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Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 25 2006, 05:29 AM)
This morning, on FOX NEWS FAIR AND BALANCED, YOU DECIDE, as broadcast on CLEARCHANNELS WORLD WIDE ....

They had on George W. Bush ...

And I am not at all sure what they had George on there for ...

But I think it had to do with high gas prices ...

And GOUGING ....

And PROFITEERING ....

By the oil companies ....

Although I am not sure ...

That George knew or understood the question being posed to him ....

Since he don't have to worry how much gas costs ...

And to him ...

PROFITEERING is just how them big, old boys down there in Texico do BID-NESS ....

And likely ...

He is one of the prime ones responsible for it being so high ...

Since he is the guy who has caused the instability in the world ....

That has disrupted supplies ...

And so .....

"It's up and up at the pump - As average price for regular gas nears $3.06 in region, some call for state to lift or cap taxes to help offset rise" 
 
By LARRY RULISON, Business writer, Albany, New York Times Union

First published: Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Gas prices in the Capital Region that topped $3 per gallon over the weekend are showing no signs of slowing down as the summer driving season approaches.

And speaking of America's George ....

Acting as an APOLOGIST ....

For BIG OIL .....

As is his "BOSS" ...

Richard Bruce Cheney ....

Or "DICK" ....

As he is known these days ....

Each time I see a picture of THE GEORGE accompanying one of these news stories ....

He looks real "pumped up" ....

Apparently gesticulating wildly .....

I wonder how much amphetimines they are pumping into that boy on a daily basis ...

To keep him going ...

Like they do our soldiers and airmen in combat ....

"Bush Orders Probe Into Gas Price Cheating"

By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer

1 hour, 33 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - President Bush, under pressure to do something about gasoline prices that are expected to stay high through the summer, has ordered an investigation into possible cheating in the markets.

During the last few days, Bush asked his Energy and Justice departments to open inquiries into whether the price of gasoline has been illegally manipulated, said White House press secretary Scott McClellan.

Bush planned to announce the action Tuesday during a speech in Washington.

It's unclear what impact, if any, Bush's investigation would have on prices that are near $3 a gallon.

Asked if Bush had any reason to suspect market manipulation, McClellan responded, "[u]Well, gas prices are high right now, and that's why you want to make sure there's not."

Republicans who control Congress have become concerned that the high cost of filling up could become a problem for them in the November elections.

Polls suggest that voters favor Democrats over Republicans on the issue, and Bush gets low marks for handling gasoline prices.


House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., urged Bush in a letter Monday to order a federal investigation into any gasoline price gouging or market speculation.

"There is no silver bullet," Frist said Tuesday on ABC's "Good Morning America," but "we need to make sure that any efforts at price-gouging be addressed and addressed aggressively."

Meanwhile, Frist said, consumers should take steps to conserve gasoline — drive at slower speeds, tune up car engines for maximum efficiency and carpool.

McClellan said Bush had already ordered investigations into market pricing.

"We share a commitment with congressional leaders to make sure that we're acting to ensure that there is no price gouging," McClellan said.

Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada dispatched his own letter, calling for a multi-pronged approach to restrain gas prices.

Among the steps were swift enactment of anti-price gouging legislation, an appeal to oil companies to refrain from further price increases, use of more alternative fuels and increased attention to existing fuel-saving laws and regulations.

Bush also planned to announce that his attorney general and Federal Trade Commission will send a letter to all 50 state attorneys general, who have primary authority over price gouging, to remind them to stay on top of the issue and offer federal help to do so.

And he planned to call on energy companies to reinvest their profits into expanding refining capacity, developing new technologies and researching alternative energy sources, McClellan said.

"I think you'll hear the president say very clearly that he will not tolerate price gouging," McClellan said.

Bush has said consistently that gas prices are high because global demand is rising faster than global supply and that the problem cannot be solved overnight.

McClellan said Bush planned to talk about how experts predict the price will increase this summer and how the switch to a summer fuel mix is contributing to the problem.

Bush's actions are part of a four-part plan to address gas prices in the short- and long-term, McClellan said.

The steps are:

_Making sure consumers and taxpayers are treated fairly.

_Promoting greater fuel efficiency.

_Boosting gasoline supply at home.

_Aggressive long-term investment in alternative fuels.
___

On the Net:

White House: http://www.whitehouse.gov

Energy Department: http://www.doe.gov

Justice Department: http://www.usdoj.gov
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 25 2006, 07:37 AM)
"Bush Orders Probe Into Gas Price Cheating"

By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - President Bush, under pressure to do something about gasoline prices that are expected to stay high through the summer, has ordered an investigation into possible cheating in the markets.

It's unclear what impact, if any, Bush's investigation would have on prices that are near $3 a gallon.

Asked if Bush had any reason to suspect market manipulation, McClellan responded, "Well, gas prices are high right now, and that's why you want to make sure there's not."

And while we are on this subject of gasoline prices ...

Here in OUR America .....

And what impacts ...

If any at all ...

Higher fuel prices are going to have on the "habits" of America .....

Which right now looks like George W. Bush is just going to use high fuel costs as a means of gutting Clean Air standards here in OUR America ...

As we continue to be GLOBALIZED .....

Which is a EUPHEMISM, really ...

For being "REVERTED" ...

Into being just like all the other third-world countries out there ....

And so ....

"Oil, Gas Prices Drop on Bush Supply Move"

By BRAD FOSS, AP Business Writer

1 hour, 3 minutes ago

Crude oil and gasoline futures fell Tuesday after President Bush gave the Environmental Protection Agency the authority to relax regional clean-fuel standards to attract more imports of gasoline to the United States and to make it easier for supplies to be moved from one state to another.

President Bush also said he would halt deposits of oil to the nation's strategic petroleum reserve until the fall, but analysts said that measure would have next to no impact on crude prices and certainly would not help make gasoline any cheaper.

Even the fuel-specification waivers will have a marginal impact, analysts said, given that the main force behind today's soaring pump prices is the near-record price of crude oil.

"If you have $75 a barrel crude oil, you're sort of at a starting point of $2.90 a gallon for gasoline," said Mary Novak, managing director at the economic consulting firm Global Insight.


Light sweet crude for June delivery settled 45 cents lower at $72.88 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, dropping on the heels of a 4.48-cents-per-gallon decline in May gasoline futures, which finished at $2.1291 a gallon.

Analysts said a floor remains underneath oil prices, which are 33 percent higher than a year ago, for a variety of reasons:

• With daily global demand roughly 85 million barrels per day, the world's oil producers have less than 2 million barrels per day of spare production capacity, and most of that is for Saudi blends of oil that are less ideal for manufacturing transportation fuels.

• Oil traders are nervous about geopolitical tensions ranging from violence in Nigeria to the West's nuclear standoff with Iran to the move toward greater nationalization of natural resources in energy-rich Venezuela.

• The global economy is expanding, and that means the thirst for oil is only going to grow.

Speculative investors are piling into energy markets as a way to profit from soaring prices and geopolitical turmoil that could potentially be bad for equities prices.

In a further escalation of the war of words between Iran and the West, Iran threatened Tuesday to begin hiding its nuclear program if the West takes any "harsh measures" against it — Tehran's sharpest rebuttal yet to a U.N. Security Council Friday deadline to suspend uranium enrichment or face possible sanctions.

The United States, Britain and France claim Iran wants to use enriched uranium for nuclear weapons, not just electricity generation.

Iran denies the charge, but Washington has been pressing fellow members of the Security Council to impose tough economic sanctions against Iran, which could affect its oil exports.

Nigerian exports are down because of violence there that prompted Royal Dutch Shell PLC to shut in 455,000 barrels per day of production, and more than 300,000 barrels per day of Gulf of Mexico output remains shut in as a result of damage from last summer's hurricanes.

Also, Iraq's output has been hampered by continued sabotage of energy industry infrastructure.

Venezuela, another major oil producer, unsettled the market over the weekend by reasserting its intention to give the state greater control of oil fields being operated by foreign-owned oil companies.

Concerns about tight refining capacity and gasoline supplies in the U.S. ahead of the summer driving season are also propping up prices.

In the seven weeks ended April 14, gasoline stocks declined by more than 23 million barrels, according to last week's U.S. Energy Information Administration report.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures rose 2.64 cents to settle at $2.0581 per gallon, natural gas futures fell 30.4 cents to $7.254 per 1,000 cubic feet.

___

Associated Press Writer Gillian Wong in Singapore contributed to this report.
Livyjr
And from where the tensions in IRAQINAM have caused fuel prices to soar ....

We go back to the source of the tensions .....

Which is George W. Bush's SOCIAL ENGINEERING EXPERIMENT ....

Over there in IRAQINAM ....

"What kind of democracy can you impose on them, at the point of a bayonet?"

"Al-Maliki to Neighbors: Don't Interfere"

By LEE KEATH, Associated Press Writer

2 hours, 58 minutes ago

BAGHDAD, Iraq - The incoming prime minister told neighboring nations in an interview televised Tuesday not to interfere in Iraq, while expressing gratitude to them for sheltering dissidents during Saddam Hussein's rule.

Jawad al-Maliki made the comment during an interview with Iraqi state television, his first since he was tapped three days ago to form a new government.

Al-Maliki, a Shiite who spent years in exile in Syria, thanked Iran, Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey for sheltering Saddam's opponents[/u].

But he added that such gratitude did not mean Iraqis would tolerate "security interference" or involvement with "certain movements inside Iraq."

His remarks appeared directed primarily at Shiite-dominated Iran, which sheltered Iraqi Shiite groups that now wield great political influence here, and at Syria, which has been accused of harboring Saddam loyalists directing the Sunni insurgency.


Al-Maliki also promised to appoint independents to the defense and interior ministry posts.

U.S. officials have insisted that those holding security portfolios have no ties to sectarian militias blamed for worsening tensions between Sunni and Shiite Muslims.

In an overture to disaffected Sunnis, al-Maliki, who had a reputation as a strong proponent of Shiite rights, said the entry of Sunnis into the government could help defeat "terrorism."

"If we can reach unity between all the components of the people, the canals of terrorism will dry up, as well as by ending unemployment and poverty," he said.

"Our people and our tribes in the western areas have fought terrorism ..."

"Our Sunni brothers by their participation in a broad alliance have begun to carry responsibilities in the political process."

"That will dry up the sources" of terrorism.

He noted that many Sunnis risk assassination by cooperating with the new government.

"Yes, there is a chance that those among our Sunni brothers will face danger from the terrorists," al-Maliki said.

"But we tell them, 'we are with you and we will stay with you, and you stay with us in a unified front against terrorism.'"

end quotes

Or something like that, anyway ....

Maybe it is the translation ....
Livyjr
And speaking of translations ....

Here's one of some comments by the "other side" on OUR American military that BUSHCO Donald Rumsfeld has converted ....

Into something that the "other side" is simply mocking ...

Now that the alleged BUSHCO "SHOCK AND AWE" ....

Has turned out to be ...

More "pop-sputter-and-fizzle" ...

In reality ...

Than anything else ....

Which is always one of the dangers ...

Of having a weak Commander-in-Chief ....

Who believes that he is a military mastermind ...

And has a coterie of sycophants surrounding him ...

Who will tell him that it is so ...

As they lick his boots ....

And so ...

"Al-Qaida Leader Mocks U.S. Forces in Video"

By SALAH NASRAWI, Associated Press Writer

50 minutes ago

CAIRO, Egypt - In a rare video posted Tuesday on the Internet, al-Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi swore allegiance to Osama bin Laden and said any government formed in Iraq would be merely a "stooge."

He also mocked the U.S. military in Iraq for what he called suicides, drug-taking and mutinies, and he warned that "worse" attacks were to come.


The video, released just days after Iraq named a new prime minister and a high-profile audiotape from bin Laden appeared on Arab TV, seemed a deliberate attempt by al-Zarqawi to claim the spotlight again following months of taking a lower profile.

It also came just one day after a triple bombing at a resort in Egypt that killed at least 24 people, including 21 Egyptians and three foreigners.

The video was believed the first to show al-Zarqawi's face.

The bearded, black-clothed terrorist leader, thought to be about 40, was in a flat desert landscape, dotted with scrub brush as if after a spring rain, that looked startlingly like Iraq's western Anbar province.

The footage showed him and about two dozen insurgents, masked and dressed in black uniforms, undergoing combat training.

In another scene, al-Zarqawi was filmed inside, sitting with his lieutenants and Anbar's insurgent commander, according to a caption in the video.

The men, sitting on traditional Arab cushions and mats, could be seen discussing strategy over a large map spread on the ground.

"Any government which is formed in Iraq now - whether by Shiites or Zionist Kurds, or those who are dubbed Sunnis - would only be a stooge," al-Zarqawi said in the video.

"They are a poisoned dagger in the heart of the Muslim nation."

It has been just days since Iraq named a new prime minister and made progress toward forming a new government.

In that sense, the video could be an attempt by the terrorist leader to raise his visibility at a time when U.S. officials are hailing the Iraqi political process as a setback to the insurgents.

Al-Zarqawi also claimed the U.S. military was overwhelmed in Iraq.

"Why don't you tell people that your soldiers are committing suicide, taking drugs and hallucination pills to make them sleep?" he asked, directing his words to President Bush.


"By God, your dreams will be defeated by our blood and by our bodies."

"What is coming is even worse," he said.

The U.S. military in Iraq said it would have no immediate comment.

A U.S. counterterrorism official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in compliance with office policy, said intelligence officials are conducting a technical analysis to determine the tape's authenticity.

The official said it appears to be al-Zarqawi.

Al-Zarqawi has done numerous audio tapes, including one in January, but this is his first video in some time, perhaps several years, the official said, adding that he appears to be healthy.

Producing a video, rather than a voice recording, is thought to increase the risk to the speaker.

His message indicates the video was made in part to display unity among the foreign fighters in Iraq, and bring more members into the organization, the official said.

The video was posted on a Web site that al-Zarqawi's group and others have used to post Internet messages.

Al-Zarqawi previously has made statements only through audiotapes posted on the Web, although photos of him obtained by the U.S. government have been widely circulated.

In one part of the video, al-Zarqawi sat dressed in black and with a black skullcap on his head, with an ammunition vest hung from his neck and an automatic rifle propped against the wall to his right.

The black flag of his group, al-Qaida in Iraq, was superimposed on the screen.

In the video, al-Zarqawi also accused the West and the United States of waging a "crusader" war against Islam but said Muslim holy warriors were standing firm.

"When the enemy entered into Iraq, their aim was to control the area and support the Zionist state," al-Zarqawi said.

"But here we have been fighting them for the last three years."


He also mentioned Jerusalem, saying that while fighters are in Iraq, "our eyes are on Jerusalem, which cannot be regained without a guiding Quran and a triumphant sword."

And he repeated his allegiance to bin Laden, calling him his emir or prince.

"Our emir, sheik Osama bin Laden, has offered you a truce, which was good for you if you had accepted."

"But you turned it down, because of your arrogance," al-Zarqawi said, referring to an offer al-Qaida's chief made two years ago to cease attacks on Europe if the U.S. would withdraw from Iraq and Afghanistan.

The bin Laden tape that was played on Arab television Sunday encouraged Muslims to support his group in its war with the West.

Al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian, has claimed responsibility for some of the most high-profile suicide bombings in Iraq, and also for a score of other attacks including hotel bombings in November in Jordan.

But in recent months, al-Zarqawi had sharply lowered his profile, halting his group's Internet claims and joining a clearinghouse group of other radical groups.

Some other radical leaders had said he had been shunted aside and told to lower his profile.

In January, al-Zarqawi's group said in a Web statement that it had joined five other Iraqi insurgent groups to form the Mujahedeen Shura Council, or Consultative Council of Holy Warriors.

Since then, al-Zarqawi's group had stopped issuing its own statements, a sharp contrast to its previous frequent postings, and al-Zarqawi had not issued a Web audiotape since January.

In the video posted Tuesday, the logo of the Shura Council appeared on the screen as al-Zarqawi spoke, even as the black flag of his specific group, al-Qaida in Iraq, appeared in the corner.

Among other attacks he has been blamed for, U.S. officials believe al-Zarqawi personally beheaded American businessman Nicholas Berg, whose savage killing was shown on a videotape distributed by al-Qaida in Iraq in May 2004.

It was the first of a series of videotaped decapitations of Westerners in Iraq, which ended after widespread complaints from Muslims who were sympathetic to the insurgency but objected to the video beheadings.

Some experts have long cautioned, however, that al-Zarqawi's role may have been exaggerated and that some of the attacks claimed by his group — or that U.S. and Iraqi officials blamed on him — may have been carried out by others.

Iraq's insurgency has always been made up of several disparate groups, and some of them, including Ansar al-Sunnah Army and the Islamic Army of Iraq, have been nearly as violent as al-Zarqawi's al-Qaida in Iraq.

Al-Zarqawi has seized most of the attention because of his relentless Internet propaganda efforts, the brutality of his attacks — including the hostage beheading videos — and a series of suicide car bombings that targeted mostly Shiites.
____

Associated Press reporter Katherine Shrader contributed to this report from Washington.
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 23 2006, 05:07 PM)
"Stanford Provost Calls It Quits - Rice to seek job in international affairs, business"

Bill Workman, Chronicle Staff Writer

Wednesday, December 9, 1998

STANFORD -- Stanford University Provost Condoleezza Rice, a national security adviser in the Bush administration, will leave the university's No. 2 academic post in June.

Rice, 44, said in an interview yesterday that she will pursue a career in the corporate world that will enable her to return to a prominent role in international affairs.

One possibility being whispered in political circles is that Rice will advise Texas Governor George W. Bush in his expected run for the Republican presidential nomination in 2000.


A political source said Rice's pending departure is rumored to be a prelude to her joining the campaign staff of Bush as his foreign affairs adviser.

Rice last worked in the White House for Bush's father.


Rice described herself as a moderate Republican like the governor, "one of those all-over-the-map Republicans that drive people crazy.''

An avid sports fan, Rice has frequently told acquaintances one job she would not mind having would be National Football League commissioner.

"I've had season tickets to Stanford Cardinal football since I came here in 1981,'' she boasted.

*

QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 25 2006, 05:40 PM)
And speaking of translations ....

Here's one of some comments by the "other side" on OUR American military that BUSHCO Donald Rumsfeld has converted ....

Into something that the "other side" is simply mocking ...

Now that the alleged BUSHCO "SHOCK AND AWE"
....

Has turned out to be ...

More "pop-sputter-and-fizzle" ...

In reality ...

Than anything else ....

Which is always one of the dangers ...

Of having a weak Commander-in-Chief ....

Who believes that he is a military mastermind ...

And has a coterie of sycophants surrounding him ...

Who will tell him that it is so ...

As they lick his boots ....

And so ...


"Al-Qaida Leader Mocks U.S. Forces in Video"

By SALAH NASRAWI, Associated Press Writer

CAIRO, Egypt - In a rare video posted Tuesday on the Internet, al-Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi swore allegiance to Osama bin Laden and said any government formed in Iraq would be merely a "stooge."

He also mocked the U.S. military in Iraq for what he called suicides, drug-taking and mutinies, and he warned that "worse" attacks were to come.


Al-Zarqawi also claimed the U.S. military was overwhelmed in Iraq.

"Why don't you tell people that your soldiers are committing suicide, taking drugs and hallucination pills to make them sleep?" he asked, directing his words to President Bush.

Well ...

That, of course ....

Was yesterday .....

Where this Abu Rabu Zimbuku .....

Or whatever .....

Was openly mocking the alleged "military prowess" .....

Of George W. Bush .....

Which is also openly mocked up here where I am ...

By good and loyal Americans ...

Who are veterans of actual combat themselves .....

And so ...

Wonder aloud just how such a pack of incompetents as are these BUSHCOS ....

Came to be in POSSESSION of OUR American military today .....

Where the BUSHCO MINISTER OF WAR AND TERROR AND DESTRUCTION .....

That being the perhaps-senile Donald Rumsfeld .....

Has turned OUR American military ...

Or "TRANSFORMED" ...

As the BUSHCOS like to have it .....

INTO A WORLD-CLASS JOKE .....

Which is a part of the reason that I disagreed with Senator John Kerry's call for pressuring George W. Bush to pull OUR troops from IRAQINAM this year .....

One, because all that would have done was to put a "ball" back in George W. Bush's hands .....

Where there is now only shifting sand .....

That would have then allowed George W. Bush ...

AND THE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE .....

TO GO BACK ON THE ATTACK ....

Casting even more aspersions back on to those who did sign on to John Kerry's plans ...

Thereby allowing the REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE to take the attention away from REPUBLICAN CORRUPTION AND INCOMPETENCE ...

When it comes to real national security matters ....

By labeling and calling those people COWARDS ...

And TRAITERS .....

And all that crapola that the REPUBLICANS like to smear people with ...

Who do not toe the REPUBLICAN IDEOLOGICAL LINE .....

Which I simply see as walking yourself right into an AMBUSH that you already know the REPUBLICANS will spring ......

Just as they sprung the SWOOFTBOAT AMBUSH on John Kerry ...

During the 2004 presidential campaign season ....

And so .....

From the standpoint of this infantryman ....

Walking into the kill zone of an ambush that you already know is waiting for you ...

Is a sign of rank stupidity ...

And so .....

What we really are confronted with today ....

In this IRAQINAM DEBACLE that George W. Bush and Condoleeza "THE WITLESS" Rice have walked ...

Or blundered America into .....

Is a HIERARCHY of questions .....

That are not resolved by putting pressure on George W. Bush to pull our troops out of IRAQINAM .....

Especially now ....

Because that would make America into the LAUGHING STOCK of the world ...

And so ....

BUT ...

Of course .....

We are turning into the LAUGHING STOCK of the WORLD ...

And so ...

A CONUNDRUM .....

And the answer of the witless WHITE HOUSE ....

Is to put another yet CONSERVATIVE FACE onto all of this ...

In what is likely to be another VAIN EFFORT to convince us the the NEW CONS ....

Really do know what they are doing ....

And so .....

The game most certainly will go on ...

And more is yet to come ...

And so ...

"Heeeere's TONY" ......

To tell us all what is right in the world ...

Which is George W. Bush, of course ...

And the NEW CONS .....

And what is wrong with the world ...

Which is the DEMOCRATS .....

And every TRAITOROUS AND COWARDLY AMERICAN ....

Who will not crawl a mile on their bellies for a chance to lick the boots of George W. Bush ....

And so ...

WATCH ....

LISTEN ....

LEARN ....

"Fox host to be named White House spokesman"

By TERENCE HUNT, Associated Press
Last updated: 4:41 a.m., Wednesday, April 26, 2006

WASHINGTON -- Conservative pundit Tony Snow will be named White House press secretary, Republican officials said Tuesday night, in the latest move in President Bush's effort to remake his troubled White House.

Snow is expected to be named on Wednesday.

He will replace Scott McClellan, who is stepping down in a White House personnel shuffle intended to re-energize Bush's presidency, bring in new faces and lift the president's record-low approval ratings.

McClellan had served as Bush's chief spokesman -- the most prominent public figure in the White House after Bush -- for nearly three years.

Snow, a Fox News commentator and speech-writer in the White House under Bush's father, has written and spoken frequently about the current president -- not always in a complimentary way.

While Snow is an experienced Washington hand, he is an outsider when it comes to Bush's tight core of advisers.

The Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank, circulated unflattering observations by Snow about Bush.

"His (Bush's) wavering conservatism has become an active concern among Republicans, who wish he would stop cowering under the bed and start fighting back against the likes of Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and Joe Wilson," Snow wrote last November after Republicans failed to win the governor's race in Virginia.

"The newly passive George Bush has become something of an embarrassment."


Last month, Snow wrote that Bush and the Republican Congress had "lost control of the federal budget and cannot resist the temptation to stop raiding the public fisc. (treasury)"

Snow, in an Associated Press interview on Tuesday, said:

"It's public record."

"I've written some critical stuff."

"When you're a columnist, you're going to criticize and you're going to praise."

Unofficially, the White House tried to put the best face on Snow's criticism, suggesting it showed that the administration listens to different voices and noting that Snow's job called for him to be opinionated.

Snow declined to say whether he had been offered the White House job.

Republicans close to the White House said the press secretary's job had been offered to Snow and that he had accepted.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because of Bush's dislike of news leaks.

One factor in Snow's decision was that he had his colon removed last year and underwent six months of chemotherapy after being diagnosed with cancer.

He had a CAT scan last week and delayed a decision while he consulted with his doctors.

Snow is the host of the "Tony Snow Show" on Fox News Radio and "Weekend Live with Tony Snow" on the Fox News Channel.

He served in the administration of President George H.W. Bush as White House speechwriting director and later as a deputy assistant to the president for media affairs.


end quotes

A whole lot of "re-treads" or "re-runs" or "has-beens" or "political hacks" from the single-term adminstration of BIG BUSH THE ELDER are showing up back again ....

Here in the administration of he who is known as "BIG GEORGE'S BOY" .....

And so ...

Stay tuned ...

I guess ...

Since we are along for the ride, anyway ...

And so ...
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 26 2006, 07:38 AM)
And so .....

What we really are confronted with today ....

In this IRAQINAM DEBACLE that George W. Bush and Condoleeza "THE WITLESS" Rice have walked ...

Or blundered America into .....

Is a HIERARCHY of questions .....

That are not resolved by putting pressure on George W. Bush to pull our troops out of IRAQINAM .....

Especially now ....

Because that would make America into the LAUGHING STOCK of the world ...

And so ....

BUT ...

Of course .....

We are turning into the LAUGHING STOCK of the WORLD ...

And so ...

A CONUNDRUM .....

And the answer of the witless WHITE HOUSE ....

Is to put another yet CONSERVATIVE FACE onto all of this ...

In what is likely to be another VAIN EFFORT to convince us the the NEW CONS ....

Really do know what they are doing ....

And so .....

The game most certainly will go on ...

And more is yet to come ...

And so ...

"Heeeere's TONY" ......

To tell us all what is right in the world ...

Which is George W. Bush, of course ...

And the NEW CONS .....

And what is wrong with the world ...

Which is the DEMOCRATS .....

And every TRAITOROUS AND COWARDLY AMERICAN ....

Who will not crawl a mile on their bellies for a chance to lick the boots of George W. Bush ....

And so ...

WATCH ....

LISTEN ....

LEARN ....

"Fox host to be named White House spokesman" 
 
By TERENCE HUNT, Associated Press
Last updated: 4:41 a.m., Wednesday, April 26, 2006

WASHINGTON -- Conservative pundit Tony Snow will be named White House press secretary, Republican officials said Tuesday night, in the latest move in President Bush's effort to remake his troubled White House.

"New Bush Spokesman Not Blind to Boss' Flaws"

By NANCY BENAC, Associated Press Writer

2 hours, 7 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - Tony Snow hasn't even started his new job as White House press secretary and already he is learning a lot — about himself.

He says he's been called "a BushBot, a puppet, a force of evil in the modern world, a White House mouthpiece-toady-stenographer."

And more.


But the good-natured columnist and Fox News commentator — named Wednesday as Bush's new spokesman — can give as good as he gets.

Although a strong supporter of President Bush, Snow has used his column to label the president "something of an embarrassment," cast his domestic policy as "listless" and compare him to "the boy who can't say no" when it comes to federal spending.

The 50-year-old conservative commentator has done an even tougher Snow job on Democrats.

He's dismissed them as "reduced to a state of unshakable hysteria" and faulted their "righteous ignorance."

He's labeled Democratic leaders like Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid "wheezy prophets of the Defeatocrat Party."

He also has been a strong defender of Bush on many an occasion, applauding his "brilliant" foreign policy, his stick-to-his-guns persistence in Iraq, his "delicious disdain for the Beltway culture," his "visionary" Social Security plan.

"On the seminal issues of national security and global destiny, he positively dwarfs the political opposition," he has written of Bush.


To put it mildly, Snow does not come from the cautious culture of some press secretaries of the past — the ones who make an art form of saying as little as possible.

All of that gives Republicans hope that Snow's fresh voice — and star quality as a polished media figure — will help reinvigorate the beleaguered White House and jolt it out of a defensive crouch.

"Tony's sympathetic to the president, obviously, in terms of policy and philosophy, but he's not a Bush insider and I think that could be healthy," said William Kristol, who worked with Snow in the first Bush administration and was a regular panelist on Snow's TV show on Fox News.

He describes Snow as "a happy-go-lucky guy" with a relaxed attitude that could do the tightly wound Bush team good.

Snow wrote in a February column that over time, even the best presidential aides burn out "or worse, lose their capacity to tell the boss, 'Sir, that idea stinks.'"

In an Associated Press interview Wednesday, he rejected the notion that his past criticism of the president could be an impediment as he becomes the public face of the Bush administration.

He said it would be a mistake for people to "waste their time on old columns," diverting attention from the real issues.

Former White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater, who worked with Snow in the first Bush administration, said the commentator "has a good personality for bringing together contentious people and contentious issues," and the independent stature to help him prod the White House staff toward better press relations.

Snow, who served the first President Bush as a speechwriting director and in media affairs, also has shown a healthy perspective on White House service.

In a 2001 column, he offered some advice to members of the new administration, including a reminder to keep their humility in check because "you are just a visitor to the history factory" that is the White House.

"People will kiss up to you in ways you cannot imagine," he wrote.

"In 1991, while I was a minor grandee in that same White House, I received more than 400 Christmas and holiday cards at the office."

"The following year, following Mr. Bush's defeat, I received 25."

Snow's biography reflects both his standing as a longtime Washington insider and more eclectic elements of his background.

He hosted "Fox News Sunday" from 1996 to 2003 and held a string of print journalism positions earlier in his career.

He also has served as an advocate for the mentally ill, taught school in Kenya and Cincinnati and is an avid musician, playing guitars, saxophone and flute.

He plays in what he calls "an old-farts rock 'n' roll band" called Beats Workin', attended a rock band "fantasy camp" in New York three years ago, and admits he's a SportsCenter junkie.

Fitzwater said Snow's main concerns about the job focused on health and family,

Snow, who had his colon removed last year after being diagnosed with cancer, delayed a decision on taking the job while he consulted with his doctors and had a CAT scan.

Snow and his wife, Jill have three children, 9, 10 and 13.

He said Wednesday he hopes to operate as efficiently as possible and "get as much time off as I can," working from home on the weekends.

Why give up a comfortable job with a much bigger salary for such a pressure-cooker job?

Said Fitzwater: "I always tell people you may lose your health, your wealth and your family but it'll still be the greatest job you'll ever have in your life."
Livyjr
I wonder if he is blind to Karl Rove's flaws?

"Rove testifies again in CIA leak case"

By PETE YOST, Associated Press
Last updated: 5:57 p.m., Wednesday, April 26, 2006

WASHINGTON -- Top White House aide Karl Rove made his fifth grand jury appearance in the Valerie Plame affair Wednesday, undergoing several hours of questioning about a new issue that has come to light since the last time he testified.

Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald declined to comment at the conclusion of the grand jury session.

Rove appeared at ease as he left the U.S. courthouse, joking to journalists to "move to the back" as the White House aide, his lawyers and several reporters entered an elevator to leave the building.


A week ago, Rove, the architect of Bush's election victories, gave up his policy duties at the White House.

He is returning to a full-time focus on politics with Republicans facing major problems in the upcoming midterm elections.

Wednesday's session is believed to be only the second time Fitzgerald has met with a new grand jury examining questions left unanswered in the leaking of Plame's CIA identity.

The only other time Fitzgerald was seen going before the new panel was Dec. 7.

The previous grand jury looking into the CIA leak expired Oct. 28, the day it indicted Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff on five counts of perjury, obstruction and lying to the FBI.

The only new issue in the CIA leak probe known to involve Rove is a contact his lawyer, Robert Luskin, had with Time magazine reporter Viveca Novak.

The contact is important because during it, the Time reporter told Luskin that Rove might have disclosed Plame's CIA status in 2003 to another Time reporter, Matt Cooper.

The Luskin-Novak conversation occurred many months before Rove belatedly revealed to the prosecutor that he had spoken with Cooper.

Rove says he'd forgotten about his conversation with Cooper.

Rove's legal problems stem from the fact that it was more than a year into the CIA leak investigation before he revealed the Cooper conversation.

Rove "testified voluntarily and unconditionally at the request of Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald to explore a matter raised since Mr. Rove's last appearance," Luskin said in a statement.

"Mr. Fitzgerald has affirmed that he has made no decision concerning charges."

Several days after Rove's conversations with conservative columnist Robert Novak and Cooper in July 2003, both the columnist and Cooper wrote stories identifying Plame as a CIA officer.

The exposure of her CIA employment came little more than a week after her husband, former U.S. Ambassador Joseph Wilson, accused the Bush administration of manipulating prewar intelligence to exaggerate an Iraqi nuclear threat.

Robert Novak is not related to Viveca Novak.

Other unfinished business in the probe focuses on the source who provided Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward information about Plame, whose CIA identity was leaked to Novak in July 2003.

Woodward says his source, who he has not publicly identified, provided the information about Wilson's wife, several weeks before Novak learned of Plame's identity.

The Post reporter, who never wrote a story, was interviewed by Fitzgerald late last year.

------

Associated Press reporter John Solomon contributed to this story.
Livyjr
And here is an American story ....

About OUR times ...

"America's rags-to-riches dream an illusion: study"

By Alister Bull

1 hour, 16 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - America may still think of itself as the land of opportunity, but the chances of living a rags-to-riches life are a lot lower than elsewhere in the world, according to a new study published on Wednesday.

The likelihood that a child born into a poor family will make it into the top five percent is just one percent, according to "Understanding Mobility in America," a study by economist Tom Hertz from American University.

By contrast, a child born rich had a 22 percent chance of being rich as an adult, he said.


"In other words, the chances of getting rich are about 20 times higher if you are born rich than if you are born in a low-income family," he told an audience at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think-tank sponsoring the work.

He also found the United States had one of the lowest levels of inter-generational mobility in the wealthy world, on a par with Britain but way behind most of Europe.

"Consider a rich and poor family in the United States and a similar pair of families in Denmark, and ask how much of the difference in the parents' incomes would be transmitted, on average, to their grandchildren," Hertz said.

"In the United States this would be 22 percent; in Denmark it would be two percent," he said.

The research was based on a panel of over 4,000 children, whose parents' income were observed in 1968, and whose income as adults was reviewed again in 1995, 1996, 1997 and 1999.

The survey did not include immigrants, who were not captured in the original data pool.

Millions of immigrants work in the U.S, many illegally, earnings much higher salaries than they could get back home.

Several other experts invited to review his work endorsed the general findings, although they were reticent about accompanying policy recommendations.

"This debunks the myth of America as the land of opportunity, but it doesn't tell us what to do to fix it," said Bhashkar Mazumder, a senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland who has researched this field.

Recent studies have highlighted growing income inequality in the United States, but Americans remain highly optimistic about the odds for economic improvement in their own lifetime.

A survey for the New York Times last year found that 80 percent of those polled believed that it was possible to start out poor, work hard and become rich, compared with less than 60 percent back in 1983.

This contradiction, implying that while people think they are going to make it, the reality is very different, has been seized by critics of President Bush to pound the White House over tax cuts they say favor the rich.

Hertz examined channels transmitting income across generations and identified education as the single largest factor, explaining 30 percent of the income-correlation, in an argument to boost public access to universities.

Breaking the survey down by race spotlighted this as the next most powerful force to explain why the poor stay poor.

On average, 47 percent of poor families remain poor.

But within this, 32 percent of whites stay poor while the figure for blacks is 63 percent.

It works the other way as well, with only 3 percent of blacks making it from the bottom quarter of the income ladder to the top quarter, versus 14 percent of whites.

"Part of the reason mobility is so low in America is that race still makes a difference in economic life," he said.
Livyjr
Up here ...

Where I am ...

In the corrupt State of New York ....

Where in the last several years ...

Property taxes alone have soared some 40% or so ....

People are moving ....

From riches .....

To rags ....

And so ...

Maybe it really is better ...

To go down to TEXICO ....

And live down there in SUGARLAND ....

And CONVERT over to being a BORN AGIN REPUBLICAN CONSERVATIVE ...

In the OIL BID-NESS, if course ...

And so ....

And if these REPUBLICANS in CONGRESS really want to investigate this GOUGING and PROFITEERING by the OIL BID-NESS .....

What they really need to do ...

IS TO EXPOSE THE DEALS THAT RICHARD BRUCE CHENEY AND THE OIL BOYS COOKED UP ...

BACK WHEN RICHARD BRUCE HAD HIS TOP SECRET ENERGY PANEL COOKING UP STRATEGY TO SCREW AMERICA WITH ....

WITH RICHARD BRUCE AS THEIR CHAMPION ....

And so ....

"Key lawmakers demand oil co. tax records"

By H. JOSEF HEBERT, Associated Press
Last updated: 6:35 a.m., Thursday, April 27, 2006

WASHINGTON -- Senate Republicans advocate sending $100 rebate checks to millions of taxpayers, and a Democrat is leading the campaign for a 60-day gasoline tax holiday.

Either way, it seems no one in Congress wants to be without a plan, however symbolic, to attack the election-year spike in gasoline prices.


A vote is possible as early as this week on the Senate GOP approach, which calls for $100 rebate checks for taxpayers to cushion the impact of higher gasoline prices.

The measure seems unlikely to prevail, at least initially, since it includes a highly controversial proposal to open a portion of Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling.

Senate Republicans also favor extending a tax break that manufacturers receive for each hybrid vehicle they make, and want President Bush to suspend deliveries to the nation's strategic petroleum reserve for six months.

Democrats seemed caught off guard by the GOP maneuvering, but a spokesman said they would have a plan of their own.

Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., has proposed a 60-day suspension in the federal tax on gasoline and diesel, a holiday that he says would cut the cost of gasoline by more than 18 cents a gallon and reduce the price of diesel fuel by more than 24 cents a gallon.

The Senate Finance Committee provided additional evidence of the lawmakers' scramble to respond.

In a rare move, the panel requested tax returns from the country's major oil and gas companies as part of an investigation into industry profits and soaring gasoline costs.

Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, the committee's chairman, said senators were concerned about the "record profits and significant executive compensation in the oil and gas industry."


"I want to make sure the oil companies aren't taking a speed pass by the tax man," Grassley said in a statement.

With gasoline prices soaring and oil companies announcing record profits, "it's relevant to know what the real financial picture is for this industry," added Montana Sen. Max Baucus, the panel's ranking Democrat.

It's highly unusual for the Senate committee to seek corporate tax records.


The last time it made such a request to the IRS it involved the tax records of the bankrupt Enron Corp.

The committee announcement came as Washington scrambled to respond to public anger over soaring gasoline prices -- $3 a gallon or more in many parts of the country -- and try to contain the political fallout.

On Tuesday, Bush suspended filling of the nation's emergency oil reserve, urged the waiver of clean air rules to ease local gas shortages and called for the repeal of $2 billion in tax breaks for profit-heavy oil companies.

He also urged lawmakers to expand tax breaks for the purchase of fuel-efficient hybrid automobiles.

Both Republicans and Democrats said they planned to support rescinding the $2 billion in tax breaks, which included subsidies for exploration in deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico and in geologically or politically difficult regions of the world, as well as royalty relief for certain oil and gas exploration.

Executives of the major oil companies said at a recent hearing they do not need those tax breaks.

House and Senate conferees -- as part of a broader tax package -- were also considering a measure that would change accounting rules involving oil held in inventory, which would force the five biggest oil companies to pay an additional $4.3 million in taxes.

The industry and the White House oppose that measure, viewing it as a form of windfall profit tax that singles out five companies for accounting practices widely used in and out of the oil industry.


Republican leaders and tax writers said they hope to finish work on the broader tax bill this week, but it's not certain the oil inventory tax measure will survive.

Several major oil companies were expected to report sharp increases in their first quarter profits this week.

On Wednesday, ConocoPhillips said its earnings rose 13 percent to $3.29 billion in the first quarter.


In a letter to the IRS, Grassley and Baucus said the tax records of the major oil companies are needed to conduct "a comprehensive review" of the companies' compliance with tax laws.

"As pressure mounts to address extraordinarily high gas prices that consumers are facing at the pump, we feel we should better understand the federal tax posture of the industry," the two senators wrote IRS Commissioner Mark Everson.

In their request, the senators noted not only the industry profits, but "an extremely lucrative retirement plan by one oil and gas industry executive, benefits which may have been subsidized in part by the taxpayers."

The retirement compensation package given by Exxon Mobil Corp. to outgoing Chairman Lee Raymond is said to total $400 million when all pension payoffs and stock options are included.


Red Cavaney, president of the American Petroleum Institute, the major oil companies Washington-based lobbying group, said Wednesday oil company profits are huge because the industry is huge.

"In the oil and natural gas business size is everything," Cavaney said at a news conference.

"It is critical to understand that fact when looking at the operational financial performance of our industry."

------

AP Special Correspondent David Espo contributed to this report.

I look at photos of that Exxon Mobil fat-cat .....

The one who is getting all that money to retire on ...

And the thought that comes to my mind ...

Is that guy has got more "meat" in his jowls alone .....

Than most people up here .....

Have got in their whole *** ....

And so ...

Just an observation ...

Of course ...

Because with all that money ...

You would expect that this man would be eating well ...

And so .....
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 27 2006, 07:14 AM)
"Key lawmakers demand oil co. tax records" 
 
By H. JOSEF HEBERT, Associated Press
Last updated: 6:35 a.m., Thursday, April 27, 2006

Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, the committee's chairman, said senators were concerned about the "record profits and significant executive compensation in the oil and gas industry."

With gasoline prices soaring and oil companies announcing record profits, "it's relevant to know what the real financial picture is for this industry," added Montana Sen. Max Baucus, the panel's ranking Democrat.

The committee announcement came as Washington scrambled to respond to public anger over soaring gasoline prices -- $3 a gallon or more in many parts of the country -- and try to contain the political fallout.


Several major oil companies were expected to report sharp increases in their first quarter profits this week.

On Wednesday, ConocoPhillips said its earnings rose 13 percent to $3.29 billion in the first quarter.


"As pressure mounts to address extraordinarily high gas prices that consumers are facing at the pump, we feel we should better understand the federal tax posture of the industry," the two senators wrote IRS Commissioner Mark Everson.

In their request, the senators noted not only the industry profits, but "an extremely lucrative retirement plan by one oil and gas industry executive, benefits which may have been subsidized in part by the taxpayers."

The retirement compensation package given by Exxon Mobil Corp. to outgoing Chairman Lee Raymond is said to total $400 million when all pension payoffs and stock options are included.

Red Cavaney, president of the American Petroleum Institute, the major oil companies Washington-based lobbying group, said Wednesday oil company profits are huge because the industry is huge.

"In the oil and natural gas business size is everything," Cavaney said at a news conference.

"It is critical to understand that fact when looking at the operational financial performance of our industry."

But they are not GOUGING ...

Or PROFITEERING .....

It was ...

Well ...

You know how it is ....

They simply got lucky .....

No, wait ...

That was not it ...

They just had real good management ...

And so ....

"Exxon's $8B 1Q profit is 5th highest ever"

By STEVE QUINN, Associated Press

Last updated: 2:35 p.m., Thursday, April 27, 2006

DALLAS -- Exxon Mobil Corp., the world's largest oil company, reported Thursday the fifth highest quarterly profit for any public company in history, posting gains from higher oil prices that were likely to stoke the furor over outsized oil company earnings.

Despite the 7 percent gain in earnings to more than $8 billion in the first quarter, Exxon Mobil said its earnings came in below its record fourth-quarter because all three of its business -- exploration and production; refining; chemicals -- didn't perform as well.

The earnings report comes amid consumer outcry in the U.S. about soaring gasoline prices.

The average retail price of gasoline in the U.S. is now $2.91 a gallon, or 68 cents higher than a year ago.


It also comes as Washington lawmakers are looking to appease consumers with various proposals to make big oil companies pay more taxes or provide consumers with some other relief.

In January, Exxon posted the highest quarterly profits of any public company in history: $10.71 billion for the fourth quarter of 2005 and $36.13 billion for the full year.

In the first quarter, net income rose to $8.4 billion, or $1.37 per share, from $7.86 billion, or $1.22 per share, a year ago.

Excluding a gain on the sale of an interest in China's Sinopec, the company's year-ago profit was $7.4 billion, or $1.15 per share.

But analysts polled by Thomson Financial were looking for a higher profit of $1.47 per share for the latest quarter, and shares fell $1.02, or 1.6 percent, to $62.08 in morning trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

Howard Silverblatt, a senior index analyst for Standard & Poor's, said the latest profit figure still places Exxon fifth historically among quarterly earnings.

Exxon also holds the first, second and fourth spots; Royal Dutch Shell PLC has the third spot.

The company said its average sale price for crude oil in the U.S. during the quarter was $55.99 per barrel compared to $42.70 a year ago.

It sold natural gas in the U.S., on average, for $8.31 compared to $6.18 during the same period one year ago.

Earnings from exploration and production of oil and gas rose to $6.4 billion from $5 billion a year ago.

Refining profits fell from $1.4 billion to $1.2 billion and profits from its chemical business fell to 949 million from $1.4 billion

Revenue grew to $88.98 billion from $82.05 billion a year earlier.

Higher crude oil and natural gas prices and improved marketing margins were partly offset by lower chemical margins.

Placed in perspective, Exxon's revenue for the three-month period was still greater than the annual gross domestic product of some major oil producing nations, including the United Arab Emirates ($74.67 billion) and Kuwait ($55.31 billion), according to statistics maintained by the Central Intelligence Agency.

Exxon said it invested $4.8 billion in capital and exploration projects, a 41 percent increase from 2005.

"In the first quarter of 2006, the results of our continuing long-term investment program contributed to a 5 percent increase in production," Exxon chief executive said in a prepared statement.

Exxon also said it returned $7 billion to shareholders through dividends of $2 billion and buying back $5 billion worth of shares.
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 26 2006, 06:04 PM)
"New Bush Spokesman Not Blind to Boss' Flaws"

By NANCY BENAC, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Tony Snow hasn't even started his new job as White House press secretary and already he is learning a lot — about himself.

Although a strong supporter of President Bush, Snow has used his column to label the president "something of an embarrassment," cast his domestic policy as "listless" and compare him to "the boy who can't say no" when it comes to federal spending.

The 50-year-old conservative commentator has done an even tougher Snow job on Democrats.

He's dismissed them as "reduced to a state of unshakable hysteria" and faulted their "righteous ignorance."

He's labeled Democratic leaders like Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid "wheezy prophets of the Defeatocrat Party."

He also has been a strong defender of Bush on many an occasion, applauding his "brilliant" foreign policy, his stick-to-his-guns persistence in Iraq, his "delicious disdain for the Beltway culture," his "visionary" Social Security plan.

"On the seminal issues of national security and global destiny, he positively dwarfs the political opposition," he has written of Bush.


All of that gives Republicans hope that Snow's fresh voice — and star quality as a polished media figure — will help reinvigorate the beleaguered White House and jolt it out of a defensive crouch.

And speaking of a DEFENSIVE CROUCH .....

As well as a man ...

Who in the words of ....

HIS OWN PRESS SECRETARY .....

Is "SOMETHING OF AN EMBARASSMENT" .....

Which sounds like understatement to me ....

We have .....

"Katrina report lambastes White House"

By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press
Last updated: 6:27 p.m., Thursday, April 27, 2006

WASHINGTON -- A Senate inquiry into the government's Hurricane Katrina failures ripped the Bush administration anew Thursday and urged the scrapping of the nation's disaster response agency.

But with a new hurricane season just weeks away, senators conceded that few if any of their proposals could become reality in time.

The bipartisan investigation into one of the worst natural disasters in the nation's history singled out President Bush and the White House as appearing indifferent to the devastation until two days after the storm hit.


It said the Homeland Security Department either misunderstood federal disaster plans or refused to follow them.

And it said New Orleans for years had neglected to prepare for large-scale emergencies.

"The suffering that continued in the days and weeks after the storm passed did not happen in a vacuum; instead, it continued longer that it should have because of -- and was in some cases exacerbated by -- the failure of government at all levels to plan, prepare for and respond aggressively to the storm," concluded the report.

It was titled "Hurricane Katrina: A Nation Still Unprepared," sober words for the future.

The Senate inquiry is the third major federal report on the government failures exposed by the Aug. 29 storm, which killed more than 1,300 people and which the Senate Budget Committee says has so far cost the federal government $103 billion.

The report follows similar inquiries by the House and White House and comes in an election year in which Democrats have pointed critically to the administration's Katrina response.

The senators concluded that only by abolishing the Federal Emergency Management Agency -- which Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, called a "bumbling bureaucracy" -- and replacing it with a stronger authority could the government best respond to future catastrophes.

But the two lawmakers who led the inquiry, Collins and Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., said such an overhaul could not be completed by the June 1 start of the hurricane season.

"As a practical matter, that's just five weeks away, and it's not going to happen," Collins told reporters.

"But that doesn't mean that we should continue in the long term to operate with a system that's failed, that is so clearly flawed."

Looking ahead to approaching hurricane season, Collins added: "We're clearly better prepared than last year, but are we prepared enough?"

"No, we're not."

Underscoring the hurdles the proposals face, eliminating FEMA got a cool reception from the White House as Bush headed to the still-ravaged Gulf Coast to view rebuilding efforts in New Orleans and Mississippi.

"As we're headed into the hurricane season, now is not the time to look at moving organizational boxes around," said White House homeland security adviser Frances Fragos Townsend.

Besides dumping FEMA, the report makes 85 other recommendations, from clarifying who's responsible for maintaining New Orleans levees to demanding better plans for protecting or evacuating elderly and poor victims.

The report calls for more funding for disaster planning and response, but does not specify how much or where the money would come from.

The Bush administration says it has been working to prepare for what the National Hurricane Center has predicted will be an active decade for hurricanes.

It is rebuilding New Orleans levees, prodding local governments to update evacuation plans and hire emergency workers, and creating databases to order and track food and other supplies needed during disasters.

Though the new report singles out officials from New Orleans to Washington for blame -- and lambastes Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff in particular -- it gives Bush a mixed review for his performance.

It credits the president for declaring an emergency before the hurricane's landfall, but faults him for waiting until two days after it hit to return to Washington and convene top officials to coordinate the federal response.

Lieberman, in an addendum, took sharper aim at Bush, who he said appeared distracted from the disaster as it unfolded.

"The president is, after all, the commander in chief -- not only in terms of international crises, but in terms of catastrophes here at home," he said.

Not all the senators who participated in the seven-month inquiry agreed with its central recommendation -- to create a National Preparedness and Response Authority but keep it within the oversight of Homeland Security Department to draw on the larger department's resources.

Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., said FEMA needs to be stripped out of the larger department and restored as an independent Cabinet-level agency.

"That's how it was done in the past and it worked as we hoped," said Lautenberg, a member of the Senate panel.

But Robert Latham, director of Mississippi's emergency response efforts, said lingering funding and manpower problems should be addressed before such a drastic step is taken.

"Changing the name of something doesn't fix a problem, other than maybe fixes a perception," Latham said.

"Maybe FEMA has taken such a bashing that the name recognition itself will be hard to overcome."

------

On the Net:

Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee: http://hsgac.senate.gov/
Livyjr
And THIRTY-SIX YEARS AFTER we amended the New York State Constitution so as to make it the POLICY of the State of New York to conserve and PROTECT its natural resources, therein directing that the New York State Legislature, in implementing this POLICY, SHALL INCLUDE ADEQUATE PROVISION FOR THE ABATEMENT OF AIR AND WATER POLLUTION .....

OUR Air and water in New York State where I live ...

Are worse than before ....

Because of misfesance, malfeasance and nonfeasance on the part of those who had a duty to protect and safeguard OUR lives, health and property as citizens of the State of New York ....

Pursuant to OUR Constitution ....

And so ....

"Hills are shrouded in the fog of ozone - Rensselaer joins Albany, Saratoga counties with flunking air quality"

By COLIN McDONALD, Staff writer, Albany, New York Times Union

First published: Thursday, April 27, 2006

GRAFTON -- The summer mist over the hills of Rensselaer County is a sign of ozone and some of the worst air pollution in the state.

Rensselaer has received an a F from the American Lung Association in its annual national report on air quality.

It is the first time Rensselaer has been mentioned in the report, which used data from a Department of Environmental Conservation monitoring station in Grafton Lakes State Park.


Albany and Saratoga counties also received failing grades.

Schenectady County got a C.

No county in the state scored above a C because of air pollution from coal-fired power plants in the Ohio Valley, industry in western New York and the increasing number of automobiles upwind, said Peter Iwanowicz of the American Lung Association in Albany.

"Our failing grades mean that too many people living in our community are exposed to unhealthful air," Iwanowicz said.

Ozone is a lung irritant that causes premature death among the elderly and increased asthma rates among children.


The gas is formed by sunlight interacting with emissions from automobile exhaust and power plants.

After baking in the afternoon sun, the gas looks like a light fog.

The lung association rated counties by the number of days that ozone levels exceeded federal health standards.

Dr. Kenneth Kroopnick, a Delmar pediatrician, said he is seeing a substantial increase in the number of children he treats for asthma and the severity of their attacks, which he attributes to air pollution.

To help curb the problem, the lung association is supporting three bills in the state Assembly.

Peter M. Rivera, D-Bronx, has sponsored a measure to eliminate bus idling at schools.

Donna Lupardo, D-Endwell, and Senate co-sponsor Carl Marcellino, R-Huntington, want to require outdoor wood boilers to meet the same emission standards as indoor wood stoves.

Assemblyman Pete Grannis, D-Manhattan, plans to introduce a bill to mandate the state to use low-sulfur fuel and minimize tailpipe emissions.

Colin McDonald can be reached at 454-5441 or by e-mail at cmcdonald@timesunion.com.
Livyjr
And here is something else that needs to be said ...

As well ....

And so .....

"Parallels of inequity in terror cases"

Fred LeBrun, Albany, New York Times Union

First published: Tuesday, April 25, 2006

For the second time, government prosecutors have had to significantly back down on claims against the accused in local terrorism cases.

First it was the sting involving the still-to-be-tried imam of an Albany mosque.

A critical word in an incriminating document that the federal government took to the grand jury as "commander" turned out to be "brother."

That revelation certainly deflated the U.S. attorney's case against Kurdish refugee Yassin Aref as far as the public was concerned.

Now, what yet another grand jury was told were high crimes by a Chinese immigrant living in Guilderland turn out to be the equivalent of jaywalking thanks to a screw-up by the State Department.


Jun Wang, a microbiologist at Wadsworth Laboratories of the state Health Department, was accused of mailing sensitive guidance systems back to China, ostensibly for the military.

But then we learned the same guidance systems are legally sold in China, as they are all over the world, and Wang's only impropriety was a procedural one of not filling out proper export papers.

Meanwhile, Wang -- who was hired at the Health Department through a contractor -- spent a month in jail.

He was fired from his job because the contractor got skittish from the publicity, according to Wang's attorney, Kevin Luibrand.

And Wang is threatened with deportation.

So sorry we erred and ruined your life, Mr. Wang.

What inevitably happens to cases like these two, which get big media buildups but turn out to be molehills, is that the accused pay a big price whether they are guilty or not.

All to salve the ego and arrogance of our Justice Department, which wouldn't think of walking away in the interests of justice.


It's the "where there's smoke, there's fire" prosecutorial strategy.

OK, so there was no fire, but we think we smell smoke, so let them pay for the fire anyway.

In this instance, Wang is still confined to his home, having posted $250,000 bail, all because the government hasn't been able to track every one of those guidance systems to the university Wang said they were going to.

You know what?

So what.

If these guidance systems are on the open market and anybody can buy them, there's no point to tracking them all down.


It's not as if Wang was trying to hide any of the transactions, which should have been a tip-off to the feds.

The money from China was wired directly to Wang's SEFCU credit union account, and he sent electronics back to his brother by snail mail.

Now the government is combing through Wang's tax returns to see if he declared the transactions.

This is beyond ridiculous.

If there was no crime, then hounding Wang amounts to malicious prosecution, regardless of the 9/11 embargo of our civil rights by the Bush administration.


Granted, in the cases of both Aref and Wang we do not know, and are unlikely to ever know with certitude, what is in their hearts, what their true motivations were.

With Aref, the evidence strongly points to making a buck.

With Wang, we just don't know.

Fair is fair.

The same can be said for not knowing what is in the hearts of the prosecutors.

Sad to say, their motivations are proving to be even murkier than those of the two men they are prosecuting.
Livyjr
And speaking of high property taxes in the corrupt State of New York .......

Which buy us corrupt government up here ...

Which results in high property taxes ...

To pay for the corruption .....

We have .....

"Property tax burden hits New Yorkers hard - Homeowners' bills soared in past 5 years amid local funding cuts, Hevesi finds"

By MARK JOHNSON, Associated Press
First published: Thursday, April 27, 2006

ALBANY -- In 2000, Lee Bordeleau paid $2,600 in property taxes on his $100,000 home in the town of Lockport.

Last year, the 48-year-old investment broker's property tax bill rose to $3,400.

Bordeleau's story is a common one across the state.

Local property taxes in New York rose 42 percent from 2000 to 2005, more than three times the rate of inflation, according to a report released Wednesday by state Comptroller Alan G. Hevesi.


"I've lived here for 19 years, and I've never had the same tax in consecutive years," Bordeleau said.

He noted that his daughter and her husband paid $850 in property taxes on their $200,000 home in Raleigh, N.C.

"Something's got to give."

The recession in the early part of this decade and the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, reduced state aid to local governments at the same time other local tax revenue dropped, in part because some New Yorkers and employers have left the state.

Those factors, combined with growth in local costs for Medicaid and government employee benefits, accelerated property tax growth, the report found.

Over the past five years, property taxes collected in New York rose from $26 billion to $38 billion.

In 2002, the most recent year for which federal data is available, property taxes in the state were $1,406 per person.

That was 49 percent above the national average of $945 and the fourth highest in the country, Hevesi said.


The state's per-capita figure jumps to $1,634 when excluding New York City, which has lower property taxes because it collects revenue from a number of other local taxes.

In one example, a homeowner with a $100,000 house in the village of Newark in Wayne County has seen his property tax burden rise from $419.80 in 2000 to $561.70 in 2005, according to data provided by Arcadia Town Assessor Lawrence Quinn.

In New Windsor, in fast-growing Orange County, property taxes for the average home rose 50 percent, from $4,350 in 2000 to $6,529 last year, excluding exemptions, said Assessor Todd Wiley.

The tax burden rose even without reassessments.

The market value of the average home has more than tripled to $315,000 in the past five years amid a hot housing market, he said.

Some suburban counties near New York City, including Westchester and Nassau, have property tax burdens more than double the statewide average, the report found.

"There is no way you can argue anything New York has done at any level has held property taxes down," said Matthew Maguire, a spokesman for the Business Council of New York State, which has long fought to reduce the state's tax burden.

While lawmakers and the governor in 1997 enacted the School Tax Relief program, which exempted the first $30,000 of property value from taxation for most homeowners, the program has simply shifted costs to the state as a whole and may lead eventually to even higher state taxes, Hevesi said.

"One thing it highlights, again, is the wrongheadedness of the notion that higher state taxes and increased state spending somehow keep property taxes down," Maguire said.

An earlier report from Hevesi's office found property taxes across the state are rising largely because of the state's Medicaid system.

County property taxes increased an average of 3.3 percent this year as a result of a local Medicaid cap enacted last year, Hevesi said in January.

Before the cap, county property taxes had been increasing by 7 percent for the past five years.

Medicaid spending by counties grew by $66 million this year, accounting for roughly half of the $131 million increase in county property taxes statewide.

At $45 billion, New York's Medicaid program is the largest in the nation.

On Wednesday, as the state Senate began overriding some of Pataki's $2.9 billion worth of vetoes to the state budget lawmakers passed last month, Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno made the case for property tax cuts, saying New Yorkers are "overburdened."

He said the $1.6 billion property tax cut included in the Legislature's budget was responsive to taxpayer angst.

"We are going to get relief for the taxpayers of this state, and we are going to get a result in this budget," Bruno said on the Senate floor.

"They deserve it; it's their money and no one else's."
Livyjr
And speaking of Tony Snow ....

It seems to me ....

From his prior statements about George W. Bush being something of an embarassment ....

As well as his comments about the Democrats being DEFEAT-O-CRATS ....

That Tony Snow is going to turn these WHITE HOUSE PRESS BRIEFINGS ....

Into a kind of high farce ...

A la FAWLTY TOWERS .....

With Tony Snow as Basil Fawlty .....

And George W. Bush ...

As Manuel, the Spanish servant .....

Tony Snow even looks like John Cleese ...

And his name sounds British ....

And so ...

It really should be quite entertaining ....

When he gets in there ...

And gets on a roll ....

About George W. Bush being even more of an embarassment than he was last week ...

And so .....

"A new Bush voice to advise on strategy - Selection of Fox's Tony Snow aims to broaden administration's views"

By JIM VANDEHEI and MICHAEL A. FLETCHER, Washington Post
First published: Thursday, April 27, 2006

WASHINGTON -- President Bush's decision to hire conservative commentator Tony Snow as his chief spokesman reflects a consensus within the White House that it has been too insular, according to advisers.

Snow, who in his roles as a pundit on Fox News and elsewhere has criticized Bush on several occasions, joined the White House only after extracting a promise that he would become an adviser to the President on day-to-day strategy.

If Bush and his team follow through on that commitment, the former columnist would become the first outsider to join Bush's revamped inner circle.


"We want fresh thinking, to charge the batteries, and passionate participation," said Dan Bartlett, a top Bush adviser.

"There is a lot of value added in Tony coming on board and helping us internally with his own views and ideas."

"It fits into the mold."

Bush aides said at least one more well-known Republican will join the White House as early as next week as part of a shake-up.

The emerging team -- which includes Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten, budget chief Rob Portman and now Snow -- is tasked with salvaging Bush's second-term agenda and repairing relations with Congress, the media and the public.

Snow, 50, worked most recently as a commentator for Fox News and as host of his own radio talk show.

He was a director of speechwriting for President George H.W. Bush and has worked as a USA Today columnist, editorial page editor of the Washington Times, deputy editorial page editor of the Detroit News and frequent substitute for radio host Rush Limbaugh.

Snow is an outspoken Republican, but he has not hesitated to pound Bush in writing and on air for his handling of the budget, as well as immigration and other domestic policies.

He even poked fun at Bush's speaking style, saying in 2000 that the President sometimes sounds like "a soul tortured with Tourette's."

Bush said Snow's selection is proof he is open to dissenting opinions.

"For those of you who have read his columns and listened to his radio show, he sometimes has disagreed with me," Bush said.

"I asked him about those comments, and he said, 'You should have heard what I said about the other guy.'"

Snow's first assignment will be to improve relations with the media, which have deteriorated over the past five years during disputes over access to Bush and senior officials and the accuracy of information released from the White House.

Many reporters viewed outgoing White House spokesman Scott McClellan as out of the loop on many debates.
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 27 2006, 06:18 PM)
"A new Bush voice to advise on strategy - Selection of Fox's Tony Snow aims to broaden administration's views" 
 
By JIM VANDEHEI and MICHAEL A. FLETCHER, Washington Post
First published: Thursday, April 27, 2006

WASHINGTON -- President Bush's decision to hire conservative commentator Tony Snow as his chief spokesman reflects a consensus within the White House that it has been too insular, according to advisers.

Snow, who in his roles as a pundit on Fox News and elsewhere has criticized Bush on several occasions, joined the White House only after extracting a promise that he would become an adviser to the President on day-to-day strategy.

If Bush and his team follow through on that commitment, the former columnist would become the first outsider to join Bush's revamped inner circle.

"We want fresh thinking ....."

Said Dan Bartlett, a top Bush adviser.

Snow's first assignment will be to improve relations with the media, which have deteriorated over the past five years during disputes over access to Bush and senior officials and the accuracy of information released from the White House.

"We want fresh thinking .....," said Dan Bartlett, a top Bush adviser.

And there, America ....

Is where we are at .....

On this day ...

At this hour in time ...

Here in OUR America .....

SO ...

Without looking to either the left ...

Or the right ...

Which would only serve as DISTRACTIONS .....

Now that Dan Bartlett, a top Bush adviser ....

Has laid out for all of us in America ...

Exactly where we as a nation are ...

Right now today ...

Which is stuck with an adminstration ...

That got us into a mess in the world ...

Not only in IRAQINAM ....

But seemingly everywhere ....

AND NOW ...

HAS NO IDEAS WHATSOEVER ....

As to how to get back out of the QUAGMIRE for OUR America .....

That this inept adminstration has BLUNDERED OUR America into ...

Because of a lack of foresight ....

And a lack of WISDOM ...

And RESTRAINT ...

And ....

Let's face it ...

Just plain, old common sense ...

Which seems to be decidedly lacking in this present "WHITE HOUSE" ....

As is made incandescently clear ....

Right above here ...

By Dan Bartlett, a top Bush adviser .....

Who should know ...

As well as anyone ...

Just exactly how inept this Bush adminstration really is ...

And has been ...

To the point of where it needs a real good "CLEANING OUT" ....

And so ....

Here ...

I am going to pause ...

So that Dan Bartlett's comments can sink in ....

Since he, unlike me, is a top Bush adviser ....

Who does understand exactly how detrimental to OUR America this ineptness and incompetence in the present George W. Bush "WHITE HOUSE" really is ...

And so ...

HE IS AN EXPERT ...

He should be heard ...

And so ....
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 28 2006, 08:05 AM)
"We want fresh thinking .....," said Dan Bartlett, a top Bush adviser.

And there, America ....

Is where we are at .....

On this day ...

At this hour in time ...

Here in OUR America .....

SO ...

See how fine ....

The PALACES .....

And see ....

How poor ....

The farms ....

How bare ....

The peasants' granaries .....

While GENTRY ...

Wear embroideries ....

Hiding sharpened arms ....

And the more they have ...

The more they seize ....

How can there be men such as these?

Who never hunger ....

Never thirst ...

Yet eat and drink ....

Until they ....

BURST!

There are other BRIGANDS .....

But these are the WORST .....

Of all the highway's harms ....

- Lao Tze, Tao Te Ching ....
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 28 2006, 05:46 PM)
There are other BRIGANDS .....

But these are the WORST .....

And another piece of the puzzle clicks into place ....

Right on schedule ....

"Limbaugh Arrested in Fla. on Drug Charges"

37 minutes ago

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - Rush Limbaugh was arrested Friday on prescription drug charges, law enforcement officials said.

Limbaugh turned himself in to authorities on a warrant issued by the state attorney's office, said agency spokeswoman Teri Barbera.

The conservative radio commentator came into the jail at about 4 p.m. with his attorney Roy Black and was released an hour later on $3,000 bail, Barbera said.

The warrant was for fraud to conceal information to obtain prescription, Barbera said.
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 28 2006, 05:46 PM)
See how fine ....

The PALACES .....

QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 28 2006, 05:50 PM)
"Limbaugh Arrested in Fla. on Drug Charges"

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - Rush Limbaugh was arrested Friday on prescription drug charges, law enforcement officials said.
*

"Army Charges Former Abu Ghraib Officer"

By ROBERT BURNS, AP Military Writer

1 hour, 32 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - The Army on Friday charged the former head of the interrogation center at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq with cruelty and maltreatment, dereliction of duty and other criminal offenses for his alleged involvement in the abuse of detainees at the notorious prison in 2003.

Lt. Col. Steven L. Jordan, was charged with 12 counts under the Uniform Code of Military Justice covering seven separate offenses.

He is the highest-ranking officer at Abu Ghraib to face criminal charges.


A preliminary hearing, often referred to as the military equivalent of a grand jury investigation, will be held when Jordan's defense counsel is ready but no date has been set, according to an announcement by the Military District of Washington.

Officers above Jordan's rank have been reprimanded and relieved of command, including Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski, who was in charge of the U.S.-run prison system that included the Abu Ghraib compound.

But none of those faced criminal charges.

The much-investigated abuses at Abu Ghraib included sexual humiliation and physical abuse of Iraqi detainees.

Disclosure two years ago triggered international protests and calls for Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld to resign.

He offered his resignation twice but President Bush refused.
jeffmoskin
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 28 2006, 03:50 PM)
"Limbaugh Arrested in Fla. on Drug Charges"
*

He's been living in the medicine cabinet for years. This is NOT news.
Snuffysmith
Pentagon's Plan For Dirty War

By Chris Floyd

The plan is the culmination and codification of an ad hoc array of progams and powers that Bush has doled out to Rumsfeld over the years, including a series of executive orders signed after the 2004 election that essentially turned the world into a "global free-fire zone" for the Pentagon's secret armies and proxy foreign militias, as a top Pentagon official told The New Yorker. "We're going to be riding with the bad boys.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article12867.htm

===
Blood Payments for Flawed Leadership

By Mike Whitney

Bad news continues to pile up around Don Rumsfeld like garbage at a land fill. The latest blast came from an unlikely source, The Army Times”, which conducted a poll showing that 64% of enlisted men think Rumsfeld should tender his resignation immediately.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article12872.htm
Snuffysmith
Bush Rejects Calls for Tax on Oil Profits :

President Bush said Friday that taxing enormous oil industry profits is not the way to calm Americans' anxieties about pain at the gas pump, and that his "inclination and instincts" are that major oil companies are not intentionally overcharging drivers.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060428/ap_on_go_pr_wh/bush
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 28 2006, 05:50 PM)
And another piece of the puzzle clicks into place ....

Right on schedule ....


"Limbaugh Arrested in Fla. on Drug Charges"

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - Rush Limbaugh was arrested Friday on prescription drug charges, law enforcement officials said.

The conservative radio commentator came into the jail at about 4 p.m. with his attorney Roy Black and was released an hour later on $3,000 bail, Barbera said.
*

QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 27 2006, 06:18 PM)
"A new Bush voice to advise on strategy - Selection of Fox's Tony Snow aims to broaden administration's views" 
 
By JIM VANDEHEI and MICHAEL A. FLETCHER, Washington Post
First published: Thursday, April 27, 2006

WASHINGTON -- President Bush's decision to hire conservative commentator Tony Snow as his chief spokesman reflects a consensus within the White House that it has been too insular, according to advisers.

"We want fresh thinking, to charge the batteries, and passionate participation," said Dan Bartlett, a top Bush adviser.

The emerging team -- which includes Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten, budget chief Rob Portman and now Snow -- is tasked with salvaging Bush's second-term agenda and repairing relations with Congress, the media and the public.

Snow, 50, worked most recently as a commentator for Fox News and as host of his own radio talk show.

He was a director of speechwriting for President George H.W. Bush and has worked as a USA Today columnist, editorial page editor of the Washington Times, deputy editorial page editor of the Detroit News .....

And frequent substitute for radio host Rush Limbaugh
.....

QUOTE(jeffmoskin @ Apr 28 2006, 05:59 PM)
He's been living in the medicine cabinet for years.

This is NOT news.

*

Oh no, jeffmoskin ...

You are absolutely right ...

The RUSHTER has had his scrapes with the law over his pill-taking before ....

And if I recall correctly ....

Among the CONSERVATIVES ...

Here in OUR America ...

THAT MADE HIM ALL THAT MUCH MORE POPULAR ...

Because Rush's CONTEMPT AND DISDAIN for the law here in OUR America ...

Applies to them as well ...

And actually defines them ....

As a "political force" .....

Here in OUR America ....

And so .....

And if it were just a news item about Rush Limbaugh being arrested ...

Well, to be truthful ....

Outside of the CONSERVATIVES ...

Whose CHAMPION he is ....

Who would really give a damn ....

BUT ...

I did not post the story as real news ...

As if nobody knew that Rush was a PILL-HEAD ....

IT WAS THE TIMING OF IT ALL ........

That made it relevant ....

Where this WHITE HOUSE dude, this Dan Bartlett ....

IS CALLING FOR FRESH THINKING IN THE WHITE HOUSE ....

After it has become incandescently clear ...

To just about everyone in OUR America ...

EXCEPT MOST OF THE CONSERVATIVES ...

AND RUSH LIMBAUGH ....

AND TONY SNOW ....

That the one thing above all else that this present INCUMBENT's ADMINISTRATION IS INCAPABLE OF DOING ....

IS THINKING, PERIOD ....

As opposed to simply SHOUTING OUT IDEOLOGICAL SLOGANS ALL THE TIME ...

As if this were Maoist China with the RED GUARDS running rampant through people's lives ...

Shouting out ideological slogans ....

As the BUSHCOS do ....

Or Stalinist Russia ....

Or an Orwellian "landscape" somewhere out there in WEIRDSVILLE ....

At the same time that this Bartlett dude is telling OUR America that they want fresh thinking ...

WHAT DO THEY GO AND DO?

They don't go forward ....

They go back in time ...

To another "political era" here in OUR America ....

One that don't exist anymore ...

That being the unremarkable ONE TERM ADMINISTRATION of George H.W. Bush ....

Affectionately known here in OUR America ....

As BIG BUSH ....

To distinguish him from his boy ...

George ...

The BUSH that is in there now ...

The one whose adminstration .....

According to this Bartlett fellow, anyway ....

NEEDS FRESH THINKING ....

Because it has no ideas about anything of substance, itself ....

AND ....

They simply give us another "BIG BUSH" RE-TREAD .....

Another "same old used-to-be" .....

Like "CON-JOB CONNIE" Rice .....

Who also comes to us from the ONE-TERM presidency of BIG BUSH ....

As does Richard Bruce Cheney .....

Who back in BIG BUSH's day ...

Held the same job that the incompetent Donald Rumsfeld is screwing up so badly in today ......

In this present adminstration of BIG BUSH's boy, George ....

SO ....

As an alleged "FRESH THINKER" ....

What we really are getting dished up instead ....

Is just another BIG BUSH has-been ....

In the form of this Tony Snow character ....

Who is himself closely aligned with AMERICA'S CONSERVATIVE PILLHEAD, the RUSHTER .....

SO?

IF these BUSHCOS really do want FRESH THINKING ....

Then why do they go back in time ....

And down to what is now the WELL-DISCREDITED BOTTOM-OF-THE-BARREL ....

To ronger around ...

Until they snag on to a Tony Snow ....

And dish him up to us ..

As a FRESH THINKER ....

Which, on its face ....

Is simply ludicrous .....

Given Tony Snow's own association with the now-discredited NEW-CON MOVEMENT here in OUR America ....

And his CLOSE ASSOCIATION with the CONSERVATIVE PILL-HEAD, Limbaugh ....

I have said it before in here ...

And since the thought is now back on my mind, I will muse it again ....

DAN BARTLETT .....

JUST HOW STUPID DO YOU REALLY BELIEVE PEOPLE OUTSIDE THE WASHINGTON, D.C. BELTWAY REALLY ARE?

AS STUPID AS THOSE WHO DO "INHABIT" THAT ZONE?

OR MORE STUPID, EVEN, THAN THAT?

Just curious, of course ....
Livyjr
For me ....

An older American ....

Who has lived through what I consider to be a whole lot of weirdness ....

Here in OUR America .....

Especially that COLD WAR BID-NESS between America ....

And the USSR ...

Which doesn't exist anymore ...

Since it was based on a real stupid idea ....

A real stupid idea ....

That "CON-JOB CONNIE" Rice then got a Doctor's degree studying ....

Until she became an expert in that real stupid idea herself ....

And went to work for BIG GEORGE BUSH .....

As his expert on this real stupid idea ...

That formed the basis ...

For the existence ...

Of the USSR ....

Until it fell apart .....

And then .....

Connie Rice went back to Stanford University ....

And became its CHIEF FISCAL OFFICER ....

While she was waiting for YOUNG GEORGE BUSH to become president .....

And when that was going to happen ...

Somehow ...

And God alone knows how that all happened ....

Condoleeza Rice went from being the CHIEF FISCAL OFFICER of Stanford University in California .....

To being the NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISOR .....

To YOUNG GEORGE BUSH .....

Even though whatever "threats" she might have known about ...

No longer existed ...

Because by then ...

The USSR was stone cold dead ....

Based on a real stupid idea, such as it was .....

And what threats did exist ...

"CON-JOB CONNIE" was woefully unprepared to perceive ....

Let alone deal with ....

Because all she really was ....

Was an expert in a stone cold dead stupid idea .....

That no longer existed ....

And outside of knowing the finances of Stanford University ....

And all about that stone cold dead stupid idea that had formed the basis for the USSR ....

Connie Rice didn't know anything else ...

And so ....

That somehow qualified her to be America's National Security Advisor ....

And the rest is now history ...

And so ....

Here we are ....

SIX YEARS LATER ....

And Dan Bartlett ....

Who is a BUSHCO SPOKESPERSON ....

Is telling us ...

That the IDEOLOGY of the NEO-CONSERVATIVES .....

Is finally being exposed for what it is ....

An ideology just as stupid as that on which the Soviet Union was based ....

And so ....

Like COMMUNISM ....

NEO-FASCISM, in the guise of NEO-CONSERVATISM ....

Is dying on the vine as well ...

Here in OUR America ....

And so ....

For me ...

It is like watching another Berlin Wall come down ....

In a sense ....

Where the Berlin Wall was a symbol of dying Communism .....

Which ideology ...

Was based on a real stupid idea ...

Like its twin, NEO-CONSERVATISM ....

Or more properly ....

NEO-FASCISM ....

And so ......
Livyjr
Yes, indeed ...

These are quite the times that we are in ....

America has been in THRALL to an ideology that has as its RASPUTIN .....

A PILL-HEAD named Rush Limbaugh .....

"IF YOU'RE A CONSERVATIVE ...."

"LIKE ME, KIDS ....."

"IT'S NOT REALLY BREAKING THE LAW ...."

"BECAUSE THERE ISN'T ANY ...."

"SO, KIDS, IF YOU WANT TO DO IT ..."

"BECAUSE IT FEELS GOOD ..."

"BECOME A CONSERVATIVE LIKE ME ..."

"AND IT WILL BE ALRIGHT ..."

"BECAUSE WHEN YOU ARE A CONSERVATIVE LIKE ME ..."

"THEN FOR YOU ..."

"THERE WILL BE NO LAWS, TOO..."

And so ....

It has been ....

And of course ....

Now we have a corrupt, inept government ....

And so .....

I am a believer ...

That when things reach their extremes ....

Like CORRUPTION in OUR government ....

That things then begin to move towards the opposite pole ....

And so ....

In the State of New York ...

Running for GOVERNOR ...

We have as the FRONT-RUNNER ....

ELIOT "Big EL" SPITZER .....

Who as far as government corruption in New York State goes ....

IS THE CHAMPION OF THAT WAY OF LIFE ...

The "same old same old" that we are all quite sick of, at least upstate ....

Because Eliot is quite soft on government corruption ...

And so .....

We are interested in his UNDERDOG OPPONENT ....

Tom Suozzi .....

Primarily because Suozzi is an OUTSIDER ....

Unlike Spitzer ....

Who has been the LAWYER for New York State these last so many years....

And so ....

"Suozzi to forgo party meeting - Underdog calls state Democratic convention 'an insider's game'"

By ELIZABETH BENJAMIN, Capitol bureau, Albany, New York Times Union

First published: Saturday, April 29, 2006

ALBANY -- Underdog gubernatorial hopeful Tom Suozzi said Friday he will forgo the state Democratic convention, at which party leaders are expected to endorse front-runner Eliot Spitzer.

The Nassau County executive will try to petition his way onto the ballot instead.


Suozzi had planned to attend the convention May 30-31 in Buffalo despite the fact that he is trailing Spitzer, the state attorney general, in statewide polls, fundraising and endorsements.

But Suozzi said he changed his mind after learning he wouldn't be allowed to address the convention without 25 percent of the weighted state committee vote -- a highly unlikely scenario because the majority of the party's leaders back Spitzer.

"This is all an insider's game," Suozzi said.

"There's a lot of wonderful people in that hall, many of them are unfortunately too heavily influenced by the party bosses."

"But there are 5.5 million Democrats in New York."

"I'm going directly to the people."


The Spitzer campaign had no comment about Suozzi's decision.

Candidates for statewide office need to receive at least 25 percent of the weighted vote at the party conventions.

The weighted vote is based on how many people voted in each county in the last gubernatorial election.

If more than one candidate receives 25 percent, it forces a September primary.

A candidate who receives more than 50 percent is the party's designee.

Gathering petitions is another option, but time-consuming and expensive.

Candidates must collect 15,000 signatures from enrolled party members statewide.

Suozzi revealed his decision at a symposium on legislative redistricting at Baruch College in Manhattan.

During his speech there, Suozzi railed against the Democratic Party.

"The leadership of my own party tried to convince me not to run," Suozzi said.

"When that didn't work, they began plotting to keep me off the ballot."

"They are treating the governor's mansion like a safe seat, and my house has just been drawn out of the district."

Erie County Democratic Chairman Len Lenihan, a Spitzer supporter, said Suozzi can't legitimately say he was locked out of the convention if he's not even bothering to show up.

"This is not a move that makes him look strong, it only happens when you have no chance at the party's endorsement," Lenihan said.

"Suozzi is involved in a grandstand play."

"It's amusing, but it's not serious."

Suozzi's move recalls the 2002 gubernatorial race when former U.S. Housing Secretary Andrew Cuomo, the upstart candidate for governor, decided at the eleventh hour to forgo the Democratic convention rather than face a landslide loss there to the party favorite, former state Comptroller H. Carl McCall.

Cuomo, now the Democratic front-runner for state attorney general, easily collected 100,000 Democratic signatures to petition his way onto the ballot.

But his campaign fizzled, and he dropped out of the race one week before the primary.

Suozzi said he will be in Buffalo during the convention, "talking to the people."

He refused to discuss his plans further.

Benjamin can be reached at 454-5081 or by e-mail at ebenjamin@timesunion.com.
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 29 2006, 05:32 PM)
Yes, indeed ...

These are quite the times that we are in ....

America has been in THRALL to an ideology that has as its RASPUTIN .....

A PILL-HEAD named Rush Limbaugh .....

"IF YOU'RE A CONSERVATIVE ...."

"LIKE ME, KIDS ....."

"IT'S NOT REALLY BREAKING THE LAW ...."

"BECAUSE THERE ISN'T ANY ...."

"SO, KIDS, IF YOU WANT TO DO IT ..."

"BECAUSE IT FEELS GOOD ..."

"BECOME A CONSERVATIVE LIKE ME ..."

"AND IT WILL BE ALRIGHT ..."

"BECAUSE WHEN YOU ARE A CONSERVATIVE LIKE ME ..."

"THEN FOR YOU ..."

"THERE WILL BE NO LAWS, TOO..."

And so ....

It has been ....

And of course ....

Now we have a corrupt, inept government ....

And so .....

I am a believer ...

That when things reach their extremes ....

Like CORRUPTION in OUR government ....

That things then begin to move towards the opposite pole ....

And so ....

And here is another story in that vein ....

"Proposed Gas Boycott Divides Texas County"

By LYNN BREZOSKY, Associated Press Writer

Fri Apr 28, 10:23 PM ET

BEEVILLE, Texas - In many ways, Beeville is a typical slice of rural America, a city of about 33,000 that was built on farming and ranching.

It has all the fast food places and a Wal-Mart, but things like malls and specialized medical care are at least an hour away — more than just an inconvenience with gas prices hovering at about $3 a gallon.

"It's hurting everybody; everything is going up except the pay," said Debbie Ponce, a 35-year-old hairdresser who no longer makes the lengthy trip in her sport utility vehicle.

It was such inconveniences that prompted Bee County commissioners this week to call for a boycott of Exxon Mobil Corp., because, according to County Judge Jimmy Martinez, the world's largest oil company is making record billion-dollar profits while consumers suffer.

"I understand free enterprise."

"I understand we live in America."

"But, by golly, just because they have a license doesn't mean that they can rob," Martinez said.


The boycott starts Monday — the same day immigrants plan to stay home from work and school in protest of proposed immigration law reforms — and will continue until gas is down to $1.30 a gallon, Martinez said.

He added that he hopes counties follow the example set by this oil-rich part of South Texas.

Martinez said Irving-based Exxon was targeted because of its size and the message it sent with its $400 million retirement package for Chief Executive Lee Raymond.

But Exxon said it isn't responsible for the high gas prices and pointed out that only about 13,000 of the 170,000 or so gas stations in the U.S. have the Exxon or Mobil brand.

And all but about 1,000 of those are owned by franchisors.

"Exxon Mobil does not and could not control the market price of gasoline," the company said in a statement.

"As you know, there are many factors that impact gas prices and the biggest influence continues to be demand and supply for crude oil and petroleum products and local supply and demand for gasoline, followed by federal and state taxes."

That doesn't matter much to many people who have blamed big oil companies, including the folks in Beeville.

"They're coming into my office, they're having to make a decision whether to drive for dialysis in Corpus Christi or whether they want to put food on the table," Martinez said.

The Beeville Bee-Picayune Web site ran a poll showing 72 percent of those surveyed planned to boycott Exxon.

Kurt Rossow, a 20-year-old student who was fueling up at an Exxon station in town, said he heard a lot of people were going to do it.

"Gasoline is real expensive, but it's kind of not very smart," he said.

"The commissioners are going to end up targeting the family who owns the station."

County Commissioner Susan Stasny, the only dissenter in Tuesday night's 4-1 vote, noted the irony of the boycott coming from the heart of oil country.

During the past five years, she said, the county received $8 million in oil and gas tax revenues, with the county's four school districts receiving a combined $30 million.

"We're all concerned about the price of gasoline," she said.

"However, the oil and gas industry has been very kind to Bee County."

County Tax Assessor Andrea Gibbud said that in 2005, mineral taxes contributed $1.6 million of the county's $3.9 million in tax revenues for 2005.

She called the resolution "misguided."

The Bee County Chamber of Commerce issued a statement against it.

Mayor Kenneth Chesshir said the City Council wouldn't support the boycott and he understood why people were upset.

"I like free enterprise," said Chesshir, who is also a barber in town. "but when a company holds the gun to America's head, sometimes government help is needed.

Leticia Munoz, who owns the city's three Exxon stations, said her 51 employees were fearing for their jobs.

"They realize if it affects us, it'll affect them," said Munoz, who counts on sales of tacos, sodas and other high-profit items purchased by people who stop for gas.

"Fuel is the lowest profit item that we have," she said.

"If you really take into account the cost of insurance, maintenance, we're losing money."

Martinez put out a newsletter Friday urging citizens to boycott only gas, not the convenience stores.

Munoz said she'd gotten a few customers who wanted to show disapproval of the resolution by buying Exxon gas.

"One said he hadn't bought Exxon fuel in 33 years," she said.
Livyjr
And it looks like the RUSHTER is going to SKATE .....

And he will be more popular than ever ...

And the NEW CONS will experience a resurgence .....

Which will carry George W. Bush's approval ratings upwards ...

Causing the REPUBLICANS to win continued control of the CONGRESS in November ....

And so ...

Kids of America .....

If you really want to do it ...

Because it feels good ...

Be a CONSERVATIVE like Rush ...

And like Rush ....

For you ....

There will be no law ...

And so ....

"Limbaugh, prosecutors can declare victory"

By BRIAN SKOLOFF, Associated Press
Last updated: 5:25 p.m., Saturday, April 29, 2006

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- After three years under suspicion, Rush Limbaugh can finally put behind him the investigation that exposed the conservative commentator's own drug problems, thrusting him into the spotlight for the very things he derided in others.

None of it affected his ratings for a radio talk show that airs weekdays on nearly 600 stations and draws about 20 million listeners a week, Limbaugh spokesman Tony Knight said.

"This investigation didn't have any impact on his audience or on his advertising," Knight said Saturday, a day after defense attorneys announced a deal with prosecutors.

A single prescription fraud charge will be dismissed after 18 months if Limbaugh stays drug free and doesn't violate any laws.


Prosecutors launched their investigation in 2003 after Limbaugh's housekeeper alleged he abused OxyContin and other painkillers.

He entered a five-week rehabilitation program and blamed his addiction on severe back pain.

Prosecutors seized Limbaugh's medical records after learning that he received about 2,000 painkillers, prescribed by four doctors in six months.

The investigation was held up as prosecutors and defense attorney Roy Black battled in court over whether Limbaugh's constitutional right to privacy was violated when the records were seized, but the state prevailed.

Is the deal a victory for Limbaugh?

"This is a dismissal of the charge ... representing, in affect, a win for the defense," said Kendall Coffey, a former U.S. attorney and prominent Miami defense lawyer.

"Having said that, I wouldn't call this case a major defeat for the prosecution."

"They fought and won an important legal point in establishing that you can use a search warrant in Florida to secure medical records," Coffey added.

"That's an important precedent for prosecutors around the state."

"This could be the rare situation where both sides made a deal and can walk away feeling some satisfaction."

The deal also allows Limbaugh "to save face," said Michael Seigel, a University of Florida law professor and former federal prosecutor.

"Given the high-profile nature of this, it's an indication to me that if Rush Limbaugh thought he could win the case and be vindicated, he would go to trial," Seigel said.

"He's not asking for his day in court."


The 55-year-old commentator surrendered Friday at the Palm Beach County jail on a warrant charging that in 2003, he sought a prescription from a physician without revealing that he had received medications from another practitioner within 30 days.

That charge, commonly referred to as doctor shopping, is a felony that could carry a sentence of up to 5 years in prison.

Limbaugh was booked, photographed and fingerprinted before being released on $3,000 bail.

He has steadily maintained his innocence.

Black called the charge a formality to bring closure to the case, adding that Limbaugh has been drug free for 2 1/2 years.

A spokesman for the Palm Beach County state attorney's office, Mike Edmondson, said the deal is typical in such cases.

"It's really standard for someone who is dealing with their addiction," Edmondson said Saturday.

"It's a diversion specifically for first-time offenders with no prior criminal history or arrest."

Before his own problems became public, Limbaugh had often argued that drug crimes deserve punishment, once saying on his short-lived television show in 1995 that users "ought to be accused and they ought to be convicted and they ought to be sent up."

The resolution of the case was applauded by Ethan Nadelmann, director of the New York-based nonprofit Drug Policy Alliance, which promotes treatment instead of incarceration for nonviolent drug offenders.

"Maybe this will soften up Rush Limbaugh a bit when he talks on the radio about the millions of other Americans who are suffering from drug problems," Nadelmann said.
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 29 2006, 05:32 PM)
And so .....

I am a believer ...

That when things reach their extremes ....

Like CORRUPTION in OUR government ....

That things then begin to move towards the opposite pole ....

And so ....

In the State of New York ...

Running for GOVERNOR ...

We have as the FRONT-RUNNER ....

ELIOT "Big EL" SPITZER .....

Who as far as government corruption in New York State goes ....

IS THE CHAMPION OF THAT WAY OF LIFE ...

The "same old same old" that we are all quite sick of, at least upstate ....

Because Eliot is quite soft on government corruption ...

And so .....

We are interested in his UNDERDOG OPPONENT ....

Tom Suozzi .....

Primarily because Suozzi is an OUTSIDER ....

Unlike Spitzer ....

Who has been the LAWYER for New York State these last so many years....

And so ....


"Suozzi to forgo party meeting - Underdog calls state Democratic convention 'an insider's game'" 
 
By ELIZABETH BENJAMIN, Capitol bureau, Albany, New York Times Union

First published: Saturday, April 29, 2006

ALBANY -- Underdog gubernatorial hopeful Tom Suozzi said Friday he will forgo the state Democratic convention, at which party leaders are expected to endorse front-runner Eliot Spitzer.

The Nassau County executive will try to petition his way onto the ballot instead.

"This is all an insider's game," Suozzi said.

"There's a lot of wonderful people in that hall, many of them are unfortunately too heavily influenced by the party bosses."

"But there are 5.5 million Democrats in New York."

"I'm going directly to the people."

And speaking of going directly to the people .....

Here is how it starts .....

http://www.tomsuozzi.com
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr@Jan 16 2005 @ 08:37)
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Jan 16 2005 @ 08:15 AM)

washingtonpost.com Highlights

"Bush says election ratified Iraq policy - 'Accountability moment' has passed, president says"

By Jim VandeHei and Michael A. Fletcher

Updated: 11:33 p.m. ET Jan. 15, 2005

President Bush said the public's decision to reelect him was a ratification of his approach toward Iraq and that there was no reason to hold any administration officials accountable for mistakes or misjudgments in prewar planning or managing the violent aftermath.

"We had an accountability moment, and that's called the 2004 elections," Bush said in an interview with The Washington Post.

"The American people listened to different assessments made about what was taking place in Iraq, and they looked at the two candidates, and chose me."

"Silence cloaks nuclear scandal - Scientist who profited by spreading atomic secrets to U.S. foes is shielded by Pakistani president and President Bush"

By ERIC ROSENBERG, Washington bureau
First published: Sunday, January 16, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Public enemy No. 1 for most Americans is Osama bin Laden, the mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, who continues to threaten more deadly strikes against the United States.

In close competition for that dubious title should be Abdul Qadeer Khan, 68, also known as A.Q. Khan, the Pakistani nuclear scientist who oversaw the spread of nuclear weapons to U.S. adversaries, possibly including al-Qaida, bin Laden's terrorist group.

Khan arguably has done more to undermine U.S. security than bin Laden.

He has confessed to transferring nuclear weapons know-how to Iran, Libya and North Korea.

U.S. officials and investigators at the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency are still searching for other possible customers who possess Khan's digitized blueprints for nuclear-specific manufacturing equipment and how-to manuals for running uranium enrichment centrifuges, much of it on handy compact discs.

Since the invention of nuclear weapons 60 years ago, no one has done more to spread those weapons to more countries than Khan.

His network of suppliers, middlemen and front companies flourished in 30 countries.

He was a for-profit nuclear peddler, with a one-stop atomic emporium that allowed shoppers to buy bomb designs, centrifuges for enriching uranium from uranium hexafluoride and consulting services to help get weapons plants up and running.

Despite his notoriety, Khan has escaped the "most-wanted" label applied to bin Laden because of a delicate diplomatic and political minuet linking Khan, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and President Bush.

Each man for his own reasons has thrown a cloak of silence over what is emerging as the biggest nuclear scandal in history.

In contrast to the missing bin Laden -- target of a global manhunt -- Khan's whereabouts are well known.

He is living under house arrest in a tony section of Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan, as part of a deal that Musharraf unveiled last year.

That deal gave Khan a full pardon and allowed him to keep the millions of dollars he is believed to have netted from the illicit sales.

In exchange, Khan took responsibility for the crimes and agreed to the house arrest -- a punishment that forced Khan, a high-profile and beloved figure in Pakistan, to vanish from public life and scientific endeavor.

A U.S. alert to Musharraf apparently triggered Khan's confession.

According to Secretary of State Colin Powell, the United States by early 2004 had amassed so much evidence that Khan was peddling nuclear secrets that Powell telephoned Musharraf and told him to "deal with" Khan.

"I said to him, 'We know so much about this that we're going to go public with it, and within a few weeks, OK?'"

"'And you need to deal with this before you have to deal with it publicly.' "

The next step came on Feb. 4 when, in a dramatic televised speech, Khan confessed and -- without naming the countries that had received his services -- accepted "full responsibility" for exporting nuclear technology.

He was quick to absolve the Musharraf government of any involvement.

While some of his colleagues at the A.Q. Khan Research Laboratories -- Pakistan's top nuclear facility -- are also under investigation for trafficking, "there was never any kind of authorization for these activities by the government," he said.

The next day, it was Musharraf's turn to appear before the TV cameras.

Dressed in an army jacket, khaki trousers and combat boots, the Pakistani leader announced at a news conference that he had pardoned Khan for spreading the potential for nuclear terror.

The Pakistani president signed off saying how much he admired the scientist.

"All the proliferation, unfortunately, was under the supervision or orders of Dr. A.Q. Khan," Musharraf told a news conference, quickly adding that Khan is "still my hero" for developing atomic weapons for Pakistan.

Musharraf insisted the Pakistani government had no knowledge of Khan's extensive proliferation network because the scientist had amassed enormous autonomy during the previous two decades as he developed nuclear weapons for Pakistan.

Musharraf's eagerness to whisk the matter out of sight reflects a harsh political fact of life for the 61-year-old general.

Khan is a hero in Pakistan and throughout the Islamic world for perfecting his country's first nuclear weapon -- and, by definition, the much-anticipated first "Muslim bomb."

Pakistan exploded a series of atomic bombs in 1998, bringing that country into nuclear parity with archrival India, with whom it has fought three wars.

Husain Haqqani, a former Pakistani ambassador to Sri Lanka and adviser to prime ministers Nawaz Sharif and Benazir Bhutto, says Khan is so popular in Pakistan that if he announced he wanted his countrymen to give him money, "150 million Pakistanis would give it to him."

"Pakistani kids would empty their pockets for him."

Haqqani teaches international relations at Boston University and is author of the forthcoming "Pakistan Between Mosque and Military."

Musharraf presides over a nation festering with Islamic militants, with large segments of the population sympathetic to al-Qaida and remnants of the fundamentalist Taliban regime in Afghanistan, which the U.S. military toppled three years ago.

The general is in no position to get tough with Khan by, for example, putting him on trial, especially since such a step would appear to be catering to the United States, which is widely unpopular throughout the country.

Pakistan's religious parties already are angry with Musharraf for placing Khan and at least a half-dozen of his associates under house arrest.

Musharraf won't let U.S. investigators or officials from the International Atomic Energy Agency question Khan directly -- "It's a matter of national pride" he says --to find out more about his far-flung proliferation network.

From the Pakistani dictator's point of view, the least said about Khan, the better.

The Pakistani leader, who has narrowly escaped two assassination attempts, keeps one eye nervously focused at all times on how Islamic militants in his nation react to his policies, especially when they involve coordination with the United States.

And there is a huge amount of coordination.

Powell said he speaks with Musharraf more than with any other foreign leader.

"We talk all the time," Powell said of the estimated 90 conversations he said they have had.

The Bush administration is also tiptoeing around the issue.

Because Musharraf is a key ally in the U.S. war against terrorism -- after the Sept. 11 strikes he agreed to withdraw support for the Taliban, a regime that had supported al-Qaida -- the White House doesn't want to add to Musharraf's precarious domestic circumstances by pushing too hard to gain access to Khan.

Another reason the Bush administration is eager to let the Khan case gently disappear is that it represents a failure of American intelligence and diplomacy that one man -- the leading nuclear scientist of a U.S. ally -- could do so much damage for so long and escape detection.

In his infrequent interviews and public statements, Khan has revealed that he is a virulent Muslim nationalist with an Islamist's hatred of the United States, Israel and the West.

"All the western countries, including Israel, are not only Pakistan's enemies but also enemies of Islam," he charged in a 1984 interview.

He called the U.S. effort to prevent the flow of nuclear technology around the globe "part of the crusades which the Christians and Jews had initiated against the Muslims 1,000 years ago."

Like many Muslims, Khan has spoken of a worldwide "Zionist" conspiracy to rob Muslim nations of their power and glory.



And speaking about "accountability moments" .....

Here is one comiong at us, right now .....

And it is a "re-play" of the same old, same old ....

Tell us something ....

One moment ....

That will get our national thumb ....

Back into our national mouth ....

So that we will "go back to sleep" ....

And as soon as we are ....

PRESTO CHANGO, LE VOILA .....

"Pakistan frees scientist held for 2 years"

By SADAQAT JAN, Associated Press
Last updated: 7:05 a.m., Sunday, April 30, 2006

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- A senior Pakistani scientist suspected of helping leak nuclear weapons technology to Iran, Libya and North Korea has been released after two years in detention, an army spokesman said Sunday.

Mohammed Farooq, who worked at Pakistan's top nuclear weapons facility, was detained in December 2003, along with 10 other people, when it was revealed that the head of the facility, Abdul Qadeer Khan, gave sensitive technology to Iran, Libya and North Korea.

Farooq, who was director general at Khan Research Laboratories, was suspected of allegedly leaking technology on Khan's orders.


He was freed last week, army spokesman Maj. Gen. Shaukat Sultan told The Associated Press.

Asked whether Farooq would be allowed to keep his job at the laboratories, Sultan said only that "he has been advised to restrict his movement and activities and stay at home for security reasons."

Sultan would not say whether Farooq had been found guilty of any wrongdoing.

Farooq was the last of the 11 people detained in 2003 who remained in custody.

The 11 -- scientists, security and administration personnel who worked at the lab --were detained for questioning over the spread of nuclear technology in the alleged black market network that Khan headed.

There was no immediate comment from Farooq or his family.

The other nuclear officials have avoided speaking with the media or discussing their detention publicly after their release.

In February 2004, Khan confessed that he sold nuclear secrets to Iran, North Korea and Libya.

But President Gen. Pervez Musharraf pardoned him due to his role in giving Pakistan a nuclear prowess to rival that of neighboring India.


The two countries carried out nuclear tests in 1998.

Khan, who is regarded as a national hero by many Pakistanis, has since been confined to his home in the capital, Islamabad, amid tight security.

Officials have said Khan's movement has been curtailed for security concerns.

Pakistan, a close U.S. ally in the war against terrorism, has rejected Washington's requests for access to Khan for questioning on nuclear black marketing.
Livyjr
And BINGO, jeffmoskin ....

Right on schedule ....

Another piece of the puzzle ....

Is now in place ....

And so .....

"Powell forces Rice to defend Iraq planning"

By LIBBY QUAID, Associated Press
Last updated: 5:06 p.m., Sunday, April 30, 2006

WASHINGTON -- Just back from Baghdad and eager to discuss promising developments, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice found herself knocked off message Sunday, forced to defend prewar planning and troop levels against an unlikely critic -- Colin Powell, her predecessor at the State Department.

For the Bush administration, it was a rare instance of in-house dissenter going public.

On Rice's mind was the political breakthrough that had brought her and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld to Iraq last week and cleared the way for formation of a national unity government.

Yet Powell sideswiped her by revisiting the question of whether the U.S. had a large enough force to oust Saddam Hussein and then secure the peace.


He said he advised Bush before the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003 to send more troops to Iraq, but that the administration did not follow his recommendation.

Rice, Bush's national security adviser during the run-up to the war, neither confirmed nor denied Powell's assertion.

But she spent a good part of her appearances on three Sunday talk shows reaching into the past to defend the White House, which is trying to highlight the positive to a public increasingly skeptical in this election year of the president's conduct of the war and concerned about the large U.S. military presence.

"I don't remember specifically what Secretary Powell may be referring to, but I'm quite certain that there were lots of discussions about how best to fulfill the mission that we went into Iraq," Rice said.

"And I have no doubt that all of this was taken into consideration."

"But that when it came down to it, the president listens to his military advisers who were to execute the plan," she told CNN's "Late Edition."

Powell, in an interview broadcast Sunday in London, said he gave the advice to now retired Gen. Tommy Franks, who developed and executed the Iraq invasion plan, and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld while the president was present.

"I made the case to General Franks and Secretary Rumsfeld before the president that I was not sure we had enough troops," Powell said in an interview on Britain's ITV television.

"The case was made, it was listened to, it was considered."

".... A judgment was made by those responsible that the troop strength was adequate."

Rice said Bush "listened to the advice of his advisers and ultimately, he listened to the advice of his commanders, the people who actually had to execute the war plan."

"And he listened to them several times," she told ABC's "This Week."

"When the war plan was put together, it was put together, also, with consideration of what would happen after Saddam Hussein was actually overthrown," Rice said.

In January, Pentagon officials acknowledged that Paul Bremer, the senior U.S. official in Iraq during the first year of the war, told Rumsfeld in May 2004 that a far larger number of U.S. troops were needed to effectively fight the insurgency, but his advice was rejected.

Bremer said his memo to Rumsfeld suggested half a million troops were needed -- more than three times the number there at the time.

"There will be time to go back and look at those days of the war and, after the war, to examine what went right and what went wrong," Rice said on CBS' "Face the Nation."


"But the goal and the purpose now is to make certain that we take advantage of what is now a very good movement forward on the political front to help this Iraqi government," she said.

Powell was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the 1991 Gulf War and is known for his belief in deploying decisive force with a clear exit strategy in any conflict.

"The president's military advisers felt that the size of the force was adequate; they may still feel that years later."

"Some of us don't."

"I don't," Powell said.

"In my perspective, I would have preferred more troops, but you know, this conflict is not over."

"At the time, the president was listening to those who were supposed to be providing him with military advice," Powell said.

"They were anticipating a different kind of immediate aftermath of the fall of Baghdad; it turned out to be not exactly as they had anticipated."

Rumsfeld has rejected criticism that he sent too few U.S. troops to Iraq, saying that Franks and generals who oversaw the campaign's planning had determined the overall number of troops, and that he and Bush agreed with them.

The recommendation of senior military commanders at the time was about 145,000 troops.

end quotes

What a bunch of horse hockey old "CON-JOB CONNIE" Rice is slinging here, now .....

With this talk of WAR PLANS .....

What a CROCK .....

The BUSHCOS went into Iraq before all of the troops were even in place ....

In what was PURE THEATER .....

NOT BELIEVING THERE WAS GOING TO BE A WAR ....

And so ....

WAR PLANS .....

As if "CON-JOB CONNIE" had something ...

Anything ....

Other than a mountain of lies .....

That would now serve to convince anyone that when the BUSHCOS went into Iraq in what is known up here as THE BOY'S WAR ....

That "CON-JOB CONNIE" had the slightest idea of what was going to happen next ....

And here she is ....

Talking this ABSOLUTE **** to none other than Colin Powell .....

Who I must say ...

I do admire .....

From his days as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff ....

During BIG BUSH'S WAR ....

Back in 1991 ....

When Richard Bruce Cheney ....

A.K.A. "THE SPHINX" ....

Had the job that Rumsfeld is bungling so badly now ....

With his arcane ideas of what America's military should look like in the 21st Century .....

And as to TROOP STRENGTH ....

Back in BIG BUSH'S WAR ...

THE SPHINX himself was on the record ....

As saying many more troops .....

Were needed ....

Just to invade Kuwait .....

And so ...

What did we have for that?

600,000?

Versus 145,000 to invade the whole of Iraq?

What a CROCK, Connie ...

Laughable ....
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 2 2006, 07:14 AM)
And while we are on the subject of IRAQINAM ....

And pure goose fools .....

And SYCOPHANTS .....

Meaning servile, self-seeking flatterers, or parasites .....

"Pentagon Contradicts General on Iraq Occupation Force's Size"

By Eric Schmitt, New York Times
February 28, 2003

In a contentious exchange over the costs of war with Iraq, the Pentagon's second-ranking official today disparaged a top Army general's assessment of the number of troops needed to secure postwar Iraq.

House Democrats then accused the Pentagon official, Paul D. Wolfowitz, of concealing internal administration estimates on the cost of fighting and rebuilding the country.

Mr. Wolfowitz, with Dov S. Zakheim, the Pentagon comptroller, at his side, tried to mollify the Democratic lawmakers, promising to fill them in eventually on the administration's internal cost estimates.

"There will be an appropriate moment," he said, when the Pentagon would provide Congress with cost ranges.

"We're not in a position to do that right now."

At a Pentagon news conference with President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan, Mr. Rumsfeld echoed his deputy's comments.

Neither Mr. Rumsfeld nor Mr. Wolfowitz mentioned General Shinseki, the Army chief of staff, by name.

But both men were clearly irritated at the general's suggestion that a postwar Iraq might require many more forces than the 100,000 American troops and the tens of thousands of allied forces that are also expected to join a reconstruction effort.

"The idea that it would take several hundred thousand U.S. forces I think is far off the mark," Mr. Rumsfeld said.

In his testimony, Mr. Wolfowitz ticked off several reasons why he believed a much smaller coalition peacekeeping force than General Shinseki envisioned would be sufficient to police and rebuild postwar Iraq.

He said there was no history of ethnic strife in Iraq, as there was in Bosnia or Kosovo.

He said Iraqi civilians would welcome an American-led liberation force that "stayed as long as necessary but left as soon as possible," but would oppose a long-term occupation force.

And he said that nations that oppose war with Iraq would likely sign up to help rebuild it.

"I would expect that even countries like France will have a strong interest in assisting Iraq in reconstruction," Mr. Wolfowitz said.

He added that many Iraqi expatriates would likely return home to help.

In the 1991 Persian Gulf War, many nations agreed in advance of hostilities to help pay for a conflict that eventually cost about $61 billion.

Mr. Wolfowitz said that this time around the administration was dealing with "countries that are quite frightened of their own shadows" in assembling a coalition to force President Saddam Hussein to disarm.

Enlisting countries to help to pay for this war and its aftermath would take more time, he said.

"I expect we will get a lot of mitigation, but it will be easier after the fact than before the fact," Mr. Wolfowitz said.

Mr. Wolfowitz spent much of the hearing knocking down published estimates of the costs of war and rebuilding, saying the upper range of $95 billion was too high, and that the estimates were almost meaningless because of the variables.

Moreover, he said such estimates, and speculation that postwar reconstruction costs could climb even higher, ignored the fact that Iraq is a wealthy country, with annual oil exports worth $15 billion to $20 billion.

"To assume we're going to pay for it all is just wrong," he said.

At the Pentagon, Mr. Rumsfeld said the factors influencing cost estimates made even ranges imperfect.

Asked whether he would release such ranges to permit a useful public debate on the subject, Mr. Rumsfeld said, "I've already decided that."

"It's not useful."

*

QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 30 2006, 06:03 PM)
Back in 1991 ....

When Richard Bruce Cheney ....

A.K.A. "THE SPHINX" ....

Had the job that Rumsfeld is bungling so badly now ....

With his arcane ideas of what America's military should look like in the 21st Century .....

And as to TROOP STRENGTH ....

Back in BIG BUSH'S WAR ...

THE SPHINX himself was on the record ....

As saying many more troops .....

Were needed ....

Just to invade Kuwait .....

And so ...

What did we have for that?

600,000?

Versus 145,000 to invade the whole of Iraq?

And as the REPUBLICAN/CONSERVATIVE BUSHCOS continue to leave their tell-tale "FINGERPRINTS" of incompetence, ineptness and CORRUPTION all over this world of OURS ....

Where they have made IRAQINAM into a MODEL of what they will TRANSFORM the rest of the world into ...

IF WE WILL JUST KEEP THEM IN POWER LONG ENOUGH .....

"Iraq corruption slows reconstruction efforts - Report says money from country's oil industry may be aiding insurgency"

By ERIC ROSENBERG, Washington bureau
First published: Monday, May 1, 2006

WASHINGTON -- A new government report released Sunday says corruption in Iraq's oil and gas industry threatens to smother the country's nascent democracy, although the study also notes the United States is making slow progress rebuilding Iraq's basic services.

Corruption in the Iraqi Ministry of Oil and throughout the oil and gas sector "could have devastating effects on both the progress of sector reconstruction and on the overall status of the reconstruction and democracy-building effort in Iraq," according to the report by Stuart Bowen, the U.S. special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction.

Bowen answers to Congress.


His report, which tracks how over $18.4 billion in U.S.-appropriated reconstruction funds are being spent, also will be sent to all congressional offices.

Citing findings from the U.S. Iraq reconstruction office in Baghdad, the report said corruption in the oil and gas sector "is particularly troubling ... because of oil's economic significance."

The report said the oil industry lacks an effective metering system to measure how much oil "is being pumped relative to what is getting to market."

The report said that the insurgency in Iraq "has reportedly been partly funded by corrupt activities within Iraq and from skimming profits from black marketers."

Before the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the Bush administration had predicted that revenues from Iraqi oil exports would provide the funds to revive the country's battered economy.

One week after the attack, then-Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz told Congress that those revenues would easily underwrite the reconstruction.

"We are dealing with a country that can really finance its own reconstruction and relatively soon," Wolfowitz said at the time.

That claim turned out to be an embarrassing mistake by the administration.


The Bowen report said that oil and gas production has yet to return to pre-war levels, despite the U.S. investment of $1.7 billion in the industry.

The reasons include corruption, stepped up insurgent attacks that slow production and sabotage of oil production facilities, he said.

During Saddam Hussein's reign, Iraq produced 2.58 million barrels of oil a day, while it now produces 2.18 million barrels daily -- far below the U.S. goal of 2.8 million barrels per day, according to the report.

The inspector general's focus on Iraqi corruption echoes recent statements by some key members of Congress, where lawmakers are increasingly concerned that corruption is fueling the insurgency and taxing U.S. forces.

Sen. John Warner, R-Va., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, lamented that widespread corruption and criminality were "pushing Iraq down into a morass."

Despite the corruption, Bowen's report to Congress concludes that American forces and contractors are making strides rebuilding Iraq.

"Although the story of Iraq reconstruction has been punctuated by shortfalls and deficiencies," he said, the U.S. has made "significant progress."

Of 13,119 planned reconstruction projects, 10,962 -- or 83.5 percent -- have been completed, 1,986 are ongoing, and 171 have yet to be started.

But within the categories of projects that are ongoing or yet to be started are a significant portion of oil-industry related and electricity projects; both are crucial to restoring basic services and filling the county's treasury with oil export revenue.
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ May 1 2006, 06:32 AM)
And as the REPUBLICAN/CONSERVATIVE BUSHCOS continue to leave their tell-tale "FINGERPRINTS" of incompetence, ineptness and CORRUPTION all over this world of OURS ....

Where they have made IRAQINAM into a MODEL of what they will TRANSFORM the rest of the world into ...

IF WE WILL JUST KEEP THEM IN POWER LONG ENOUGH .....

By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: April 28, 2006

The U.S. government is being stalked by an invisible bandit, the Crony Fairy, who visits key agencies by dead of night, snatches away qualified people and replaces them with unqualified political appointees.

There's no way to catch or stop the Crony Fairy, so our only hope is to change the agencies' names.

That way she might get confused, and leave our government able to function.


That, at least, is how I interpret the report on responses to Hurricane Katrina that was just released by the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

The report points out that the Federal Emergency Management Agency "had been operating at a more than 15 percent staff-vacancy rate for over a year before Katrina struck" — that means many of the people who knew what they were doing had left.

And it adds that "FEMA's senior political appointees ... had little or no prior relevant emergency-management experience."

But the report says nothing about what caused the qualified people to leave and who appointed unqualified people to take their place.

There's no hint that, say, President Bush might have had any role.

So those political appointees must have been installed by the Crony Fairy.


Rather than trying to fix FEMA, the report calls for replacing it with a new organization, the National Preparedness and Response Agency.

As far as I can tell, the new agency would have exactly the same responsibilities as FEMA.

But "senior N.P.R.A. officials would be selected from the ranks of professionals with experience in crisis management."

I guess it's impossible to select qualified people to run FEMA; if you try, the Crony Fairy will spirit them away and replace them with Michael Brown.

But she might not know her way to N.P.R.A.

O.K., enough sarcasm.

Let's talk about the history of FEMA.

In the early 1990's, FEMA's reputation was as bad as it is today.

It was a dumping ground for political cronies, headed by a man whose only apparent qualification for the job was that he was a close friend of the first President Bush's chief of staff.


FEMA's response to Hurricane Andrew in 1992 perfectly foreshadowed Katrina: the agency took three days to arrive on the scene, and when it did, it proved utterly incompetent.

Many people thought that FEMA was a lost cause.

But Bill Clinton proved them wrong.

He appointed qualified people to lead the agency and gave them leeway to hire other qualified people, and within a year FEMA's morale and performance had soared.

For the rest of the Clinton years, FEMA was among the most highly regarded agencies in the federal government.

What happened to that reputation?

The answer, of course, is that the second President Bush returned to his father's practices.

Once again, FEMA became a dumping ground for cronies, and many of the good people who had come in during the Clinton years left.

It took only a few years to transform one of the best agencies in the U.S. government into what Senator Susan Collins calls "a shambles and beyond repair."

In other words, the Crony Fairy is named George W. Bush.


So what's the point of creating a new agency to replace FEMA?

The history of FEMA and other agencies during the Clinton years shows that a president who is serious about governing can rebuild effective government without renaming the boxes on the organizational chart.

On the other hand, the history of the Bush administration, from the botched reconstruction of Iraq to the botched start-up of the prescription drug program, shows that a president who isn't serious about governing, who prizes loyalty and personal connections over competence, can quickly reduce the government of the world's most powerful nation to third-world levels of ineffectiveness.

And bear in mind that Mr. Bush's pattern of cronyism didn't change after Katrina.

For example, he appointed Julie Myers, the inexperienced niece of Gen. Richard Myers, to head Immigration and Customs Enforcement — an agency that, like FEMA, is supposed to protect us against terrorism as well as other threats.


Even at the C.I.A., the administration seems more interested in purging Democrats than in improving the quality of intelligence.

So let's skip the name change for FEMA, O.K.?

The United States will regain effective government if and when it gets a president who cares more about serving the nation than about rewarding his friends and scoring political points.

That's at least a thousand days away.

Meanwhile, don't count on FEMA, or on any other government agency, to do its job.
Livyjr
These days up here where I am ...

The days are long ....

As the sun rises higher and higher in the sky ....

And as is my way ...

I am outside ....

Doing those things which need to be done up here ...

In the spring ....

So that come next fall ...

I am once again ready for winter ....

And so ...

Some days ...

Like this one ...

I will be in here .....

For just a flash ....

And then ...

Back out again ....

Because I am getting here late ....

Having been outside all day ...

And so ....
jeffmoskin
QUOTE(Livyjr @ May 1 2006, 04:07 PM)
These days up here where I am ...

The days are long ....

As the sun rises higher and higher in the sky ....

*

Out here in Kah-Lee-FAWN-Yah, which is less extreme in Latitude (but more extreme politically) than the great Empire State, the seasons and sunlight change much more gradually.

Having spent (served?) more than my share of time in the Empire State, I am quite happy to be where I am.

Physically.

If it were not a part of BushWorld...

a parallel Universe.
Livyjr
Good morning, jeffmoskin ....

And yes ...

Regardless of latitude ....

And attitude ....

The SUN OF BUSHWORLD "shines" down on all of us equally .....

Turning hope to dismay ....

Cheerfulness to dreariness ....

And rationality ....

Into something, anyway ...

That is so irrational ...

That it totally defies RATIONAL ANALYSIS ....

And so ...

I guess ...

WE ARE ALL REPUBLICANS NOW ....

And so .....
Livyjr
QUOTE(Livyjr @ Apr 25 2006, 07:18 AM)
And by way of reply .....

From WE, THE PEOPLE of Rensselaer County .........

In the State of New York .....

Where Eliot "Big EL" Spitzer is clearly "DA MAN" .....

As originally posted in ....

http://commongroundcommonsense.org/forums/...php/t24721.html

We have ....

And this is catchy CAMPAIGN RHETORIC by New York State Attorney General and GUBERNATORIAL HOPEFUL Eliot Spitzer, right above here, of course .....

Which the Albany, New York Times Union editorial staff will never question ....

But as the record above here clearly demonstrates ....

IT IS PATENTLY FALSE .....

Because ...

Jeffrey Pelletier of Poestenkill, New York is VERY CLEARLY so powerful that he is above the reach of the law .....

Not only in the State of New York .....

Where Eliot Spitzer clearly is "THE POWER" .....

But in the federal Northern District of New York, as well .....

Where Spitzer flexed his muscles ...

And exercised his CLOUT ...

On behalf of Jeffrey Pelletier .....

Who is clearly so powerful ...

Thanks to Eliot Spitzer ....

That he is and remains above the reach of the law ...

In the State of New York ...

And the federal Northern District of New York ....

As is alleged New York State Veterans' Counselor and "political operative" William "BUCK" Shea ....

Who was Eliot Spitzer's CLIENT in this above matter ...

Who made patently false statements to the VA Police ....

And allegedly ...

The Office of the United States Attorney for the Northern District of New York ....

On Pelletier's behalf ....

As well as the New York State Police .....

Who are also "clients" of Eliot Spitzer .....

In the 8/22/01 combined Rensselaer County/State of New York effort to have PLAINTIFF locked away and "TREATED" by "Dr. Adrian" in the Northeast Health, Inc. "GULAG", or "political re-conditioning facility" in Troy, New York as an alleged dangerous "mental patient" ......

So as to DESTROY his mind, forever ....

Make him "cross-eyed" and drooling a lot ....

WITH ELIOT SPITZER'S BLESSINGS ....

And thus, to render him totally incapable .....

Of ever being an expert witness ...

Against corrupt practices ...

In the State of New York ...

Involving administrative agencies in the State of New York ...

Like the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation ....

The New York State Department of Health ....

And the Office of Professional Discipline ...

Of the New York State Department of Education ....

Which "agency" upheld the position taken by REPUBLICAN Rensselaer County Personnel Director Felix "Iron Felix" Pugliese above here on March 13, 1989 ....

That in the State of New York ...

New York State licensed professional engineers serving THE PUBLIC in the capacity of associate public health engineers in county health departments in the State of New York .....

ARE NOT ALLOWED TO ENGAGE IN "INDEPENDENT THINKING" .....

But instead ...

MUST DO WHAT THE "POLITICAL BOSSES" WANT DONE ....

Even if it constitutes PROFESSIONAL MISCONDUCT ....

And misfeasance, malfeasance and nonfeasance .....

And so ....

And just as clearly .....

PLAINTIFF herein .....

And us along with him ....

ARE SO POWERLESS .....

That WE, THE PEOPLE are beneath the protection of the law .....

Not only in the State of New York ...

But in the federal Northern District of New York, as well .....

And so .....

Some "truth in advertising" here ...

Even if in the State of New York ...

The truth is no longer in vogue ...

Thanks in large part to the ambitious and self-serving New York State Attorney General, Eliot Spitzer .....

And so .....

*

And while we are on the subject of RANK HYPOCRISY in here this morning .....

And Eliot "Big EL" Spitzer, the "DANCER" who wants to be the next GOVERNOR of the corrupt EMPIRE STATE OF NEW YORK ...

Before he is the next president of the United States of America ...

We have ....

"Spitzer remarks draw fire - Election foes criticize his criticism of Scalia at Law Day ceremony"

By MICHELE MORGAN BOLTON, Staff writer, Albany, New York Times Union

First published: Tuesday, May 2, 2006

ALBANY -- Eliot Spitzer advocated a flexible approach to the U.S. Constitution on Monday, evoking the example of Thurgood Marshall and saying that Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia sees the 200-plus-year-old document as "a dead piece of paper."

Comparisons of the renowned U.S. Supreme Court associate justices came during a Law Day ceremony on the steps of the state Court of Appeals.

There, the state's attorney general and Democratic gubernatorial favorite, along with Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye, celebrated the heritage of liberty under the law with dozens of other lawyers, judges and observers.


"Understanding what the framers meant can help us," Spitzer said.

"But alone it cannot be enough."

Without constitutional interpretation, there would be no Roe vs. Wade and subsequent abortion rights, he said.

Birth control would be illegal.

Women would be banned from serving on juries.

Segregation would be alive.

And children as young as 7 could be executed for felonies, he said.

"A flexible Constitution allows us to consider not merely how the world was, but how it ought to be," he said.

"It retains its legitimacy, not shackled to the mores of men long gone, but the enduring legacy of the framers."

Republican gubernatorial hopeful John Faso criticized Spitzer's comments.

"I think that it's very unfortunate that an attorney general would attack by name a sitting justice of the U.S. Supreme Court," he said.

"It's one thing to question a judicial philosophy, but I think this shows a certain lack of respect for the court."

Faso said Spitzer didn't accurately characterize Scalia's views.

Andrea Tantaros, spokeswoman for Republican gubernatorial candidate William Weld, called Spitzer's comments "hairsplitting obscure theories of jurisprudence."

She said Weld, a former federal prosecutor, is instead "focused on creating jobs, keeping New Yorkers safe, and changing the culture in Albany."

The idea for Law Day was floated in 1957 as a way to contrast the United States' reliance on the rule of law with the Soviet Union's Cold War-era rule by force.

The American Bar Association wanted to shift the focus from war-making to peace-keeping.

A year later, President Dwight D. Eisenhower permanently established the day as a tribute to the nation's commitment to a fair legal system.


Ceremonies endure, almost 50 years later, and are always held on May 1.

This year's theme, "Liberty Under Law: Separate Branches, Balanced Powers" was timely, given Kaye's push this year to establish an independent commission to determine whether annual cost-of-living adjustments are warranted for all three branches of government.

State Bar Association President A. Vincent Buzard pushed for those raises during his address.

He also praised the evolution of the separation of power and the standard of judicial review, even though they are not mentioned in the Constitution.

"As a result, no one that governs, nor those who are governed, are beyond the rule of law," Buzard said.

Kaye emphasized the need for an independent court system, "even in the face of controversy, criticism and outright condemnation."

"We are passionate about assuring that the prized American justice system is more than a paper promise, that it remains truly accessible to the public," she said.


But she also lauded the way the state's judicial, executive and legislative branches have succeeded in working together: in the Child Welfare Roundtable and the Permanent Judicial Commission on Justice for Children.

Future projects include work on probation and indigent defense, she said.

"Justice thrives on passions born of shared values and common dreams entrusted to us by our founders," Kaye said.

In the end, she said, "what I am most passionate about is the opportunity I have had all these precious, treasured years as chief judge to join with all of you and enlarge the circle of dreamers and doers in the service of justice."


Kaye is entering her term's last year.

Law Day commemorations were also held in county bar associations across the state and, locally, at Albany Law School.

Michele Morgan Bolton can be reached at 434-2403 or by e-mail at mbolton@timesunion.com. The Associated Press contributed to this article.
Livyjr
Boy ...

Old "Oncle Eliot" Spitzer sure is in the "cat-bird" seat up here ...

Where he serves as the State of New York's top lawyer ...

At the same time ....

That he is running for governor ....

Taking money from special interests ....

That are regulated ....

Through "Old Oncle Eliot's" clients .....

Which are the administrative agencies ...

Of the State of New York .....

And so ....

But, hey ...

That is enough about "Old Oncle Eliot" .....

Who has his press people out there writing songs ....

And paeans ....

And odes ....

And hymns ...

To "Old Oncle Eliot", everyone's "Dutch uncle" ....

And so ....

If we are sicker up here in the State of New York ....

Than the English are in England ....

It might well be because we are breathing filthy air ...

And drinking chemically-contaminated water ....

THANKS TO ELIOT SPITZER ....

And the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation ...

And the New York State Department of Health ....

Both of which are "Old Oncle Eliot's" clients ....

And so ....

"Study shows Americans sicker than English"

By CARLA K. JOHNSON and MIKE STOBBE, Associated Press
Last updated: 4:26 p.m., Tuesday, May 2, 2006

CHICAGO -- White, middle-aged Americans -- even those who are rich -- are far less healthy than their peers in England, according to stunning new research that erases misconceptions and has experts scratching their heads.

Americans had higher rates of diabetes, heart disease, strokes, lung disease and cancer -- findings that held true no matter what income or education level.

Those dismal results are despite the fact that U.S. health care spending is double what England spends on each of its citizens.

"Everybody should be discussing it: Why isn't the richest country in the world the healthiest country in the world?" asks study co-author Dr. Michael Marmot, an epidemiologist at University College London in England.

The study, based on government statistics in both countries, adds context to the already-known fact that the United States spends more on health care than any other industrialized nation, yet trails in rankings of life expectancy.


The United States spends about $5,200 per person on health care while England spends about half that in adjusted dollars.

Even experts familiar with the weaknesses in the U.S. health system seemed stunned by the study's conclusions.

"I knew we were less healthy, but I didn't know the magnitude of the disparities," said Gerard Anderson, an expert in chronic disease and international health at Johns Hopkins University who had no role in the research.

Just why the United States fared so miserably wasn't clear.

Answers ranging from too little exercise to too little money and too much stress were offered.

Even the U.S. obesity epidemic couldn't solve the mystery.

The researchers crunched numbers to create a hypothetical statistical world in which the English had American lifestyle risk factors, including being as fat as Americans.

In that model, Americans were still sicker.

Smoking rates are about the same on both sides of the pond.

The English have a higher rate of heavy drinking.

Only non-Hispanic whites were included in the study to eliminate the influence of racial disparities.

The researchers looked only at people ages 55 through 64, and the average age of the samples was the same.

Americans reported twice the rate of diabetes compared to the English, 12.5 percent versus 6 percent.

For high blood pressure, it was 42 percent for Americans versus 34 percent for the English; cancer showed up in 9.5 percent of Americans compared to 5.5 percent of the English.

The upper crust in both countries was healthier than middle-class and low-income people in the same country.

But richer Americans' health status resembled the health of the low-income English.


"It's something of a mystery," said Richard Suzman of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, which helped fund the study.

Health experts have known the U.S. population is less healthy than that of other industrialized nations, according to several important measurements, including life expectancy.

The U.S. ranks behind about two dozen other countries, according to the World Health Organization.


Some have believed the United States has lagged because it is more ethnically diverse, said Suzman, who heads the National Institute on Aging's Behavioral and Social Research Program.

"Minority health in general is worse than white health," he said.

But the new study showed that when minorities are removed from the equation, and adjustments are made to control for education and income, white people in England are still healthier than white people in the United States.

"As far as I know, this is the first study showing this," said Suzman.

The study, supported by grants from government agencies in both countries, was published in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

Other studies have measured the United States against other countries in terms of health care spending, use of medical care and availability of health care services.

But this is the first to focus on prevalence of chronic conditions, said Anderson, the Johns Hopkins professor.

Differences in exercise might partly explain the gap, he suggested.

One of the study's authors, Jim Smith, said the English exercise somewhat more than Americans.

But physical activity differences won't fully explain the study's results, he added.


Marmot offered a different explanation for the gap: Americans' financial insecurity.

Improvements in household income have eluded all but the top fifth of Americans since the mid-1970s.

Meanwhile, the English saw their incomes improve, he said.

Robert Blendon, a professor of health policy at the Harvard School of Public Health who was not involved in the study, said the stress of striving for the American dream may account for Americans' lousy health.

"The opportunity to go both up and down the socioeconomic scale in America may create stress," Blendon said.


Americans don't have a reliable government safety net like the English enjoy, Blendon said.

However, Britain's universal health-care system shouldn't get credit for better health, Marmot and Blendon agreed.

Both said it might explain better health for low-income citizens, but can't account for better health of Britain's more affluent residents.

Marmot cautioned against looking for explanations in the two countries' health-care systems.

"It's not just how we treat people when they get ill, but why they get ill in the first place," Marmot said.

------

EDITOR'S NOTE: Carla K. Johnson reported from Chicago, and Mike Stobbe reported from Atlanta.

------

On the Net:

JAMA: http://jama.ama-assn.org
Livyjr
I wonder if Californians are more sick ....

Or less sick ....

Than New Yorkers .....

Both of whom ...

Are sicker than people in England .....

And I wonder if high gas prices and fuel oil prices have anything to do with it?

"Saudi Minister Says Oil Prices Too High"

By H. JOSEF HEBERT, Associated Press Writer

Tue May 2, 12:07 PM ET

WASHINGTON - Saudi Arabia's oil minister said Tuesday that currently high crude oil prices are of no long-term benefit to either producers or consumers and contribute to market instability.

"Energy security cannot be sustained when prices are extreme — too high or too low," Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said in remarks to an energy conference.


He said Saudi Arabia is committed to working with the United States to keep oil markets stable, including plans to increase production to 12.5 million barrels a day by 2009.

But he said that producing adequate supplies must involve other suppliers and conservation.

Oil prices went above $74 a barrel Tuesday, flirting with their record high of just above $75 reached last month.

Al-Naimi, who was joined in a panel discussion by Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman, sought to dispel the notion that U.S. energy independence could drive down prices, although he did not specifically refer to the phrase frequently use by the Bush administration and members of Congress as an answer to America's energy problems.

It is "a myth" that countries can lower prices by reducing their oil imports or that they can achieve greater energy security by blocking imports from a region of the world, said al-Naimi.

He said oil is traded on the global markets, and even if a country has no imports it will cost whatever the international market dictates.


President Bush in his State of the Union Address pledged to increase development of alternative fuels with a goal of reducing U.S. oil imports from the Middle East by 75 percent.

Bodman reiterated that goal.

During a question-and-answer period, the Saudi official was asked if he viewed that as unwise protectionism.

"I don't call it anything," he replied.

But in his speech, al-Naimi cautioned against a country "backsliding into protectionism" by seeking to block imports from any region.

"Not only is a country worse off when it builds walls around itself and slips into protectionism, but the global system as a whole suffers," he said.

Bodman said the United States views Saudi Arabia as a leading ally not only in the war against terrorism, but also in efforts to stabilize global oil prices.

He noted that Saudi Arabia, which produces about 9 million barrels a day, is the only producer with significant spare production capacity and the United States has the largest emergency government oil reserve.

Both officials agreed there are adequate oil supplies.

Bodman said the market is worried about a supply disruption — in part because of the standoff with Iran over nuclear issues and the war in Iraq — and "there's no doubt a (fear) premium" is reflected in today's prices.

"Political tensions, tight petroleum product market, and talk of the world running out of oil are fostering an environmental of fear and uncertainty in oil markets and among consumers," said al-Naimi.

He pledged in the long run that Saudi Arabia will be able to substantially expand production using new technologies and he discounted that global oil supplies have, or will soon peak.

Asked if he and executives of Saudi Aramco, the government-owned oil company, "live in fear" that the United States might one day become energy independent, he replied, "The answer is no."

"We welcome conservation."

The panel discussion, moderated by former Energy Secretary James Schlesinger, was sponsored by the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Bodman and al-Naimi were to meet privately later in the day.
Snuffysmith
Bush in ‘ceaseless push for power’:

President George W. Bush had shown disdain and indifference for the US constitution by adopting an “astonishingly broad” view of presidential powers, a leading libertarian think-tank said on Monday.
http://tinyurl.com/ptjo9
Snuffysmith
Endgame for the Constitution

By Paul Craig Roberts

Unless Bush is impeached and turned over to the war crimes court in the Hague, Americans will never reclaim their liberties from an executive branch that has established itself as the sole judge of the limits of its powers.
http://informationclearinghouse.info/article12916.htm
Livyjr
Good morning, Snuffysmith ......

Good to see you around the place ...

And I would say ...

That the Constitution is in danger ....

Because of the rank apathy of the American people ...

Who seemingly do not care about constitutional government .....

Or the Constitution .....

What you either don't know about ...

Or care about ...

Is hard to defend ....

So ...

George W. Bush is merely taking away the last vestiges of what the American people had already put out in the trash can, anyway .....

And so .....

BUT .....

Assuming there are some Americans who do care ...

This underscores the importance of tossing the CORRUPT AND INEPT REPUBLICAN PARTY from power ...

Here in OUR America ...

Come November of this year ....

And if that does not happen ...

If America returns the REPUBLICAN PARTY to power .....

Then kiss RULE BY LAW good-bye ....

And hello WHIMS .....

What the EXECUTIVE wants ....

Is what the "law" shall be ...

For that moment, anyway ....

Until the next WHIM comes along ...

And so .....
Livyjr
And speaking opf PRESIDENTIAL WHIMS ...

Here in OUR America ...

Where one of George W. Bush's many, many WHIMS ...

Is that there is no global warming .....

Because if there was ...

His CROWD would have to change their piratical ways ...

Which would reduce THEIR profits ....

Which THE GEORGE OF AMERICA AND THE WORLD ...

Is not going to allow to happen ....

And so ....

There is no global warming .....

Even if there is ....

And so ...

"Hurricane destruction powers global warming debate"

By Jim Loney

Tue May 2, 10:22 AM ET

MIAMI (Reuters) - For a brief time in October, the pressure inside 185-mph (298 kph) Hurricane Wilma dropped to an astonishing low, making it the most intense hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic and Caribbean.

That historic cyclone happened during a record-shattering hurricane season that produced 28 storms and occurred only weeks after Katrina swamped New Orleans, causing $80 billion in damage.

The ferocity of last year's season gave ammunition to a growing chorus of voices that says humans and their greenhouse gas-spewing cars and factories could be making hurricanes more destructive.

But it did nothing to convince a hard core of hurricane researchers who insist there's no evidence that people are responsible for the recent intensity, and growing numbers, of tropical cyclones.


The stakes are high.

An estimated 50 million people live along the hurricane-vulnerable U.S. east and Gulf coasts.

Millions more live in flood-prone mountains in Haiti and Central America, where hurricanes take thousands of lives.

The U.S. hurricane tab last year was more than $100 billion.

Major storms in the 2004 season caused another $45 billion in damage.

"The coastal regions are in jeopardy."

"The Miami area and the New Orleans area are very much at risk."

"We have a 10-year window to do something about greenhouse gases," said Prof. Judith Curry, chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

"STUNNING INCREASES"

Curry said leading scientists with published research have compelling evidence that human-induced global warming is heating the seas from which hurricanes draw their strength.

In the North Atlantic -- as the Atlanic north of the equator is called -- that has increased both the number and intensity of hurricanes in the last decade, she said.

"They are stunning increases that are way outside the bounds of natural variability," she said.

Tropical ocean temperatures have risen about 1 degree Fahrenheit since 1970, said Curry.

"This 1 degree is playing havoc with hurricanes."

"It's a lot of extra energy for these storms."

When Wilma's internal pressure hit 882 millibars, beating a record held by 1988's Gilbert, climatologists took notice.

It was the first time a single season had produced four Category 5 hurricanes, the highest stage on the 5-step Saffir-Simpson scale of storm intensity.

The 28 tropical storms and hurricanes crushed the old mark of 21, set in 1933.

While some hurricane researchers accept that the sea is warming, they believe it's part of a natural cycle, rather than human-caused.

They say the Atlantic entered a period of heightened hurricane activity around 1995 and may not settle down for another 20 or 30 years due to a cycle called the "Atlantic multidecadal oscillation."

With hurricane records for only 150 years, some say there isn't enough historical data to blame the greenhouse effect.

"We don't have any facts because we don't have any long-term records," said Neil Frank, a former director of the U.S. National Hurricane Center.

The debate has taken center-stage among hurricane and climate scientists in the United States, where President George W. Bush's rejection of the Kyoto agreement to cut greenhouse gases enraged environmental groups and foreign nations.

Some U.S. scientists say Washington has stifled dissenters.

Others deny it.

"No one has put any pressure on me, from the White House or anywhere else," U.S. National Hurricane Center director Max Mayfield said.

GROWING EVIDENCE

After two of the worst seasons on record -- 2004 produced 15 storms -- U.S. researchers are speaking more boldly.

At an American Meteorological Society conference in Monterey, California, last week, a U.S. government researcher blamed last year's record season on global warming.

On the web site of the government's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, the subject is broached frankly.

"The strongest hurricanes in the present climate may be upstaged by even more intense hurricanes over the next century as the earth's climate is warmed by increasing levels of greenhouse gases....," it says.

Kerry Emanuel, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, wrote in Nature magazine last August that the power dissipated by hurricanes in the North Atlantic has doubled in the last 30 years, possibly because storms have been more intense for longer periods of time.

"My results suggest that future warming may lead to an upward trend in tropical cyclone destructive potential," he wrote.

A study by Curry and her colleagues published in Science magazine last fall found the proportion of hurricanes reaching Category 4 and 5 has nearly doubled in the last 35 years.

But Frank, the former hurricane center director who now is a weatherman for KHOU television in Houston, said he does not believe hurricanes are more frequent or more intense than they were in the last warming period, in the 1930s, '40s and '50s.

Only since the 1970s have researchers had satellites that allow them to look directly at hurricanes.

As a result, he believes, storms that might have escaped detection in mid-ocean decades ago are now tracked from birth to death.

Scientists who believe human-induced global warming is linked to hurricane formation and strength rely too heavily on numerical models, Frank said.

"These same numerical models that I can't put faith in for a two-week forecast, we're told can be accurate out 200 years," he said.

"Ridiculous."

Whatever the outcome of the debate, forecasters say the damaging seasons of 2004 and 2005 could be just the beginning.

"I'm here to tell you it can get worse," Mayfield said.
Snuffysmith
Hi All - This one is for Jeffmoskin


http://www.aljazeerah.info/3%20o/The%20Ine...e%20Whitney.htm

The Inevitable Collapse of the Greenback

By Mike Whitney

Al-Jazeerah, May 3, 2006

“The ultimate financial impact of trading oil in Euros rather than dollars is a complex one, but according to many experts, such a move could lead to a collapse in value for the American currency, potentially putting the U.S. economy in its greatest crisis since the depression era of the 1930s.” “Petro-euro: a reality or distant nightmare for the US?” Al Jazeera

Today, Iran fired the first shot in a battle that will ultimately change the global economic system. Mehr News Agency announced that the long-anticipated Iran Oil Bourse (OIB) will open sometime next week on Kish Island competing head-on with the US dollar. Currently, all oil transactions are denominated exclusively in greenbacks (via the London and New York oil exchanges) giving the US a virtual monopoly on the oil trade and maintaining the dollar’s position as the world’s reserve currency. This privilege has allowed the US to generate massive deficits as well as a national debt of $8.4 trillion without fear of economic collapse but, the “time’s they are a-changin’”. If Iran proceeds with its plan, the central banks around the world will convert some of their reserves into euros sending billions of dollars back to the America. This will result in either recession or depression.

The notion that the bourse poses a serious threat to the US economy has been widely dismissed as a left-wing, internet-conspiracy theory. In fact, there is nothing conspiratorial about it, unless the fundamental law of “supply and demand” no longer applies.

If fewer people want the greenback it becomes worthless. Is that conspiratorial?

Articles about the bourse have magically disappeared from the internet. The more reputable accounts of the potential disaster have slipped into a cyber black-hole.

No matter. If the bourse opens next week then gold will shoot into the stratosphere while jittery currency traders continue to edge away from the shaky greenback.

The Bush administration has done irreparable damage to our currency. Under the guidance of the Federal Reserve, Bush has increased government spending by 35% while raising the national debt a whopping $3 trillion. The only thing keeping the dollar on its lofty perch is the oil trade and that may soon change.

The dollar fell steadily during Bush’s first years in office as currency traders recognized Bush’s intention to enshrine deficit spending as a permanent function of government. The greenback has managed to keep its head above water due to shaky lending practices in the mortgage industry (which sluiced trillions into domestic housing) and because of the estimated $2.3 trillion circulating in oil transactions. The increase in oil prices has allowed the Fed to keep the printing presses going at full-tilt while Bush’s friends were making off with hundreds of billions in lavish tax cuts.

Now, it appears that the game is over. Oil thirsty nations will be free to purchase petroleum in a stable currency leaving Uncle Sam to flail away in ocean of red ink.

Nearly 70% of the reserves in the world’s central banks are currently denominated in US dollars. This monopoly allows the US to purchase valuable resources with fiat currency and maintain enormous deficits without hyper-inflation. It is the perfect rip-off. The administration has shown its willingness to go to war and kill hundreds of thousands of innocent people to defend this global extortion-racket. However, forces are in play now that will make it impossible to maintain the present system. If the Fed increases interest rates much more the $9 trillion housing bubble will burst, and if it doesn’t raise rates, the $2 billion of cash inflows the government needs each day to cover its trade deficit will evaporate.

It is a “lose-lose” situation.

The opening of Iran’s bourse will only hasten the inevitable decline of the dollar and a death-spiral for the American economy; that is why Congress passed the Iran Freedom Support Act last week (even before the Security Council had made its recommendations!) Hidden in the small print of the legislation is a clue that reveals Congress’ real intentions:

“The Congress declares that it is the policy of the United States to deny Iran the ability to support acts of international terrorism….by limiting the development of Iran’s ability to explore for, extract, refine, or transport by pipeline petroleum resources.”

Yes indeed; Iran’s plan to sell oil in euros is now tantamount to an act of “international terrorism”, a clear sign of the importance that Washington attaches to the coming bourse.

The fate of the greenback is entirely the result of Bush’s enormous tax cuts, profligate spending, and a deeply-flawed foreign policy agenda. By now, Bush and co. had expected to topple regimes in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya, Sudan and Somalia. If his “5 year campaign” had been successful then Washington would control enough of the world’s oil to force the other nations to continue using the dollar even while the gargantuan debt kept piling up. This explains why the oil giants linked arms with the 12 central banks to dupe the American people into the apocryphal war on terror. Terrorism is simply a public relations scam that conceals the ongoing global resource war.

America is now facing a slow-motion meltdown that could escalate into a widespread run on the dollar. Attacking Iran will only aggravate the situation and push tenuous states towards new alliances. (China, India, Venezuela and Russia have already expressed support for the new bourse)

If the bourse opens as scheduled they’ll be no turning back. The Bush administration is loaded with hawks who still believe the issue can be resolved through force. They have learned nothing from Iraq.

Military action will do nothing to relieve America’s enormous account imbalances or lessen the vulnerability of the ailing greenback. The dollar is teetering on the brink and it’s about to get a big shove from behind.

Big changes are coming whether we want them or not.
Snuffysmith
Its all about hubris.


http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/HE04Aa01.html
Peddling democracy the US way
By Chalmers Johnson

There is something absurd and inherently false about one country trying to impose its system of government or its economic institutions on another. Such an enterprise amounts to a dictionary definition of imperialism. When what's at issue is "democracy", you have the fallacy of using the end to justify the means (making war on those to be democratized), and in the process the leaders of the missionary country are invariably infected with the sins of hubris, racism and arrogance.

We Americans have long been guilty of these crimes. On the eve of our entry into World War I, William Jennings Bryan, president Woodrow Wilson's first secretary of state, described the United States as "the supreme moral factor in the world's progress and the accepted arbiter of the world's disputes".

If there is one historical generalization that the passage of time has validated, it is that the world could not help being better off if the American president had not believed such nonsense and if the United States had minded its own business in the war between the British and German empires. We might well have avoided Nazism, the Bolshevik Revolution, and another 30 to 40 years of the exploitation of India, Indonesia, Indochina, Algeria, Korea, the Philippines, Malaya and virtually all of Africa by European, American and Japanese imperialists.

We Americans have never outgrown the narcissistic notion that the rest of the world wants (or should want) to emulate us. In Iraq, bringing democracy became the default excuse for our warmongers - it would be perfectly plausible to call them "crusaders", if Osama bin Laden had not already appropriated the term - once the George W Bush lies about Iraq's alleged nuclear, chemical and biological threats and its support for al-Qaeda melted away.

The president and his neo-con supporters have prattled on endlessly about how "the world is hearing the voice of freedom from the center of the Middle East", but the reality is much closer to what Noam Chomsky dubbed "deterring democracy" in a notable 1992 book of that name. We have done everything in our power to see that the Iraqis did not get a "free and fair election", one in which the Shi'ite majority could come to power and ally Iraq with Iran. As Noah Feldman, the Coalition Provisional Authority's law advisor, put it in November 2003, "If you move too fast the wrong people could get elected".

In the election of January 30, 2005, the US military tried to engineer the outcome it wanted (Operation Founding Fathers), but the Shi'ites won anyway. Nearly a year later in the December 15 elections for the national assembly, the Shi'ites won again, but Sunni, Kurdish and American pressure has delayed the formation of a government to this moment. After a compromise candidate for prime minister was finally selected, two of the most ominous condottiere of the Bush administration, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, flew into Baghdad to tell him what he had to do for "democracy" - leaving the unmistakable impression that the new prime minister is a puppet of the United States.

Hold the economic advice
After Latin America, East Asia is the area of the world longest under America's imperialist tutelage. If you want to know something about the US record in exporting its economic and political institutions, it's a good place to look. But first, some definitions.

The political philosopher Hannah Arendt once argued that democracy is such an abused concept we should dismiss as a charlatan anyone who uses it in serious discourse without first clarifying what he or she means by it. Therefore, let me indicate what I mean by democracy. First, the acceptance within a society of the principle that public opinion matters. If it doesn't, as for example in Joseph Stalin's Russia, or present-day Saudi Arabia, or the Japanese prefecture of Okinawa under American military domination, then it hardly matters what rituals of American democracy, such as elections, may be practiced.

Second, there must be some internal balance of power or separation of powers, so that it is impossible for an individual leader to become a dictator. If power is concentrated in a single position and its occupant claims to be beyond legal restraints, as is true today with our president, then democracy becomes attenuated or only pro forma. In particular, I look for the existence and practice of administrative law - in other words, an independent, constitutional court with powers to declare null and void laws that contravene democratic safeguards.

Third, there must be some agreed-upon procedure for getting rid of unsatisfactory leaders. Periodic elections, parliamentary votes of no confidence, term limits and impeachment are various well-known ways to do this, but the emphasis should be on shared institutions.

With that in mind, let's consider the export of the American economic, and then democratic "model" to Asia. The countries stretching from Japan to Indonesia, with the exception of the former American colony of the Philippines, make up one of the richest regions on earth today. They include the second most productive country in the world, Japan, with a per capita income well in excess of that of the United States, as well as the world's fastest growing large economy, China's, which has been expanding at a rate of more than 9.5% per annum for the past two decades. These countries achieved their economic well-being by ignoring virtually every item of wisdom preached in American economics departments and business schools or propounded by various American administrations.

Japan established the regional model for East Asia. In no case did the other high-growth Asian economies follow Japan's path precisely, but they have all been inspired by the overarching characteristic of the Japanese economic system - namely, the combining of the private ownership of property as a genuine right, defensible in law and inheritable, with state control of economic goals, markets and outcomes.

I am referring to what the Japanese call "industrial policy" (sangyo seisaku). In American economic theory (if not in practice), industrial policy is anathema. It contradicts the idea of an unconstrained market guided by laissez faire. Nonetheless, the American military-industrial complex and our elaborate system of "military Keynesianism" rely on a Pentagon-run industrial policy - even as American theory denies that either the military-industrial complex or economic dependence on arms manufacturing are significant factors in our economic life. We continue to underestimate the high-growth economies of East Asia because of the power of our ideological blinders.

One particular form of American economic influence did greatly affect East Asian economic practice - namely, protectionism and the control of competition through high tariffs and other forms of state discrimination against foreign imports. This was the primary economic policy of the United States from its founding until 1940. Without it, American economic wealth of the sort to which we have become accustomed would have been inconceivable. The East Asian countries have emulated the US in this respect. They are interested in what the US does, not what it preaches. That is one of the ways they all got rich. China is today pursuing a variant of the basic Japanese development strategy, even though it does not, of course, acknowledge this.

Marketing democracy
The gap between preaching and self-deception in the way we promote democracy abroad is even greater than in selling our economic ideology. Our record is one of continuous (sometimes unintended) failure, although most establishment pundits try to camouflage this fact.

The Federation of American Scientists has compiled a list of more than 201 overseas military operations from the end of World War II until September 11, 2001, in which we were involved and normally struck the first blow. (The list is reprinted by Gore Vidal in Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace: How We Got To Be So Hated, p 22-41.) The current wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are not included. In no instance did democratic governments come about as a direct result of any of these military activities.

The United States holds the unenviable record of having helped install and then supported such dictators as the Shah of Iran, General Suharto in Indonesia, Fulgencio Batista in Cuba, Anastasio Somoza in Nicaragua, Augusto Pinochet in Chile and Sese Seko Mobutu in Congo-Zaire, not to mention a series of American-backed militarists in Vietnam and Cambodia until we were finally expelled from Indochina. In addition, we ran among the most extensive international terrorist operations in history against Cuba and Nicaragua because their struggles for national independence produced outcomes the US did not like.

On the other hand, democracy did develop in some important cases as a result of opposition to our interference - for example, after the collapse of the Central Intelligence Agency-installed Greek colonels in 1974; in both Portugal in 1974 and Spain in 1975 after the end of the US-supported fascist dictatorships; after the overthrow of Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines in 1986; following the ouster of General Chun Doo-hwan in South Korea in 1987; and following the ending of 38 years of martial law on the island of Taiwan in the same year.

One might well ask, however: what about the case of Japan? Bush has repeatedly cited our allegedly successful installation of democracy there after World War II as evidence of our skill in this kind of activity. What this experience proved, he contended, was that we would have little difficulty implanting democracy in Iraq. As it happens though, General Douglas MacArthur, who headed the American occupation of defeated Japan from 1945 to 1951, was himself essentially a dictator, primarily concerned with blocking genuine democracy from below in favor of hand-picked puppets and collaborators from the pre-war Japanese establishment.

When a country loses a war as crushingly as Japan did the war in the Pacific, it can expect a domestic revolution against its wartime leaders. In accordance with the terms of the Potsdam Declaration, which Japan accepted in surrendering, the State Department instructed MacArthur not to stand in the way of a popular revolution, but when it began to materialize he did so anyway.

He chose to keep Hirohito, the wartime emperor, on the throne (where he remained until his death in 1989) and helped bring officials from the industrial and militarist classes that ruled wartime Japan back to power. Except for a few months in 1993 and 1994, those conservatives and their successors have ruled Japan continuously since 1949. Japan and China are today among the longest-lived single-party regimes on earth, both parties - the nucleus of the Liberal Democratic Party and the Chinese Communist Party - having come to power in the same year.

Equally important in the Japanese case, MacArthur's headquarters actually wrote the quite democratic constitution of 1947 and bestowed it on the Japanese people under circumstances in which they had no alternative but to accept it. In her 1963 book On Revolution, Hannah Arendt stresses "the enormous difference in power and authority between a constitution imposed by a government upon a people and the constitution by which a people constitutes its own government." She notes that, in post-World War I Europe, virtually every case of an imposed constitution led to dictatorship or to a lack of power, authority and stability.

Although public opinion certainly matters in Japan, its democratic institutions have never been fully tested. The Japanese public knows that its constitution was bestowed by its conqueror, not generated from below by popular action. Japan's stability depends greatly on the ubiquitous presence of the United States, which supplies the national defense - and so, implicitly, the fairly evenly distributed wealth - that gives the public a stake in the regime. But the Japanese people, as well as those of the rest of East Asia, remain fearful of Japan's ever again being on its own in the world.

While more benign than the norm, Japan's government is typical of the US record abroad in one major respect. Successive American administrations have consistently favored oligarchies that stand in the way of broad popular aspirations - or movements toward nationalist independence from American control.

In Asia, in the post-World War II period, we pursued such anti-democratic policies in South Korea, the Philippines, Thailand, Indochina (Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam), and Japan. In Japan, in order to prevent the Socialist Party from coming to power through the polls, which seemed likely during the 1950s, we secretly supplied funds to the representatives of the old order in the Liberal Democratic Party.

We helped bring wartime minister of munitions Nobusuke Kishi to power as prime minister in 1957; split the Socialist Party by promoting and financing a rival Democratic Socialist Party; and, in 1960, backed the conservatives in a period of vast popular demonstrations against the renewal of the Japanese-American Security Treaty. Rather than developing as an independent democracy, Japan became a docile Cold War satellite of the United States - and one with an extremely inflexible political system at that.

The Korean case
In South Korea, the United States resorted to far sterner measures. From the outset, we favored those who had collaborated with Japan, whereas North Korea built its regime on the foundation of former guerrilla fighters against Japanese rule. During the 1950s, we backed the aged exile Syngman Rhee as our puppet dictator. (He had actually been a student of Woodrow Wilson's at Princeton early in the century.) When, in 1960, a student movement overthrew Rhee's corrupt regime and attempted to introduce democracy, we instead supported the seizure of power by General Park Chung-hee.

Educated at the Japanese military academy in Manchuria during the colonial period, Park had been an officer in the Japanese army of occupation until 1945. He ruled Korea from 1961 until October 16, 1979, when the chief of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency shot him to death over dinner. The South Korean public believed that the KCIA chief, known to be "close" to the Americans, had assassinated Park on US orders because he was attempting to develop a nuclear-weapons program the US opposed. (Does this sound familiar?) After Park's death, Major General Chun Doo-hwan seized power and instituted yet another military dictatorship that lasted until 1987.

In 1980, a year after the Park assassination, Chun smashed a popular movement for democracy that broke out in the southwestern city of Kwangju and among students in Seoul. Backing Chun's policies, the US ambassador argued that "firm anti-riot measures were necessary". The American military then released to Chun's control South Korean troops assigned to the United Nations command to defend the country against a North Korean attack, and he used them to crush the movement in Kwangju. Thousands of pro-democracy demonstrators were killed. In 1981, Chun would be the first foreign visitor welcomed to the White House by the newly elected Ronald Reagan.

After more than 30 post-war years, democracy finally began to come to South Korea in 1987 via a popular revolution from below. Chun made a strategic mistake by winning the right to hold the Olympic Games in Seoul in 1988. In the lead-up to the games, students from the many universities in Seoul, now openly backed by an increasingly prosperous middle-class, began to protest American-backed military rule. Chun would normally have used his army to arrest, imprison and probably shoot such demonstrators as he had done in Kwangju seven years earlier, but he was held back by the knowledge that, if he did so, the International Olympic Committee would move the games to some other country.

In order to avoid such a national humiliation, Chun turned over power to his co-conspirator of 1979-80, General Roh Tae-woo. To allow the Olympics to go ahead, Roh instituted a measure of democratic reform, which led in 1993 to the holding of national elections and the victory of a civilian president, Kim Young-sam.

In December 1995, in one of the clearest signs of South Korea's maturing democracy, the government arrested Chun and Roh and charged them with having shaken down South Korean big business for bribes - Chun allegedly took US$1.2 billion and Roh $630 million. Kim then made a very popular decision, letting them be indicted for their military seizure of power in 1979 and for the Kwangju massacre as well.

In August 1996, a South Korean court found both Chun and Roh guilty of sedition. Chun was sentenced to death and Roh to 22-and-a-half years in prison. In April 1997, the Korean Supreme Court upheld slightly less severe sentences, something that would have been simply unimaginable for the pro forma Japanese Supreme Court. In December 1997, after peace activist Kim Dae-jung was elected president, he pardoned them both despite the fact that Chun had repeatedly tried to have Kim killed.

The United States was always deeply involved in these events. In 1989, when the Korean National Assembly sought to investigate what happened at Kwangju on its own, the US government refused to cooperate and prohibited the former American ambassador to Seoul and the former general in command of US Forces Korea from testifying. The American media avoided reporting on these events (while focusing on the suppression of pro-democracy demonstrators in Beijing in June 1989), and most Americans knew next to nothing about them. This coverup of the costs of military rule and the suppression of democracy in South Korea, in turn, has contributed to the present growing hostility of South Koreans toward the United States.

Unlike American-installed or supported "democracies" elsewhere, South Korea has developed into a genuine democracy. Public opinion is a vital force in the society. A separation of powers has been institutionalized and is honored. Electoral competition for all political offices is intense, with high levels of participation by voters. These achievements came from below, from the South Korean people themselves, who liberated their country from American-backed military dictatorship.

Perhaps most important, the Korean National Assembly - the parliament - is a genuine forum for democratic debate. I have visited it often and find the contrast with the scripted and empty procedures encountered in the Japanese Diet or the Chinese National People's Congress striking indeed. Perhaps its only rival in terms of democratic vitality in East Asia is the Taiwanese Legislative Yuan. On some occasions, the Korean National Assembly is rowdy; fist fights are not uncommon. It is, however, a true school of democracy, one that came into being despite the resistance of the United States.

The democracy peddlers
Given this history, why should we be surprised that in Baghdad, such figures as former head of the Coalition Provisional Authority L Paul Bremer, former ambassador John Negroponte and current Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, as well as a continuously changing cohort of American major-generals fresh from power-point lectures at the American Enterprise Institute, should have produced chaos and probable civil war? None of them has any qualifications at all for trying to "introduce democracy" or American-style capitalism in a highly nationalistic Muslim nation, and even if they did, they could not escape the onus of having terrorized the country through the use of unrestricted military force.

Bremer is a former assistant and employee of former secretaries of state Henry Kissinger and Alexander Haig. Negroponte was American ambassador to Honduras, 1981-85, when it had the world's largest Central Intelligence Agency station and actively participated in the dirty war to suppress Nicaraguan democracy.

Khalilzad, the most prominent official of Afghan ancestry in the Bush administration, is a member of the Project for a New American Century, the neo-con pressure group that lobbied for a war of aggression against Iraq. The role of the American military in our war there has been an unmitigated disaster on every front, including the deployment of undisciplined, brutal troops at places such as the Abu Ghraib prison.

All the United States has achieved is to guarantee that Iraqis will hate it for years to come. The situation in Iraq today is worse than it was in Japan or Korea and comparable to the US tenure in Vietnam. Perhaps it is worth reconsidering what exactly the US is so intent on exporting to the world.

Chalmers Johnson is, most recently, the author of The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic, as well as of MITI and the Japanese Miracle (1982) and Japan: Who Governs? (1995) among other works. This piece originated as "remarks" presented at the East Asia panel of a workshop on "Transplanting Institutions" sponsored by the Department of Sociology of the University of California, San Diego, held on April 21. The chairman of the workshop was Professor Richard Madsen.

(Copyright 2006 Chalmers Johnson)
(Used by permission Tomdispatch )
Livyjr
HUBRIS is its own reward, Snuf .....
Livyjr
And speaking of George W. Bush ...

And HUBRIS .....

"Taliban Steps Up Attacks in Afghanistan"

By PAUL GARWOOD, Associated Press Writer

2 hours, 27 minutes ago

KABUL, Afghanistan - Taliban militants and their allies have launched an intensified campaign against thousands of NATO troops deploying to southern Afghanistan, where the multinational force is taking over from U.S. soldiers.

Whether ambushing Afghan police from mountain passes or detonating bombs on lonely highways, remnants of the ousted Islamic regime have stepped up attacks, causing havoc and insecurity across a cluster of provinces.


Military officials and analysts said Wednesday the Taliban threat is the No. 1 challenge facing more than 7,000 U.S., Canadian, British and Dutch troops that by September will be fighting under the NATO flag in four southern provinces.

"This is counterinsurgency warfare (and) there will be casualties on both sides," said British Col. Chris Vernon, chief of staff for NATO forces operating in southern Afghanistan.

"This is not the north or west of the country."

"This is a counterinsurgency war zone."

Taliban chiefs like Mullah Omar hail from southern Afghanistan.

Its deserts and mountain ranges provide good cover for militants hiding or planning for attacks.

Protecting opium poppy fields — and the illicit funds they earn — is another reason to fight.

Mountains running through the northern districts of the neighboring Helmand and Kandahar provinces, and Zabul and Uruzgan to the north offer sanctuaries for militants, Vernon said.

The porous Pakistani border runs along the southern and eastern edge of the provinces, providing another base where militants replenish funds and weapons before sneaking back in to launch attacks.

Ordinary Afghans and foreign analysts are critical that militants can still pose such a threat, more than four years after the late 2001 U.S.-led invasion that ousted the Taliban government for harboring Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida terrorists, blamed for the Sept. 11 attacks.

"The situation would have been a lot easier if we got troops down there four years ago," said Joanna Nathan, the Kabul-based senior analyst for the International Crisis Group.

"Security has gotten much worse."

"Four years ago they would have been welcomed, but things have been allowed to fester."

NATO officials believe the militancy will subside in regions such as Helmand, Kandahar and Uruzgan once foreign forces consolidate their presence.

Only 1,000 British troops are in Helmand, where no coalition forces have been before, but that number will rise to 2,500 by July.

Another 1,500 Dutch troops are due to boost security in Uruzgan by August or September.

They are part of an expansion of a NATO-led security force, which is gradually assuming command of all foreign troops in Afghanistan.

"Helmand has been a free zone for the Taliban and the narco-traffickers, but now as coalition-UK capability moves in there, things will improve," Vernon said.

"But it is going to take a good year or so to get that sorted."

Extremists are also launching attacks to protect their massive opium poppy plantations from coalition and government efforts to eradicate the crops, which produce 90 percent of the world's opium and heroin.

Tribal disputes, criminal rivalries and anti-Western militants crossing from sanctuaries in Pakistan are also fanning the violence.

Afghanistan has 27,000 new soldiers and another 60,000 lesser-equipped police, many of whom are based in the south.

But they still aren't enough to counter strengthening Taliban forces and the more violent tactics, such as suicide attackers and roadside bombs.

"We are afraid when we increase our security presence in the community, we become targets for these terrorists," a Kandahar-based Afghan army commander said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Despite the brazen nature of the Taliban attacks, many of the reported casualties have been on the militant side.

At least 30 militants died in a bold attack in late March on a remote coalition forward operating base in Kandahar.

One Canadian soldier was also killed.

Canadian forces killed 20 militants planning an ambush in Helmand province's Sangin district the past weekend.

Four Taliban militants were killed Wednesday by police in another foiled Helmand ambush.

But Taliban militants have still been able to inflict casualties, killing four Canadian soldiers April 22 in a village north of Kandahar city.

Militants also kidnapped and beheaded an Indian engineer this week in Zabul province, where some 1,500 U.S. soldiers are based.

"We are seeing small cells of never more than 15 to 20 fighting men, occasionally up to 30, operating with local leaders dispersed across the south without great coherence," said Vernon.

"This makes them difficult to track."

Key to NATO efforts is its three-pronged approach to supporting security, reconstruction and improved governance.

"If we can get these three lines together, eventually the people will say that they would rather have us than the Taliban," he said.

Kandahar clothing shopkeeper Haji Din Mohammed, 45, said Afghans are desperate for increased coalition support to confront the growing Taliban influence in southern villages and towns.

Militants demand housekeepers give them food and shelter at night.

"Outside of the city, everywhere you can easily find the Taliban," Mohammed said.

"The government and coalition forces promised us security and an improved economy, but instead the security is bad."

"I can't go to my nearby village after 5 p.m."


___

Associated Press writer Noor Khan in Kandahar, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.
Livyjr
And enough ...

Of George W. Bush ....

Here is a story ....

That to me ...

Speaks of hope ....

For OUR future ....

As living, breathing entities ....

Down here ...

On this earth ....

Of OURS ....

Especially if you have ever seen one of these birds fly .....

I personally am from that time in OUR America ...

When DDT was widely used as a pesticide .....

And I remember birds up here like the Baltimore Oriole ....

Simply disappearing ...

As though they had never even been here ...

Because of the effects that DDT had on the shells of their eggs ...

And so ....

"Soaring rebirth for birds - Webcam offers bird's-eye view of hatchlings as the once-rare peregrine falcon flourishes"

By COLIN McDONALD, Staff writer, Albany, New York Times Union

First published: Wednesday, May 3, 2006

RENSSELAER -- Beneath the Dunn Memorial Bridge, a kingfisher frantically crashes into the Hudson River.

Overhead, a peregrine falcon, talons extended, hovers and waits for the fist-sized bird to re-emerge.

Then, for one of the longest minutes in its life, the kingfisher flies erratically between the air and water, trying to escape to the shore.

With a few sweeps of its wings, the falcon gains on its prey and comes in for the kill.

The kingfisher twists in the air.

The peregrine misses.

And the kingfisher flies skyward into the safety of the bridge's steel trusses.


Peregrines can dive at speeds in excess of 200 mph, but they can't elevate nearly that fast.

That shortcoming saved the kingfisher.

"That was either a very lucky kingfisher or a not very hungry peregrine," said Barbara Loucks, a peregrine specialist for the Department of Environmental Conservation.

"I really thought that kingfisher was doomed."

After being extirpated from the wild in the Northeast and most of North America in the 1950s because of the DDT pesticide, peregrine falcons are back in record numbers.

And the cities of Rensselaer and Albany have the best view in the state of their recovery.


This year, the pair nesting in the box underneath the Dunn Memorial Bridge laid five eggs, which started to hatch Tuesday morning.

For the first two to three weeks, their parents will share the job of sitting on top of the chicks to keep them warm and of feeding them tidbits of meat.

The brooding will be easy to watch, thanks to a camera placed in the nest box streaming live video to a monitor at the Empire State Plaza Concourse and still images to the DEC's Web site.

"There is no excuse if you live in Albany not to see a peregrine," Loucks said.

After three weeks, the chicks will begin to lose their fluffy white down as dark feathers begin to grow.

The chicks will be big enough to keep themselves warm while the parents undertake a constant hunt to provide their young with four meals a day.

Soon they will be strong enough to walk and will move from the back of the nesting box to the front, where they will be able to look down at the river.

They will start exploring the bridge supports and flapping their wings in preparation for flight.

During this time, the best viewing will be from the picnic tables underneath the span on the Rensselaer side of the river, since the Webcam is aimed at the back of the nest box and the birds will have moved out of its view.

Even before DDT, the peregrine falcon was one of the rarest birds of prey on the continent.

Then the pesticide, which caused falcons and other birds to lay thin-shelled eggs, reduced the wild population to a handful of breeding pairs scattered across the western United States.


Researchers made the connection between the fragile eggs, declining population and powerful chemical spray in 1965.

By 1970, captive breeding programs had begun, and in 1972 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency banned DDT.

Two decades later, and thanks to several million dollars in public and private funds along with partnerships between state agencies and nonprofit organizations, New York had 10 wild breeding pairs.

Now 55 breeding pairs are spread across the state from the man-made canyons of Manhattan to the remote cliffs of the Adirondacks.

The DEC estimated a record 114 young peregrines took flight in 2005.

If its recovery continues, Loucks said, the peregrine falcon may be taken off the state's endangered species list in a few years.

Six weeks from now, the chicks born under the Dunn Memorial Bridge will make their first attempts at flight.

It's the most awkward stage in the birds' young lives and will provide the most entertaining viewing as the fledglings make short forays away from the nest and then try to get back.

Soon the young will start chasing butterflies, and then other birds, Loucks said.

When it is time for the young to find their own homes, the parents will abandon the nest until next year.

About half of the chicks born each spring make it through their first winter.

This next generation of peregrines faces a new challenge.

All of the bridge nest sites have been taken, as have the best cliffs in the Adirondacks.

For the first time in more than 50 years, New York is poised to become crowded with peregrines.

Colin McDonald can be reached at 454-5441 or by e-mail at cmcdonald@timesunion.com.

Watch the birdies

-- The peregrine falcon's nest box is easy to spot on the south side of the Dunn Memorial Bridge from Riverfront Park in Rensselaer. The box is the size of a large dog house and sits on top of the second concrete support column out from the shore.

The live video feed from the nest box can be viewed on a monitor set up in the Concourse of the Empire Plaza between the McDonald's and the doors to the bus turn-around.

-- On the Internet, go to www.dec.state.ny.us/, search for peregrine and follow the links to the Web cam. The DEC Web site also has links to Web cams of nesting boxes in Buffalo, Rochester and New York City.

-- In the box: Every baby needs a name, even a peregrine chick. E-mail us your suggestion at TUcitydesk@timesunion.com and we'll print a list of the most popular ones in Saturday's editions.
Snuffysmith
This was emailed to me by a friend of mine in California. Sorry its political, but its quite good.


"I'm the Decider"
by Roddy McCorley

"Well, it took me awhile, but I finally realized what "I'm the decider"
reminds me of. It sounds like something a character in a Dr. Seuss book
might say.

"So with apologies to the late Mr. Geisel, here is some idle
speculation as to what else such a character might say:"

I'm the decider.
I pick and I choose.
I pick among whats.
And choose among whos.

And as I decide
Each particular day
The things I decide on
All turn out that way.

I decided on Freedom
For all of Iraq.
And now that we have it,
I'm not looking back.

I decided on tax cuts
That just help the wealthy.
And Medicare changes
That aren't really healthy.

And parklands and wetlands
Who needs all that stuff?
I decided that none
Would be more than enough!

I decided that schools
All in all are the best
The less that they teach
And the more that they test.

I decided those wages
You need to get by
Are much better spent
On some CEO guy.

I decided your Wade
Which was versing your Roe
Is terribly awful
And just has to go.

I decided that levees
Are not really needed.
Now when hurricanes come
They can come unimpeded.

That old Constitution?
Well, I have decided
As"just goddam paper"
It should be derided.

I've decided gay marriage
Is icky and weird.
Above all other things,
It's the one to be feared.

And Cheney and Rummy
And Condi all know
That I'm the Decider -
They tell me it's so.

I'm the Decider
So watch what you say
Or I may decide
To have you whisked away.

Or I'll tap your phones.
Your e-mail I'll read.
`cause I'm the Decider -
Like Jesus decreed.

Yes, I'm the Decider
The finest alive
And I'm nuking Iran.
Now watch this drive!

"Now that I think about it, Dr. Seuss anticipated this administration
pretty well when he wrote Yertle the Turtle..."
Livyjr
QUOTE(Snuffysmith @ May 3 2006, 09:29 AM)
"The Inevitable Collapse of the Greenback" 

By Mike Whitney

Al-Jazeerah, May 3, 2006

The Bush administration is loaded with hawks who still believe the issue can be resolved through force.

They have learned nothing from Iraq.

Military action will do nothing to relieve America’s enormous account imbalances or lessen the vulnerability of the ailing greenback.

The dollar is teetering on the brink and it’s about to get a big shove from behind.

Big changes are coming whether we want them or not.

*

The less a leader does and says ....

The happier his people ....

THE MORE A LEADER STRUTS AND BRAGS ......

THE SORRIER HIS PEOPLE ....


- Lao Tze, Tao Te Ching
Livyjr
QUOTE(Snuffysmith @ May 3 2006, 09:54 AM)
"Peddling democracy the US way"

By Chalmers Johnson

There is something absurd and inherently false about one country trying to impose its system of government or its economic institutions on another.

The situation in Iraq today is worse than it was in Japan or Korea and comparable to the US tenure in Vietnam.

Perhaps it is worth reconsidering what exactly the US is so intent on exporting to the world.

The "United States" have become another Barbary Coast "pirate state" ......

In my estimation, anyway ....

Or maybe we have become Great Britain ....

Which would probably be worse .....
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