March 7th, 2007

Politics

Comments (1)

Permalink

Final Throes

From Perrspectives: the last throes of the Bush presidency:

Start with Tuesday’s conviction of former Cheney chief-of-staff Scooter Libby on four counts of obstruction and perjury in the outing of CIA operative Valerie Plame. In revelation after revelation, the administration’s duplicity in selling its Iraq war was laid bare. …

Meanwhile, the Senate Judiciary Committee began to peel back the onion on the growing Bush Justice Department scandal involving the politically motivated firings of 8 U.S. prosecutors. Senators heard six of the attorneys tell them under oath of pressure from the White House and Congressional Republicans to pursue — or not pursue — a raft of public corruption cases. …

Even as the prosecutors’ imbroglio is just starting to simmer, the outrage over the appalling conditions for wounded American servicemen at Walter Reed Army Medical Center is now at a full boil. The disgraceful conditions reported by the Washington Post and the dismissive response of the Army’s former head at Walter Reed Lt. General Kevin Kiley undermined the last remaining trump card of the Bush team — its mantra of “we support the troops.” …

Sadly for President Bush, the news coming out of Iraq was no better. Even as he praised the initial successes of his surge in Iraq, over 100 Shiite pilgrims were slaughtered in bomb blasts south of Baghad in Hillah. Worse still, nine U.S. soldiers were killed in separate attacks across Iraq on the same day that the Pentagon revealed that Bush’s “surge” would actually require 28,000 additional troops, 7,000 more than the White House claimed.

The toll on President Bush’s standing was reflected in polls released yesterday as well. A new USA Today/Gallup survey showed that fully 60% of Americans now support a timeline for U.S. withdrawal from Iraq, while only 28% say the U.S will win the war. …

For the Bush administration, it is all over except for the shouting. His domestic agenda dead, President Bush can only stubbornly move forward with his debacle in Iraq while threatening to veto Democratic domestic initiatives such as union rights for TSA workers.

Gee, I wonder how history will judge the Bush presidency?

Politics

Comments (0)

Permalink

No Cents

Via GrrlScientist: the George W. Bush postage stamp.

Bush Stamp

It’s worthless. So it’s perfect.

Politics

Comments (0)

Permalink

Vermont Leads

From The Nation: Vermont Leads:

When Vermont Governor Jim Douglas, a Republican with reasonably close ties to President Bush, asked if there was any additional business to be considered at the town meeting he was running in Middlebury, Ellen McKay popped up and proposed the impeachment of Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney.

The governor was not amused. As moderator of the annual meeting, he tried to suggest that the proposal to impeach — along with another proposal to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq — could not be voted on.

But McKay, a program coordinator at Middlebury College, pressed her case. And it soon became evident that the crowd at the annual meeting shared her desire to hold the president to account.

So Douglas backed down.

“It became clear that no one was going home until they had the chance to discuss the resolutions and vote on them,” explained David Rosenberg, a political science professor at Middlebury College. “And being a good politician, he allowed the vote to happen.”

By an overwhelming voice vote, Middlebury called for impeachment.

So it has gone this week at town meetings across Vermont, most of which were held Tuesday.

Late Tuesday night, there were confirmed reports that 36 towns had backed impeachment resolutions, and the number was expected to rise.

In one town, Putney, the vote for impeachment was unanimous.

Impeach Bush and Cheney?

Hmmm… President Nancy Pelosi. I like the sound of that.

Funnies
Politics

Comments (0)

Permalink

The Way We Were

Cartoonist D.C. Simpson thinks about Bush’s current low poll numbers:

The numbers are clear. George Bush is now less popular than getting kicked in the groin.

… and flashes back to recall the political climate at the start of the Iraq War:

George Bush is so brave and heroic! He held office when something bad happened!

What we believed, of course, was that George W. Bush would do as other presidents had done in times of crisis, and would rise to meet history’s challenge. But George W. Bush was not like other presidents. He had reached the White House not by the process defined in the Constitution, but in an anti-Constitutional judicial coup d’etat. He has spent his presidency disabusing us of our optimism.

Politics

Comments (0)

Permalink

Starry-Eyed Optimists

Via Hetty Litjens: Some people are such optimists:

Dick Cheney has been diagnosed with a blood clot in his left leg, leading to speculation he will be forced to resign as U.S. Vice-President.

The United States has the most expensive medical care on earth. Cheney will be blighting lives for years to come.

Politics

Comments (0)

Permalink

The Problem with Fox

Atrios makes a good point about Fox News:

The problem with Fox isn’t that it’s conservative, it’s that it’s basically a propaganda outlet for the GOP. The difference is an important one. Back when Clinton in power, their true nature was somewhat obscured by the fact that were doing what media should be doing at least in broad terms, which is be skeptical about the actions of the powerful. Back when Bush was popular, it was also easier for people to fail to understand just what Fox does on a daily basis. But now that they spend 24/7 propping up Mr. 30% and his gang of incompetents, the absurdity of considering them to be a “news channel” should be apparent.

I started watching Fox News at about the time we invaded Iraq. They advertised with the slogan, “We Report, You Decide,” and within a few hours I noticed that they never, ever played a story straight. You might not notice the constant editorializing about the war — CNN and CBS and the New York Times all got teary-eyed about “our brave soldiers” during those early days in Iraq. But Fox was different. Reporting even something as simple as an auto accident, they never resisted tacking on a little sermonette about the deeper cultural meaning of the event.

I watched Fox for about two days, then decided they were not a trustworthy source of information. I haven’t watched since.

You know who played the Iraq War story straight? The BBC. There were brave British soldiers in the fight, but the BBC reported just the facts. They left it to each of us to decide for ourselves how to feel about those facts.

Politics

Comments (0)

Permalink

Good Television

The Daily Show on Monday was dynamite, as Jon Stewart took on the Walter Reed story. Crooks and Liars has video. They also have video of Jon Stewart’s interview with wounded ABC News reporter Bob Woodruff.

Stephen Colbert also looked at the Walter Reed story Monday night, focusing on the role of Congress. Think Progress has the video, including Colbert’s summary of Joe Lieberman:

The senseless war in Washington must end, so the War in Iraq can continue in peace.

Switch parties, already, Lieberman. You’re embarrassing the Democrats.

Update: Crooks and Liars is calling the Walter Reed scandal “Waltergate.” Good one!

Politics

Comments (0)

Permalink

Faux News: Libby Not Guilty

Via Boing Boing, Fox News’ unbiased report:

Libby Not Guilty

Yeah, that’s your headline. Guilty on four counts, but the big news is the one not-guilty verdict.

Media Matters has a dishonor roll of bad media coverage of the case.

Update: Via Crooks and Liars, more Fox spin:

Fox News: Was there even a crime?