whatever happened to Sibel Edmonds? Sibel Edmonds is a former FBI translator who was fired after having accused the FBI translation service of serious lapses (including an apparent compromise of security which allowed an employee to protect a suspect). She was ignored entirely, not only by the 9/11 Commission but also by the U.S. press. (Her letter to the commission was ultimately published by the Asia Times in Hong Kong.) Despite the whistle-blower law, and despite a supportive report from Justice Department Inspector General Glenn Fine, Edmonds is now out of a job. The FBI has admitted nothing. Thanks to my friend Diana Moon for the link. Diana is always interesting and is sometimes willing to rush in where angels fear to tread -- though she did wimp out on us just recently. (She justified herself using the "sanity clause", but there's one thing she forgot: as Chico Marx pointed out, "There ain't no Sanity Claus".) (P.S.: If there's a Blogspot expert out there, Diana seems to have a permalink problem). Swift Boat Liars, etc.: Combating Republican Slime Operations A few posts down, Dave linked to a bunch of the Republican character assassin sites pushing the "Swift Boat" smear. For those of you who want to do your own research, here are some links to the most prolific sources of Republican slime, together with links to debunking sites and to some research I did a few months ago. The Bad Guys: Citizens United (Bossie) / Vietnam Special Forces Against Kerry (Noe) / GOP USA (Aldrich) / Vietnam Veterans Against John Kerry (Stampley) / NRO: The Corner / Ann Coulter / Front Page / Worldnet Daily / NY Post / Washington Times / Republican National Committee / George W. Bush.com The Good Guys: Daily Howler / Media Matters / Kerry Campaign: D-Bunker / Move On: Daily Misleader / CJR Campaign Desk / Snopes (search "Kerry") / Spinsanity (search "Kerry") Some stuff I gathered: Kerry's Military Service / Kerry's Anti-war Activities / Kerry's Military & Intelligence Votes / Cleland's Military Service . The links just above are only up-to-date as of March 31 or so. Ex-Senator Max Cleland is included as an example of the way the Republican attack machine (e.g., the near-psychotic TV personality Ann Coulter) is willing to smear absolutely anyone. Sen. John McCain during the 2000 South Carolina primary is another example. Most of the surrogates have no direct connection with Bush or the Republican Party, but they all show up reliably whenever there's dirty work that needs to be done. Experts The voting machine makers and their palsy-walsy state and local election officials fashionably deride computer scientists, but what do they say to the real experts?
Wow Mark A. R. Kleiman: The Rev. Mr. Moon and North Korean WMD: "Is this a hoax? Or is it true that the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church give North Korea the Russian missile submarines from which they have now successfully copied intermediate range ballistic missile launchers?"That's Moon, as in Washington Times. Jeeze Steve Soto found this: Bush, family and top aides received $127,600 gifts last year from Saudi crown prince. And that's just last year. The State Department's annual tally of gifts to administration officials shows that Abdullah gave them $127,600 in jewelry and other presents last year, including a diamond-and-sapphire jewelry set for first lady Laura Bush that was valued at $95,500.I report, you decide. 8/05/2004 The Smear is Widespread Scary John Kerry and Vietnam. Well-produced. Circulating via e-mail... If you can stomach watching this one to the end ... it's a LOT worse than the "swift boat veterans" smear. It is MUCH worse. And this one. And this one. And this one. And this one. And this one. And this one. And this one. And this one. And there is so much more. Update - What he says. (From the comments.) No More Kerry In The News Kerry Opposes Media Consolidation Trend: Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry said on Thursday he opposes the push for media consolidation and would pursue a policy aimed at broad and diverse ownership of media outlets.Remember what happened to Dean when he said the same thing? Another Republican Vote-Suppression Scam Get this one -- getting voter registration lists, and sending "change of address cards" for the Democrats on the list. [lbo-talk] Old, old way to steal an election "Apparently there are groups out there who buy copies of the voterSurprised? WHY? Here It Is Here it is. The latest smear. The big one. Drudge is pushing (and Limbaugh repeating) a new smear ad, supposedly by veterans who "served with" Kerry. This is Bush campaigning at its ... finest. This is what we all knew was coming. "VIET VETS CHARGE: KERRY KILLED A LONE, FLEEING, TEENAGE FOE; LIED TO SUPERIORS TO GAIN MEDALThis is a pretty big smear, and you can be sure they are pushing it through every channel available to them. Drudge. Limbaugh. Internet chain letters. Internet discussion sites. Churches... They are also running a new commercial in swing states. Of course the entire right-wing machine is all over this today. Limbaugh, etc. are talking about nothing else. This is the expected, coordinated, well-funded smear. We bloggers have been talking about this for more than a year. Everyone knew it was coming. This is what Bush did to McCain in 2000 -- and it's even the same people doing it. From a New York Times story about this smear, "Mr. Kerry's aides circulated an 18-page packet discrediting the veterans group and linking its backers to Republicans, noting that a public-relations consultant the group paid $27,000 this spring, Merrie Spaeth, was also involved in a advertising campaign attacking Senator John McCain during his tough race against Mr. Bush in the 2000 primary in South Carolina."So here we are. What does Kerry have ready in response? Two weeks ago there was a coordinated smear campaign involving Sandy Berger, that the Republicans claimed proved that Clinton was entirely responsible for 9/11. The Democrats weren't ready for this at all, and did not respond. I don't even think they understand today that this was a planned, coordinated smear designed to convince people that Bush was not responsible for letting the 9/11 attack happen! And now a big Kerry smear arrives. What response has Kerry prepared? To me, this is the question of the election. What does Kerry have ready in response? Did I say that we all knew it was coming. This is what Bush Sr. did to Dukakis. This is what Bush did to Gore. The Big Smear. This is what Republicans do. Since Bush Sr. effectively used these tactics on Dukakis the Democrats must have been preparing a response. Right? Or at least since they did it to Gore. Right? They must have had teams of psychologists, linguists, advertising pros, etc. doing the necessary research on how to most effectively respond to this kind of smear. Right? To me, this goes beyond the campaign. This goes beyond protecting their own political careers. This goes to protecting us. What is the criticism of Bush for 9/11? That all the signs were there that we were going to be attacked, and they ignored it. Does Kerry have a devastating response ready for The Big Smear? To me this is the same question as: Is Kerry ready to be president? Update - For those who think that McCain speaking out for Kerry is all that is needed, remember: Bush did this to McCain in South Carolina, AND THE RESULT WAS THAT McCAIN LOST! 8/04/2004 Are Bloggers Gentlemen? During the Democratic Convention there was a mini-controversy about whether bloggers are real journalists or not. Today Paul Krugman gave his own answer to this question, by recommending that his fellow journalists start reading David Brock's Media Matters, The Columbia Journalism Review's Campaign Desk, and especially Bob Somerby's Daily Howler. Krugman gave special attention to Somerby's belief that political journalists are "writing to a script" -- deciding on their story in advance, and then selecting or twisting the facts to fit the script, while suppressing the facts that contradict it. By citing Somerby's blog, Krugman effectively destroys the most serious single objection to blogdom. For while it is indeed true that bloggers don't have factcheckers or editors, the big media don't factcheck any more either. As a result, that job is left to bloggers, and Somerby is the best of the best. In short, the blog critics are 180 degrees off. It's the legit media that needs to clean up its act. So why do people say such mean things about bloggers? Well, it's like a Jane Austen novel. Bloggers are not gentlemen, and our social status is uncertain -- perhaps we are cads and bounders. The print journalists, on the other hand (including the ladies, God bless them!) are gentlemen. They have institutional connections and get paid, while we're all still in the "Who the hell does he think he is?" category. Because of their institutional connections, legit journalists have come to believe that they are authorities and kingmakers, and that the rest of us are laymen whose opinion is of no real importance. They are professionals in their own minds, and they believe that they have no more need to listen to the criticisms of amateurs than physicists or mathematicians do. The odd thing is that an unfortunate professional inversion has taken place. At the very moment when journalists achieved their quasi-professional status, their work began to degenerate and become less professional. Because "professionalism" now means (rather than following professional standards) the possession of authority, and being part of an in-group, and being a loyal member of a powerful team which begins with the beat reporters at the bottom, and goes on past the byline reporters and columnists and the editors and publishers all the way up to the highest government officials. That's the significance of all the cute little nicknames and jokes Bush has for media people. It's like he's telling him that they're now low-ranking members of the same powerful fraternity he is, and that he's going to haze them a bit but they're really part of the gang -- as long as they act right. (Doonesbury's Garry Trudeau, who knew Bush backin in the day, says that he has "the soul of a rush chairman"). And the ones lower down on the food chain have learned that the only way to be successful is to please the ones above them. Journalistic success is defined by promotions and pay, and promotion is decided by agreeing with the boss -- which includes slanting or suppressing stories . There is plenty of evidence that professional standards have been weakened, and this is because most media outlets have fallen into the hands of ideologues and financiers. The big decisions are increasingly made for purposes of ideology or marketing or for other non-professional, non-journalistic reasons. But alas for the "pros"! Right at the moment we're going through another one of those McLuhanesque media revolutions. Anyone who cares can now check up on the big names and find out how good or bad a job they're doing. Blog readership is not numerically great, but it's high quality, and the media clowns are increasingly finding themselves being held in justified contempt by many of their best informed readers. It's got to be taking a lot of fun out of it for them. "Who are these guys?" Well, we're citizens using a new medium. The best comparison is with the eighteenth-century pamphleteers who used the newfangled printing presses to topple the Ancien Regime or George III. Or maybe I'm just being optimistic. Are Bloggers Gentleman? (version 1.0) A young blogger becomes a gentleman and forgets his old friends Grumpy blogger response George IV is worse than George III P.S. Almost nobody has recognized so far that blog journalism is, in one key sense, superior to print journalism. Bloggers can give supporting citations to the reader directly, with links which are immediately checkable. In order to check up on a print journalist (much less a TV newsman), you have to go to the library and dig around, and enough journalists get caught misusing citations that you can be sure that a lot of them get away with it. Somerby makes my case for me: not only does he link everything, but his whole site back several years is a searchable database. Kit Seelye, Chris Matthews, Bill O'Reilly -- you've got them right there at your fingertips. Somerby is able to back up everything he says in a way that print journalists cannot, and within the range of his specific interests he's the go-to guy. P.P.S. Probably the reason Krugman is able to accept Somerby is that Krugman isn't really a journalist -- he's really a Ph.D. professor at a top university. The status "journalist" isn't really a very lofty one, but if it's all he's got, a dog will fight to the death for a dry, smelly bone. P.P.P.S. It should be said that bloggers almost never do the kinds of detailed investigation that real reporters do. We can fact-check and critique real reporting, but few of us really do any. On the other hand, dozens of bloggers can bloviate as well as David Broder by now. (Extensively edited and rewritten, 9:00 p.m. August 4. My imaginary editor didn't feel like coming in today). The Fear IV Over at Michael Berube Online: "Following the release of a new psychological study that indicates voters prefer George Bush over John Kerry only when they are asked to think about death, Director of Homeland Security Tom Ridge has raised the terror alert level to 'black,' the White House revealed today.Go read the rest. Firefighters Smeared at Bush Blog Unbelievable. Firefights support Kerry, so they get smeared. Check this out at the OFFICIAL Bush weblog, GeorgeWBush.com :: Official Blog :: August 01, 2004 - August 07, 2004 Archive. The post links to this: "Generally speaking, the likelihood that a firefighter will vote for John Kerry is inversely proportional to the number of fires he has actually fought. Witness all those T-shirted "Fire Fighters for Kerry" you saw at the convention. A little soft around the middle some of them were, weren't they? Do you think some of them could haul a hose pack up 50 flights of stairs? I'm not betting on it. I'm guessing the only fires many of them have seen lately were at IAFF barbecues."There's more, and it is just disgusting. It praises Cheney for his use of foul language, it says Republicans are "regular guys," etc. WAY Over the Line Steve Gilliard thinks that right-winger Instapundit has gone over the line and suggests some things you can do to act on this. Instapundit is promoting a T-shirt that basically says 'shoot non-whites.' New Smears From Drudge: "Two of John Kerry's three Purple Heart decorations resulted from self-inflicted wounds, not suffered under enemy fire.This is how Republicans campaign. They keep throwing mud -- lies -- until some sticks. Smears, lies, and psychological manipulation. This is called vote suppression. They're trying to get people to say "I can't vote for either of them" and not show up at the polls. Ignore these trees. Don't take your eyes off the forest -- the big picture. Kerry volunteered to go to Vietnam and is a decorated war hero. Bush's daddy got him into the "champagne unit" of the National Guard and he STILL took off, didn't show up. Labels: kerry, swiftboating 8/03/2004 Missed? There are two posts that I would like to bring back to your attention, now that the convention is over. I think these are very important and you might have missed them. The first is a report of a psychological study of the effect of fear of death on people's voting choices. From the report: "When asked to think about television, the 100 or so volunteers did not approve of Bush or his policies in Iraq. But when asked to think about Sept. 11 first and then asked about their attitudes to Bush, another 100 volunteers had very different reactions.Read this, and keep it in mind as you watch Bush campaign, declare terror alerts, etc. Send it to your family and friends. The second is Michael Moore's July 28 talk to the Campaign for America's Future conference going on at the same time as the convention. (The transcript is here.) Funny Ad Before you watch the ad, it helps to know that President Bush-of-the-cowboy-image is rumored to be afraid of horses. (The ex-cheerleader also insists on travelling with a special pillow that he calls his "pilly".) The Real Story: $87 Billion Middle Class Dollars Yesterday, John wrote a very cogent piece about the whole "$87 billion dollar vote" controversy which got me thinking about how I would put an end to this issue and knock the republicans back on their heels at the same time...
How to Con the Public I haven't gone out to get the NY Times yet this morning, but this one I want to read for myself. It's to Mayor Bloomberg's credit that he pointed out in his news conference on Sunday that he didn't know how old the information was on which the latest terrorist alert is based. Maybe he really didn't know yet, but now he does. The fact that we have this information does seem to be new. The fact that the information itself is three and four years old and predates the attack on the WTC is what we should have been told and, of course, weren't told. I've probably been as angry as I am this morning, but not often. Yeah, it's shocking to learn how complete the information gathered by the terrorists really was, but the odds are very high that the information was important to the terrorists while making the choice of targets for 9/11 2001 and we don't really need to have traffic jams that are 4 and 5 miles long or police in battle gear carrying assult rifles at this moment. Yeah, it's not a bad idea to generally increase security for financially important buildings, and not just the ones mentioned in the information on that captured hard disk in Pakistan. And yeah, now that a little bit more of the truth is coming out, it couldn't be more obvious that the administration is cynically issuing terrorist alerts whenever this gives them some political advantage. Sadly, even the "security precautions" are being applied cynically. Those who live behind the Citicorp headquarters are trying to point out that there's now plenty of security in front of the building, barricades, police presence, etc. along Lexington Ave. which is well traveled, and NOTHING, no extra security, behind the building, which is equally vulnerable. So -- that's pure theater. On the other hand, the Mayor is taking advantage of the situation to provide extra security for areas that really need it regardless, like Grand Central Station. Nobody's considering the psychological cost of fake terrorist alerts on the citizens of NYC. How about the effect on the schoolchildren who live near the WTC site and were so badly affected on 9/11? What do their parents tell them now? Not to mention the adults still suffering from PTSD. Or the workers trudging bravely off to work in the supposedly threatened buildings. How sweet of Laura Bush and her twins to show up for coffee with them! As though this were somehow a brave and noble sacrifice? I wonder if she brought cookies? How to Con the Public I haven't gone out to get the NY Times yet this morning, but this one I want to read for myself. It's to Mayor Bloomberg's credit that he pointed out in his news conference on Sunday that he didn't know how old the information was on which the latest terrorist alert is based. Maybe he really didn't know yet, but now he does. The fact that we have this information does seem to be new. The fact that the information itself is three and four years old and predates the attack on the WTC is what we should have been told and, of course, weren't told. I've probably been as angry as I am this morning, but not often. Yeah, it's shocking to learn how complete the information gathered by the terrorists really was, but the odds are very high that the information was important to the terrorists while making the choice of targets for 9/11 2001 and we don't really need to have traffic jams that are 4 and 5 miles long or police in battle gear carrying assult rifles at this moment. Yeah, it's not a bad idea to generally increase security for financially important buildings, and not just the ones mentioned in the information on that captured hard disk in Pakistan. And yeah, now that a little bit more of the truth is coming out, it couldn't be more obvious that the administration is cynically issuing terrorist alerts whenever this gives them some political advantage. Sadly, even the "security precautions" are being applied cynically. Those who live behind the Citicorp headquarters are trying to point out that there's now plenty of security in front of the building, barricades, police presence, etc. along Lexington Ave. which is well traveled, and NOTHING, no extra security, behind the building, which is equally vulnerable. So -- that's pure theater. On the other hand, the Mayor is taking advantage of the situation to provide extra security for areas that really need it regardless, like Grand Central Station. Nobody's considering the psychological cost of fake terrorist alerts on the citizens of NYC. How about the effect on the schoolchildren who live near the WTC site and were so badly affected on 9/11? What do their parents tell them now? Not to mention the adults still suffering from PTSD. Or the workers trudging bravely off to work in the supposedly threatened buildings. How sweet of Laura Bush and her twins to show up for coffee with them! As though this were somehow a brave and noble sacrifice? I wonder if she brought cookies? 8/02/2004 Mike Malloy!!! Mike Malloy on Air America Radio tonite! You can listen on the internet - just go to their site. Why is it so hard to say this? "In the end, everyone knew that Kerry was going to vote to authorize funds for the troops, and Bush was going to sign the bill. But there was more than one authorization bill being considered, and Kerry and Bush disagreed as to which one was best. Bush threatened to veto the one he didn't like, and Kerry voted against the one he didn't like. That's the way business is done there. What was it that they disagreed about? The reconstruction money that's being grafted away right now in Iraq. Kerry wanted to separate that from the money dedicated to supporting the war itself. It sure looks like he was right now, doesn't it?" 113 words would put an end to hundreds of thousands of words of TV pontification and Republican speechifying. But somehow nobody can be found who's able to get those words out there. This is just the most horrible example of the way that Bush is aiming the campaign only at his most fanatical and ill-informed core supporters. This is probably his major single arguing point against Kerry, and it's really just too silly for words. Once we have a new President, we should elect a new media too. What a lame bunch of liars. Daily Howler: Tim Russert knowingly watches the lie run right past him C.S.Monitor: Iraq reconstruction money being grafted Left Coaster / NYT: Billions of Iraqi oil dollars unaccounted for Blogosphere Controversey There is disagreement about whether Robert Novak did or did not turn into a bat and fly away. I was there. I saw it. Byron LeMasters also saw it happen, and his picture is close to proof -- I mean, how could the person in that picture NOT turn into a bat and fly away? I think Bill was there. What is xian's statement? What does Logical Realism say? Pacific Views: Novak Baiting Terror Warnings According to the Republicans, the terrorists want the Democrats to win. So I've been wondering, how come the terrorists always, always stir up trouble and cause terror warnings at the worst possible times, politically, for the Democrats? Update - What he said. 8/01/2004 Zell Said I just got this in an e-mail form the Kerry campaign: Did He Really Say That??? Copyright © 2002-05. |
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