Keith Olbermann=Molly Ivins

Well, not quite, but the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies sees a parallel:

From Editor & Publisher:

NEW YORK MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann will receive the first Molly Ivins Award from the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies later today, according to AAN officials.

[…]

The organization, which represents 125 alternative publications, created the award to “honor those who practice the same bold, fearless journalism for which Ivins was renowned during her years as co-editor of AAN member The Texas Observer and as a syndicated columnist.”

(That giant “kaboom” you folks in New York heard this morning was Bill O’Reilly’s head exploding…geez, I’d hate to clear up that mess!)

Keith’s reaction to the news was notably modest:

]
“I’m utterly honored,” Olbermann said in a statement, “largely because I’d still like to be Molly Ivins when I grow up.”

One of the trademarks of Ivins’ career was her ability to speak truth to power, and to clothe that truth in her inimitable Texas wit — Keith brings that same truth to America, with his combination of outrage, snarkiness and style. Yes, there are many here who decry the “fluff” pieces on Paris Hilton and “American Idol” that grace the “Countdown” airwaves…but it could be argued that those items bring in those who would not tune in for an hour of straight hard news, and those are the people that need to be reached. In fact, how much of the turn of opinion against George W. Bush and the Iraq “War” can be credited to those few like Keith Olbermann who spoke out and revealed that our Emperor has no clothes, and no clue?

According to the article:

AAN plans to donate $2,000 in Olbermann’s name to the Molly Ivins Fund for Investigative Reporting at the Texas Observer, stating “Ivins remained a passionate supporter of the non-profit bi-weekly newsmagazine until her passing.”

This will help to continue the legacy of Ivins, of Olbermann, and pave the way for future writers who want to ascend to the level of journalists and not just mere hacks.

Anyway, congratulations to Keith Olbermann for this award, to the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies for continuing to provide an additional resource beyond the standard corporate media, and to all of us who value truth over blather.

"Treatable, but not curable"

That’s the word from the Edwards family regarding a recurrence of Elizabeth Edwards’ cancer.

A case of cracked ribs may turn out to be a blessing in disguise — she went in because of some pain in her side, and that led to a biopsy that discovered the cancer had returned, moved from her breast to the bones.

Not the greatest of news, but not the worst-case scenario. As Keith Olbermann may have said back in the “SportsCenter” days: “She’s day-to-day…we’re all day-to-day.”

Oh, and Edwards is NOT DROPPING OUT or even suspending his campaign…but I think that news is secondary.

Those of you who are praying or meditating types, please hold the Edwards family and Elizabeth’s doctors in your prayers and meditiations…or at least give her a good thought now and then…

Air America Staffer Killed in Iraq

Just heard about this on Air America’s “The Rachel Maddow Show”:

LA Times story:

American woman killed in Baghdad attack
The victim helped train Iraqi political parties. Three security guards also are slain in the ambush.

BAGHDAD — An American woman working for a U.S. nonprofit organization in Iraq to help strengthen the fledgling government was among four people killed Wednesday in a roadside ambush.

The woman, whose name was withheld pending notification of her family, worked for the National Democratic Institute, a Washington organization that advises political parties around the world.

Les Campbell, director of the group’s operations in the Middle East and North Africa, said the three other people killed — a Hungarian, a Croat and an Iraqi — were bodyguards from the private security firm Unity Resources Group.

The woman’s name was Andi Parhamovich, according to Randi Rhodes‘ personal show web site. Up until a few months ago, she was a member of the public relations department at Air America.

Rachel was devastated announcing the news at the beginning of her show. It was apparently first announced during Al Franken’s show; I haven’t listened to the podcasts of either him or Randi to hear how they handled the news.

The war comes home to haunt all of us yet again. For those of you marching on January 27th, whether in Washington DC or in locales across the country (I’ll likely be in San Francisco if I can get myself into marching shape), hold Andi and all the victims of this cruel and unnecessary occupation in your thoughts and prayers.

Godspeed, Andi…

Update [2007-1-18 19:14:19 by Cali Scribe]: Tip o’ the nib to Kossack peraspera, for the following MSNBC article:

Insurgents say they killed Ohio woman

John Dean: Go After The Small Fry

On the eve of the New Era, with Democrats on the verge of regaining majority power both in the House and Senate, “Countdown”‘s Keith Olbermann took a look at the incoming 110th Congress with former Nixon staffer John Dean, with some interesting words for those who are hoping for the impeachment of George W. Bush and Richard “Dick” Cheney:

OLBERMANN:  The far end of what you suggest, obviously, would be impeachment, but the merits of that are at best arguable.  I think we can probably both recall an occasion on which impeachment actually bolstered a president`s popularity.  But you wrote recently about impeaching not a president or a vice president, but members of the cabinet.  How would that work, and is it a practical thing?

DEAN:  Well, my thought was, there are some very serious movements afoot throughout the country, local, working right up to state levels and in regional areas.  People are very determined to try to develop an effort and a movement to get Bush and Cheney impeached.

It is not going to happen.  The Senate, there are not the votes to ever convict, even in the House, with a simple majority, sent a bill over.  So what occurred to me is, there are some very good reasons to look at some of the lower-level people, and there–you can do an impeachment just as easily against the secretary of a department, or a White House, senior White House staff person, and raise the very issues that these people are privy to as well, as part of what Bush and Cheney have done.

It may well be high crimes and misdemeanors.  This is where they should be focusing.  I don`t think they should exclude that possibility.  It`s a way to start hearings.  It would send a message across the bow of this administration that the Congress is going to look seriously at the kind of conduct they`re conducting.

Before we write this idea off as the spewings of a right-wing Republican, let’s take a closer look at it.

John Dean is a Republican, yes, but more of a traditional conservative than the “wingnut lunatic fringe” that we see holding the reins of this Administration. In his latest book, Conservatives Without Conscience, he has expressed deep concern and even alarm over the direction this country is going under the current crop of Republicans.

But he also speaks from the historical perspective as someone who was part of another Constitutional crisis — one that was remembered just this past week with the death and burial of Gerald R. Ford, the only President who was never elected to the office. Many times over the past several days, we’ve heard about how Richard Nixon faced impeachment, but only when members of the Senate came to him and said, “We don’t have the votes — the Senate will vote to convict” did he finally step down and hand the Presidency to Ford, the “Inadvertent President”.

Dean has a point — we could impeach Bush and Cheney, but we would not have the votes for conviction. And as we saw with the Republican impeachment of Bill Clinton, all that did was to divide the nation and focus the MSM on trivialites, while the major problems were ignored.

But what about the lower level people? We can’t go after Rumsfeld, but what about Rice for the lack of effort in preventing the 9-11 attacks? Maybe Chertoff for the gross failures of Homeland Security in the Gulf Region during and after Katrina. And I’m sure we can come up with other candidates.

What these efforts would do would be to focus attention not just on the actions of one or two men, but on the entire “culture of corruption” that permeates this Administration, and indeed the entire Republican Party. This would serve two purposes:

  1. It would fit in well with the overarching theme of “ethics reform” that the Democrats are attempting to adopt
  2. It would serve as a jumping board for the 2008 campaigns (Congressional and Presidential), as Republicans would be forced to respond to calls for reform, as well as face scrutiny on their current practices.

Of course, it’s not going to be easy:

OLBERMANN:  But if the administration has, as it already has, already denied the request from the new chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Mr. Leahy of Vermont, for two secret documents about the CIA detention and interrogation of terror suspects, if that stonewalling is already in place, would there not be stonewalling in every respect?  Would there not be some contention that you can`t go and impeach anything that`s not spelled out line by line in the Constitution?

DEAN:  Keith, I think we`re in for two years of struggle to get information the likes of which we haven`t seen since Nixon was in the White House.  I think this administration`s going to try to build a stone wall that is going to make the Wall of China look like a stone–stepping stones.  They`re going to really build a fortress to protect themselves.

Cheney is determined this is the whole way to determine the strength of a presidency is by their ability to keep their secrets, and so they`re going to go to the mat on this.  And I think we`ll–impeachment is one way you can do it.  But, of course, even Nixon himself refused to cooperate with the impeachment committee, and he would have been impeached, one of the articles, the third article, was to impeach him for failure to cooperate with the impeachment committee.  So that isn`t a solution either.

This Administration is going to fight hard to keep control, and to continue Business as Usual. They’re going to be aided by the folks in the MSM (with a few noted exceptions) who will scream “partisanship!” at every turn. It’s going to be up to us to keep an eye on Congress to encourage them to not let up, to leave no stone unturned, to investigate, investigate, investigate…and impeach, impeach, impeach if and only if we know we can convict.

Tonight’s Countdown — Must See TV

TV often gets a bad rap amongst liberals. It’s derided as the “boob tube”, blamed for everything from autism to dumbing down politics to a 60-second sound bite.

Well, tonight’s “Countdown” shows what TV can be, if the corporate suits give it a chance.
The show begins with the shit that’s been hitting the media fan; John Kerry Is Not A Stand-Up Comedian. But instead of rehashing the old “Did Kerry really insult our fine men and women of the military?”, there was a discussion of what the foofraw has kept us from focusing on: the increasing sectarian violence in Iraq, Laura Bush taking Michael J. Fox to task for playing with people’s emotions, and George Allen’s security assaulting Mike Stark.

The next story was about the upcoming elections, with a report that the Republicans are definitely concerned that they will lose the House, and control of the Senate could come down to three key states: Tennessee, Missouri, and Virginia.

After the light-hearted “Oddball”, the next story was an interview with Mike Stark about the attack. Mike acquitted himself well — IIRC, Keith had interviewed him before in conjunction with Bill O’Reilly putting “Fox Security” on his tail. Mike also mentioned that Allen’s campaign is considering pressing charges against him — might want to consider passing a few leftover pennies to a legal defense fund…

The next story was a brief taped feature on Ken Mehlman and Rahm Emmanuel, the heads of their campaign committees. Despite it not being FOX News, it was pretty fair and balanced. 😉

Then, after a report that Ann Coulter is being investigated for possible voter fraud, came the “Special Comment” for which Olbermann has become famous. The transcript and video are available on Crooks and Liars. No one escaped the righteous Wrath of Olbermann — from the “inflated” Tony Snow to the “shameless” John McCain, and even Saint Laura Bush.  But the harshest words were reserved for George Bush, whom Keith continually calls “Mr. Bush” when you know he probably has other choice terms that cannot be used on the public airwaves (not even on cable). If undecided voters in key states heard this comment, we just might wake up Wednesday morning to a new “Morning in America” for checks and balances.

If you can, please watch the repeat showing (midnight Eastern, 9pm Pacific, check your local cable listings). If you can’t watch the whole thing, at least watch the video and read the transcript, then go to the MSNBC web site and rate the transcript as high as possible.

In a world where truth and honesty can be as hard to find as a cheap tank of gas, we need to praise it and encourage more whenever we can. You also might want to send emails to counteract the expected deluge from the right-wing assholes that will read “traitor” in Olbermann’s words:

KOlbermann@msnbc.com — Keith’s address
DAbrams@msnbc.com — Dan Abrams (Keith’s boss) deserves some thanks as well

Sorry if I’ve been rambling a bit — this comment was probably the most powerful of all the special comments, and I hope and pray that it will hurt the Republicans where it counts…at the ballot box on Tuesday.

Tony LaRussa and the Midterm Elections

non sequitur (noun) — 1. a conclusion or statement that does not logically follow from the previous argument or statement. 2. a kick-ass comic strip by Wiley Miller

Looking at the title, you’re probably wonder, “WTF does a baseball manager have to do with saving our country from further disaster?” Well, if you haven’t clicked the “back” button on your browser yet, I’ll try to explain below the fold.

Sunday night, LaRussa’s St. Louis Cardinals played the Detroit Tigers in Game 2 of the World Series. In the first inning, someone in the bullpen was watching the FOX network coverage when they highlighted a dark spot on the hand of Detroit pitcher Kenny Rogers.

The player contacted the bench, and LaRussa came out to request that the umpires take a look at Rogers’ hand. The umpires investigated, determined that it was “merely” dirt, and told him to wash his hands between innings.

Most of the sports talking heads have railed against LaRussa for not raising a bigger stink — they are positive that it was some sort of foreign substance; theories range from pine tar to a substance used by string musicians (violinists, harpists) to keep their fingers sticky for plucking the strings. In any case, these folks say, LaRussa should have protested more and had Rogers ejected.

I’ve got a different take on it.

LaRussa didn’t make a bigger deal because he wanted to keep the focus where it belonged — on winning the damn Series. If he had complained louder, his players might have started wondering, “How are these guys going to get over on us next?”, doubting their own abilities. Instead, LaRussa kept the focus on the ultimate goal…winning 4 out of 7 games. The Cardinals lost that Sunday game, but they won last night and hold a 2-1 lead in the Series.

So what has this got to do with the midterm elections, now less than two weeks away? Well, I’ve been reading a lot about “October Surprises”, Diebold trickery, and other means the Republicans might use to “steal” the elections and retain control of Congress. I’m not saying those issues aren’t important, but they must not take our energy away from our primary cause: winning the damn Series. We need to keep up the good work — get the message out, get voters to the polls, and other things that are within our control. We can’t go worrying about things that are out of our control, or when the day comes, we’re going to be standing at home plate with the bat on our shoulders, watching the called strike three in the “sure knowledge” that we could never beat these assholes anyway, because the game is rigged against us.

We’ve got less than two weeks to do what we can to make a difference. If you’ve got time and health, go knock on some doors for your favorite candidate/cause, or make some phone calls. If you don’t have time and/or health but have a few extra dollars, write a check (or use the Internets) to contribute some needed green (the sooner the better). And even if you’re short of everything, tell people who you’re supporting, and why. Pick up a button or two at the local campaign office and wear it proudly. I’m usually not a fan of campaign bumper stickers because they go out of date; I still see Kerry/Edwards stickers two years after the fact (which just remind me of what might have been). But if you don’t mind scraping them off your bumper in a couple of weeks, go for it.

It’s not going to be easy — we’re heading for the ninth inning, and the game is tight. The Republicans are going to be bringing in their closer, and he throws a wicked curveball. Are we going to focus on how unhittable he is and how unbeatable the Republicans are, or are we going to get that key base hit that brings in the winning run? The manager’s looking at you — grab a bat and get to the plate…

Mass Murderer Walks Free!

So, who is this mass murderer? And what prosecutor, what police force, is shirking their public duties and preventing justice from being served?

Is this a modern-day Willie Horton situation?

Is this a drug dealer cutting deals with crooked cops and lawyers?

Is this a case of prosecutorial incompetence that couldn’t convict an obviously guilty man?

This is the mass murderer allowed to walk free…

Remember this guy? “Wanted dead or alive”? Cutting off the head and the tail will follow?

Okay, so it wasn’t long after that that Bush said that he “doesn’t spend that much time” thinking about bin Laden. Well, okay, the President had a lot on his mind — and not much can fit in such a small space.

But now, according to Fred Barnes at The Weekly SubStandard:

WE NOW KNOW WHY the Bush administration hasn’t made the capture of Osama bin Laden a paramount goal of the war on terror. Emphasis on bin Laden doesn’t fit with the administration’s strategy for combating terrorism. Here’s how President Bush explained this Tuesday: “This thing about . . . let’s put 100,000 of our special forces stomping through Pakistan in order to find bin Laden is just simply not the strategy that will work.”

Rather, Bush says there’s a better way to stay on offense against terrorists. “The way you win the war on terror,” Bush said, “is to find people [who are terrorists] and get them to give you information about what their buddies are fixing to do.” In a speech last week, the president explained how this had worked–starting with the arrest and interrogation of 9/11 planner Khalid Sheik Muhammad–to break up a terrorist operation that was planning post-9/11 attacks on America.

“It’s really important at this stage . . . to be thinking about how to institutionalize courses of action that will enable future presidents to gain the information necessary to prevent attack,” he said. This, presumably, would include the use of secret prisons, tough but legal interrogation techniques, a ban on lawsuits against interrogators, electronic eavesdropping, and monitoring of bank transfers, among other measures.

It’s no longer about bin Laden…it’s about how to institutionalize tyranny in the name of “keeping us safe.” Bin Laden and “terrorists” are just a handy scapegoat for this regime to solidify their grasp on power. And you know that when he talks about “future Presidents”, he means future Republican presidents…if a Democrat, say Hillary Clinton, tried to use these powers the Right would scream bloody murder.

If a Democratic prosecutor said that pursuing a known drug kingpin was not the best use of resources to combat drug use, the Right Wing would be up in arms, talking about “coddling criminals” and planning recall movements. If a Democratic police chief said that pursuing child pornographers was not the right way to prevent children from being molested, the Right would be calling for his/her head. Yet this man who boasts about the actions that killed nearly 3000 people 5 years ago this week is still out there…and no one in the White House cares.

When the World Trade Center was bombed in the 1990s, the attackers were found, brought to justice under law, and are still in prison to this very day. When good fine Americans blew up the Murrah building in Oklahoma City, they were tried, convicted, and punished for their crimes (one imprisonment, one execution). And these were under a Democratic presidency. Yet today, those who want to use our own justice system to prosecute those accused of terrorism, those who want them treated humanely under law, are accused of being “soft”, of “coddling” terrorists.

I ask you, who’s really being soft on terror? (And bonus question for the conspiracy theorists…why?)

Good News for Online Journalists

This just in: Apple Computer has decided to drop their case against online journalists who “leaked” sensitive company information. Specifically, they let the deadline pass without filing an appeal to the California Court of Appeal’s 6th Appellate District ruling.

San Jose Mercury News Report

A brief history of the case, courtesy of Internet News:

The whole mess began in December 2004, when Apple filed suit against 20 unnamed and presumably unknown individuals, referred to in the court filing as “Does,” for leaking confidential materials on an Apple product under development to several Web publications, including the Web sites AppleInsider and PowerPage.

As part of its investigation, Apple subpoenaed Nfox — PowerPage’s email service provider — for communications and unpublished materials obtained by PowerPage publisher Jason O’Grady. A Santa Clara trial court upheld the subpoena in March of 2005 and the EFF appealed.

In a 69-page ruling, the 6th District Court of Appeal ruled that bloggers and webmasters are no different in their protections than a reporter and editor for a newspaper. “We can think of no workable test or principle that would distinguish ‘legitimate’ from ‘illegitimate’ news,” the judges wrote.

“Any attempt by courts to draw such a distinction would imperil a fundamental purpose of the First Amendment, which is to identify the best, most important, and most valuable ideas not by any sociological or economic formula, rule of law, or process of government, but through the rough and tumble competition of the memetic marketplace,” they wrote.

According to various online articles, Apple was unavailable for comment at press time.

This is very good news for bloggers and other online journalists. In this era where both companies and our own government are trying to restrict the amount of information available, it’s good to have an appellate court affirm that the rights (and responsibilities) of a free press apply to bits and bytes traveling across the Ether(net) just as much as they do to those who used a manual printing press and moveable type back in the day that the Constitution was first written.

Return to Pre-9/11 Thinking

This is more a personal reflection than anything political, but I do have a bit of political commentary at the end just to keep things interesting…

I used to love to fly. My mother hated it…perhaps that’s why I loved it. I would sit next to the window and gaze down at the mountains that looked like carpeted lumps, the highways that looked like the squiggles I’d draw in an attempt to be artistic, the cars that were even smaller than the Matchbox vehicles my brother and I played with, and the houses that looked like Monopoly houses. (I especially loved the homes with swimming pools, those tiny dots of blue.)

Mom would sit on the aisle, hands gripping the seat armrests for dear life — I don’t know how she ever made it to Europe and back when I was only 7; perhaps only sheer force of will or perhaps liquid courage (or maybe a little of both).
Then came September 11, 2001 — and as the current President is fond of saying, “9/11 changed everything.” The thought of flying caused me to tremble. I imagined myself on a plane heading towards certain disaster…what would be my reaction? How would I say goodbye to those I loved? Hell, how could I stand the embarrassment of family members seeing the disaster area known as my apartment? (Okay, I’m shallow, so sue me…)

A couple of years passed. I became active on some forums on the Internet…and one person proposed a group get-together; she was taking her brother to Las Vegas for his birthday and thought it would be a great chance for folks to meet up.

Great idea…then I did some research. While I could technically take Amtrak and bus there, it would be far easier to fly. Easier, yes…except on my psyche.

I approached the spouse with the idea, hoping he would veto it and I’d have a built-in excuse. “Sounds fun…go for it!” was his response. So much for his help…

Swallowing my fear, I booked the flight to Vegas. I hugged and kissed my loving spouse farewell as he left for work that morning, certain I would not see him again this side of the Pearly Gates.

Okay, chalk up one point in the Dead Wrong in Public competition. No problems, other than drinking waaaaay too many Lemon Drop martinis (those little buggers are addictive!) and staying up too late talking politics.

Fast forward two years. I’m active on more political sites, including BooTrib, but still have a fear of flying — that fear causing me to decide against a trip to Washington DC for The March. When a get-together of California Tribbers is suggested, I book a flight to San Diego before I can talk myself out of it; thanks to my mother going off to that Great Cruise Ship In The Sky, we were a great deal more financially content. I knew that I could get there just as easily by taking the train, but knowing the reputation of Amtrak’s Coast Starlight (commonly known in railfan parlance as “The Starlate“), I decided to fly instead.

The flight was a bit more problematic — a little more turbulence, causing me to worry more about crashing out of the sky than black-masked terrorists taking the plane over. Besides, the aisles were so narrow they’d never make it past the beverage cart to the cockpit.

Had a wonderful time in Del Mar, and returned home more or less in one piece (other than a sore back from lugging my laptop around).

The final step was this past vacation — traveling to the Northwest with the spouse. On the trip home, I once again marveled at the scenery — the sights of Mt. Rainier and other snowcapped peaks through the window made me wish I’d kept my camera handy. Once again I marveled at the landscape below, the bare hillsides and flat areas that looked like they’d never been besmirched by mankind. And as we reached more populous areas, I saw homes and swimming pools, schools and ballfields, parks and businesses. The spouse took my hand on final approach to reassure me…but it wasn’t totally necessary. The joy of flying had returned.

And one other thing returned — the realization that I can no longer live in fear of what might happen. I can’t let that fear keep me from enjoying life. I can’t stay home out of fear that some unknown stranger will grab me and rape me. I can’t stay off BART out of fear that some terrorist is going to plant Sarin gas or something. And I can’t be afraid of things out of my control. I can be cautious — I’m not going to go hang out in the Tenderloin at 10pm — but I can’t live in fear.

And neither can the rest of this country, unless we want to give up what few freedoms we have left for a false sense of “safety”. We can’t let the government take away a free press under guise of “national security”. We can’t let the government take away the right to free speech under cries of “treason”. We can’t let the government take away the right to freedom of religion (or non-religion) under claims of “Christian nation”. And we cannot let the government take away due process under law under the bogus claims of “War on Terror” and “9/11 changed everything.” The only thing 9/11 changed was that it brought us into the same watchful mindset the rest of the world has faced for years — but if we let the post-9/11 mindset rule our lives and we live the rest of those lives in fear…then the terrorists have indeed won.

See you somewhere in the friendly skies…(cue Rhapsody in Blue piano solo)

Enron Verdicts In

Just got out of bed and greeted by the news that the verdicts are in on the Enron trial.

Details still sketchy, but:

Ken Lay — guilty on all 6 counts
Jeff Skilling — guilty on 18 counts, not guilty on 10

Guilty verdicts seem to center around fraud — Skilling’s not guilty verdicts seem to be mostly insider trading related.

Will provide links as they develop.

Of course there will be appeals — according to MSNBC’s Pete Williams, “standard of proof” will be one possible path.

Lay has also been found guilty of bank fraud in an additional case, according to MSNBC.

The interesting thing to watch is how George Bush will respond to his good friend “Kenny Boy’s” conviction.
Links:

CNN

ABC News

Enron Trial Fast Facts (FOX News)