Administration abandons all pretension to the truth

January 29, 2004 at 9:00 pm
Contributed by:

Folks,

In a stunning display of arrogance, our infallible administration has finally abandoned all pretensions of telling the truth. Check out these excerpts from today’s Progress Report:


…instead of explaining why it ignored repeated warnings from the intelligence community that the White House’s WMD case was weak, newswires report the Administration responded by “denying it ever warned that Saddam Hussein posed an ‘imminent’ threat to the United States.” But a closer look at the record shows the Administration not only used exact phrase “imminent threat,” but also buttressed it with claims that Iraq was a “mortal threat,” “urgent threat,” “immediate threat,” “serious and mounting threat,” “unique threat,” and a threat that was actively seeking to “strike the United States with weapons of mass destruction” – all just months after Secretary of State Colin Powell admitted that Iraq was “contained” and “threatens not the United States.” See a long list of the Administration’s “threat” rhetoric in this new American Progress backgrounder.

NOW

“I think some in the media have chosen to use the word ‘imminent.’ Those were not words we used.”

- White House spokesman Scott McClellan, 1/27/04

THEN

“This is about imminent threat.”

- White House spokesman Scott McClellan, 2/10/03


I have to plug them again: the Progress Report is one of the best sources for the truth that you might hope to find on the Web. Sign up for their daily newsletter, it’s free!

Sign up for e-mail delivery of The Progress Report

George Soros – The U.S. is Now in the Hands of a Group of Extremists

January 29, 2004 at 4:30 am
Contributed by:

Folks,

George Soros is not a perfect human, by any means, but his contributions to the political dialogue lately are right in line with my perspective. I think he’s right on every point here. The US, blessed as it is with a position of global domination, must change its attitudes or risk losing everything.

–CThe US is now in the hands of a group of extremists

By George Soros
  The Guardian


  Monday 26 January 2004



Fundamentalism has spawned an ideology of American supremacy.


  The invasion of Iraq was the first practical application of the pernicious Bush doctrine of pre-emptive military action, and it elicited an allergic reaction worldwide – not because anyone had a good word to say about Saddam Hussein, but because we insisted on invading Iraq unilaterally without any clear evidence that he had anything to do with September 11 or that he possessed weapons of mass destruction.


  The gap in perceptions between America and the rest of the world has never been wider. Abroad, America is seen as abusing the dominant position it occupies; opinion at home has been led to believe that Saddam posed a clear and present danger to national security. Only in the aftermath of the Iraqi invasion are people becoming aware they have been misled.


  Even today, many people believe that September 11 justifies behaviour that would be unacceptable in normal times. The ideologues of American supremacy and President Bush personally never cease to remind us that September 11 changed the world. It is only as the untoward consequences of the invasion of Iraq become apparent that people are beginning to realise something has gone woefully wrong.


  We have fallen into a trap. The suicide bombers’ motivation seemed incomprehensible at the time of the attack; now a light begins to dawn: they wanted us to react the way we did. Perhaps they understood us better than we understand ourselves.


  And we have been deceived. When he stood for election in 2000, President Bush promised a humble foreign policy. I contend that the Bush administration has deliberately exploited September 11 to pursue policies that the American public would not have otherwise tolerated. The US can lose its dominance only as a result of its own mistakes. At present the country is in the process of committing such mistakes because it is in the hands of a group of extremists whose strong sense of mission is matched only by their false sense of certitude.


  This distorted view postulates that because we are stronger than others, we must know better and we must have right on our side. That is where religious fundamentalism comes together with market fundamentalism to form the ideology of American supremacy.


  We may have more difficulty in perceiving the absurdity of pursuing supremacy by military means, because we have learned to rely on military power and we particularly feel the need for it when our very existence is threatened. But the most powerful country on earth cannot afford to be consumed by fear. To make the war on terrorism the centrepiece of our national strategy is an abdication of our responsibility as the leading nation in the world. The US is the only country that can take the lead in addressing problems that require collective action: preserving peace and economic progress, protecting the environment and so on.


  Whatever the justification for removing Saddam, there can be no doubt that we invaded Iraq on false pretenses. Wittingly or unwittingly, President Bush deceived the American public and Congress and rode roughshod over our allies’ opinions.


  The gap between the administration’s expectations and the actual state of affairs could not be wider. We have put at risk not only our soldiers’ lives but the combat readiness of our armed forces. We are overstretched and our ability to project our power has been compromised. Yet there are more places where we need to project our power than ever. North Korea is openly building nuclear weapons; Iran is doing so clandestinely. The Taliban is regrouping in the Pashtun areas of Afghanistan. The costs of occupation and the prospect of permanent war weigh on our economy, and we are failing to address festering problems both at home and globally. If we ever needed proof that the neo-cons’ dream of American supremacy is misconceived, Iraq has provided it.


  It is hard to imagine how the plans of the defence department could have gone more awry. We find ourselves in a quagmire that is in some ways reminiscent of Vietnam. Having invaded Iraq, we cannot extricate ourselves. Domestic pressure to withdraw is likely to build, as in the Vietnam war, but withdrawing would inflict irreparable damage on our standing in the world. In this respect, Iraq is worse than Vietnam because of our dependence on Middle East oil.


  Nobody forced us into it; on the contrary, everyone warned us against it. Admittedly, Saddam was a heinous tyrant and it was a good thing to get rid of him. But at what cost? The occupying powers serve as a focal point for attracting terrorists and radicalising Islam. Our soldiers have to do police work in full combat gear.


  And the cost of occupation is estimated at a staggering $160bn for the the fiscal years 2003-2004 – $73bn for 2003 and $87bn in a supplemental request for 2004 submitted at the last minute in September 2003. Of the $87bn, only $20bn is for reconstruction, but the total cost of reconstruction is estimated at $60bn. For comparison, our foreign aid budget for 2002 was $10bn.


  There is no easy way out. The Bush administration is eager to get the United Nations more involved but is unwilling to make the necessary concessions. We have no alternative to sticking it out and paying the price for our mistake. Eventually a different president with a different attitude to international cooperation may be more successful in extricating us.


  The US is not the only country at the centre of the global capitalist system, but it is the most powerful and it is the main driving force behind globalisation. The European Union may equal the US in population and gross national product, but it is far less united and far less comfortable with globalisation. In military terms, the EU does not even qualify as a power, because members make their own decisions.


  Insofar as any nation is in charge of the world order, it is the US. That is not to suggest that other countries are exempt from having to concern themselves with the wellbeing of the world. Their attitudes are not without consequence, but it is the US that matters most.


  If Bush is rejected in 2004, his policies can be written off as an aberration and America resume its rightful place in the world. But if he is re-elected, the electorate will have endorsed his policies and we will have to live with the consequences. But it isn’t enough to defeat Bush at the polls. The US must examine its global role and adopt a more constructive vision. We cannot merely pursue narrow, national self-interest. Our dominant position imposes a unique responsibility.


  ——-

US and Saddam: Thanks for the Memories

January 29, 2004 at 2:45 am
Contributed by:

Folks,


This short clip, set to Sinatra’s “Thanks for the Memories,” is just about the best recap I’ve ever seen of the US relationship with Saddam Hussein. Utterly brilliant! Check it out.


Thanks for the Memories by Eric Blumrich (Creator of Bushflash.com)

Aliens Cause Global Warming

January 28, 2004 at 11:45 pm
Contributed by:

This is the only nonfiction I have ever read by Michael Crichton. This is the Caltech Michelin Lecture he gave on January 17, 2003.

Aliens Cause Global Warming

I think there are some very important points made in this lecture. Although I think the thrust of his argument is more about the integrity of science itself, I think its worth considering what negative impact on environmentalism in general might be. I think bad science threatens the credibility of environmentalism.

I have to say I am really suspiscious of what’s happening in this country with our industry. More and more of our manufacturing is going over seas and beaucracies like EPA seem to have complicated things unnecessarily. In a way it seems like there is a kind of de-industrialisation going on. There must be a better way. There must be better, cleaner, energy technology out there waiting to be disovered but we hear nothing about any such attempts to find it. We just hear yada yada yada about Global Warming. This just doesn’t seem right to me.

And apparently, $87 billion could have been used to buy enough windmills to provide the USA with 1/4 of its energy. That’s technology that we already have. Hmmm.

Cheers,

Colin

Richard Perle on Jon Stewart\’s Daily Show

January 28, 2004 at 10:47 am
Contributed by:

Folks,

I hope you caught Jon Stewart’s Daily Show tonight. That show is still the best political commentary on television, I swear. You could watch an hour of any other political talk show and never get the direct questions and straight answers that you’ll get in a five minute guest segment on Stewart’s show.

In tonight’s show, Stewart questioned Perle directly about the missing WMD; the hyped intelligence; our intimidation of other countries; the way that the Administration’s stated policies applied more to the Saudis and Syria than it did Iraq; and more.

If you didn’t see it tonight, catch the replay tomorrow night on Comedy Central at 7pm.

–C

Doing Business With The Enemy

January 28, 2004 at 3:30 am
Contributed by:

So this is an interesting article mostly by virtue of the fact that it is on CBS, albeit part of their 60 minutes section:

Doing Business With The Enemy

Here’s an excerpt:



(CBS) Did it ever occur to you that when President Bush says, “Money is the lifeblood of terrorist operations,” he’s talking about your money — and every other American’s money?

Just about everyone with a 401(k) pension plan or mutual fund has money invested in companies that are doing business in so-called rogue states.

In other words, there are U.S. companies that are helping drive the economies of countries like Iran, Syria and Libya that have sponsored terrorists.


Now this is the same CBS that won’t run the MoveOn advertisement. Hmmm.

Interesting to note that this sort of issue is turning the heads of firemen and policemen, finally, as they realise that their own pension funds are supporting so called “rogue states”.

Its also worth noting that part of Halliburton’s scam is to build the stuff twice. They build it once, the USA bombs it, and then they win contracts to rebuild it all. That’s exactly what happened in Iraq.

Are we feeling really dumb yet?

Cheers,

Colin

Former Sec. Defense McNamara on Vietnam and Iraq

January 27, 2004 at 2:05 am
Contributed by:

Folks,

This is a great article, based on an interview with the former U.S. Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara. ‘It’s just wrong what we’re doing’ he says of the war in Iraq, and discusses the 11 lessons he learned from the Vietnam war, which he now says was a big mistake. They’re eerily appropriate to the war in Iraq as well.


In an exclusive interview, repentant Vietnam War architect Robert McNamara breaks his silence on Iraq: The United States, he says, is making the same mistakes all over again


By DOUG SAUNDERS

Saturday, January 24, 2004 – Page F3

‘It’s just wrong what we’re doing’


In an exclusive interview, repentant Vietnam War architect Robert McNamara breaks his silence on Iraq: The United States, he says, is making the same mistakes all over again


By DOUG SAUNDERS
Saturday, January 24, 2004 – Page F3


And for some other interesting reflections on this subject, you might want to check out Barlow’s blog.

Sobering thoughts.

–C

Howard Dean \"Yeagh!\" remix

January 24, 2004 at 9:14 am
Contributed by:

Folks,


I honestly feel badly for Howard Dean. Oh, how the mighty have fallen. Rather than just sucking it up after his third place finish in the Iowa caucuses, and focusing on New Hampshire, he had to appear before his supporters and…make a screaming ass of himself. Talk about shooting yourself in the foot!


It took mere hours for his little spectacle to grow legs. The pundits thrashed him for it immediately, and then the turntable jockeys got into the act. Here’s an article about that, with links to some of the “Yeagh!” remixes:


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/Default.aspx?id=4021146&p1=0


Could Dean have put the final nail in his own coffin? Come next week, we’ll find out.


–C

Addendum

Here is a list of some Howard Dean remixes, cribbed from the above article and from Dean Goes Nuts:

Yeagh,” (http://homepage.mac.com/lileks/.Public/Yeagh.mp3 (James Lilek)

Jonathan Barlow’s clip (http://barlowfarms.com/howarddean.wav


Rapping It Up With Dean (Original Rap remix by Zach Freeman and Jonathan Stokes of Austin, TX)
We have the Power (Stand up for America) (Faulkner remix)
Keep Dean Alive (Tom Harkin mix) (Crystal Method Mix)
Hellraiser Remix (DJ Mary Jane’s ‘Howard Dean Goes Nuts’ edit)
Dean Throws It Up For America (Lil Jon and Howard Dean)
Introducing Howard Dean (by Brian Robinson)
WMDean (Bush Lies Mix) (by Orenzero)
Howard Dean: Reloaded (Video Remix) (by Dragonslayer)
Howard Dean Unchained (by Matt Burns)


IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER
Keep in mind that I did not create any of these tracks, and that none are in original form. I simply compiled them to provide a little comedy for all you nice people. If any of these tracks are owned by you and you do not want them here, then inform me and I will remove them immediately. If you created one of these files and do not want me to host them on my site, or if you just want me to include the proper credits, Email me and I will take care of it ASAP. I will immediately comply with any and all requests. This is all just for fun, and nothing more.

Halliburton Execs Fired Over Kuwaiti Kickbacks

January 24, 2004 at 2:23 am
Contributed by:

Folks,


Two Halliburton execs have been fired for accepting $6 million in kickbacks from a Kuwaiti company that was awarded contracts to supply U.S. troops in Iraq. Halliburton has made it clear that they won’t tolerate such activities. But I’m here to tell you that this is purely whitewashing. If you read Robert Baer’s Sleeping with the Devil, you will find out that this sort of practice–raising the price of something in order to skim off kickbacks for the provider–is utterly endemic to all sorts of commerce in the Middle East, especially as it relates to U.S. government contracts. His book is mainly about the Saudis, but the same dynamics apply in all Middle Eastern client-states of the US.

I’m sure that Halliburton hopes that by firing these employees, it will take the heat off of them. But I hope it doesn’t. The American taxpayer has enriched so many individuals for so long through these illegal schemes. It’s time we put an end to it.

Here’s an excerpt from Baer’s book that illustrates the point:

“Saudi money also seeped into the bureaucracy. Any Washington bureaucrat with a room-temperature IQ knows that if he stays on the right side of the kingdom, some way or anoyhter, he’ll be able to finagle a way to feed at the Saudi trough. A consulting contract with Aramco, a chair at American University, a job with Lockheed–it doesn’t matter. There’s hardly a living former assistant secretary of state for the Near East; CIA director; White House staffer; or member of Congress who hasn’t ended up on the Saudi payroll in one way or another, or so it sometimes seems. With this kind of money waiting out there, of course Washington’s bureaucrats don’t have the backbone to take on Saudi Arabia.”

I reckon they don’t have the backbone to take on Halliburton, either.

–C

Ex-Arms Hunter Kay Says No WMD Stockpiles in Iraq

January 23, 2004 at 3:09 pm
Contributed by:


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=578&u=/nm/20040123/ts_nm/iraq_usa_weapons_dc_3


Ex-Arms Hunter Kay Says No WMD
Stockpiles in Iraq

By Tabassum Zakaria


WASHINGTON (Reuters) – David Kay stepped down as
leader of the U.S. hunt for banned weapons in Iraq (news
web sites) on
Friday and said he did not believe the country had any large stockpiles of
chemical or biological weapons.


In a direct challenge to the Bush administration,
which says its invasion of Iraq was justified by the presence of illicit arms,
Kay told Reuters in a telephone interview he had concluded there were no Iraqi
stockpiles to be found.



“I don’t think they existed,” Kay said. “What
everyone was talking about is stockpiles produced after the end of the last
(1991) Gulf War (news
web sites),
and I don’t think there was a large-scale production program in the nineties,”
he said.


The CIA (news
web sites)
announced earlier that former U.N. weapons inspector Charles Duelfer, who has
previously expressed doubts that unconventional weapons would be found, would
succeed Kay as Washington’s chief arms hunter.


Kay said he believes most of what was going to be
found in the search for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq has been found and
that the hunt would become more difficult once America returned control of the
country to the Iraqis.


The United States went to war against Baghdad last
year citing a threat from Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction. To date, no banned
arms have been found.


In his annual State of the Union on Tuesday,
President Bush (news
web sites)
insisted that former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein (news
web sites)
had actively pursued dangerous programs right up to the start of the U.S. attack
in March.


Citing a report to Congress in October, Bush said Kay
had found “dozens of weapons of mass destruction-related program activities and
significant amounts of equipment that Iraq concealed from the United Nations
(news
web sites).”


“Had we failed to act,” Bush said, “the dictator’s
weapons of mass destruction programs would continue to this day.”


JURY STILL OUT


And on Wednesday, Vice President Dick Cheney
(news
web sites)
said the United States had not given up on finding unconventional weapons in
Iraq. “The jury is still out,” he said in a radio interview.


Kay said he left the post due to a “complex set of
issues. It related in part to a reduction in the resource and a change in focus
of ISG,” he said referring to the Iraq Survey Group, which is in charge of the
weapons hunt.


ISG analysts were diverted from hunting for weapons
of mass destruction to helping in the fight against the insurgency, Kay said.


“When I had started out I had made it a condition
that ISG be exclusively focused on WMD, that’s no longer so,” he said.


“We’re not going to find much after June. Once the
Iraqis take complete control of the government it is just almost impossible to
operate in the way that we operate,” Kay said.


“I think we have found probably 85 percent of what
we’re going to find,” he said. “I think the best evidence is that they did not
resume large-scale production and that’s what we’re really talking about.”


Kay said he was going back to the private sector.


In a statement announcing Kay’s departure, CIA
Director George Tenet praised Kay for his “extraordinary service under dangerous
and difficult circumstances.”

Duelfer, 51, a former deputy executive chairman of
the U.N. Special Commission that was responsible for dismantling Iraq’s weapons
of mass destruction, had previously expressed doubts that unconventional weapons
would be found.

“I think that Mr. Kay and his team have looked very
hard. I think the reason that they haven’t found them is they’re probably not
there,” Duelfer told NBC television earlier this month.

But in a statement included in the CIA announcement,
Duelfer, who will be based in Iraq and as CIA special adviser to direct the WMD
search, said he was keeping an open mind.

“I’m approaching it with an open mind and am
absolutely committed to following the evidence wherever it takes us,” he said.


–C




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