Daily Kos

Tag: Glenn Greenwald

Uncle Sam Has You

Sat May 10, 2008 at 10:05:04 AM PDT

Glenn Greenwald continues his admirable journey into the heart of propaganda darkness that helped grease the skids of public opinion for the United States to invade Iraq and ameliorate public outrage over its detainee abuses. In addition to keeping his own spotlight fixed on what should have been one of the most explosive and covered stories in a long time, Greenwald's own example of how a real journalist might actually behave - and what stories to which he or she should actually pay attention - is throwing into stark relief the yawning chasm between the press that we have and the press that we so desperately need.

But there is another powerful lesson to be derived from this lamentable state of our national discourse. In today's column, Greenwald highlights a typical response from figures in the media to the near-total silence over the military propaganda story:

Shocker: More revelations about Pentagon's illegal propaganda campaign

Sat May 10, 2008 at 08:18:42 AM PDT

As noted in previous posts here, the shocking New York Times article last month by David Barstow exposing the Pentagon's use of retired military officers to carry their talking points on the Iraq war in the media has received relatively little follow-up--or response--from the news outlets involved, principally TV and cable networks.  One popular blogger who has kept the issue alive is Salon's Glenn Greenwald.

The Pentagon, earlier this week, released dozens of documents that Barstow forced out by his inquiries, including transcripts of some of the meetings with the "media generals" (who are further compromised by working for companies with defense contracts) and even some audio.   Greenwald, yesterday and today, has been going through some of it and offering some startling quotes about the collaboration.

NN Panels -- What's up with that?

Sun May 04, 2008 at 09:45:05 AM PDT

Josh Orton paid me a courteous and very much  appreciated  compliment yesterday, did you see it?  It was along the lines that since my departure from NN, the organizers are working hard to fill my shoes.  This was in the context of explaining the communication problems and delay in announcing NN panels.

And in return, I doff my hat, bow low, and drag the feather across the ground in his direction.  My compliments to him for his hard work and resilience.    Though I usually lap up this kind of thing like the kids' melted ice cream, I am troubled a bit by the reference to me in all of this kerfluffle.  It's this:

"Their destruction of our political culture." Glenn Greenwald nails it.

Sun May 04, 2008 at 06:25:35 AM PDT

There is a long fascinating look at the disease currently infecting the traditional media, by Glenn Greenwald on Salon this morning.

Article.

That's the only job of the modern "journalist" as they see it: to repeat whatever trash is whispered in their ears by political operatives. If right-wing strategists or opposition campaigns are chattering about some lowly attack, they have no choice but to repeat it -- and not just repeat it, but repeat it endlessly, have it dominate their political "reporting." After all, as Gibson says: "That's an issue that's being much debated now." Of course, the only reason those sideshows are "being much debated now" is because Gibson and his friends never stop talking about them, but that's the endless self-referential loop that fuels their destruction of our political culture.

Question re: Netroots Nation / Glenn Greenwald

Sat May 03, 2008 at 03:39:38 PM PDT

Arianna Huffington has been taking questions at firedoglake today and I was just catching up with some of the discussion. Glenn Greenwald was also there and answered a question:

Arianna and Glenn,
Are you planning to come to Netroots Nation this summer? Do you think that these kinds of events will help build us up or are we wasting our time and money doing them?

Glenn's Reply over the hump...

Nine Days of Silence from the Willing Accomplices

Tue Apr 29, 2008 at 06:43:29 AM PDT

One of many questions that Chris Wallace failed to ask Barack Obama during his 45-minute interview on Foxaganda Sunday was what the Senator thought about David Barstow’s devastating exposé in The New York Times the previous weekend.

No surprise. What would be the percentage in replacing one of the plethora of Jeremiah Wright questions with an inquiry about the megamedia’s hiring of retired military officers who sexed up the case for the U.S. invasion of Iraq and then exaggerated, distorted and lied about what was happening when the war and subsequent occupation got underway? Would that help the bottom line? Nah. Hence, none of Wallace’s pals at Foxaganda are talking about this. Indeed, mum’s been the word on Barstow’s bombshell throughout the megamedia. The talking point – or perhaps the memo from on high – seems to be: Don’t talk.

Don’t tell viewers that retired generals and colonels and majors engaged in a war-drumming, flag-waving perversion of patriotism. Or that those in the Pentagon who ordered special briefings for these analysts as part of a domestic propaganda campaign ought to get their mail deliveries slipped between the bars at Leavenworth for the next few years. Avoid the subject and maybe it will go away like so many other stories which have been disappeared as if they were dissidents in some backwater military dictatorship.

No news coverage, no commentary, no questions for any candidates. No abject apologies to viewers from station CEOs who paid double-dippers and triple-dippers to give an official patina to fabrications that have caused the killing and maiming of tens of thousands of Americans and other coalition soldiers. Plus millions of Iraqis. Business as usual. Even two days after the Pentagon suspended the briefings last Friday, Foxaganda was still employing retired Lt. Gen. Thomas McInerney without disclosure.

You want to know more about the story, you go to Barstow’s follow-ups, to those of Glenn Greenwald at Salon, to the folks at Media Matters, and to excellent work of Ari Melber at The Nation. As a matter of fact, if you’d like to see Senator Obama’s answer to that question Wallace should have asked, you can find it (and Senator Clinton’s answer, too) at Melber’s blog here.

We’ve arrived at this situation because of three sets of cowards.

First among these are the military analysts themselves, supposedly men of courage who donned the uniform of the United States and swore an oath to uphold its Constitution. As Barstow wrote:

Analysts have been wooed in hundreds of private briefings with senior military leaders, including officials with significant influence over contracting and budget matters, records show. They have been taken on tours of Iraq and given access to classified intelligence. They have been briefed by officials from the White House, State Department and Justice Department, including Mr. Cheney, Alberto R. Gonzales and Stephen J. Hadley.

In turn, members of this group have echoed administration talking points, sometimes even when they suspected the information was false or inflated. Some analysts acknowledge they suppressed doubts because they feared jeopardizing their access.

Tell the truth on the teevee and say poof! to that lucrative retainer, that seat on the board of some major player in the military-industrial complex, that ability to get the Pentagon to assign a favorable contract to the guys who are filling your bank account. What would retirement be like with a lowered cash flow? Yikes! Can't have that. So, instead of calling government policy into question, instead of acting like an officer and a gentleman, sell the country out and keep the moolah flowing. Spit on the men and women sent to fight. Spit on the Constitution. Spit on the truth. Once, they painted a yellow stripe down the back of cowardly soldiers.

Not merely cowards. As Daily Kos Contributing Editor BarbinMD wrote when this story was new:  "These men willingly deceived the American public to protect their access to power and more importantly, their profits. Perhaps traitor doesn't even begin to describe them." Indeed.

The second set of cowards are all those well-coifed news-readers and commentators and interviewers at CBS, NBC, ABC, MSNBC, CNN and Foxaganda who’ve not seen fit to discuss The New York Times story except to briefly note that the Pentagon has stopped giving the briefings.

We know why Bill O’Reilly hasn’t stepped up with a mea culpa. On April 14, less than a week before Barstow’s piece appeared, according to Media Matters:

During the April 14 broadcast of his nationally syndicated radio show, Bill O'Reilly declared: "I can't base my opinion" about the Iraq war "on anything" other than "what my military analysts, people paid by Fox News, say to me." O'Reilly added that he could trust only Fox military analysts because "[t]he newspapers ... all have an agenda" and "only give you a snapshot of the war." Later in the broadcast, O'Reilly reiterated his position, saying, "I have to base my analysis on what our Fox News military analysts, who I think are the best and always [have] been the best, are saying." Further, O'Reilly described as "ridiculous" a caller's efforts to base his view of the war by "reading the Internet and the newspapers and forming a definitive opinion [based] upon what they say."

No retraction since. No mention at all. Silence from him and his colleagues throughout the industry – how appropriate that word. They didn’t vet the analysts or check out their possible agendas the way any good journalist would do. They ignored sources that might have called into question the claims of Lt. General Disinformation. Couldn’t find the wherewithal to let viewers know that Major Mendacious worked for a military contractor with a stake in the occupation of Iraq. Just broadcast his lies and cut his checks.

Of course, pointing out the cowardice of the megamedia’s on-camera crowd is thoroughly redundant. As Greenwald wrote Monday after a little praise for the Washington Post’s Howard Kurtz – one of the few print journalists of note to say anything about Barstow’s revelations:

Kurtz's specific criticism of the media's behavior regarding this story highlights a broader and even more important point. In general, the establishment media almost completely excludes critiques of their own behavior, and discussions of the role the media plays in bolstering deceitful narratives is missing almost entirely from media-controlled discourse.

One of the most significant political stories of this decade, if not this generation -- the media's full-scale complicity with the Government in the run-up to the Iraq war -- has never been meaningfully discussed or examined on any establishment television network, including cable shows. While piecemeal quibbles of media coverage can be heard (of the type Kurtz typically spouts, or the Limbaugh-driven complaint about the "liberal media"), no fundamental critique of the role the media plays, the influence of its corporate ownership, its incestuous relationship with and dependence on government power -- among the most influential factors driving our political life -- are ever heard.

And we’re not likely to because of the third group of cowards. The guys who actually own and run the channels who paid the military shills to present the Cheney-Bush administration’s Iraq case for the past six years. Indeed, as Media Matters noted, they refused to appear on PBS last Thursday when the public channel took its look into the role of the military analysts.

In the old days in Japan, so the story goes, bosses who engaged in illegal, destructive or merely shameful behavior made a deep bow to those they had offended and headed off to a private room for a date with the blade of a tanto.

Even for those who’ve betrayed their fellow citizens and helped deliver thousands to their deaths for profit, seppuku’s admittedly a bit harsh. But if the craven news chiefs and channel owners were the least bit honest and upstanding, they’d be setting aside 15 or 20 minutes of broadcast time to apologize to the American people for acting as propagandists, for their malicious, intentional, long-running disinformation campaign. And they’d end with an on-the-air resignation and a vow never again to head up a media operation.

But then, if they were honest and upstanding, they wouldn’t be who they are. And we wouldn’t be where we are, mired in Iraq with no end in sight.

A hundred years of scrubbing will not remove the blood from their hands.

Shut your stupid trap, Maureen Dowd!

Sun Apr 27, 2008 at 03:06:01 PM PDT

I've been getting more and more annoyed with the New York Times columnist, but today, after seeing her idiotic piece on the Democrats juxtaposed next to Elizabeth Edwards' excellent critique of the media, I must say that I've had enough with Ms. Dowd and her so called analysis.

The Earth, the Energy Crisis and the Silver Bullet - Part 5: Werewolves, Vampires, and Zombies

Fri Apr 25, 2008 at 09:00:25 PM PDT

     I hope it's been an interesting week for those of you who've been following this Silver Bullet series. (Parts 1, 2, 3, and 4 can be found here for those who may have missed them.) I figured the week of Earth Day was a good time to do this, and I've been wanting to get word of Dr. Bussard's work out to a wider audience for some time.
     To recap quickly, I started by sketching out the problem (energy supply vs. demand, global climate change, people), proposed a solution (nuclear fusion), spent a couple more days fleshing out the background on nuclear tech, and yesterday held forth on a new approach to fusion that just might be the real Silver Bullet solution. Today I'm going to end by riffing on the topic a bit and seeing if I can expantionate the dynamulon.  (more)

Poll

Now that this series is finally concluded, I:

35%19 votes
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11%6 votes
15%8 votes
0%0 votes
1%1 votes
18%10 votes
0%0 votes
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5%3 votes

| 53 votes | Vote | Results

Liveblogging with Glenn Greenwald

Sun Apr 20, 2008 at 09:29:20 AM PDT

Great American Hypocrites: Toppling the Big Myths of Republican Politics
By Glenn Greenwald
Crown Publishers, New York, 2008

Last Sunday I reviewed Glenn Greenwald's new book, Great American Hypocrites. Glenn wanted to join us then, but travel snafus prevented it, so he's here today. Here's a snippet from that review:

It's not about the hypocrisy, it's about the damage that the hypocrisy has done to our political processes and to our political discourse, leading to the ultimate example this weekend when the entire media has spent more time and real estate on "Bittergate" than on the fact that the highest officials in our government--including the President--conspired to commit acts of torture. It's the logical outgrowth of the Drudgified political world, which Glenn documents from its inception--creating the myth of the Great American Republican--through this cycle's presidential race.

That was written before the ABC debate debacle, when ABC (ironically the news outlet that brought us the torture story) reached yet another low. Here's Glenn's reaction.

My favorite (unintentionally revealing) media commentary about the debate is from The Washington Post's Anne Kornblut and Dan Balz, who devoted paragraph after paragraph to describing the substance-free "issues" that consumed most of the debate -- Obama's "remarks about small-town values, questions about his patriotism and the incendiary sermons of his former pastor . . . gaffes, missteps and past statements" -- and, at the end of the article, they added:

The debate also touched on Iraq, Iran, the Middle East, taxes, the economy, guns and affirmative action.

It's just not possible to express the wretched state of our establishment press better than that sentence does.

Revealingly, not everyone is displeased with Charlie Gibson and George Stephanopoulos' conduct of the debate. To the contrary, two constituencies which frequently work in harmony are quite impressed and very pleased with the whole spectacle -- right-wing noise machine members and establishment journalists....

Last night was a perfect microcosm of how our political process works. The Right creates stupid, petty personality-based attacks to ensure that our elections aren't decided on issues (where they have a decisive disadvantage). Media stars -- some due to sloth, some due to ideology, some due to an eagerness to please the Right and convince them how Good and Fair they are -- eat up the shallow trash they're fed and then spew it out relentlessly, ensuring that our political discourse is overwhelmed by it, our elections dictated by it. That happens over and over. It's how our media and our elections function. Last night was just an unusually transparent and particularly ugly expression of it.

Glenn's book, which details how the "petty, personality-based" focus on politics was built up, and how the Right got the traditional media to buy into it, couldn't be more timely. This week's debate proves every point in Glenn's book. He doesn't break new ground in exposing either hypocrisy or the failure of most of America's leading political reporters to their job even adequately, but he does reinforce what every Democrat and every Democratic politician needs to be cognizant of when dealing with a press that plays lackey to the Right.

I've reposted the e-mail interview portion of last week's review below the fold, and Glenn will join us in comments.

American Hypocrites, Greatness Forever Denied

Sun Apr 20, 2008 at 07:50:48 AM PDT

[Cross-posted at The Left Coaster.]

Great American Hypocrites
Glenn Greenwald
DMDM Enterprises 2008
978-0-307-40802-0

As any furious American liberal or Glenn Greenwald will tell you, instant blatant Republican hypocrisy is a bedrock of our horrendous political realm, has been for a long time.  Republicans will preach small government yet spend like drunken sailors in office, then rail against the evil encroachment of government over liberty—but given the slightest opportunity turn in snarling authoritarian dogs. Nauseating morality sniffing about marriage and the value of life mean nothing to them as they wantonly divorce and kill with impunity, all their core "principles" shown to be nothing but manipulative lying.

The ABC Debate: Not Everyone is Displeased

Sat Apr 19, 2008 at 12:13:59 PM PDT

George Stephanopoulos and Charles Gibson's moderation of Wednesday evening's Democratic Presidential Debate on ABC has been widely criticized for channeling Karl Rove's politics of personal destruction and condemned for propagating the toxicity of right-wing Conservative tactics against Democratic candidates.

However, as Glen Greenwald of Salon.com pointed out, "not everyone was displeased with Charlie Gibson and George Stephanopoulos' conduct of the debate.To the contrary, two constituencies which frequently work in harmony are quite impressed and very pleased with the whole spectacle -- right-wing noise machine members and establishment journalists."

Glenn Greenwald post about ABC debacle

Thu Apr 17, 2008 at 10:39:33 AM PDT

I think it's about time for me to order Greenwald's new book, Great American Hypocrites.  I was putting it off for a while in order to get some serious school studying out of the way, but I'm not so sure I can put it off anymore.

I'm so furious at our damn media establishment, I honestly can't see straight.  Last night was just a fiasco.  I was embarrassed to be an American with such disgusting coverage and debating moderators throwing out the most asinine and irrelevant questions they could ever ask presidential candidates.  They had all the influence and whisperings of the Right Wing Noise Machine.

And it seems that Greenwald has captured that well in today's post.

NPR atrocity continues.

Wed Apr 16, 2008 at 04:31:46 PM PDT

Last week I diaried on a couple of egregious NPR stories that really pimped for John McCain. One of them was a 3 part series looking at Obama, McCain, and Clinton as business school cases studies on what brands they'd be like. They'd done the first two parts last week; they did Clinton yesterday. Here's my email to the NPR Ombudsman.

Dear NPR Ombudsman:

I am writing about the appalling wast of air time devoted to a 3 part series on All Things Considered which looked at the 3 presidential candidates and compared them to well known product brands. The idea was to look at them in the fashion of business school case studies.

If I am to take this halfway seriously, I should now think that John McCain is like Apple Computer, while Barack Obama is like McDonalds and Hillary Clinton is like Lays Potato Chips. I'd really like to know who came up with these characterizations and what objective basis was used to decide. There is more than a little hint of bias in depicting the GOP candidate as market leading high tech while the Democrats come across as junk food.

 (more)

Week of April 14 To Do List

Tue Apr 15, 2008 at 11:56:46 AM PDT

  1.  Buy Cliff Schecter book "The Real McCain" for personal use and for five friends and relatives.  Check.
  1.  Write letter to editor bemoaning the absence of reporting on the fact that the President of the United States signed an order creating a class of persons who the United States and its proxies can torture.  Check.
  1.  Write letter to Wall Street Journal decrying slip shod hit job on Barack Obama - charmed life plus elitism plus untested.  Check.
  1.  Act on Daily Kos, Talking Points Memo, Act Blue candidate information.  Contribute to four democratic Congressional campaigns.  Check.

Book Review: Glenn Greenwald's "Great American Hypocrites"

Sun Apr 13, 2008 at 11:59:02 AM PDT

Unfortunately, Glenn is at the mercy of American Airlines while on book tour (see item #3 here for DC appearances). His flight was rescheduled and he's in the air now, unable to join us. We're working on a date and time to reschedule the liveblog. In the meantime, here are my impressions of the book and a short e-mail interview I had with him. And, if you need more Glenn, read this post about John Yoo (non-subscribers have to watch the ad).

Great American Hypocrites: Toppling the Big Myths of Republican Politics
By Glenn Greenwald
Crown Publishers, New York, 2008

Glenn Greenwald is an angry blogger. Fortunately for us, he's also intelligent, insightful, and on our side.

From the time I began blogging in October, 2005, I've written about many different topics, but almost all have a similar undercurrent: the Limbaugh/Kristol/Fox-News right-wing faction that controls the Republican Party and has dominated our political life for the last 15 years, and the multiple ways that our political institutions -- and particularly the Drudgified establishment press -- enable them. Marketing packages aside, this book is about them; how they function; the weakness-driven bloodthirstiness, dishonesty and sleaze which defines them; the indispensable eagerness of the establishment media to be used by them; and what can be done by those opposed to them to change all of that.

It's not about the hypocrisy, it's about damage that the hypocrisy has done to our political processes and to our political discourse, leading to the ultimate example this weekend when the entire media has spent more time and real estate on "Bittergate" than on the fact that the highest officials in our government--including the President--conspired to commit acts of torture. It's the logical outgrowth of the Drudgified political world, which Glenn documents from its inception--creating the myth of the Great American Republican--through this cycle's presidential race.

Glenn must have donned an asbestos suit for this one, because his first line of attack is against that great American icon, Marion Morrison, AKA John Wayne. Attempting to topple that myth, Glenn exposes Wayne's draft-dodging, womanizing, drug- and alcohol-abusing, multiple-divorced self. The reinvention of the Republican male--many of whom mimic his immoral excesses and sordid personal life--along the lines of John Wayne is coupled with highly personalized, gender-based, and diminishing smears against Democratic opponents. Hillary Clinton is a "dyke" and John Edwards a "faggot." The fact that Mitt Romney spent as much on make-up as Edwards did on his haircut is overwhelmed by the cut of Romney's jaw and broad shoulders. Welcome to our Drudgified world:

What is notable here is not so much the specific petty attacks, but rather the method by which they are disseminated and then entrenched as conventional wisdom among our Really Smart Political Insiders and Serious Journalists.  This is the endlessly repeated process that occurred here:

STEP 1 A new Drudge-dependent gossip (Ben Smith) at a new substance-free political rag (The Politico)--or some rightwing talkradio host (Rush Limbaugh) or some credibility-bereft right-wing blogger (a Michelle Malkin)--seizes on some petty, manufactured incident to fuel clichéd caricatures of Democratic candidates.

STEP 2 The old right-wing gossip (Drudge) employs his old, substance-free political rag (The Drudge Report) to amplify the inane caricatures.

STEP 3 National media outlets, such as AP and CNN, whose world is ruled by Drudge, take note of and begin "analyzing" the "political implications" of the gossip, thus transforming it into "news stories."

STEP 4 Our Serious Beltway Journalists and Political Analysts--in the Haircut Case, Tim Russert and Brian Williams and Adam Nagourney and the very serious and smart Substantive Journalists at The New Republic--mindlessly repeat all of it, thereby solidifying it as transparent conventional wisdom.

STEP 5 When called upon to justify their endless reporting over such petty and pointless Drudge-generated matters, these "journalists" cite Steps 1-4 as "proof" that "the people" care about these stories, even though the "evidence" consists of nothing other than their own flocklike chirping.

Repeat steps 1-5 until the Republican is elected.

Glenn's argument is strongest and sharpest in his dissection of our political press and how they are played, time and time again, to collude with this myth-making to draw false contrasts between opposing candidates. Thus, the draft-dodging Bush inherently had better national security credibility, according to the traditional media, than the war-hero Kerry. This year, the press has their real war-hero in McCain. But in  covering "the coolest kid in class," they are going to be following the same rules.

The GOP nominee for 2008--John McCain--is, in virtually every important respect, a completely typical Republican presidential candidate. He relies upon character mythology far more than substantive positions on issues to sustain his appeal. He endlessly claims to uphold personal values that he has chronically violated in reality--including his vaunted apolitical, truth-telling independence; his devotion to "traditional family values"; his Regular Guy credentials; his supposed hostility to the prerogatives of the elite; his honor-bound integrity; and his commitment to limited government and individual liberty. One finds, in McCain's actual life, rather than in his rhetoric and media-sustained mythology, one act after the next that directly violates each of these relentlessly touted principles, and in that regard, he is a standard, run-of-the-mill Republican hypocrite.

The electoral dynamic discussed in this book applies to McCain most vividly when it comes to the reverence that most of our nation's establishment political journalists harbor for him. The vast bulk of the establishment press, as many unashamedly admit, are blindly enamored of McCain and swoon in his presence--probably more so than any modern political candidate in many years, if not decades. As a result, just as was true for Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush before him, McCain has been permitted to construct a public image that is unscathed by any critical scrutiny from an adoring, even intimidated political press corps.

You can read an excerpt from Glenn's book on the marketing of McCain. It's the destruction of this narrative, Glenn argues, that should be the primary focus of Democrats and the left if we're going to break the cycle.

More of Glenn's thoughts on this matter, and more, below the fold.

NPR's All Things Considered Pimps for John McCain

Thu Apr 10, 2008 at 07:11:17 PM PDT

  Today April 10 I was driving home and had to turn my car radio off. I'd been listening to All Things Considered, and they ran not one but two stories outrageously pimping John McCain.

  First they ran a story by Peter Overby relating how McCain and Obama are battling over public financing of their campaigns.

McCain intends to take public funds. He accuses Obama of breaking a promise to do the same. But the cash machine built by the Obama campaign may dwarf the $84 million federal grant that he would get from Washington under public financing.

 Except Overby never mentions it's McCain who's breaking the law.

Then there was another piece by David Kestenbaum:

In a three-part series, NPR examines the presidential campaigns as business school case studies — where the bottom line is votes rather than profit.

Ready for this? Obama is like McDonalds; McCain is like Apple Computer or a Mars bar.

Lee Hamilton also doesn't know what call Mukasey was referencing

Tue Apr 08, 2008 at 01:02:05 PM PDT

A short diary this time: Glenn Greenwald got a response back from 9/11 Commission Vice Chairman Lee Hamilton in regards to Michael Mukasey's speech at the Commonwealth Club in San Jose on March 27th:

a perfect storm is taking hold over the Bush administration

Sat Apr 05, 2008 at 01:55:05 PM PDT

Suffice to say, it was an exciting week!

While I was expecting Olbermann and Maddow's report on April Fool's Day about Mukasey's verbal trainwreck to be a sick prank on my mind, the public glimmer of, and even if it was just a temporary mirage in the sea of election politics, of a Bush administration so incompetent it was criminally negligent for failing to prevent 9/11 served as a stark reminder to everyone that, if anything, this man is still in office!


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