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George W Bush

“Reckless” Redux

Aw jeez.  Here we go again…

WASHINGTON (AFP) — Republican presidential hopeful John McCain Monday warned that plans by his Democratic rivals to withdraw from Iraq were “reckless” as the US general running the war prepared to testify to Congress.

 

Oh yes.  Gosh darn those Dems.  So reckless!  Says the crotchety old git with the serious anger-management problem

 

The doddering fool who “mis-speaks” on a daily basis regarding Iraq, the economy, health care, lobbyists, what-have-you… 

 

The out of control rage-aholic who lashed out at (trophy wife  and heiress) Cindy during the 1992 Senate campaign,  calling her  a “cunt” and a “trollop” in front of reporters when she had the gall to play with his hair and say he  was  getting “a little thin on top”…

 

Oh my, yes.  Compared to those reckless Dems, THIS guy’s abso-frickin’-lutely presidential.

*

The presumptive Republican nominee then added:

McCain:  McCaintankerous!

You goddamn kids, get off my lawn! And where’s my onion belt, goddammit! Grrrr…

 

 

 

 

*Tild sez:  About the picture –if it fit for Gonzo, it sure as hell fits for McCaintankerous.

~

Pass It On: M is W

From the Department of Nifty Stuff I Wish I’d Thought Of: 

 

 

Now go thank Needlenose for this great animated gif, and get the code to embed it in your own site. 

Spread the word:   McCain = four more years of Bush. 

~

The George W Bush Library

The George W Bush Presidential Library is in the final planning stages. Allen L Roland via Op Ed News gives us the details about some of the library’s proposed features:

1. The Hurricane Katrina Room, which is still under construction.

2. The Alberto Gonzales Room, where you can’t remember anything.

3. The Texas Air National Guard Room, where you don’t have to even show up.

4. The Walter Reed Hospital Room, where they don’t let you in.

5. The Guantanamo Bay Room, where they don’t let you out.

6. The Weapons of Mass Destruction Room (which no one has been able to find).

7. The Iraq War Room. After you complete your first tour, they make you go back for a second, third, fourth, and sometimes fifth tour.

8. The Dick Cheney Room, in the famous undisclosed location, complete with shooting gallery.

9. Plans also include: The K-Street Project Gift Shop - where you can buy (or just steal) an election.

10. The Airport Men’s Room, where you can meet some of your favorite Republican Senators.

11. Last, but not least, there will be an entire floor devoted to a 7/8 scale model of the President’s ego.

Of course, there will be an autographed copy of “My Pet Goat”, which is in a climate-controlled, laser-beam protected, heat-proof, shatter-proof case.

To highlight the President’s only positive accomplishments, the museum will have an electron microscope available to help you locate them. Good luck ~

mouse ears bush

~

The very model of a modern movement conservative

Anybody out there still falling for that hoary old chestnut that “Republican” = “conservative”?

(And yeah, I guess I am talking to you,  Mr. or Ms. reader in the rapidly-trending-Blue southwest metro,  who may have wandered over here from the link in the Eden Prairie News blogroll)

If you still believe that George W Bush and the Republican party  are “conservatives” in anything except the modern Movement Conservatism sense, then maybe what you need right now is a good slap in the face. 

A bucket of cold water dumped over your head. 

A little song, a little dance, a little seltzer down your pants.   

No! No!   Tempting, it’s true, but actually what you need on this rainy bleak Monday is to read Paul Krugman’s latest column: 

SAME OLD PARTY

by Paul Krugman

Published:  October 8, 2007

There have been a number of articles recently that portray President Bush as someone who strayed from the path of true conservatism. Republicans, these articles say, need to return to their roots.

Well, I don’t know what true conservatism is, but while doing research for my forthcoming book I spent a lot of time studying the history of the American political movement that calls itself conservatism - and Mr. Bush hasn’t strayed from the path at all. On the contrary, he’s the very model of a modern movement conservative.

For example, people claim to be shocked that Mr. Bush cut taxes while waging an expensive war. But Ronald Reagan also cut taxes while embarking on a huge military buildup.

People claim to be shocked by Mr. Bush’s general fiscal irresponsibility. But conservative intellectuals, by their own account, abandoned fiscal responsibility 30 years ago. Here’s how Irving Kristol, then the editor of The Public Interest, explained his embrace of supply-side economics in the 1970s:
He had a “rather cavalier attitude toward the budget deficit and other monetary or fiscal problems” because “the task, as I saw it, was to create a new majority, which evidently would mean a conservative majority, which came to mean, in turn, a Republican majority - so political effectiveness was the priority, not the accounting deficiencies of government.”

People claim to be shocked by the way the Bush administration outsourced key government functions to private contractors yet refused to exert effective oversight over these contractors, a process exemplified by the failed reconstruction of Iraq and the Blackwater affair.

But back in 1993, Jonathan Cohn, writing in The American Prospect, explained that “under Reagan and Bush, the ranks of public officials necessary to supervise contractors have been so thinned that the putative gains of contracting out have evaporated. Agencies have been left with the worst of both worlds - demoralized and disorganized public officials and unaccountable private contractors.”

People claim to be shocked by the Bush administration’s general incompetence. But disinterest in good government has long been a principle of modern conservatism. In “The Conscience of a Conservative,” published in 1960, Barry Goldwater wrote that “I have little interest in streamlining government or making it more efficient, for I mean to reduce its size.”

People claim to be shocked that the Bush Justice Department, making a mockery of the Constitution, issued a secret opinion authorizing torture despite instructions by Congress and the courts that the practice should stop. But remember Iran-Contra? The Reagan administration secretly sold weapons to Iran, violating a legal embargo, and used the proceeds to support the Nicaraguan contras, defying an explicit Congressional ban on such support.

Oh, and if you think Iran-Contra was a rogue operation, rather than something done with the full knowledge and approval of people at the top - who were then protected by a careful cover-up, including convenient presidential pardons - I’ve got a letter from Niger you might want to buy.

People claim to be shocked at the Bush administration’s efforts to disenfranchise minority groups, under the pretense of combating voting fraud. But Reagan opposed the Voting Rights Act, and as late as 1980 he described it as “humiliating to the South.”

People claim to be shocked at the Bush administration’s attempts - which, for a time, were all too successful - to intimidate the press. But this administration’s media tactics, and to a large extent the people implementing those tactics, come straight out of the Nixon administration. Dick Cheney wanted to search Seymour Hersh’s apartment, not last week, but in 1975. Roger Ailes, the president of Fox News, was Nixon’s media adviser.

People claim to be shocked at the Bush administration’s attempts to equate dissent with treason. But Goldwater - who, like Reagan, has been reinvented as an icon of conservative purity but was a much less attractive figure in real life - staunchly supported Joseph McCarthy, and was one of only 22 senators who voted against a motion censuring the demagogue.

Above all, people claim to be shocked by the Bush administration’s authoritarianism, its disdain for the rule of law. But a full half-century has passed since The National Review proclaimed that “the White community in the South is entitled to take such measures as are necessary to prevail,” and dismissed as irrelevant objections that might be raised after “consulting a catalogue of the rights of American citizens, born Equal” - presumably a reference to the document known as the Constitution of the United States.

Now, as they survey the wreckage of their cause, conservatives may ask themselves: “Well, how did we get here?” They may tell themselves: “This is not my beautiful Right.” They may ask themselves: “My God, what have we done?”

But their movement is the same as it ever was. And Mr. Bush is movement conservatism’s true, loyal heir.

Paul Krugman, New York Times

~~~

Thanks as always to Norwegianity for bringing the latest Krugman column to our attention.   The Wege adds his own pungent commentary of course:

The plain fact is that modern “movement” conservatives aren’t conservatives at all. Not unless your definition of conservative is someone who rushes to war then cowers beneath their urine-soaked bed, only emerging to attack others who disagree with them.

Demagoguery is reviled because demagogues are philosophically inconsistent, seizing upon hot button issues without regard to whether they’re consistent with their previous positions. That’s why Bush yammers about fiscal responsibility but then runs up massive deficits, just like Ronald Reagan did.

Contrast this with our piss poor media who call John Edwards a demagogue because he wants to give money to the poor despite the fact that he’s personally rich. That’s not demagoguery. Not unless Edwards proves to be a stealth movement conservative who’s lying on the campaign trail. I don’t think he is, and I don’t think there’s any proof to suggest that.

But there is ample proof that what Bush says today will not affect his actions tomorrow, and tomorrow’s actions will be forgotten by the time Bush again opens his mouth.

Congress needs to make this mouth-action disconnect permanent by taking away Bush’s powers. It’s called impeachment, and we’re well past the point where such action is justified.

Remove this son of a bitch now, before he starts a war with Iran.
 

Well said, Wege. 

~

The Wisdom of Doubt

Barb O’Brien of the Mahablog will be on a religion panel at Yearly Kos next month.

Wow — next month?  Tempus is fugiting way too celeriter. Eheu!  (Gesundheit.) 

Marshaling her thoughts in preparation for that panel, the Mahabarb has written a four part series titled the Wisdom of Doubt.  On the surface it’s a collection of reflections on the alarmingly doubt-free thought processes — if you can call them that — of George W. Bush (on display again today  via the Carpetbagger Report:)

“It’s like there’s no adult supervision; he’s oblivious” 

But O’Brien delves far deeper than that.  Her observations are informed by commentary ranging from Reinhold Niebuhr to Christopher Hitchens, from St. Augustine to Glenn Greenwald. 
Be prepared to spend a lot of time with each of these four posts. This is not lightweight bloggedy frippery, my young dears.  This is a heady mix,  rich in insight and enlightenment.  Is it any wonder why we call her our “Mahabarb”? This is greatness of mind; greatness of blog.
For your reading convenience, here are links to all four parts of The Wisdom of Doubt.  Take your time. Small bites.  Chew carefully.

From Part I:

Our culture looks at doubt as something to overcome.  Being without doubt is celebrated as a virtue, and if you do have doubts you are supposed to replace them with certainties as soon as possible.  But I say the ideal is to have faith
and doubt in balance.  This includes faith in and doubt about yourself.  Too much doubt is crippling, but so is not enough doubt, although in a different way.

Our President, for example, is a man without doubt.  This may be the single biggest reason he’s a disaster at his job.

The Wisdom of Doubt, Part I 

From Part II:

Essentially, “moral clarity” is about bullshitting yourself. It’s about not dealing honestly and compassionately with all aspects of a moral issue. Instead, the “morally clear” begin with the position they want to take and work backward to justify it, scamming themselves and others when necessary to achieve the desired outcome. This twisted way of achieving “clarity” is founded in the dualistic thinking Glenn Greenwald writes about. This dualism assumes one side of an issue must be “good” and the other must be “bad.” Thus, in much anti-choice literature embryos can talk and women who choose abortions are either ignored or assumed to have evil or selfish motivations. But real-world moral issues often involve multiple “good” sides. It is actually quite rare for people and facts to so neatly sort themselves into “good” and “bad” boxes as the morally clear want to sort them. And by achieving “clarity” based on lies and false assumptions, the “clarifiers” actually create more pain and complication.

The Wisdom of Doubt, Part II 

From Part III:

Moral absolutism and “valueless relativism” are just mirror images of each other. Ego and desire inflame the religious and nonreligious alike, to much the same result. A person can wear his Jesus T-shirt and holler hallelujah a hundred times a day, and still be an egotistical, desire-driven wretch underneath. And an egotistical, desire-driven wretch with religion is likely to use religion as an excuse to gratify his ego and desires.
[...]
Trust me; when people say “we’re doing this obnoxious thing not for ourselves, but for God” — they’re doing it for themselves. If not for material gain, it’s for ego gratification, or territorial marking, or something else selfish and ugly clanking about in their ids. They’re just bullshitting themselves about the God thing. Count on it.

The Wisdom of Doubt, Part III

From Part IV:

Now, some of you are probably thinking Hitchens is right and that religion is the root of all evil. Religion is, unfortunately, an easy thing to be fanatical about. Religion presents itself as a solution to our deepest pain and fears. It’s a perfect escape route for people running away from themselves. This is particularly true of dogmatic, authoritarian religions.

In Escape From Freedom, Erich Fromm wrote that people who fear personal freedom, who are uncomfortable with their own autonomy, tend to escape into authoritarianism and conformity. Religion that combines passion with absolutism is the perfect medium for fanaticism.
[...]
History shows us that when authoritarian religion gets mixed up with political power, the results can be nasty. The Inquisition — which was as much about political authority as church authority — is a grand example. We should fear for the Middle East; whose residents seem determined to fold themselves into some kind of authoritarian Islamic theocracy. And we should fear for ourselves as long as fundamentalism is affecting the outcome of elections.

The Wisdom of Doubt, Part IV

 

 I wouldn’t miss that panel at YK for anything.  See you in August, Barb!

mahablog hed

 

 

  
 

Reckless

reckless

Reckless“.  It’s such a descriptive word.  Useful, too.  Not too long, not too many syllables, it can be flung around easily by just about anybody. 

Yet “reckless” is also elusive; subjective.  Like “beauty”, “fair and balanced”,  “winning”, “losing”, “truth”, and so many other things in 2007, “reckless” is ultimately only found in the eye of the beholder. To illustrate, here’s a selection of hits that a quick Google search turned up earlier today….  

 

“Listen, we made a decision at the Department as to the appropriate way forward. There was nothing improper about the decision here … There’s no evidence whatsoever, and it’s reckless and irresponsible to allege that these decisions were based in any way on improper motives.”

 

~~~ 

 

“If you have any bit of evidence that anybody connected with the Bush campaign was involved in that, you bring it forward, because it is a reckless charge.”

 

~~~

 

Bush Says Democrats Push Reckless Spending Policies

 

~~~

 

“CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - Freshman Republican Rep. Dean Heller echoed President Bush on Tuesday in saying congressional Democrats are being “reckless” in setting a timeline for a withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq.” 

 

~~~

 

Democrats plan to get even more reckless

 

~~~

 

“…The White House not only doesn’t care about the concerns, it also decided it doesn’t care about the constitutional nomination process.

Frankly, the Bush gang’s recklessness and disregard for the nation’s institutions and standards has become tiresome. No abuse is too offensive.

They know no limits; they have no shame.”

 

~~~

 

Above and Beyond the Call of Doody

Heroic Secret Service Agent Takes Question Intended For Bush

The Onion

Heroic Secret Service Agent Takes Question Intended For Bush

WASHINGTON, DC—Agent Anthony Panucci dives in between the president and a hostile reporter.

~~~

Uh oh

pickles is pissed!

Word to Michele “Hot Lips” Bachmann:

You’re in a world o’ hurt now, missy.

[ADDED] And not only with Pickles Laura…

a lieberman scorned

Umm, and not only with Joe, either…

a mccain scorned

Hissy fits all around, I’ll bet.   Oh George, you little minx!

Quite the coinkydink

Gas prices here in the Twin Cities, as of 8 AM today:

tc gas prices wed 01-10-07Wow. When was the last time the price of unleaded fell below 2 bucks a gallon?

18 month avg gas prices in twin cities

(Click image to embiggen)

Hmmm. This chart shows the last time Twin Cities gas prices dipped below 2 dollars, to 1.96/gal was on November 30th, 2005.

What was going on in the world on November 30, 2005?

Well, there was this.

Do you suppose it means anything?

Spong: Small Leaders In a New Dark Age

When asked why I go Spong-blogging so often, I usually say something about how Spong reminds me that not all Christians subscribe to the Dobsonite Values Voters hatefest of “values”.

I also think that many people through lifelong indoctrination tend to listen to and take seriously the words of a religious leader far more readily than they’ll heed a non-religious entity.

For those people then, here’s Bishop Spong saying the same things that many of us godless heathens have been saying. If you won’t listen to us, maybe you’ll listen to Spong:

September 27, 2006

Small Leaders in A New Dark Age

At the end of the first of the two debates that most recently captured the attention of world opinion, a compromise was reached, but many people voiced their belief that the President of the United States would pay no more than lip service to this settlement. At the end of the second debate there was an ingenious “apology” offered by Pope Benedict XVI that appeared neither to understand nor to address the hurt that his comments had created.

When these two debates lost center stage or began to bore the media that needs fresh red meat daily, many were left with the haunting sense that the quality of leadership in these two offices, one the most powerful political office in the world and the other the most powerful spiritual office, was sadly lacking, indeed that midgets now stood where giants are needed.

Most Americans never imagined that they would live long enough to watch a president of the United States publicly defending torture as an instrument of his foreign policy. Most of the people of the world also thought that we had evolved to a level of religious sensitivity in which no leader of one faith tradition would refer to another faith tradition as “evil and inhuman.” We assumed that the imperialistic mentality of the crusading middle ages had passed away. Our minds reeled as we entered what sounded like the double-talk of George Orwell’s vision of 1984, a year that passed almost a quarter of a century ago. How is it possible that the 21st century has arrived at a period in history that looks more and more like the ‘Dark Ages’ revisited?

The behavior of these two men, which St. Paul might have called “spiritual wickedness in high places,” made it clear that in our time people of small, dated minds are now occupying key positions of world leadership. Their words reveal these occupants to be poorly equipped to stand where they stand. Both appear to be out of touch with reality without knowing it, which makes them far more dangerous. The elected president and the chosen pope seem to believe that each possesses such superior wisdom that disagreement with them can only come from those who are confused, ignorant, heretical, or hopelessly unenlightened. When these two men act as they have done recently, we begin to sense that differences between right and wrong are incredibly blurred and a leader’s role is no longer to call people to embrace and reflect a higher humanity, and to see truth and honor as values that must be held at all costs and against every challenge.

Some may be startled at the harshness of this indictment. They may even dismiss it as an expression of either political
partisanship or religious intolerance. It is neither. Let me examine the two episodes about which I speak and ask you to draw your own conclusions.

First, for days now, we watched this administration in which neither the President nor the Vice President have ever been engaged in military conflict in the service of their country, attacking as “soft on the war on terror” three leaders of their own party whose military records are quite distinguished. One, Senator John McCain, is from a military family and was for five years a tortured prisoner of war in Vietnam. The second, Senator John Warner, has served as the Secretary of the Navy after a long career in the military. The third, Senator Lindsay Graham, even today continues to build on his active military career as an Air Force lawyer by being the only member of Congress serving in the National Guard. These noted conservatives battled their president for the principles upon which this nation was founded: justice before the law, fairness in seeking convictions, and the conviction that human rights are of more value than short term political goals.

It was good that these three men stood firm because the Democratic leadership had obviously been cowed by the Republican suggestion that those who do not favor the tactics of torture are weak both on national defense and homeland security. They did not want to be characterized in the Vice President’s words as “pre-9/11 thinkers in a post-9/11 world.”

In this debate the President of the United States sought unilaterally to re-interpret the decisions of the Geneva Convention on the humane treatment of enemy combatants. He did not seem to grasp the fact that if the United States can redefine the meaning of torture, so can every other nation in the world. He did not comprehend that in the course of world history, American service personnel, who become prisoners of war, would then no longer be protected by an appeal to the Geneva Accords. This president has assured this nation that “America does not do torture.” I do not any longer believe him.

Neither do the leaders of the other nations of the world. The data giving birth to this lack of belief is overwhelming. The world has seen vivid pictures of torture at Abu Ghraib. It is now obvious that we tortured at Guantanamo. We have learned that despite earlier denials, the CIA has operated torture centers in other countries where the laws against torture are less stringent than they are in the United States
and where those carrying out these illegal procedures, are not subject to criminal charges.

When the Washington Post broke the story about these foreign torture chambers, President Bush’s response was not to deny their existence but to denounce those who revealed it as disloyal to this country. He insisted that the United States needed this program for our own security and asserted once more, without credibility, that this country “does not do torture.”

Then the case of Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen of Syrian background, broke into the news, validating every fear and suspicion that truth has now been sacrificed in this nation’s quest for security. Maher Arar was kidnapped by American authorities at Kennedy Airport after mistaken intelligence identified him with a terrorist organization. With no due process this Canadian citizen was put on a United States government plane, flown to Jordan, and then driven to Syria, where he was tortured for a year, being forced to live underground in a space the size of a grave. No connection between this man and terrorism was ever established. The Canadian government finally secured his release, but Mr. Arar has exposed the lies, if they still needed to be exposed, that
this government is not engaged in practices prohibited by the Geneva Accords.

This deliberately misleading denial was only this government’s latest assault on truth. It must be placed alongside telling this nation that we went to war because Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear bomb-making potential. Neither claim was truthful. Both the President and Condoleeza Rice went so far as to state that they did not want the “next terrorist attack to be in the form of a mushroom cloud.” Mr. Bush dismissed the outcry of the nations of the world about abuses at Guantanamo. He proclaimed that Abu Ghraib was an aberration involving low-level military personnel, but then he dodged any challenge to this assertion by not recommending the general, under whose command the prison at Abu Ghraib fell, for a promotion, since that would have required congressional approval in the process of which questions would have had to be answered under oath and contrary data revealed.

President Bush continued his attempt to “redefine” the Geneva Accords in ways that were illustrious of little more than political
spin. This program “will not go forward,” he asserted at a very emotional press conference, “if I cannot guarantee that
government personnel are safe from the possibility of criminal lawsuits when they do their work.” What Mr. Bush obviously
wanted to protect were the illegal procedures, which were already part of his policy, and that clearly fell outside the Geneva Accords. To buttress the appeal of this false assertion further, he sought to make these redefinitions retroactive! Only one who has already violated the Geneva Accords would work so hard to make his reinterpretations “retroactively legal.”

While this was going on, Joseph Ratzinger, the German Cardinal who became Benedict XVI, was embarrassing the Christian world in his address on Islam. In this speech, in which he said his intention was to establish “the place of reason in inter-religious conversation,” he condemned quite rightly religious violence. Yet his biased words implied that only Islamic fundamentalists had ever been guilty of religious atrocities. To introduce this talk he quoted a Byzantine Emperor from the 14th century, a time when the memory of the Crusades was still in the public mind, who said, “Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new and there you will find things evil and inhuman.” Can anyone be so naive as to think these words were not intended to be offensive, coming from one who has publicly opposed the entry of Turkey, the world’s lone democratic Islamic state, into the European Common Market because it would “compromise the Christian basis of European culture”?

Trying to defend himself when Islamic leaders reacted with criticism, Benedict simply dug a bigger hole. “These were not my words,” he said weakly, “I was only quoting someone else.” He seemed not to be aware that he had chosen this quotation and that by doing so he gave its words renewed power. On the day before Cardinal Ratzinger was elected pope, he lectured the cardinals on why Christianity must stand against all relativity. Behind his words lay the incredibly dated conviction that the content of the Catholic Faith has been received by Divine Revelation, and that anyone who disagrees with it cannot be other than wrong. Violence, whether it be political or religious, always begins with the claim that “my point of view is true and anyone who disagrees is evil.”

Truth is far too precious to me to allow me to let these affronts of both state and church to go unopposed. Freedom and liberty are far too valuable to me to allow them to become pawns in the service of either political or ecclesiastical expediency. One does not fight terrorism by adopting the values of the terrorists; one does not serve truth by pretending to possess it.

A new age of darkness is re-emerging in our time. I tremble for my nation, for Christianity and for the citizens of the world, who have leaders today with such small minds occupying the seats of such great authority.

John Shelby Spong