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February, 2005 Archives


One Third of Homeless Men are Veterans

Well, here's a nice fact for those of you who have had the annoyance of stepping over homeless people on the way to work or shopping. According to the Associated Press, United States veterans now comprise 33% of all homeless men in America, although as a group they only comprise 13% of adult males in American society. This disturbing article describes the problem. Apparently, nearly 500,000 of our veterans will become homeless this year.
Pete Dougherty, the VA's director of homeless programs in Washington, says there are two kinds of homeless people: Some are short-timers, driven to the streets by pure economics. Others have psychiatric or substance abuse problems that contribute to chronic homelessness, meaning they are homeless for more than a year or four times within three years.

Veterans are twice as likely as other people to be chronically homeless.
Many of the vets have problems going back to a normal life after spending 18 months killing or being killed. Funding for veterans continues to be cut, and health benefits for Guardsmen are laughable. These people are putting their lives on the line every day for our country. They deserve better than what we give them in return.

Posted on February 28, 2005
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Don't Call It Outsourcing

Watching the Watchers has an interesting excerpt from the 160-page, confidential guidebook for political speech, as decreed by Republican pollster extraordinaire and consultant Frank Luntz. One fascinating addendum to the document is entitled: "The Fourteen Words Never To Use." The document lists the words that should never be uttered when making Republican political arguments. Some of the no-no's in our "it's not what you say but how you say it society" include: Outsourcing (instead, call it Taxation, Regulation, Litigation Innovation, or Education), Government (instead, call it Washington because people like their local governments and despise Washington), Drilling for Oil (instead, call it Exploring for Energy, which seems to conjure up visionso of Lewis and Clark), Privatize Social Security (instead, call it Personalize Social Security, which sounds cozy and friendly) and--one I actually happen to agree with wholeheartedly--the Estate Tax (instead, call it the Death Tax, which nearly everyone opposes when described that way and which all small business owners oppose no matter what you call it). The left will cry foul, but the truth is all parties attempt to use language to control the debate. Words really do matter in our mediacentric, superficial society in which many Americans are totally ignorant about the important issues facing us today. So, whoever gets the best soundbite may very well win the argument. Lutz is just doing his job. All this means is that it's time for the Democrats to crack open the thesaurus and make their own list of Words Never to Use.

Posted on February 26, 2005
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The Post's Kinky Condi Fantasies

The Washington Post has a highly inappropriate and disturbingly Freudian column about Condi's black outfit she wore when visiting Germany. Here's a taste:
As Rice walked out to greet the troops, the coat blew open in a rather swashbuckling way to reveal the top of a pair of knee-high boots. The boots had a high, slender heel that is not particularly practical. But it is a popular silhouette because it tends to elongate and flatter the leg. In short, the boots are sexy.

Rice's coat and boots speak of sex and power -- such a volatile combination, and one that in political circles rarely leads to anything but scandal. When looking at the image of Rice in Wiesbaden, the mind searches for ways to put it all into context. It turns to fiction, to caricature. To shadowy daydreams. Dominatrix!

She was not hiding behind matronliness, androgyny or the stereotype of the steel magnolia. Rice brought her full self to the world stage -- and that included her sexuality. It was not overt or inappropriate. If it was distracting, it is only because it is so rare.

It's funny when Wonkette does it; it's her job to be irreverent. But it's just creepy when a serious publication like The Washington Post spends an entire column discussing said columnist's sexual fantasies about our female Secretary of State. Whether you love her politics or hate her politics, you have to admit that Secretary Rice always looks professional, cool, calm and collected when she represents our country abroad. Many women wear high heels just to be taller and give a psychological advantage in a business meeting -- not to send a "come hither" message. It was also cold as hell in Germany that day, making boots and a coat quite practical. But, lost in an S&M fantasy, the Post could only see Rice through the filter of its own kinky fantasies. This is the newspaper that brought down Nixon? For shame...

Posted on February 25, 2005
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Tina Brown Talks Testosterone Poisoning

Tina Brown has a funny column in the Washington Post about how perhaps a woman's touch is just what the world needs right now. She writes:
Perhaps in the wake of the Larry Summers debacle at Harvard it's time for a study of the missing social gene in men. It's amazing how many executive disasters are caused by the way otherwise smart males crash around in the thicket of interpersonal relations.

There were so many blunders of tone in the first Bush term it needed Condi Rice in her Jackie O pearls to go and suck up to wounded European leaders in advance of the presidential visit.
I think she has a point. I mean, Condi really was a hit with the French. And it's not like she moderated her positions or anything. But she was really polite when she talked--and she had great outfits. Isn't the art of diplomacy about saying the nastiest things in the nicest possible way? And it certainly doesn't hurt to speak the native language when you're doing it, either.

Posted on February 24, 2005
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Gannon-Guckert Needs a Date for the White House Correspondents Dinner

First, he wasn't going to talk to the media anymore on the advice of his attorneys. Then, he decided he'd rather listen to his publicists than his attorneys and appeared on CNN's Anderson Cooper 360 last Friday night for a most entertaining grilling by the unflappable Cooper. Unable to bear the silence any longer this week, Gannon has once again been interviewed by Editor and Publisher. In a truly surreal interview, Guckert tells Joe Strupp that he wants to go to the White House Correspondents Dinner, is sure someone will invite him, that he thinks he still has a future in journalism, and that the scandal (of him being exposed as a gay, male prostitute who worked for a GOP activist organization who got access to the White House) is the price he's paid to now be taken seriously as a journalist. Here's the quote from La Guckert himself: "I have every intention of attending this year's [dinner].... "Don?t you think I could? I'm sure someone is going to ask me or offer me the opportunity to go. It is a great publicity event." Guckert is also keeping a journal and is thinking about a book deal. "There are people who are definitely interested in some of my behind-the-scenes work in the press room," said Guckert. You got that right, buddy.

Posted on February 23, 2005
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A Bedtime Kiss for Chirac

USA Today shares more tasty tidbits about President Bush's trip to Europe to win fences. So, how is the Charm Offensive going, anyway? One clue: the headline for one Belgian newspaper's story about Bush's dinner with French President Jacques Chirac read: "The Mission: a Night Kiss for Chirac Before Bedtime." Maybe it sounds better in Flemish (the language of that particular newspaper), but it's hard to imagine USA Today, for example, running a headline like that. Bush has definitely got some better comedy writers for this trip. In his first European speech of the trip, he joked about his cool reception by Europe. "More than 200 years ago, Benjamin Franklin arrived on this continent to great acclaim," said President Bush. Citing John Adams' description of Franklin's popularity, he continued, "There was scarcely a peasant or a citizen....who did not consider him as a friend to humankind." "I have been hoping for a similar reception, but Secretary (of State Condoleezza) Rice told me I should be a realist." That line drew big laughs in the crowd. So, how did the dinner with Chirac go? Pretty well, it seems. The two world leaders dined on lobster risotto with truffle sauce and beef filet with bordelaise sauce. Chardonnay and cabernet wines were served. They also served up the infamous pommes frites, or as they were known for awhile "Freedom Fries." To the Flemish newspaper's dismay, no one reported whether Chirac did, indeed, receive a kiss goodnight.

Posted on February 22, 2005
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The Minutemen Ride Again

The Associated Press shares the exciting news that the Minutemen are riding again. What's that, you ask? Should I grab my trusty musket, join the Massachusetts Colony Militia and prepare to defend our beloved home against the British? Ummm, no. Not exactly. The embattled Arizonians who have the misfortune to live near the Mexico border are sick and tired of illegal aliens crossing their lands and the federal government doing nothing about it. The property damage and violence is no joke and the citizens have had enough. So has the Border Patrol, by the way. But every time they complain to Washington, their budget gets cut even further. This is what happens when our own government refuses to police its own borders. So the 500 citizen Minutemen are going to patrol the border, looking for illegals then reporting them to the authorities. They will never exceed their authority, challenge suspected illegals directly or engage in violent acts just because many of them carry weapons. Trained? No, they're not trained. But I'm sure it will be fine. Really.

Posted on February 21, 2005
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The Bush Tapes: "It's Me Against the World."

Just when you thought it was safe to talk to your friends without first doing a wiretapping sweep, The New York Times gets the journalistic scoop of the new year with the release of a bunch of tape recordings of President Bush before he was President Bush. Doug Wead, a former friend of President Bush, (he may think he's a current friend, but I wouldn't count on any invites to the White House to sample the cuisine of the new chef) apparently taped hours of conversations with W for posterity. Some juicy bits: the president admits he tried marijuana (and possibly cocaine and LSD), grumps about horrible Time magazine, praises the "fabulous" John Ashcroft and predicts that John McCain won't wear well over time with the public. He also lets us in on his worldview: "It's me versus the world," he told Mr. Wead. "The good news is, the world is on my side. Or more than half of it." And that's before he found out his good friend was taping their private conversations. I just hope the Wead Tapes don't make him feel paranoid or anything.

Posted on February 20, 2005
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Bush Dangerously Close to the Read My Lips Zone

President George W. Bush is dangerously close to entering the Read My Lips: No New Taxes territory that sunk his father's hopes of a second term as president. Bush, Jr. knew that the only way he could get small and medium-sized businesses on board with this social security privatization idea is to promise not to increase the taxes paid by businesses to social security. He said over and over again he would consider any fix but a tax hike. But, here we go again. The Associated Press reports that President Bush is, indeed, open to the idea of raising social security and/or medicare taxes. That set off a firestorm among fiscal conservatives (You remember them, right? Small government, no deficits, fiscal responsibility? No? Me either.) "People are quite angry about Bush opening a Pandora's box of tax increases," said Stephen Moore, an anti-tax advocate from the Club for Growth. "It's almost like 'read my lips' all over again." Be careful, Mr. Moore, you are treading dangerously close to heresy here. That almost sounds like you're calling our president a flip-flopper.

Posted on February 18, 2005
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Ari-Bob Wades into Gannongate

Former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer (affectionately known as Ari-Bob by our nickname-loving president), waded into the Gannongate mess with an interview with Editor and Publisher, which has been doggedly following the simmering scandal. Fleisher confirmed that faux reporter/gay male prostitute James Guckert aka Jeff Gannon was, indeed, in the White House press corps during Ari-Bob's tenure and that Ari-Bob was so concerned about the fact that he was a political activist and not a reporter that he refused to call on him for a week. "I found out that he worked for a GOP site, and I didn't think it was my place to call on him because he worked for something that was related to the party," Fleischer told Editor and Publisher. "He had the editor call me and made the case that they were not related to the Republican Party. He said they used the GOP name for marketing purposes only." Fleischer was worried about paid activists masquerading as journalists, saying "They are advocates, not reporters, and a line should be drawn." (The owner of Talon News eventually talked Ari-Bob into calling on its reporters by swearing Talon News wasn't an official RNC party site.) When E&P pushed him about the revelations that Guckert was a hooker, the master of understatement himself would say only, "It is all a bit odd." Well, that's one way of putting it, I suppose. The mainstream press is starting to pick up on the story. Howard Kurtz of The Washington Post pens a nice little story about the Guckert Fiasco, giving a spicy description of the Guckert/Gannon's naked pictures on the the website which offers his services for hire. Kurtz notes that "The X-rated twist has made for a lot of clandestine clicking in a town where Deep Throat conjures images not of a porn star but of a man in a parking garage."

Posted on February 17, 2005
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Syria and Iran: A Match Made in ....

The Associated Press shares the good news that Iran and Syria have decided to create a united front "to confront all the challenges imposed (on us) by others." The countries did not come out and specifically say "we're teaming up against the U.S." but, hey, we all know they mean us. Both countries are operating under U.S. sanctions and Condi regularly mentions how awful they both are. Does anyone here remember how the Republicans used to stand for isolationism, no nation-building and no going to war unless we made a profit? Remember those guys? Well, they're called paleo-cons or Old Republicans and they've gone the way of Dodo, apparently. The Neocons are holding the reins of the foreign policy bucking bronco and the ride is getting wilder. The Europeans are negotiating like mad with Iran over this nuclear capability thing and we're not doing a thing to help. Didn't we go down this road before with Iraq? Before we do the "let's invade first and worry about the cost later" thing, why not try some other methods first? Say, negotiations, sanctions, whatever the CIA is supposed to do in situations where we think someone might have WMDs -- like spy on them? Just a thought.

Posted on February 16, 2005
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Plamegate Update: Court Orders Reporters to Reveal Source of Leak

Reuters reports that a federal appeals court has upheld the lower court's ruling which orders New York Times reporter Judith Miller and Matthew Cooper of Time Magazine must comply with a subpoena from a grand jury investigating whether the Bush administration illegally leaked CIA officer Valerie Plame's name to the news media in retaliation for her husband Ambassador Joe Wilson's refusal to lie about the fact that Iraq had purchased yellowcake, which is used in making WMD. Miller and Cooper each face as much as 18 months in prison. "There is no First Amendment privilege protecting the evidence sought," Judge David Sentelle wrote in the opinion. Judge Sentelle acknowledged the first amendment right of reporters not to reveal their sources, but said that it didn't apply in this case because a serious crime has been committed. He said he might have ruled otherwise "were the leak at issue in this case less harmful to national security or more vital to public debate." I'm all for freedom of the press, but this Valerie Plame leak is very disturbing. Revealing the name of an active duty CIA spy endangers lives and our national security. Whoever leaked Plame's name to six reporters needs to be found and punished. But why hasn't Robert Novak (the guy who actually ran the column outing Plame) been forced to turn over the source? Neither Judith Miller nor Mr. Cooper leaked Plame's name -- Novak did.

Posted on February 15, 2005
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Scandal in the White House Press Corps; Gannongate Gains Steam

The White House Press Corps is an experienced group of journalists from major news outlets that have undergone rigorous FBI background checks in order to be allowed within 10 feet or less of the President of the United States. It's an honor to be given credentials from the Congressional Press Office, and it's not easy to get those day passes that let you into the White House Briefing Room to grill Scott McClellan about who we're invading next. So, given that background and that we are still targets of al-Qaeda (remember them?) and are fighting a war in Iraq, you'd think that security would be pretty tight in the press room at the White House, right? Well, you'd be dead wrong. A guy with no journalism background, with a fake name and a fake press badge, who runs a gay escort service for gay military men, and who trolls for gay encounters on the Internet was vetted by the White House and inserted into the press corps to ask softball questions of President Bush and/or Scott McClellan whenever the questioning got too hard. He also regularly posted White House memos verbatim on Talon News site and reported them as news, and received a copy of the infamous Valerie Plame memo, which outed her as a CIA operative (that meant a direct call from someone in the West Wing). He also wrote numerous anti-gay articles which were posted on Talon News, which have since been removed from the site.

The story of Mr. Guckert's rise to fame, as far as can be pieced together by bloggers and journalists at AmericaBlog, DailyKos, Eschaton, Raw Story Salon and MediaMatters.org, is as follows: Fake news reporter Jeff Gannon (whose real name is James Dale Guckert) once took a "journalism" course about how to put the right wing spin on any news story. This was after he was in the military for awhile, attended some college somewhere in Pennsylvania, he drove a truck, bought a gun, and registered the gay escort domain name MilitaryStuds.com to prostitute himself to other men. (Guckert is available for $1200/weekend, for fun and frolic -- if you're into that kind of thing).

Along the way, he managed to snag a job working for an online ultra conservative propaganda site, called Talon News. Talon News is owned by GOPUSA, which is owned by Texas Republican activist Bobby Eberle. Guckert was issued a White House photo ID under the name "Jeff Gannon" by some mysterious White House official and told to put forth the administration's talking points, while posing as a journalist.

So, how did a gay hooker get access to the White House on a daily basis using a fake name? Why was he one of six people who got access to the infamous memo outing Ambassador Wilson's wife Valerie Plame as a CIA operative?

Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan frequents gay bars yet supports the administration's anti-gay positions? Or the fact that the head of the Republican National Committee Chairman Ken Mehlman refuses to answer reporters' questions about his sexuality? Inquiring minds want to know.

Posted on February 14, 2005
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Shiites Win Big in Iraqi Elections

So, the results are in. It looks like the Shiites really got their base out to vote: the Shiite Islamist slate received more than 47% of the vote, a Kurdish alliance got 25% and our guy Allawi was the anchorman in the election, with only 14% of the votes. Each of those parties will take their proportion of the 275 seats in the National Assembly which will write a new constitution. The Christian Science Monitor reports that the Sunnis barely voted at all. But it looks like the Kurds really showed up at the polls, thank goodness. Turkey is making grumbling noises about the Kurds and their independent leanings. Condi tried to pour oil on those troubled waters, but I still think that there's a good chance that if the new government doesn't respect the Kurdish independent streak, they are going to secede and form a Kurdistan. Now everyone is dealmaking like crazy to get enough support for a good voting block in the upcoming constitutional squabbling. Allawi hotfooted it up to see the Kurds and discuss how his secular leanings are more beneficial to them than the Islamic government favored by Sistani. Still, this is not good news for the U.S.'s interests. Even if the Kurds and Allawi's people form an alliance, they still are outnumbered by the Shiites. Allawi better brush up on his negotiating skills. Let's hope they're better than his campaigning skills.

Posted on February 13, 2005
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A Dramatic Step by John Kerry

John Kerry got behind presumed new DNC Chair Howard Dean today, pledging $1 million to the DNC for grassroots organizing. Kerry wrote in an email to supporters today:
A new DNC Chair will be elected at the end of this week. Let's make sure that he has everything he needs to start strong. The Democratic Party should have powerful and nimble organizations in every single county and precinct. There's only one way to win - we've got to compete everywhere, all the time. Our party should be a constant positive presence in every American community, and we can be if we tap into the grassroots energy of volunteers.
Kerry is also asking for donations of both money and time from supporters to grow the grassroots Democratic organization over time. Since Dean got behind Kerry and campaigned hard on his behalf, it's only sportsmanlike for Kerry to get behind Dean as he takes the reins of the DNC. And, speaking of that, has this campaign for head of the DNC gone on longer than the presidential campaign, or is that just me? I mean, honestly, it's unseemly. What happened to the smoke-filled rooms? The secret deliberations and a sudden announcement that "this is the new leader"? Kerry, not exactly a shrinking violet, has decided to step forward and support Dean and his efforts for the 2006 midterms. No flip-flopping here. We'll see if other party powerhouses follow suit. If they don't, the Republicans are going to eat their lunch in the midterms.

Posted on February 9, 2005
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President Bush Explains Social Security Reform

Atrios gives the heads up to the most enlightening part of President Bush's speech to seniors in Florida to explain what in the world he means by social security reform.
(Question from crowd) --[I don't] really understand how is it the new plan is going to fix that problem?

THE PRESIDENT: Because the -- all which is on the table begins to address the big cost drivers. For example, how benefits are calculate, for example, is on the table; whether or not benefits rise based upon wage increases or price increases. There's a series of parts of the formula that are being considered. And when you couple that, those different cost drivers, affecting those -- changing those with personal accounts, the idea is to get what has been promised more likely to be -- or closer delivered to what has been promised.

Does that make any sense to you? It's kind of muddled. Look, there's a series of things that cause the -- like, for example, benefits are calculated based upon the increase of wages, as opposed to the increase of prices. Some have suggested that we calculate -- the benefits will rise based upon inflation, as opposed to wage increases. There is a reform that would help solve the red if that were put into effect. In other words, how fast benefits grow, how fast the promised benefits grow, if those -- if that growth is affected, it will help on the red.

Okay, better? I'll keep working on it. (Laughter.)


It's crystal clear to me. I don't know why that questioner is so negative. He must be part of the freedom-hating, reality-based community. I think President Bush could land a cushy gig at MIT after his term is up -- lecturing on theoretical physics, perhaps. And, in a related newsflash, not even Stephen Hawking could make this proposed Social Security "reform" plan make any kind of sense.

Posted on February 8, 2005
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Cheney on Running for Prez in '08: Not Only No, But Hell No!

Dick Cheney told Fox News he has said that he won't run for president of the United States in 2008. "I will say just as hard as I possibly know how to say ... If nominated, I will not run, If elected, I will not serve....or not only no, but Hell No!" Well, that seems clear enough. Cheney said he wouldn't run even if President Bush or the Republican party begged him to reconsider. Hmmmm...does it seem even the least bit likely that the RNC will get down on its knees and beg the quadruple-bypass surviving, multiple heart-attack surviving Cheney to run? I'd say, not only no, but hell no.

Posted on February 6, 2005
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Condi's Gifts to Reporters: An Atlas and a Smile

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice surprised reporters who are traveling with her on her first official trip abroad in her new role as our chief diplomat. She gave a pocket atlas to every reporter traveling with her on the 12,560-mile trip -- with 10 stops from Europe to the Mideast and back -- and quipped: "I would not want anybody to feel lost." You know, I have to say that Condi always looks fabulous. In London, she was wearing a tailored brown and black plaid suit with gold jewelry and heels. Seemingly determined to launch a charm offensive against Old Europe, Condi actually got German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder to laugh uproariously. Wasn't Schroeder the guy who ran his entire re-election campaign on how much he hated George Bush? Ah, the strange world of diplomacy.

Posted on February 5, 2005
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The State of the Union is... Blue?

Well, I managed to sit through the entire State of the Union speech and the Democratic Response, and here are my initial impressions. First off, all the women seemed to be wearing blue, which is really weird considering the whole red state/blue state paradigm. I mean, even the Republican women are really embracing the blue. Navy blue (Condi), sky blue (Laura Bush), aqua blue (Nancy Pelosi, with fabulous coordinating South Sea pearls) and many other shades of blue were clearly de rigeur for the evening. Bush didn't get the memo, though, and went with a solid red tie, as did Cheney. Hastert broke out of the pack and had a gold tie. The policy specifics? Oh right, well, there were some surprises in Bush's speech, such as his outspoken support for the dissidents in Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Pakistan (ouch!) and his forceful call for a constitutional amendment to prohibit gay marriage (guess that grumpy letter from Dobson et al worked.) Also surprising was 1) his nonchalant passing reference to the security of our homeland about 30 minutes into the speech; 2) his forceful demands for an end to all those frivlous asbestos lawsuits (emphysema-riddled hypochondriacs, the lot of them!); and 3) the statment that "The United States has no right, no desire, and no intention to impose our form of government on anyone else." Ooops! Someone's been reading his Inaugural Speech reviews.... Not surprising was the invoking of the buzzwords and phrases: "culture of life," "social security will be bankrupt," and "we can only be safe when the rest of the world is free." Oh, and we can't give a timetable for leaving Iraq because it would embolden the terrorists. So, does that mean we can never leave?

Posted on February 2, 2005
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Tucker Carlson Moves to Jersey

The Washington Post reports that it's official: Tucker Carlson, formerly of CNN's Crossfire is taking a job at MSNBC and moving to New Jersey, where his new job is located. Carlson confides to the Post that he will retain his trademark bowtie and that he will miss the venison sausage Paul Begala brought to the studio every year. And what does the bow-tied wonder think of New Jersey? "When you live here, it's just Jersey." "I'm embracing every aspect of it. The Sopranos is a blueprint for life in New Jersey, as far as I'm concerned." At least he hasn't lost his sense of humor. But he just laughed when asked if he was going to invite Jon Stewart to be a guest on his new show. I like MSNBC. I just never know where to find it on cable.

Posted on February 2, 2005
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The Iraqi Elections: Same Song, Second Verse?

Watching the Watchers provides a fascinating comparison between the rah-rah reporting about the 1967 historic first free elections in Vietnam and the coverage of Sunday's Iraqi elections. The New York Times reported: "September 4, 1967. United States officials were surprised and heartened today at the size of turnout in South Vietnam's presidential election despite a Vietcong terrorist campaign to disrupt the voting. According to reports from Saigon, 83 per cent of....registered voters cast their ballots yesterday. Many of them risked reprisals threatened by the Vietcong." Wow, that's amazing. It's happening all over again. First the Vietnamese got to vote in a free election, were happy for a few weeks then went on to form a democratic government. What's that you say? Then came the Tet Offensive, huge casualties, an American pullout, the revelation that the election was a big fake, followed by the entire country embracing communism? Clearly, you must be a freedom-hater to say such a thing.

Posted on February 1, 2005
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