Daily Kos

Demand an apology from Nadler re: his Obama "vacuous" comments

Thu Feb 07, 2008 at 06:32:27 AM PDT

First of all, some quick background on me.  I've been a frequent visitor here for many years, but I don't write much.  I'm a very partisan Democrat, have done plenty of volunteer work for Dem candidates in the past, and don't hesitate to give money.  I was initially hoping for a Mark Warner run, and later a Gore run.  At various points I supported Richardson, Dodd, and Edwards.  I read Obama's biography back in 2003 when some of the initial buzz around him was building, and was happy to see him running.  However, I wasn't fully sold on his campaign until the last month or two.  Now I consider myself a strong supporter.

From a friend stuck in Lebanon: Who should pay?

Wed Jul 19, 2006 at 07:21:28 AM PDT

I just received the following email from a friend of mine stuck in Lebanon. I have cross-posted it on my blog, Cicero Jones. He has submitted it to Anderson Cooper's show via their blog - we'll see if it makes it on, it should.

MBNA helicopter goes down in East River

Fri Jun 17, 2005 at 03:06:21 PM PDT

http://www.ny1.com/ny1/content/index.jsp?stid=1&aid=51589

Word on the street is it is a corporate helicopter, containing 6 MBNA executives and 2 pilots.  Since they're ok, I'm tempted to wonder if this is some kind of karmic bite for the bankruptcy bill?

It was headed, of course, to Delaware.  Some very nice suits, watches, and laptops got very wet.

Again, only posting this now that it is known that no one was seriously injured.

the single best shot at ko'ing a republican

Sun Oct 10, 2004 at 05:48:51 PM PDT

The Day of New London has come out with a great profile of Jim Sullivan, candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives from eastern Connecticut.

We absolutely need him to win this election.

His profile in the blogosphere has been low, which is very unfortunate, because I think it's the single best pickup opportunity for Democrats this election.  Read my endorsement below.  The race is a dead-heat with a WEAK incumbent.  See: OurCongress.org :: CT-02: Simmons, Sullivan "in a dog fight"

NAACP poll on Bush

Wed Jul 14, 2004 at 01:07:41 PM PDT

The NAACP has a poll up asking "Is Bush disrespecting the black community by continually refusing to speak at the NAACP convention?"  

I only heard about it through a coworker who got an email asking him to "vote no" to "support President Bush" from a right-wing friend of his.  Anyway, the vote is really close, "Yes" has a slight lead, but let's work to defeat what is probably a snowballing right-wing email campaign.  

Chavez and Me

Thu Jul 08, 2004 at 10:14:56 AM PDT

crossposted from an entry in a blog my coworkers and I have, Americas, Americans

Chavez and me

The upcoming referendum on the rule of Hugo Chavez in Venezuela presents an interesting quandry for the progressive/liberal community in the United States, as this post from MyDD seems to show.

I was disgusted when I saw it at first -- the final thought, "A victory for Chavez is a defeat for Bush," particularly upset me.  The implication is that, as a card carrying member of the Anybody But Bush crowd, a good progressive should support the Chavez government in its attempts to win the election.  I'm not going to go into the whole history of the recall effort, or Venezuelan history for that matter, but clearly Venezuela is now a country so polarized that it makes the Bush/ABB divisions seem like a polite disagreement.  

Of course, the term "recall" immediately brings to mind California and the Gropernator.  Add to that the Bush administration's (I'd say half-hearted) support of a 2002 businessman's coup that briefly overthrew the democratically elected Chavez, and progressive sympathies seem certainly warranted.  However, Hugo Chavez is not a man worthy of anyone's sympathies.  He finds himself in a difficult situation, his political life, and perhaps life in general, possibly nearing an end, but it is a situation that he has brought entirely upon himself.  By relying so much on the masses of poor Venezuelans to maintain his tenous claim to legitimacy, he is injecting into the population critically high amounts of the poisoinous rhetoric of class warfare, which Latin America has seen for too many decades now, darkening the horizons of his country's once bright future.  

If you have seen Michael Moore's Farhenheight 9/11 you probably remember the opening scenes, those which centered on then Vice President Al Gore, in his role as President of the Senate, certifying the dubious electoral results that left him jobless (the first of many) and GWB the leader of a then free world.  The audience is meant to think, "The horror!  How could this be!  How could he do this!  He's ignoring the well-voiced opposition of the Congressional Black Caucus, who actually want to help him!"  That scene, however, has for me a much more powerful message: despite extreme duress under which US democracy found itself, it held strong.  The defeated candidate remained defeated, even when he certainly could've manipulated the democratic "rules of the game" to his benefit, to at least drag out the certification of the election and certainly to delegitimize his victorious opponent.  For that, we are all better off -- the world's most influential democracy continued to function, and despite the destruction that Bush has caused, the higher ideals of the American Republic have remained, allowing us, this November, to see to it that our voices are heard and the country continues to move forward.

This is not the case in Venezuela.  Chavez will do anything he can to manipulate the courts, the congress, and the electorate, to further his "Bolivarian Revolution" -- a nice name given to a process which has resulted in the disenfranchisement of a huge portion of the population.  My heart is a revolutionary heart, I think, and a term like that, combined with rhetoric about giving the poor access to food, jobs, healthcare, any kind of better life, certainly stirs me.  In fact, when Chavez won the election in 1999, and then when he won the ensuing battle with the old congress, I was truly hopeful.  But all he has brought to Venezuela is renewed class warfare, economic stagnation (the surging demand for oil, of which Venezuela is the US's third largest supplier, has mitigated it, at least statistically, a bit), and, above all, a very, very uncertain future.

I think that the opposition to Chavez, a confusing, multifaceted blob of everything from corrupt oilmen to truly inspiring and principaled young leaders, has done a bad job at showing why they're the right choice for Venezuela.  I don't want to endorse their cause by any means -- I'm not Venezuelan, I've never been there, and what I hear in New York is so filtered and processed I don't think I can base any real opinions on it.  However, I can say, please don't tell me a vote for Chavez is a vote against Bush.  Chavez may spew vitriol against Bush, but he probably will against Kerry too.  He's throwing democracy out the window in favor of his one-party dictatorship-in-the-making.  He encourages violence and suppresses independent thought.  If he defeats the recall, he might just break the back of democracy in the country he professes to love so much.  

Stratfor on the IRR

Thu Jul 08, 2004 at 07:29:26 AM PDT

Update [2004-7-8 13:18:30 by jgontero]: I removed the article, per the problems with posting whole articles Here is a recent analysis from Stratfor on the decision to activate the Army's Individual Ready Reserve.  I know a lot has been said about this already, but I think where this article makes a good point is in stressing how, in "preparing" for wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Bush administration actually worked to downsize the military.  This analysis suggests the size of the Army should've doubled or tripled, which is probably right.  Ironically, had the administration embraced such an expansion, the Dems probably would've fought it, it might not've happened anyway, but the onus would now be on the Dems.  Now, however, it's snowballed and is one of the best examples yet of Bush's disasterous national security policy, something that Kerry/Edwards will hopefully hammer on.  

Allawi - interesting analysis by Stratfor - just another Chalabi

Wed Jun 09, 2004 at 06:14:53 PM PDT

It looks like the neocons haven't learned any lessons from Chalabi...after flirting with Sistani, we're still buddies with the exiled elites.

Iraq's Allawi: A U.S. Friend in the Highest Place
June 04, 2004   1612 GMT

Summary

Iyad Allawi's appointment as prime minister of Iraq's interim government confirms that the United States still plans on handling Iraq via the same group of Iraqi elites that includes the recently ostracized Ahmed Chalabi. This group of intellectuals and exiles -- the most pro-U.S. group in Iraq -- also is most pliable to U.S. interests in the country. Stratfor has obtained inside information about Allawi that offers insight into the former Baathist and into Washington's strategy for Iraq. Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani is the wild card in all of this.


::