Iraq better off with Saddam according to Blix

Former United Nations chief weapons inspector Hans Blix on Wednesday described the United States-led invasion of Iraq as a “pure failure” that had left the country worse off than under the rule of Saddam Hussein.

I think many people have said this now.  Wasn’t Senator Rockefeller one of them?

IMO, we could have paid Saddam to behave better for a lot less money and lives.  But the truth may also be that Iraq needs a “strongman dictator” to keep the different factions in order.  

In unusually harsh comments to Danish newspaper Politiken, the diplomatic Swede said the US government had ended up in a situation in which neither staying nor leaving Iraq were good options.

“Iraq is a pure failure,” Blix was quoted as saying. “If the Americans pull out, there is a risk that they will leave a country in civil war. At the same time, it doesn’t seem that the United States can help to stabilize the situation by staying there.”

<snip>

‘Saddam would still have been sitting in office’
Blix said the situation would have been better if the war had not taken place.

“Saddam would still have been sitting in office. Okay, that is negative and it would not have been joyful for the Iraqi people. But what we have gotten is undoubtedly worse,” he was quoted as saying.

<snip>

Ultimately a US-led coalition invaded Iraq and no such weapons were found. – Sapa-AP

    * This article was originally published on page 14 of The Mercury on October 26, 2006

article here

More ammo for democrats over the next few weeks.

Sorry, you don’t know Jack (the life of a friend)

Cross posted at dkos and at politicaltheatreblog and MyLeftWing

When Jack was little, about 2 or 3 years of age, he never told me specifically, his father left.  Or maybe he was driven out, Jack was not sure.  All he knew was that his father was a WW2 vet and an alcoholic who was later maligned to Jack, or Johnny as he was known then, as a bad man and bad father.

Johnny’s mother remarried when he was six and one day, he found himself at a boarding school for the orphans of Military vets.  He had a mother and a father and a step father, but Johnny was left sitting on a bench at a home for orphans, wondering when his mother was coming back to get him.  It was a nice place and Johnny was excited to be going to school there.  The school was only a short drive from his house, but why was he sitting on a bench alone waiting for his mother and where did she go and when was she coming back?  She said he should sit still and that she would be right back. But he waited and waited and she didn’t come back.
Why was the matron carrying his suitcase and where did that come from?  He hadn’t packed it and he didn’t know if his mother had, but there is was with his clothes and he was being taken to a room which some strange woman was telling him was his room.

There were a lot of beds all lined up and perfectly made.  He wondered who slept in all those beds.

The strange women told him it was almost dinner time.  He wanted to go home for dinner.  Maybe Mommy was making pot pie.  He didn’t want to eat here with other kids he didn’t know.  Could they tell he was crying?

A year later Johnny’s little sister, Judy, came to live at Scotland School.  It was a little easier for her since her brother was there already.  He’d been home for a week and she had seen him at Grandma’s house over the summer. He was happy to have Judy there.  She reminded him of home.

During the summers Johnny and Judy spent time with Grandma.  She was their father’s mother and the absolutely best thing Johnny could remember about his childhood was sitting in her lap being rocked.  She would hold him and rock in the chair and tell him what a good boy he was and how much she loved him.

Johnny was very small for his age, and very blonde.  Judy and Johnny made quite a picture, two tiny blonde children born in the 1940s.  They grew up together and were very close.  They were closer than most brothers and sisters.  And they lived in an orphanage just down the road from their mother, step father and half brother and sister who were born after Johnny and Judy went to live at Scotland School.

For one week in the summer they went home.  It could only be one week because otherwise the state would give custody back to Mommy and they would get to go home to live.  They worked in the fields during the rest of the summer.

When Johnny was in high school he played baseball, and he played the trombone and I think the trumpet.  He wanted to be a musician and had some talent.  He thought, maybe he could be a music teacher.  But his guidance counselor told him to learn a trade; there would be no money for college.  So he learned about electronics from the school handyman.  He liked working with maintenance man.  It gave him a chance to get away from the Matron who beat them for breaking rules, and have some independence on campus.

Johnny was an elf of a young man, all of 5’4″, with a personality both optimistically joyous and despairingly angry by turns, the kind of man who used to be referred to as a bantam Rooster.  I didn’t know him then, but I imagine he was as much an endless talker, a laugher and a fighter as the man I met 50 years later.  He had dreams.  One of them was the dream of family.  That was the big one.

When Jack graduated from school he was allowed to live at home for a bit while he found a job.  He worked in the local Five and Dime but that didn’t last long.  The woman who was his supervisor used him as a scapegoat for her own laziness and he was fired after a time.  So he was told to get a job or get out and he joined the Navy.  This started the 12 year period that was the best and the worst time of his life.  He both loved and hated the Navy.  It turned him from a republican to a democrat.  He loved the camaraderie and sense of shared purpose.  He came to hate the senseless rules and the senseless war.

The Navy lied to Johnny about his height and for the rest of his life he was convinced he was 5’6″.  Johnny’s height was not the only thing the Navy lied about.  They told him that he could be on a submarine.  They didn’t tell him that very few men made it through the training.  Jack couldn’t do the underwater training so he went to electronics and it suited him well.  That was 1960 and Jack spent the next 12 years in the military.  He served 4 tours of duty in Viet Nam during that time.

  Eventually Jack found himself on the battle ship “New Jersey”.  Here is the story of his time on the ship.  It is no wonder he ended up with PTSD.

   

“…New Jersey’s third career began 6 April 1968 when she recommissioned at Philadelphia Naval Shipyard, Captain J. Edward Snyder in command. Fitted with improved electronics and a helicopter landing pad and with her 40-millimeter battery removed, she was tailored for use as a heavy bombardment ship. Her 16-inch guns, it was expected, would reach targets in Vietnam inaccessible to smaller naval guns and, in foul weather, safe from aerial attack.

      New Jersey, now the world’s only active battleship, departed Philadelphia 16 May, calling at Norfolk and transiting the Panama Canal before arriving at her new home port of Long Beach, Calif., 11 June. Further training off southern California followed. On 24 July New Jersey received 16-inch shells and powder tanks from Mount Katmai (AE-16) by conventional highline transfer and by helicopter lift, the first time heavy battleship ammunition had been transferred by helicopter at sea.

      Departing Long Beach 3 September, New Jersey touched at Pearl Harbor and Subic Bay before sailing 25 September for her first tour of gunfire support duty along the Vietnamese coast. Near the 17th parallel on 30 September, the dreadnought fired her first shots in battle in over sixteen years. Firing against Communist targets in and near the so-called Demilitarized Zone (DMZ), her big guns destroyed two gun positions and two supply areas. She fired against targets north of the DMZ the following day, rescuing the crew of a spotting plane forced down at sea by antiaircraft fire.

      The next six months fell into a steady pace of bombardment and fire support missions along the Vietnamese coast, broken only by brief visits to Subic Bay and replenishment operations at sea. In her first two months on the gun line, New Jersey directed nearly ten thousand rounds of ammunition at Communist targets; over: 3,000 of these shells were 16-inch projectiles.

      Her first Vietnam combat tour completed, New Jersey departed Subic Bay 3 April 1969 for Japan. She arrived at Yokosuka for a two-day visit, sailing for the United States 9 April. Her homecoming, however, was to be delayed. On the 15th, while New Jersey was still at sea, North Korean jet fighters shot down an unarmed EC-121 Constellation electronic surveillance plane over the Sea of Japan, killing its entire crew. A carrier task force was formed and sent to the Sea of Japan, while New Jersey was ordered to come about and steam toward Japan. On the 22nd she arrived once more at Yokosuka, and immediately put to sea in readiness for what might befall.

      As the crisis lessened, New Jersey was released to continue her interrupted voyage. She anchored at Long Beach 5 May 1969, her first visit to her home port in eight months. Through the summer months, New Jersey’s crew toiled to make her ready for another deployment. Deficiencies discovered on the gun line were remedied, as all hands looked forward to another opportunity to prove the mighty warship’s worth in combat. Reasons of economy were to dictate otherwise. On 22 August 1969 the Secretary of Defense released a list of names of ships to be inactivated; at the top of the list was New Jersey. Five days later, Captain Snyder was relieved of command by Captain Robert C. Peniston….” (http://www.battleshipnewjersey.org/...)

During his time in Long Beach Jack met a nurse named Linda.  She was from MN and Jack thought, somewhat sheltered.  They fell in love and married and their son was born while Jack was in the Navy.  Linda told him she could not stay married to him if he stayed in the service so he retired from the Navy and went home to his family.  But Linda was mistaken. She didn’t want to remain married to Jack at all.  He said it was something about his temper and the lack of communication.  I can believe that.  He was both temperamental and too scared of losing family to be able to talk about problems in a relationship.

They divorced and she moved to MN only to be followed by Jack who wanted to be near his son.  Eventually unable to find work and depressed over losing his family life, he moved back to York Pa and started a new life.

That is where he was when I met him on line many years later.  He was divorced for the second time.  He had spent 23 years working for a union book binder and serving part of that time as Union steward.  But in the early 90s he got oral cancer, lost part of his jaw, developed an aortal aneurism, lost part of his foot and that is how I found him on disability.

We met on the AOL message boards.  On any given day my name was the topic header in 50 percent of the posts as argumentative people tried to harass me off the Clinton impeachment board discussions.  Jack thought I was funny and I thought he made great points.  Some of my favorite snarky expressions are those I learned from Jack.

Jack and I became friends and really something more than that.  He came to live with me in the late 90s because he was falling through the cracks on SS disability and I was in need of someone to share the house keeping and teen age son chauffeuring.  Jack had given up on life in some ways I could not accept.  So I was frustrated with him and knew I would not spend the rest of my life in this indefinable, platonic but deeply loving companionship.  We were like an old married couple.

We had a great deal of fun, Jack and I.  He was willing to go to the plant store with me.  We spent many Saturdays driving around NE PA looking for interesting Nurseries.  He put up bird feeders and we watched birds using a book to identify them.  We tried to outsmart the squirrels and lost most of the time.  One of them we named “Steelheart” after one particularly odious “survivalist” character on AOL.  Our neighbor caught that squirrel and took him fifteen miles away, but damned if the thing didn’t show back up a few days later.  We knew it was him because of the big chunk of tail he was missing.

We spent time with each other’s families.  He went to my family stuff (which is more than I can say for the man I was married to for 13 years) and I went to his.  But the best thing he did for me was this: he kept his temper at me in check.

He sometimes went in to the kitchen and slammed cupboards and mumbled under his breath which used to make me furious.  I would yell at him to “say it to my face”.  But he couldn’t because he was too mad and he was afraid of this temper and he was giving me a gift.  He was showing me that I was worth holding a temper for and that I was worth worrying about losing.

I don’t know if I will ever have another romantic relationship in my life.  I am not so sure I care at this point.  I have not taken good care of my health and I have gained a lot of weight since Jack came in to my life.  But if I ever do, I know that the person will have to spend time doing things I like to do, to work at finding common ground and he will have to be as kind and considerate as Jack tried to be.  I deserve it because Jack told me so.

Two years ago on the 28th Jack died of Lung Cancer.  Several years earlier he had a heart attack and we both quit smoking.  But it was way too late for Jack.  He was now in his 60s and had smoked since he joined the Navy in 1960.  He spent 2 months on the couch taking pain pills and waiting for what the doctor said was a pulled muscle to stop being so painful.  For the last few weeks of those 2 months the doctor was looking for cancer all over Jack’s body because Jack was anemic and losing weight.  The one place he didn’t look was Jack’s lungs because they always sounded so good.  Finally one day Jack described his pain in more detail and was sent to the hospital for a chest X-ray.  He never left the hospital that day or ever and died three weeks later.

Jack used to drive me out of my mind with his idle chatter.  He talked more than anyone I have ever known and sometimes, in my head, I would chant “shut up shut up”.  After a day spent talking to people for a living I just wanted some quiet.  After a day with no one to talk to, Jack wanted to talk to me.

When he was dying, those last four days or so, he slept all the time and I would ask people to come to the hospital because I knew when other people were there Jack would wake up and talk to them. With me he was comfortable and so he slept as I sat there hour after hour praying for just a little more idle chatter.

Thank you for reading.  I wanted to post this on the second anniversary of Jack’s death but I was too busy. Join me tommorow when I write about another friend who is being forced to outsource his employees’ jobs.

Carney for Congress election 2006

In the interest of disclosure I have to tell you that I have done
a few hours of volunteer work and plan to do more for the Carney for Congress campaign.

But because I have met Chris and some of his staff I feel like I can talk a little bit about the campaign and urge you in good  conscience to send some money their way.
So yesterday I stuffed envelopes.  It has been a long time since I stuffed envelopes and I was happy to do it. I had a chance to talk a little bit to Chris and get to know him a bit better.  I think he is exactly the right person to be running in this district.  

He is smart, very nice and has a great resume.

 Here is his web site.  You can sign up for their email list if you want to keep up on how the campaign is going.

If you had asked me several months ago if Sherwood could be beaten, I
would have said it could be done but only with the right candidate.
 Now that I have met and talked to Chris Carney I think that we
have he right candidate.

Please go and support the campaign with a few bucks, even 5 or 10
dollars would be very handy if enough people contributed.  Of
course if you can give more that would be great.    

The 10th district in Pa is republican. In fact a few years ago the area
was redistricted to take Scranton out and give it to the next district.
 Scranton is the democratic strong hold in this area.
 However several places in the district are becoming more
democratic, including my town which is now half democratic party by
registration.  

Several areas are getting an influx of people who moved out of NYC
after 9-11.  They have added to the shift to the left in this
district.  But it is still leaning republican.  So why do I
think Carney has a really good shot at winning this?

I think he has a good shot for several reasons.  First of all
Sherwood is a Bush rubber stamp.  I don’t think that’s such an
advantage anymore.  People around here need good jobs and
healthcare. They are frustrated about the cost of the war and we have
lost a lot of young men to this war in Iraq.  We had five men
blown up in one incident a few months ago and another one just about a
week before that.  People of all parties are questioning why we
are there.

My friends who are more or less apolitical are disgusted with the
direction the country is headed.  There seems to be a general
feeling of depression or enui.  People are ready for a change.
 I have many republican friends and they are as ready for a change
as anyone else.  They are the ones who always let me know when
they are going to vote for a democrat.  It’s funny when they tell
me, “hey  Teresa, you’ll be glad to know I have decided to vote
for Rendell”.

So far no one is thinking too much about november, but when they do I
fully expect a whole lot of people to be telling me they plan to vote
for Carney.

Another reason Carney has a really good chance is because he has about
20 times the personal character of Sherwood.  Sherwood has run on
“family values” for years, but he has been accused of choking his 29
year old girl friend who he had been having an affair with for several
years.  He’s admitted to the affair but denies the choking
incident.  However, he is not convincing and I don’t think the
people around here approve of men who cheat on their wives and beat up
women.

Following are some links and quotes about this campaign.  There is
more good stuff coming in the future and I will let you know when it
comes out.

From the campaign website:

 

    *  Lt. Commander Naval Reserves

    * Senior Terrorism and Intelligence Advisor at the Pentagon

    * Penn State Associate Professor of Political Science

    * Husband of 18 years

    * … and very proud father of five

A Lieutenant Commander in the United States Naval Reserve, Chris Carney
served multiple tours overseas and was activated for operations
Enduring Freedom, Noble Eagle, and Southern Watch.

After 9/11, Chris served at the Pentagon as an intelligence analyst and
senior advisor on intelligence and counterterrorism issues. Chris
coordinated counterterrorism activities in the Middle East and later
worked on the integration of national-level intelligence products in
the effort to destroy international terrorist networks.

Chris grew up in rural Iowa, near Cedar Rapids. He graduated in 1981
from Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa where he double majored in
Environmental Science and U.S. Diplomatic History.

After college, Chris did graduate work at the University of Wyoming,
where he met his future wife Jennifer. After enjoying teaching at the
University of Wyoming, Chris decided to pursue a career in higher
education.

In 1992, Chris and Jennifer moved their young family to Northeastern
Pennsylvania when Chris was offerred a position at Penn State
University in Scranton.

As an associate professor at Penn State, Chris teaches courses in U.S.
Foreign Policy, American Government, and U.S. Security Policy.

Chris lives in Dimock, Pa. with his wife Jennifer and their five
children. Their oldest is a freshman in high school and their youngest
just started kindergarten.

Here is a bit of analysis from Sabato’s Crystal Ball:

Pennsylvania (10)

Outlook: Likely Republican

This race is part of the Crystal Ball’s “Watch List” of the next 20 House races worth keeping an eye on.

Four-term GOP Rep. Don Sherwood won his seat in Congress by only
several hundred votes against Democrat Pat Casey in 1998, but since
then the district was reconfigured to substantially improve Republican
performance, dropping most of Scranton. Sherwood’s biggest
vulnerability this year does not seem to stem from the nature of his
district but rather the nature of public reaction to his personal
problems. Though there is no evidence that he has experienced much
political fallout at home, the 64 year old Sherwood’s name got plenty
of ink last year over allegations that he choked a much younger
Republican Party activist with whom he later admitted to having a
multi-year affair.

Democratic candidate Chris Carney, a Naval Reserve Officer, has been
quick to invoke character and integrity as themes of his campaign, but
Sherwood must start out as the strong favorite in this heavily GOP
district.

Candidate – 4th Quarter Raised – Cash on Hand

Don Sherwood (R)* – $166,808.10 – $497,783.15

Chris Carney (D) – $65,876.81 – $78,257.62  

You can see Carney needs to raise some money to battle Sherwood’s
headstart advantage. Sherwood has not had a serious challenge since
2000.

And from his local paper:

WYOMING COUNTY – The revelation that U.S. Rep. Don Sherwood,
R-Tunkhannock, had been engaged in a 5-year affair with a woman not his
wife and the woman’s charges of physical and emotional abuse was the
top local story in 2005.

Parts of the story initially came to light in late April when Victoria
Hannevig, the Constitution Party candidate who lost to Sherwood in the
Nov. 2004 election, faxed to most of the region’s news media a copy of
a preliminary police report dated Sept. 15, 2004.

The Fax asked of the media if they were aware of the report from an
alleged choking incident involving Sherwood, 64, and a 29-year-old
Maryland woman, Cynthia Ore. Hannevig wanted to know if the media were
aware of it, how did they report it, and if they weren’t, why didn’t
they report it.

On May 3, Sherwood apologized “for the pain and embarrassment I have caused my family and my supporters.”

He offered little follow-up on the matter until on June 15, Ore filed a
$5.5 million lawsuit claiming physical and emotional abuse in what the
suit said was a “five-year intimate relationship.”

In July, Sherwood admitted, “For about five years I had an affair I deeply regret.”

Although there is some legal wrangling on both sides about whether a
trial in the matter should take place before or after the 2006
election, the matter becomes moot when both sides decide on Nov. 8 to
settle the issue out of court. The terms of the settlement are kept
confidential.

Link

There have also been stories in other papers in the district.

I really think this is a good chance for the party to take back a seat
in congress.  I would hate to see us miss this chance because it
is not a district with huge democratic party money donors as of yet.
 

Oh yeah.. and the campaign is very well organized and ready for the election season.

Hit the Bat for Women

Hit one for the women’s team.


Here it is  go and read my message at Women For Democrats.

= )

……Yesterday Tim who is in charge of the DNC blog

decided to put up a diary and promote a group of recently retired

military candidate, male and female and call it “The Band Of Brothers”.

I objected but neither he nor anyone else at the DNC had the courtesy

to respond.

I think they were just not thinking clearly. So I decided to make this

fundraising page. It is not that money donated to swinging this bat

will go to female candidates only. But I would like to make this bat

about reminding the party that you can not take women and their issues

for granted and casual unthinking sexism is not okay. This is not

longer the 1500s and we now have women in the military and they are

giving as much as their male counterparts for this country.

So here is my band and all you women and men who care about Choice,

equal access, equal pay and equal rights… and the end to guys

thinking it is okay to call a group of veterans which includes women

“Brothers”, or if you just would like to make the point that we are

here and you need us to make this party whole, then swing this bat.

Gore2008 , My PoliticalTheaterBlog
Cross posted at MyLeftWing and appearing as a comment in Joe Rospars diary….   😛

Last Chance to tell Lieberman what you think

DFA is going to deliver your message to Senator Lieberman, hand delivered by Jim Dean. Some have suggested that the message is too tame, but the personal notes from 40K people seem quite direct to me.  
Add your voice and read some of the message below the fold….
 

  Have you told Joe yet?

    This is getting exciting. The Hartford Courant, The Washington Post, The New York Times and the Associated Press have all taken notice. Nearly 40,000 patriots have co-signed Jim Dean’s letter to Sen. Lieberman –telling Joe that we won’t be muzzled.

    Here are few of the personal post scripts from across the country:

        Sen. Lieberman, you have always had my respect. I believe that it is our duty to show the world that we still cherish our right to challenge our leaders to find a better way to tackle terrorism. Let us all accept the blame together, and make a better moral decision-TOGETHER! –Airie, FL

        You are some piece of work, pal. Dissent seemed to be just fine with you when Clinton was president. –Kirsten, CA

        You are out of touch with the majority of Democrats, the majority of the American people, and the majority of the world at large. Its time to start paying attention to what is going on! –Jennifer, IL

        Please encourage open discussion, not discourage it. –Joanne, IA

    And a couple more from Connecticut:

        Please stop telling us to quietly accept a mistaken Iraqi policy. American credibility and lives are far more important than George W. Bush’s credibility which he alone is responsible for. Return to your senses and let us find a solution to this disastrous ideological mistake that is killing our children and bankrupting America. –Trinidad, CT

        In regards to the war in Iraq, you have a blind spot that is truly alarming. To ask us Democrats (who are Americans, incidentally) to essentially shut our mouths for 3 more years while this country continues a reckless & flawed war is an outrage. I’m not entirely certain what your agenda is but I certainly know mine & it will be reflected come next election. –Jack, CT

    Jim Dean will deliver the letter –with all of the personal post scripts –to Sen. Lieberman’s office in Hartford on Tuesday. Sign on and send your message to Joe today!

    (posted by Tom Hughes)

    here is the link to BlogforAmerica

Why I want Gore to be our next President

Hey booers,

I posted this diary at dkos yesterday.  I didn’t expect it to hit the recommend list last night (it dropped off this morning).  But once it did there was a lot of interesting discussion and good comments, along with the usual right wing trolls and “let’s fight the 2004 primaries again” folks.

I just spent an hour writing a diary about Gore and lost it somehow. I am very annoyed that all of my “brilliance” is lost because I will be damned if I am going to spend another two hours writing.  But I will try to give you the readers digest version and hope you agree with me.

Walk this way……

In 1988 when I was first aware of Al Gore he seemed young, but there was something special about him as a candidate.  When he spoke you could tell that he cared about the things he was talking about, that he  was knowledgable about his subject and that being knowledgable was also important to him.

Here are the things I know about Gore:

He is dedicated to the environment:

There are scientific warnings now of another onrushing catastrophe. We were warned of an imminent attack by Al Qaeda; we didn’t respond. We were warned the levees would break in New Orleans; we didn’t respond. Now, the scientific community is warning us that the average hurricane will continue to get stronger because of global warming. A scientist at MIT has published a study well before this tragedy showing that since the 1970s, hurricanes in both the Atlantic and the Pacific have increased in duration, and in intensity, by about 50 %. The newscasters told us after Hurricane Katrina went over the southern tip of Florida that there was a particular danger for the Gulf Coast of the hurricanes becoming much stronger because it was passing over unusually warm waters in the gulf. The waters in the gulf have been unusually warm. The oceans generally have been getting warmer. And the pattern is exactly consistent with what scientists have predicted for twenty years. Two thousand scientists, in a hundred countries, engaged in the most elaborate, well organized scientific collaboration in the history of humankind, have produced long-since a consensus that we will face a string of terrible catastrophes unless we act to prepare ourselves and deal with the underlying causes of global warming. [applause] It is important to learn the lessons of what happens when scientific evidence and clear authoritative warnings are ignored in order to induce our leaders not to do it again and not to ignore the scientists again and not to leave us unprotected in the face of those threats that are facing us right now. [applause]

more

He is not afraid to criticize Bush or republican policy:

The direction in which our nation is being led is deeply troubling to me — not only in Iraq but also here at home on economic policy, social policy and environmental policy.

Millions of Americans now share a feeling that something pretty basic has gone wrong in our country and that some important American values are being placed at risk. And they want to set it right.

The way we went to war in Iraq illustrates this larger problem. Normally, we Americans lay the facts on the table, talk through the choices before us and make a decision. But that didn’t really happen with this war — not the way it should have. And as a result, too many of our soldiers are paying the highest price, for the strategic miscalculations, serious misjudgments, and historic mistakes that have put them and our nation in harm’s way.

I’m convinced that one of the reasons that we didn’t have a better public debate before the Iraq War started is because so many of the impressions that the majority of the country had back then turn out to have been completely wrong. Leaving aside for the moment the question of how these false impressions got into the public’s mind, it might be healthy to take a hard look at the ones we now know were wrong and clear the air so that we can better see exactly where we are now and what changes might need to be made.

In any case, what we now know to have been false impressions include the following:

(1) Saddam Hussein was partly responsible for the attack against us on September 11th, 2001, so a good way to respond to that attack would be to invade his country and forcibly remove him from power.

(2) Saddam was working closely with Osama Bin Laden and was actively supporting members of the Al Qaeda terrorist group, giving them weapons and money and bases and training, so launching a war against Iraq would be a good way to stop Al Qaeda from attacking us again.

(3) Saddam was about to give the terrorists poison gas and deadly germs that he had made into weapons which they could use to kill millions of Americans. Therefore common sense alone dictated that we should send our military into Iraq in order to protect our loved ones and ourselves against a grave threat.

(4) Saddam was on the verge of building nuclear bombs and giving them to the terrorists. And since the only thing preventing Saddam from acquiring a nuclear arsenal was access to enriched uranium, once our spies found out that he had bought the enrichment technology he needed and was actively trying to buy uranium from Africa, we had very little time left. Therefore it seemed imperative during last Fall’s election campaign to set aside less urgent issues like the economy and instead focus on the congressional resolution approving war against Iraq.

(5) Our GI’s would be welcomed with open arms by cheering Iraqis who would help them quickly establish public safety, free markets and Representative Democracy, so there wouldn’t be that much risk that US soldiers would get bogged down in a guerrilla war.

(6) Even though the rest of the world was mostly opposed to the war, they would quickly fall in line after we won and then contribute lots of money and soldiers to help out, so there wouldn’t be that much risk that US taxpayers would get stuck with a huge bill.

Now, of course, everybody knows that every single one of these impressions was just dead wrong.

link

He is a man of faith but a real one who believes that we should value diversity and strengthen all families:

Two reviews of his and Tipper’s book JOINED AT THE HEART :

From Publishers Weekly

“For us, as for most Americans,” write the former vice-president and his wife, “family is our bedrock, and we believe the strength of the American family is the nation’s bedrock.” But the American family has changed substantially in the last half century and so have the cultural and economic conditions under which it exists. The families the Gores have encountered in a decade of research reflect these changes: one couple has children from the husband’s three different relationships, a gay white couple adopts two black children, a single mother struggles with poverty. The couple add stories from their own marriage and consult with historians, sociologists, psychologists and educators, giving the American family the same comprehensive treatment Al’s Earth in the Balance gave the environment. Al and Tipper examine subjects as diverse as the increased divorce rate, the parent-teen gap, dual-income households and the health problems associated with sleep deprivation. They divide the book into themes, including love, communication, work, play and community, and show how these factors influence one another, taking a holistic approach to the underlying problems affecting today’s families. Yet although they declare America should “provide every possible support to those most important to us,” they make very few firm recommendations on government policy; those reading with an eye toward identifying planks in another Gore presidential campaign will have their work cut out for them. Photos not seen by PW.

Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Coauthoring this very readable work, the Gores affirm their respect and support for culturally and structurally variant American families, loving individuals committed to each other’s welfare. Based on personal experiences and interviews with others in traditional and nontraditional relationships, the authors offer a sampling of caring individuals struggling to balance family, work, play, and community to support one another, adults and children, together with the future of this country. The Gores relate these families’ experiences to the environments in which they live, offering a critique of the social programs needed to support successful family life: affordable shelter, reliable and competent child care, pre- and post-school time supervised activities, employee family-leave provisions, well-run community facilities, and services for all age levels. They argue that it is increasingly critical to maintain and grow our country’s various sources of “social capital,” to understand and support families, the too often unacknowledged vital units of our American society. This convincing, multiresourced work is recommended for public and academic library purchase. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 7/02; also released this November is The Spirit of the Family, a photography book edited by the Gores.-Ed.]-Suzanne W. Wood, formerly with SUNY Coll. of Technology at Alfre.

–Suzanne W. Wood, formerly with SUNY Coll. of Technology at Alfred

Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

link

Yes while he is a brilliant policy wonk he is also very funny:

The veep’s playful antics are particularly legendary among staff members. On one flight home after a trip to the former Soviet Union, Gore ambled back through the staff section and came across his national security adviser, Leon Fuerth, fast asleep against a window. Sensing a photo op not to be missed, he sat down beside him and launched into an animated discussion of U.S. policy toward Russia. Gore leaned into him and grew increasingly demonstrative as Fuerth remained slumped down, totally oblivious to the tongue-lashing, the photographer and the circle of giggling staff members who had gathered around. According to his aides, Gore is notorious for such stunts — and usually makes sure his unsuspecting target receives a copy of the photo.

…….snip……

Presidential adviser Paul Begala called Gore’s dry wit “a really rare gift because it deflates egos, it eases tension. In a very deadpan, exaggerated, comic sort of way,” Begala said, “he’ll make fun of the president or of other big-shots by sort of pretending to be an absolute yes man: ‘That’s a great idea. We should definitely do that. Why stop there?’ It’s a kind of humor that requires a deep reservoir of self-confidence, a sense of real familiarity with your colleagues … and obviously high intellect to be able to turn it around.”

link

He is visionary in matters of the environment and technology:

The project, which would need approval by Congress, is expected to cost between $20 million and $50 million. Gore sees it as an invaluable resource for scientific, educational and weather research.

It would show hurricanes and other threatening weather patterns, forest fires, cloud formations and other phenomena in real time. There are no full-Earth images now available, although existing satellites track regions of the world.

The vice president announced the program Friday at a technology conference at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.

“As we connect all our classrooms to the Internet, we have the opportunity to bring new education and potential scientific projects as well as global weather observations to millions of American classrooms and living rooms via television and computer,” Gore told an audience of academics, industry leaders and politicians. more

He was right about Social Security:

Stance on Social Security reform featuring private accounts: opposes.

“We have the chance to reform Social Security the right way, in a way that preserves its basic guarantees, pays down our debt, keeps our economy strong, and enables us to meet our other great challenges.” Gore has detailed a plan to keep Social Security solvent through at least 2050. As President, Gore would use today’s budget surpluses to pay down the national debt and use the interest saved from debt reduction to shore up the Social Security Trust Fund. Gore would also raise benefits for widows and eliminate the motherhood penalty that reduces benefits for women who take time off from work to raise their children. Gore supports a guaranteed benefit for Social Security and opposes raising the retirement age. “Social Security isn’t supposed to be a system of winners and losers. It’s supposed to be a bedrock guarantee of a minimum decent retirement,”

[Source: press release for speech delivered at Fordham University, NY May 16, 2000] more

And he was right about about the war in Iraq:

 I want to talk about the relationship between America’s war against terrorism and America’s proposed war against Iraq.

Like most Americans, I’ve been wrestling with the question of what our country needs to do to defend itself from the kind of focused, intense and evil attack that we suffered a year ago September 11th. We ought to assume that the forces that are responsible for that attack are even now attempting to plan another attack against us.

I’m speaking today in an effort to recommend a specific course of action for our country, which I sincerely believe would be better for our country than the policy that is now being pursued by President Bush. Specifically, I am deeply concerned that the course of action that we are presently embarking upon with respect to Iraq has the potential to seriously damage our ability to win the war against terrorism and to weaken our ability to lead the world in this new century.

To begin with, to put first things first, I believe that we ought to be focusing our efforts first and foremost against those who attacked us on September 11th and who have thus far gotten away with it. The vast majority of those who sponsored, planned and implemented the cold-blooded murder of more than 3,000 Americans are still at large, still neither located nor apprehended, much less punished and neutralized. I do not believe that we should allow ourselves to be distracted from this urgent task simply because it is proving to be more difficult and lengthy than was predicted.

Great nations persevere and then prevail. They do not jump from one unfinished task to another. We should remain focused on the war against terrorism.

(APPLAUSE)

And, I believe that we are perfectly capable of staying the course in our war against Osama bin Laden and his terrorist network, while simultaneously taking those steps necessary to build an international coalition to join us in taking on Saddam Hussein in a timely fashion. If you’re going after Jesse James, you ought to organize the posse first, especially if you’re in the middle of a gunfight with somebody who’s out after you.

I don’t think we should allow anything to diminish our focus on the necessity for avenging the 3,000 Americans who were murdered and dismantling that network of terrorists that we know were responsible for it. The fact that we don’t know where they are should not cause us to focus instead on some other enemy whose location may be easier to identify.

We have other enemies . . . more

I have no idea if Al Gore has any plans to run for President.  But I do know that he is the best qualified candidate for the job IMO.

I wanted to include this information on Gore’s new position on healtcare.  As one of the posters below reminded me, Gore decided that single payer healtcare was the only thing that would save our broken system.

In Surprising Shift, Gore Says He Favors Single-Payer Health Care System

 WASHINGTON – Noting that 40 million Americans now have no health insurance, Al Gore says he now favors “single-payer” national health coverage, a proposal that would require a massive change in the health insurance system

With single-payer coverage, money to pay for health care – such as insurance premiums and tax dollars – would be collected by a single agency, which would then pay for comprehensive coverage for all citizens.

Gore, the 2000 Democratic presidential nominee and a potential candidate in 2004, offered his views in response to a question at a synagogue in New York during a tour promoting his book “Joined at the Heart,” written with his wife, Tipper.

“I was planning to wait and make a major speech on this and I probably should, but I’ll just answer your question candidly,” Gore told the moderator.

Gore’s comments Wednesday night were first reported by ABC News’ Internet political report “The Note” and were confirmed by Gore spokesman Jano Cabrera, who said any details would come in a future speech on health care.

“I think we’ve reached a point where the entire health care system is in impending crisis,” Gore said. “I have reluctantly come to the conclusion that we should begin drafting a single-payer national health insurance plan.”

Depending on the details, calling for a single-payer plan could be a very dramatic step for Gore. During the 2000 primary campaign, Gore attacked Democratic rival Bill Bradley’s central proposal – universal health care – calling it too expensive and not expansive enough to help poor people afford full coverage.

Another potential Democratic candidate for president, Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, pushed for health care for all Americans in a speech Thursday night to an education group in Washington. He wants to expand coverage under Medicare and Medicaid to cover people who don’t have insurance.

more

Georgia voters are Diebold guinea pigs

I am posting this here for the original diarist RoxanneJ.  This diary was posted at Dembloggers and also linked at www.peopleforchange.net

Roxanne is not a member here so she gave me permission to post this for her.

This is regarding the meeting McKinney had in Georgia to expose the fact that the people of that state were used as guinea pigs during actual elections.

If this doesn’t make you furious I don’t know what will.  There is video of the meeting linked below.

Yesterday, thanks to Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, a new window opened on the facts of electronic voting.  We discovered the State of Georgia agreed to use Georgia voters as guinea pigs and Diebold’s beta test of electronic voting.

We learned yesterday that Georgia’s 2002 election was fraught with errors, mistakes and a massive failure of the Diebold voting system.

The 2002 General Election in Georgia was the “beta test” of Diebold’s touchscreen voting system and Georgia’s elected officials agreed to the test, paying Diebold $54 million dollars in taxpayer money for the “honor.”

What McKinnney’s office has just released is a group of documents that lend the visible evidence necessary to take this issue out of the hands of conspiracy theorists, and put it in the public purview of government officials.

Georgia’s Diebold elections have been fraught with massive problems from day one and election officials have hidden the problems from the voters.

Georgia’s election officials sought to protect Diebold instead of the voters.

The first document is a list of bugs and failures experienced in Georgia’s 2002 election, none of which have been resolved to date, much less in time for the 2004 election.

Mr. Sam Barber of American Computer Technologies, Inc. has filed a federal lawsuit against Diebold. ACT was originally a Minority Owned Business contacted by Diebold to subcontract the Acceptance Testing of the Diebold system. When they discovered Mr. Barber really intended to test the equipment as prescribed by computer science, they threw him off the contract.

What they WANTED Mr. Barber’s company to do was assemble the 2 pieces of equipment and CALL it acceptance testing. When he refused, he was dismissed by Diebold in McKinney, TX.

As we know from Rob Behler, the computer neophyte hired by ABSS, they found a company willing to do just that:

    Behler: “My background is normally telecom…….

    Behler: “Of course you have to have the touchscreens assembled in the warehouse, and do some testing. It turned out that there were a lot of problems that needed to be dealt with, and they simply weren’t dealing with them.”

    Behler: “No, it’s not just that. NOBODY even tested it! When I found that out — I mean you can’t not test a fix — I worked for a billing company, and if I’d put a fix on that wasn’t tested I’d have gotten FIRED! You have to make sure whatever fix you did didn’t break something else. But they didn’t even TEST the fixes before they told us to install them. “Look, we’re doing this and 50-60 percent of the machines are still freezing up! Turn it on, get one result. Turn it off and next time you turn it on you get a different result. Six times, you’d get six different results.”

Georgia activists at CountTheVote.org,  and the Voter Choice Coalition have been fighting to repair the visible problems with electronic voting for almost 3 years now; since late 2002.

At every turn, with each step, it has been the Secretary of State in Georgia who has prevented even the most basic changes to this system, including a voter verified paper ballot.  The SoS office turned out in full to lobby against our first legislative attempt to bring verification to this system – SB500.

During Ms. McKinney’s press conference we learned, through the production of the documents, the SoS was well aware of the problems with this system, even as she testified to their accuracy at Senate committee hearings while lobbying against SB500.

The documents are available here

Congresswoman McKinney plans to hold a series of press conferences to bring this issue to the voters of Georgia; to ensure the voters are informed and to call for reform to correct the problems with Georgia’s voting system.

Link to P4C discussion

P4C

Link to dembloggers post

where the video is located.
dkos Thread…(please to recommend so it was stay visible today.)  You know how those diaries disapear.

dkos diary

Congressritters Kucinich and McKinney on the BBV case!

Monday Morning Press Conference: “Shocking” Election Practices Revealed

Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, who has been one of the few elected officials from either major party championing accountable elections, will have a press conference tomorrow morning (Monday July 18th) to reveal “shocking findings on Diebold Election Systems and the fraud and gross incompetence that has taken place in Georgia elections”.

When: Monday July 18th, 10am.

Where: The office of Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney

North DeKalb Mall, Suite D-46,

2050 Lawrenceville Hwy, Decatur, Georgia 30033

More on the flip side…….
DK’s Statement………

Kucinich calls for suspension of electronic voting

Kucinich press release

Democratic presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich, who has been sounding warning alarms regarding electronic voting systems since he began his campaign last year, today called on federal, state and local election officials “to suspend immediately the implementation of any voting systems that do not provide a 100 percent reliable paper-trail back-up to corroborate results.”

A decision yesterday by the eight-member California Voting Systems and Procedures Panel that 15,000 electronic voting machines in four counties be banned in the November election because of “glitches” in the March primary election “is more than enough evidence that these systems could undermine the integrity and affect the results of November’s general election,” Kucinich said.

Especially in terms of the Presidential election, Kucinich said, “we cannot entrust the future of our country to technologies that are flawed, suspect, and proven to have failed, especially when those technologies have been developed by companies that have their own political agendas.”

Diebold Election Systems, which came under the harshest criticism from the California elections panel, is headed by Chief Executive Officer Walden O’Dell, who last year became active in the re-election effort of President Bush, even attending a strategy meeting with wealthy Bush benefactors at the President’s private ranch in Texas. Soon after, O’Dell wrote a fundraising letter where he said he was “committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year.”

Although Diebold is the most embattled voting equipment company, Newsday reported that “paperless systems made by Sequoia Voting Systems Inc. and other competitors also expose elections to malicious attack, software glitches and mechanical errors that could delete or alter millions of ballots.” The story went on to report a variety of other problems in Indiana, Maryland, and other states. According to Newsday, “Because votes that only exist in electronic form can be altered or deleted, Oregon, New Hampshire and Illinois require paper ballots; and California, Missouri and Nevada will require paper backups on touchscreen terminals by 2006.” The newspaper also reported that “Secretaries of state in Washington and West Virginia are calling for paper trails, while Ohio is reconsidering the switch to new machines.”

Kucinich said he will take his challenges to the newly created federal agency charged with overseeing electronic voting, the U.S. Election Assistance Commission, established in January, which will conduct a May 5 public hearing in Washington, D.C. on May 5.

“The technological problems are real,” Kucinich said, “and the potential for further problems, mischief, and outright fraud is equally real, and far more dangerous.”

(Extensive information on electronic voting systems is available at http://www.kucinich.us/e-voting/intro.php

For information about the National campaign: http://www.kucinich.us

For Congressman Kucinich’s Schedule: http://www.kucinich.us/schedule.htm

To schedule an interview with Kucinich or spokesperson: interviews@kucinich.us

I will update when I have information about where the video of McKinney’s statement can be viewed.

This is a mad important issue whether you believe that the machinery has been gamed in the 2002 or 2004 elections.  I do believe it has been used to change the results of several elections.  But even  if you don’t agree, you have to see that it can be used that way.  Trusting that it WONT be used that way is nuts.

I told you so…… O’Connor retires

I knew it.  People kept saying it was going to be Renquist.  Actually I will bet that Renquist goes soon too.  Now we have to fight two nut case appointments from Bush.  
Go to PFAW and sign up for their action network.  They have a BIG push planned to protect the court.

www.pfaw.org/pfaw/general/

June 16, 2005

To: Journalists
Fr: Ralph G. Neas
Re: Supreme Court Vacancies: Bush Should Choose Consensus Not Confrontation

Within the next few weeks, President George W. Bush may have the opportunity to make his first nomination or nominations to the U.S. Supreme Court, an opportunity that will be a defining moment of his presidency.

President Bush will face the choice of whether to honor the spirit of bipartisan cooperation that emerged in the Senate to avert the nuclear option – and follow the precedent set when each of his three most recent predecessors made their first Supreme Court selection – and nominate someone who will be supported by most senators in both political parties, or to heed the demands of his party’s ideologues and embroil the nation in further partisanship, controversy and division, distracting the country from other pressing issues. For the good of the country and the Supreme Court, President Bush should choose bipartisan consensus over confrontation.

www.pfaw.org/pfaw/general/default.aspx?oid=18941

And join in the meetings with your representatives:

http://tools.pfaw.org/idm/home.asp?tr=y&auid=970292

onstituent Meetings with U.S. Senators:
The Future of the Supreme Court and Our Rights
Your senator needs to hear from YOU, and the July 4th recess is the perfect opportunity for you to speak up in person. PFAW is organizing meetings at the state offices of your senator(s) so you can meet with them or their staff to let them know you would like them to:

* Preserve Checks and Balances – Protect the minority right to filibuster
* Reject extremist judicial nominations, and insist the president consult with both parties and choose consensus Supreme Court justices who have broad bipartisan support
* Hold the president to his constitutional obligation to seek “advice and consent” on ALL judicial nominations

Register to join a meeting delegation in your state and urge senators to vote against an extreme right-wing Supreme Court nominee, to demand consultation and consensus in the judicial nominations process, and to continue to protect the filibuster from the Radical Right’s attacks. Start by filling out this form. Please remember to sign up individually, even if you are participating with someone else.

Click here: savethecort.org

I’d forgotten how charming CBS Sunday Morning is

This morning I watched and was delighted to see that it is still almost as good as it has ever been.  The one thing I miss is the nature segment they used to always do at the end.  I don’t think they do that anymore or I am missing it for some reason.

The best segment this morning was about a mail boat on lake Geneva WI…

(CBS) Mail carriers are always in the swim of things in Lake Geneva, Wis., because they travel their delivery routes by boat. Every piece of mail arrives by special delivery.

CBS News Sunday Morning correspondent Bill Geist reports they’ve been doing it that way since 1873. He says it’s a treasured tradition that could almost pass for a love letter.

Or an old postcard come to life, as a steam yacht known as the Walworth II, which also serves as the mailboat, slips across the clear, sparkling waters of the lake.

Geist says people in the town still enjoy the same simple pleasures they always have, in a timeless place where the arrival of summer is announced by the first mailboat.

Residents such as Jim and Darrell Riley set their calendars by it.

“The mailboats start the beginning of the season of the summer,” Darrell says, “and it’s always a very sad day when it’s the last day the paper is delivered, ’cause that means it’s September and its time to go back to the city.”

Bill Gage owns and operates the mailboat, as his father and grandfather did before him.

“The mail started right at the beginning in 1873,” he says, “but they were delivering groceries and furniture and everything else along with the mail. …The mail had to be delivered by water, just because there wasn’t a decent road system around the lake until the 1920s, and people who owned homes on the lake literally came back and forth to their houses by boat … and the tradition has continued ever since.”

more sunday morning