Daily Kos

Email: jim-candlin @ gmail.com

Iran and IAEA punk Bush's War Drive

Fri Jul 13, 2007 at 05:37:45 PM PDT

Bush's drive to war with Iran - to cover his Iraq disaster - may be made much more difficult by a new agreement Iran has made with the IAEA this week.  The agreement would make it very unlikely that the UN Security Council would in the short run pass resolutions to increase sanctions on Iran for its nuclear enrichment programs.  

In an article on 7/13/07, AP reports that Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) have reached agreement:

  • Iran will answer questions regarding previous nuclear experiments, and both sides have agreed how to resolve remaining issues
  • IAEA inspectors will return to a plutonium-producing reactor Iran is building
  • Iran has scaled back its enrichment of uranium (but not halted enrichment)
  • In regard to the nuclear enrichment site that makes the neo-cons get all hard: [see extended entry]

Bush eats 'flaming turd' - Talks with Iran

Tue Feb 27, 2007 at 11:56:47 AM PDT

U.S. Launches New Talks to Secure Iraq
Updated 1:57 PM ET February 27, 2007  

WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States and the Iraqi government are launching a new diplomatic initiative to invite Iran and Syria to a "neighbors meeting" on stabilizing Iraq, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Tuesday.

As Sid Blumenthal reported at Salon in January, regarding the Baker report on Iraq:

Informed correspondents of the Washington Post and New York Times related in conversation that Bush furiously called the report "a flaming turd," but his colorful remark was not published. Perhaps it was apocryphal. Nonetheless, it conveyed the intensity of his hostile rejection.

So, now, Condi and Bush are backing the Iraqis in meeting with Iran and Syria, in two meetings planned for mid-March and Mid-April.  
l
So, how does eating part of the Baker report 'flaming turd' taste, Pres. Bush and Sec'y Rice?

Who is on the Iraq Study Group?

Sun Nov 12, 2006 at 06:07:55 PM PDT

Have you wondered who are the members of the Iraq Study Group?  How will their recommendations be shaped by their partisan affiliations and previous government backgrounds?

Here's the membership of ISG, according to the sponsor of the group. "The United States Institute of Peace is an independent, nonpartisan, national institution established and funded by Congress."

"The Iraq Study Group is a bipartisan group of prominent Americans supported by four premier institutions. It is led by co-chairs James A. Baker, III, the nation's 61st Secretary of State and Honorary Chairman of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University, and Lee H. Hamilton, former Congressman and Director of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars."

The other members of the study group include: Lawrence S. Eagleburger, Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., Edwin Meese III , Sandra Day O'Connor, Leon E. Panetta, William J. Perry, Charles S. Robb, and Alan K. Simpson.

More on the membership division in extended body below.

Three Senate Moderates in Support of Tyranny

Thu Sep 28, 2006 at 11:17:21 AM PDT

Remember these names: Ben Nelson (D), Susan Collins (R) and Olympia Snow (R).  All are characterized as 'moderates'.

Nelson and Collins voted against the Specter Amendment to the Military Detentions bill - the amendment would have striken the habeas corpus provisions (the worse part of an awful bill) from the overall bill.

All Democrats except Nelson voted for the Amendment and four Republicans with some conscience joined the Dems in the vote: Lincoln Chafee, Gordon Smith, Arlen Specter, John Sununu.

Olympia Snowe did not vote.  

If Snowe, Collins and Nelson had voted for the Specter amendment, as so-called 'moderates', the amendment would have succeeded.

Remember these names: Nelson, Snowe, and Collins.  Each of these Senators needs a real Democrat to oppose them in their next election.

Harry Reid and the Dem. leadership deserve our thanks for preserving a nearly unanimous Democratic opposition to adding tyranny to our laws.

Now, time for a filibuster.

Evolution evidence rated as top `breakthrough' in 2005

Thu Dec 22, 2005 at 06:46:35 PM PDT

MSNBC: Two days after a federal judge delivered a heavy blow to the intelligent-design movement, the journal Science Thursday proclaimed that fresh evidence of evolution in action was the top scientific breakthrough of 2005.

In the annual roundup, the journal's editors pointed to wide-ranging research built on the foundations of Charles Darwin's landmark 1859 work "The Origin of Species" and the idea of natural selection.
...

[more in extended]

Newsweek's Clift: Kos is 'Moses Leading Democrats

Fri Aug 05, 2005 at 06:56:21 PM PDT

to the Promised Land'

In a web-only article on MSNBC , by Eleanor Clift titled 'Fighting Back: An Ohio special election result shows how Democrats are harnessing the power of the blogosphere', Clift reports on Kos and Trippi's presentation as follows:

No fewer than three esteemed political reporters from The Washington Post were in the audience taking notes on a steamy Thursday afternoon at a forum called "Reflections of a Blogger," sponsored by the New Politics Institute, a progressive think tank.

[more in extended]

Mr. Bush: Tear Down Your Global Warming Wall

Sun Jul 03, 2005 at 06:28:18 PM PDT

Nick Kristof in today's NYT tells Bush that greenhouse gases can be reduced with benefits, not penalties.  Portland Oregon shows how to do it.  

"Kyoto would have wrecked our economy," Mr. Bush told a Danish interviewer recently, referring to the accord to curb carbon emissions. Maybe that was a plausible argument a few years ago, but now the city of Portland [Oregon] is proving it flat wrong.

Newly released data show that Portland, America's environmental laboratory, has achieved stunning reductions in carbon emissions. It has reduced emissions below the levels of 1990, the benchmark for the Kyoto accord, while booming economically.

In 1993, Portland became the first local government in the United States to adopt a strategy to deal with climate change. The latest data, released a few weeks ago, show the results: Greenhouse gas emissions last year in Multnomah County, which includes Portland, dropped below the level of 1990, and per capita emissions were down 13 percent.

Multnomah Co, population 600,000 (and 77% voting for Kerry) does things that any city can do:

[more in extended]

Leaked US Docs Show Bush Undermining G8 unity

Sat Jun 18, 2005 at 07:44:48 PM PDT

BushCo's willingness to go to the mat for Exxon and friends seemingly has no limit.  The G8 conference in the UK is scheduled to take up Global Warming, a major initiative of Tony Blair for the meeting.  

The US documents leaked to the Guardian (UK), show that Washington officials:

  • Removed all reference to the fact that climate change is a 'serious threat to human health and to ecosystems';

  • Deleted any suggestion that global warming has already started;

  • Expunged any suggestion that human activity was to blame for climate change.

[more in extended]

ABC News says Dean messages hurt Dems

Sat Jun 18, 2005 at 08:59:43 AM PDT

and fit the propaganda line of the the Repubs.

The June 18th story, labeled as 'analysis', is titled Frame Up? Dems, Dean Hit in Message War.  

Here's some snips from the story, which is almost unrelently negative regarding Dean's recent comments.

"We need to be blunt and clear about the things that we're going to fight for," he told Iowa Democratic leaders Saturday, according to the Des Moines Register. "People have criticized me for being blunt. I do that on purpose. I am tired of lying down."

So is it a strategy?

If so, it's misguided, said analysts contacted by ABCNEWS.com -- unless it's part of a Republican strategy.

[more in extended entry]

Frank Rich (NYT), Gays, and 'Advise and Consent'

Sun May 15, 2005 at 08:03:50 AM PDT

Rich's column in the NYT: "Just How Gay is the Right?", uses the re-release in DVD of the 1962 film drama 'Advise and Consent' to make some points on what he calls a 30 year war on gays by the right.  Author Allen Drury's novel turned movie was a best seller in the early 60's.

But when the pivotal gay plot twist kicks in, "Advise and Consent" taps into unfinished business that roils the capital as much, if not more, today than it did then. In 2005, homosexuality is no longer the love that dare not speak its name (the word is never mentioned in the movie), but as Washington fights its nuclear war over the judiciary, it is the ticking time bomb within the conservative movement that no one can defuse.
[snip]
[more in extended entry]

Wall Street Journal offends liberals/moderates

Fri Apr 15, 2005 at 02:59:48 PM PDT

The New York Post reports that:

Earnings plunged by 54 percent at the newspaper's parent Dow Jones & Co., with its fledgling online operations earning more money for the first time than the flagship Journal and the weekly Barron's.

Even more interesting: I called the WSJ today to NOT renew my online subscription, and when asked why I answered that I just couldn't tolerate the editorial stance of the Journal anymore.  The customer service rep. then surprisingly replied "I can't tell you how many people have told me that recently when they cancelled".  Apparently this has become very common.

Is it possible that one the premier megaphones for right-wing propaganda is finally offending even their own reader base?

(more quotoes from article below)

The Oregonian editorial for Kerry 10/10/04

Sun Oct 10, 2004 at 09:09:41 AM PDT

Kerry for president

The Democrat could help rebuild the United States' standing in the world while restoring balance at home
Sunday, October 10, 2004

When George W. Bush entered the White House in 2001, he and his team moved quickly to push government hard to the right.

This effort came even though Bush campaigned as a moderate and his narrow, contested election was anything but a mandate for sweeping change.

But if Bush partisans could turn aside disagreement with a brusque "elections have consequences" in 2001, it turns out today that governing has consequences, too.

One of them should be that Americans elect John Kerry president in November.

Bush's term in office has been marked by two major failures. One is his conduct of the war in Iraq. The other is his stewardship of the nation's fiscal health. Bush ran for president as a "compassionate conservative." But true conservatives don't choose to go to war without proper planning or pursue fiscal policies leading to the deepest federal deficits in our nation's history.

Certainly the president has done many things right. He handled the murderous terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, about as well as we can imagine any national leader could. His decision to attack and destroy the Taliban regime and al-Qaida camps in Afghanistan was vigorous and correct.

The federal No Child Left Behind Act, which the president proposed and signed, isn't perfect. But it's a huge, necessary step for better accountability in education, especially for low-income and minority students.

We supported going to war in Iraq, and we'll discuss the war and the campaign further in this space soon. For now, though, let us say our concerns center on how President Bush has carried out the war and isolated the United States.

We believe the White House's policy-makers approached the war with preconceived notions about success based on what the president later called "just guessing." They brushed aside warnings and contrary opinions. They chose ideology over expertise. This arrogance led to a series of military, political and diplomatic blunders and, we believe, resulted in the unnecessary deaths of many brave Americans.

On fiscal policy, the White House and leaders in Congress have failed to fully acknowledge the threat posed by the giant deficits that the current recipe of tax cuts and profligate federal spending has brewed. Addressing this will not be as simple as paying for tax cuts through spending cuts. The anemic performance of the economy suggests also that the administration's hope that the country can grow its way out of trouble is overly optimistic, at best.

In almost every area, deliberate gaps between the administration's rhetoric and reality have become routine. Last year's misinformation about the cost of Medicare drug coverage is just one example.

Elections, of course, are not just about the incumbents. In John Kerry, the Democratic Party has not offered the perfect challenger.

The Bush campaign has succeeded in presenting Kerry as inconsistent on some important issues because Kerry has, indeed, been inconsistent. Kerry deserves criticism, for example, for voting for the authorization to go to war but voting against the appropriation of money for it.

Even so, on the international front, Kerry understands something that Bush does not: Our nation's experience shows that strong international alliances are vital to erecting a bulwark against aggression, tyranny and terrorism.

The president's destructive rhetoric during the campaign reflects the administration's recklessness in this area. This nation's role as the world's only military superpower does not grant it the unquestioned right to lead. Other nations will follow a United States they respect and admire. They will resist a United States they fear.

Foreign leaders may well understand that their long-term interests lie in sticking with the United States. But Bush has made it politically impossible for them to do so. Kerry has some chance of rebuilding the international alliances that Bush and his people have shattered.

Kerry also has demonstrated, through his personal heroism in Vietnam and his positions in this campaign, that he is strong, aggressive and thoughtful enough to perform well as commander in chief of the U.S. armed forces.

A long record of public service shows that he possesses a deep, nuanced understanding of the central domestic issues of our time.

Kerry is likely to select strong Cabinet secretaries, and he may even listen to them when they disagree with his inner circle. During the Bush administration, there has been little evidence that solid Cabinet choices like Secretary of State Colin Powell are able to get their views heard on critical issues at critical times.

We believe the top choices in a Kerry administration also would be more vigorous in pursuing both the letter and spirit of the nation's environmental protection laws. A Kerry attorney general might have a more coherent and defensible view of citizens' civil liberties and constitutional rights than John Ashcroft, Bush's attorney general.

President Bush has had no chance to name anyone to the Supreme Court but he has made it clear, through his words and his nominations to the federal bench, what sort of court he wants.

One or more seats on the high court may open in the next four years, and it would be a shame if they were filled with jurists with political and social agendas who seek to turn back the clock. We believe Kerry would nominate more moderate candidates to the court.

When George W. Bush took office in a deeply divided nation, he promised to reach out to unite the country. If anything, he has helped make the rifts deeper. That may be his real failure as president.

John Kerry can do better.

[The Oregonian is published in Portland OR with an average weekday circulation of 334,783, which ranks #24 out of 1,413 U.S. newspapers]


::