Thursday, April 28, 2005

Saudi Arabia, Wahabi clerics, Bush and the Crown Price.

So, a few days ago, Bush was holding hands with Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz.



What's interesting is that the Wahabi sect of Islam is only found in Saudi Arabia. Now, remember 15 of the 19 hijackers that few plans into the WTC, Pentagon and the field in Pennsylvania, came from Saudi Arabia. A Wahabi Imam -- cleric -- in Saudi Arabia said that it was really OK for young Arabian men to cross the border into Iraq and fight US Troops.

Quoting from this page we find this: Dr. and Imam (cleric) Ayed Al Qarni, is a royal advisor with Prince Abdulaziz Bin Fahd, and a graduate from Imam Mohamed Bin Saud Islamic University. He made a poem embracing the Iraqis killing of U.S. troops. His poem was published on the net, and recorded with his own voice, played on MBC radio and television many times during the war with Iraq. MBC is financed by the Saudi government and air from Dubai.

The poem was published in the Almustaqbal Alislamy (Islamic Future) magazine by extremist group called World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY), based in Riyadh and financed by Saudi government. WAMY has many branches around the world, including Washington D.C., and has been advocating violence and distributing hate messages in the United States.

In the interview with the magazine, Al Qarni has stated that he prays for the destruction of the US several times a day during his daily prayers. He also said the US is the source of all misery in the world. The interview is also published on WAMY site on the net. This is the same issue of the magazine that US Ambassador to Riyadh Robert Jordan granted an interview. It is the same issue that says People of Scriptures "Jews and Christians" are kafir (infidels), and treated as such. As such means the above 4 points apply to them
.

So, explain to me why it is OK for the President of the United States to welcome a member of the Saudi Royal Family -- the royal family from the country where 15 of the 19 hijackers came from. The Family advised by clerics that say it's OK to kill the US Troops.

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

WIMPS

compromise? with frist? whatever happened to, "if you don't stand for something, you'll fall for anything." have the democrats learned nothing in the last five years? republicans don't stick to their word.

law.com - Article: "Compromise on 6th Circuit Judicial Nominees Said to Be in the Works
David Espo and Jesse J. Holland
The Associated Press
04-26-2005

In private talks with Majority Leader Bill Frist, the Senate's top Democrat has indicated a willingness to allow confirmation of at least two of President Bush's seven controversial appeals court nominees, but only as part of a broader compromise requiring Republicans to abandon threats to ban judicial filibusters, officials said Monday.

At the same time he offers to clear two nominees to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for approval, officials said Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., wants a third appointee to be replaced by an alternative who is preferred by Michigan's two Democratic senators. "

Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Mercury - Ratzinger urges stand for tradition

Welcome to the Neo Inquisition Era. The Cardinals picked a conservative Pope who will be Benedict the XVI. Wow. Here's a story from today on Joseph Ratzinger

Mercury - Ratzinger urges stand for tradition: "His stern defence of doctrine and bans on reformist theologians have polarised the Catholic church, winning applause from conservatives but alienating moderates and causing friction with other faiths he has dismissed as false churches."

Saturday, April 16, 2005

Bush administration eliminating 19-year-old international terrorism report

Why is it that republicans always find it necessary to change the rules when they don't like how the game is playing out? Tom DeLay found to be the most unethical bastard in Congress? Change the ethics rules. Bush not getting 100% of his ultra right-wing judges confirmed? Try to eliminate the fillibuster. Terrorism increases during your tenure? Just stop publishing the report.

Thank you Secretary Rice



KR Washington Bureau 04/15/2005 Bush administration eliminating 19-year-old international terrorism report: "Posted on Fri, Apr. 15, 2005

Bush administration eliminating 19-year-old international terrorism report
By Jonathan S. Landay
Knight Ridder Newspapers

WASHINGTON - The State Department decided to stop publishing an annual report on international terrorism after the government's top terrorism center concluded that there were more terrorist attacks in 2004 than in any year since 1985, the first year the publication covered. "

"According to Johnson and U.S. intelligence officials familiar with the issue, statistics that the National Counterterrorism Center provided to the State Department reported 625 "significant" terrorist attacks in 2004.

That compared with 175 such incidents in 2003, the highest number in two decades."


Here's a list from David Sirota's blog with a few reports that have been stopped, since Bush took office.

Dozens of Shiites held hostage in Iraqi town - International News - MSNBC.com

Well, is this the start of the civil war that some people warned our esteemed leaders about?

Dozens of Shiites held hostage in Iraqi town - International News - MSNBC.com: "Dozens of Shiites held hostage in Iraqi town
Sunni militants demanding all Shiites leave, officials sayThe Associated Press
Updated: 10:52 a.m. ET April 16, 2005BAGHDAD, Iraq - Sunni militants took about 70 Shiite males hostage in the central Iraqi town of Madain and threatened to kill them unless all Shiites left the town, government officials and a Shiite political group said Saturday. Bombings around the country killed a dozen Iraqis."

Thursday, April 14, 2005

Bush administration impedes investigation...

The media feeds you this, so you won't pay attention to this:

White House Said to Impede Education Probe
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: April 14, 2005

Filed at 10:24 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Bush administration is impeding an investigation into the Education Department's hiring of commentator Armstrong Williams by refusing to allow key White House officials to be interviewed, a Democratic lawmaker briefed on the review said Thursday.

In addition, Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., said Education Secretary Margaret Spellings is considering invoking a privilege that he said would require information to be deleted when the final version is publicly released, which is expected within days.

Miller called for Jack Higgins, the inspector general at the Education Department, to delay the report until Spellings agrees not to invoke ''deliberative process privilege'' and the White House grants interviews with current or former officials familiar with the deal.

''The public's right to know is absolutely more important than any claim of privilege that the White House or the Department of Education might make,'' Miller said. ''The public has a right to all the facts about possible misconduct.''

Democracy Now! | NY Law Enforcement Caught Doctoring Video of RNC Arrests

You can read the full story or see clips of the show here.

Democracy Now! | NY Law Enforcement Caught Doctoring Video of RNC Arrests: "Thursday, April 14th, 2005
NY Law Enforcement Caught Doctoring Video of RNC Arrests

During last year's Republican National Convention, the city of New York witnessed some of the largest mass arrests in the city's history. 1800 people were arrested.
But now the cases against the vast majority of the arrested have fallen apart. Of the nearly 1700 cases that have run their full course, 91 percent ended with charges dismissed or with a verdict of not guilty."

Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Tell me what you see....

look here, then look here and here...then tell me what you see.

Support for the troops? Hipocrisy? Family Values?

What happened to the roses and chocolates and hugs and adoration?

These are from the protest in Iraq on April 9, 2005.


















Tens of thousands of Iraqis protest US occupation

Hhmmm..how is it that we got coverage of the anniversary but none of the protests. 2 years ago they made 50 look like thousands. This week, they make tens of thousands disappear.

BBC NEWS | World | Middle East | Insurgents kill 15 Iraqi soldiers: "Tens of thousands of Iraqis joined an anti-US protest in Firdus Square, where Saddam Hussein's statue was toppled on 9 April 2003 as millions watched on TV.
Chanting 'No to America' and 'No to the occupiers', they pulled down and burned effigies of Saddam Hussein, US President George W Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair."

Monday, April 11, 2005

Mandate My ASS

Mandate? What mandate?? Now, the Democrats need to get off their FUCKING ASSES and get going and turn this country around.

Bush's Poll Position Is Worst on Record (washingtonpost.com): "Bush's Poll Position Is Worst on Record
Second Terms are Tough, and No President Has Banked Less Political Capital for the Fights Ahead
By Terry M. Neal
washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Monday, April 11, 2005; 8:29 AM
With apologies to George Tenet, the first 100 days of President Bush's second term have been no slam-dunk.
How rough has it been? Bush has the lowest approval rating of any president at this point in his second term, according to Gallup polls going back to World War II.

Bush's erosion of support among independents in particular has helped bring his overall approval rating down to 45 percent. Forty-nine percent disapprove of his performance. Compare Bush's Gallup numbers taken in late March to poll numbers taken at the same point in the presidencies of the six previous men who served two terms:

Clinton: 59 percent approval versus 35 percent disapproval

Reagan: 56 percent versus 37 percent disapproval

Nixon: 57 percent versus 34 percent

Johnson: 69 percent versus 21 percent

Eisenhower: 65 percent versus 20 percent

Truman: 57 percent versus 24 percent

True enough, Bush's numbers weren't all that high to begin with. In the last Gallup poll before the election, he was at 48 percent approval to 47 percent disapproval -- yet he still won and helped his party in the process.

But second terms are often more difficult than first terms. In addition to administration scandals, the re-elected president's party often loses seats in the mid-term congressional elections. Bush will need a higher approval rating if he hopes to avoid the "Sixth Year Itch."

Only 38 percent of respondents said they believed Bush had done an excellent or good job in his first 100 days, compared to 58 percent who believed he had done a fair or poor job, according to a poll conducted March 31 to April 1 by Westhill Partners and the National Journal's Hotline.

People will analyze the data differently. But here are a few things that I believe have hurt the administration in the last few months:

• Overconfidence: The president beamed with confidence after his November defeat of John Kerry. After the election, Bush told a news conference, "I earned capital in the campaign, political capital, and now I intend to spend it. It is my style." This statement was certainly no surprise, given that Bush governed as though he had a clear mandate even after losing the popular vote by a half-million to Al Gore in 2000. But the reality of Bush's victory in 2004 was that he won with 50.7 percent of the popular vote to Sen. John F. Kerry's 48.2 percent. You'd have to back to at least the early 1800s to find a president who has been re-elected by a closer margin.

The nation remains nearly evenly divided, yet Bush came out of the blocks as if he'd won by a Reaganesque landslide.

• Social Security: By the time Bush began pushing his first round of tax cuts in 2001, he had already been advocating the issue for two years, starting as a candidate in 1999. Bush made the issue his first priority, deploying his proven communications apparatus to make the case that the cuts benefited middle-class people and small business owners. By the time Bush took the nation to war in March 2003, he had been building his case, piece-by-piece, for months. But during his reelection campaign, he said little about Social Security. Had he made it a major issue, Kerry might be sitting in the White House today, a point that is reinforced by the reluctance of voters to accept Bush's proposal today. Democrats certainly would have been able to use the issue to bludgeon Bush among older voters, who also comprise the most reliable block of voters.

After the election, Bush signaled clearly that Social Security reform would be the first domestic priority of his second term, putting the issue on the table before clearly laying out the case for the need to make changes. Democrats, defying their recent inability to coalesce around anything controversial, came together on this issue and quickly used their historic advantage on Social Security to define the debate before the White House. The administration is still playing catch-up, even working to overcome skeptical Republicans. Meanwhile, most polls show the public is strongly opposed to private accounts.

• Terri Schiavo: Bush declined to cut short his vacation after the southeast Asian Tsunami disaster, even as it became clear that it would be of epic proportions. Then, months later, he interrupted another vacation in Texas to fly back to Washington in the middle of the night to sign legislation, pushed through in a rare weekend session, designed to keep a severely brain-damaged Florida woman alive. The actions of Bush and his party appeared to deviate from their stated principles supporting states' rights and the sanctity of marriage and their opposition to judge shopping. Most polls have shown widespread disapproval of the president's handling of the issue, even among Republicans.

• Iraq: The recent Iraqi elections gave supporters of the president's foreign policy something to cheer about. But then the Commission on the Intelligence Capabilities of the United States Regarding Weapons of Mass Destruction -- which had been created reluctantly by the president -- issued a scathing report about the CIA's intelligence failures leading up to the war. Fortunately for the White House, the commission was tasked with analyzing the intelligence-gathering agencies, and not how the president and other policy makers used the intelligence to make the case for war. The administration has long maintained, essentially, that everyone in the world believed that Hussein was building WMD. But there was never anything close to unanimity within the intelligence community about Hussein's stockpiles or capability to deliver them. Whatever the case, the public remains dissatisfied about the president's handling of Iraq, with 41 percent approving and 54 percent disapproving, according to the Westhill Journal poll.

• The economy: A majority of Americans -- 56 percent according to the Westhill poll -- oppose the president's handling of the economy. Republicans are even feuding even among themselves about the president's agenda, disagreeing on whether to push for a new round of tax cuts or to focus on tackling a massive federal budget deficit that clearly now is more than just a short-term problem.

For the first time in his presidency, Bush made a real effort to cut and slow spending, but his budget barely nips at the edges of the massive inequity between government revenues and spending. The signature economic achievements of Bush's first months of his second term -- new laws restricting class action lawsuits and bankruptcy protections -- could be two issues that resonate little with Joe and Jane Sixpack. Congress has already pushed through legislation designed at curbing class action lawsuits -- a top priority of the corporate lobby. And the Senate has passed a bill that would make it much more difficult for people to declare Chapter 7 bankruptcy, another corporate top priority. The House appears poised to pass a similar piece of legislation.

What difference does it make that Bush poll numbers appear to be weak on all of the major issues that have come up so far in his second term? One of the enduring realities of the American presidency is that second terms are often politically tougher than first terms. What's unusual in Bush's case is that the public's typical second-term disillusionment began so early. In one sense, this matters little because Bush will never run for another election. But it could be an early sign of trouble for his party, especially when you consider that the Republican-run Congress's approval rating has dropped to its lowest point in nearly a decade, with only 40 percent or fewer approving of the job it is doing, according to several recent polls.

Among political professionals, the campaign season runs continuously. So even though there's little news about it in the nation's papers and broadcasts, both parties are already in the thick of candidate recruitment for the 2006 midterm congressional elections. Much is at stake. Elections in the sixth year of a presidency are typically perilous territory for the party of the president in power.

"There have been six of these elections in the post-World War II era (1950, 1958, 1966, 1974, 1986, and 1998). The average loss for the White House in these sixth year elections has been six Senate seats -- double the overall midterm average loss of three seats," wrote Larry J. Sabato, the director of the University of Virginia's Center for Politics, in a recent analysis.

A loss of six seats for Republicans would put Democrats back in control of the Senate. But averages are nothing more than academic debating points. In truth, each election has its own dynamic.

Clinton's Democrats lost no seats in 1998's congressional elections. But Eisenhower, who began his second term with significantly more popularity than Bush, saw his party lose 13 seats in the Senate in the 1958 midterm election.

"[Bush] got no real bounce out of the election," said nonpartisan election analyst Stuart Rothenberg. "He has had an ambitious but controversial agenda and doesn't start off with widespread support. And I think it's relevant a couple ways, both down the road and over the next six months. First it will affect candidate recruitment. And it will also impact his ability to intimidate the Hill."

Some left-wing activists are becoming increasing engaged in an effort to defeat the bankruptcy bill in the House. They appear to be energized not only by the president's troubles on the economy, but by their anger at the 18 Democrats broke ranks to support the bill in the Senate.

And the Schiavo case may complicate the GOP's efforts on other parts of its domestic agenda, particularly the nomination of conservative Bush appointees to the bench. Democrats are planning to use the Schiavo case -- and the disparaging comments made by congressional Republican leaders about the judges in that case -- to argue against the elimination of the filibuster in judicial nominations, which some Republicans are advocating.

Of course, none of Bush's problem matters if the Democrats can't get on the same page. Already the party has shown deep fissures on the Schiavo case as well as the class-action lawsuit and bankruptcy bills. Nearly as many Democrats voted for the Schiavo bill as voted against it, which will complicate the party's efforts to make a sustained case about GOP extremism in coming months.

The Republican triumph of 2004 was less about the electorate's overwhelming love for the Bush agenda than it was about the failure of Kerry and the Democrats to present an enticing and viable alternative and a cohesive vision for the future.

As it stands today, there's little evidence -- outside of the Social Security issue -- that the Democrats have changed all that much since Kerry's defeat in November. They don't appear positioned to take advantage of Bush's dropping poll numbers any more than Republicans are queuing up behind the president as a strong leader of the party. It seems in some ways that both parties are doing their best to lose."

Friday, April 08, 2005

Random stuff....

His funeral was a highlight of my presidency

Yahoo! News - Bush, Clinton Disagree on Pope's Legacy: "ABOARD AIR FORCE ONE - President Bush on Friday said that attending the funeral of Pope John Paul II was 'one of the highlights of my presidency,"

I swear, when Random House republishes its dictionary, they might as well put a picture of GWBush next to the entery for "center of the universe." What a dolt.

New Foreclosure Inventory in U.S. Rises Nearly Fifty Percent in March

Harbinger? You betcha.

RisMedia.com - New Foreclosure Inventory in U.S. Rises Nearly Fifty Percent in March: "New Foreclosure Inventory in U.S. Rises Nearly Fifty Percent in March

RISMEDIA, April 7 -- Some 28,190 new foreclosed residential properties were listed for sale in the U.S. during March 2005, reports Foreclosure.com.

The number represents an increase of 50 percent from February 2005. The total number of U.S. residential foreclosure properties available for sale in the U.S. during the month of March was 80,757, an increase of 10 percent from February. "

Thursday, April 07, 2005

Lemme know when any of these sons-a-bitches actually say "ooops." Or better yet, I'm sorry.

2005 Pulitzer Prizes-BREAKING NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY, Works

The American press needs to run these photos. On the cover of USAToday.

2005 Pulitzer Prizes-BREAKING NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY, Works

Wednesday, April 06, 2005

More on oil company profits...

Macon Telegraph | 04/06/2005 | Slowing the economy with speedy gas prices: "Also astounding are the big oil company profits. Exxon Mobil, the world's largest oil company, had a $26 billion after-tax profit in 2004. Chevron Texaco's profits soared 85 percent and Shell made $19 billion...In America, our appetite for fuel seems as insatiable as our appetite to make money. Many analysts agree that this latest run up in price has been fueled by oil speculators. President Bush could put an end to that by releasing some of the nation's oil reserves of 314.7 million barrels."

Of course he won't do this. He's making too much money. Don't forget, there were "closed door" energy sessions w/ Cheney, et al. And don't forget, we found out last year that Enron orchestrated the "energy crunch" in California that helped Ahh-nold get elected.

Bush and his cronies are gonna use this to motivate Americans to agree to open up drilling in Alaska. And then bush is going to use that precident to open up drilling in all of our national forrests. Yosemite? Grand Canyon? Be prepared for the lovely backdrop of oil rigs in your family vacation pictures.

Tuesday, April 05, 2005

Profits, Profits, Profits.

Business - California oil giants plan merger - sacbee.com: "The deal comes at a time when oil and gas companies are enjoying big profits in the wake of higher energy prices. ChevronTexaco's profits nearly doubled last year to $13.33 billion, while Unocal's profits also nearly doubled to $1.21 billion."

US News Article | Reuters.com

US News Article | Reuters.com: "Frist Says Courts in Schiavo Case Acted Fairly
Tue Apr 5, 2005 04:51 PM ET
By Thomas Ferraro
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senate Republican leader Bill Frist said on Tuesday that courts had acted fairly in the Terri Schiavo 'right-to-die' case, differing sharply from a vow of retribution by his House of Representatives counterpart, Tom DeLay.
'I believe we have a fair and independent judiciary today,' said Frist, now trying to resolve a battle with Democrats over judicial nominations that threatens to tie his chamber into knots. 'I respect that.' "

I'd bet he does. Man, he's lookin' at the polls that say nearly 80% of the American public disagreed w/ the congress on this. He's lookin' at DeLay and his ethics indictments. He's jumpin' quicker than a rat from a sinking ship. I respect that. LOL

Bush: U.S. to Bear Burden of Iraq Costs

I thought that the "coalition of the willing" was going to help. On September 23, 2003,
Senator Dorgan said "Iraq has the second largest oil reserves in the world. Those oil reserves, it seems to me, ought to be used for the reconstruction of Iraq. Let Iraqi oil pay for the reconstruction of Iraq."

Indeed. Since the news is "all Pope, all the time," I thought that the few people that read this blog would want to know.

ABC News: Bush: U.S. to Bear Burden of Iraq Costs
By NEDRA PICKLER Associated Press Writer
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON Apr 4, 2005 — President Bush said Monday that seeing Iraq through reconstruction to a stable and secure democracy is a worthy cause that the United States will press regardless of whether its coalition partners remain there.

Monday, April 04, 2005

Hunger in Iraqi children doubles under occupation

Ain't democracy grand?? Soon, the Iraqi children will be free to be as hungry as our U.S. kids are.

SBS - The World News: "IRAQ CHILD HUNGER DOUBLES: UN
31.3.2005. 12:06:06

The malnutrition rate for Iraqi children aged younger than five has doubled as "a result of the war led by coalition forces", according to a report by a United Nations food rights specialist.

Jean Ziegler made the comments at an address to the 53-member UN Human Rights Commission where he delivered his report on world hunger.

Late last year, 7.7 percent of Iraqi infants were found to be suffering malnutrition, compared to four percent just after Saddam Hussein's ouster in April 2003.

Saturday, April 02, 2005

Three Were Told to Leave Bush Town Meeting (washingtonpost.com)

Wow, talk about the Damn. Talk about the thought police. A bumper sticker and "might try to disrupt" is enough to get you kicked out. Could you imagine the reaction if a democratic supporter would have done this to a conservative? Scarborough would have a fucking field day!

Three Were Told to Leave Bush Town Meeting (washingtonpost.com): "Three Were Told to Leave Bush Town Meeting
By Jim VandeHei
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 30, 2005; Page A04
Three Denver residents yesterday charged that they were forcibly removed from one of President Bush's town meetings on Social Security because they displayed a bumper sticker on their car condemning the administration's Middle East policies...Scott McClellan, Bush's press secretary, said it was a volunteer who asked them to leave "out of concern they might try to disrupt the event."

Friday, April 01, 2005

demonstrably at odds with...our Constitution.

Judge Birch on how DeLay and the rest of the congress acted when they voted on, and when Bush signed, "a bill to provide for the relief of the parents of Theresa Marie Schiavo

A popular epithet directed by some members of society, including some members of Congress, toward the judiciary involves the denunciation of "activist judges." Generally, the definition of an "activist judge" is one who decides the outcome of a controversy before him according to personal conviction, even one sincerely held, as opposed to the dictates of the law as constrained by legal precedent and, ultimately, our Constitution. In resolving the Schiavo controversy it is my judgement that despite sincere and altruistic motivation, the legislative and executive branches of our government have acted in a manner demonstrably at odds with our Founding Fathers' blueprint for the governance of a free people -- our Constitution.

If you think that Birch is some flaming liberal, think again. He was appointed to the 11th Circuit by Bush 41. He was one of the judges that upheld Florida's anti-gay adoption laws. Wonder if this opinion will convince George that he might want to read the constitution. Perhaps Bush would like to get his own personal Constitution here