Thursday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* CNN reports, “The top general at Walter Reed Army Medical Center was fired Thursday, the military announced, following revelations of poor conditions in the building where troops who were wounded in Afghanistan and Iraq are treated. Maj. Gen. George Weightman’s firing was the first major military staff change after reports surfaced last month about substandard conditions in a building that is part of the facility.” Good. I hope he’s not the last.

* AP reports, “Democrats rewarded organized labor Thursday for helping them retake control of Congress, passing a House bill that would make it easier to start unions against companies’ wishes. The legislation, passed 241-185 on a nearly party-line vote, would take away the right of employers to demand secret-ballot elections by workers before unions could be recognized.” The AFL-CIO Blog has been reporting on the debate and the bill all afternoon.

* They just don’t make them like Arthur Schlesinger anymore.

* Considering the administration’s post-Katrina failures in New Orleans, the president wasn’t exactly welcome in the city today.

* Dennis Miller thinks jokes like these are funny: “This is what cracks me up about Al Gore. He is absolutely certain of temperature figures in the year 2057. And yet, when you talk about election figures from the year 2000, they’re still gray and murky, you know.” The right really doesn’t get comedy, does it.

* Dem Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel did a nice job following up on the prosecutor purge story today on the House floor.

* 84% of Philadelphia voters rejected Rick Santorum last year. So, naturally, the Philadelphia Inquirer is poised to hire him as a columnist. (The liberal media strikes again)

* In addition to all of his other problems, CNN’s Glenn Beck can be very creepy.

* Norwegianity: “So here’s the deal. Progress for America raises and spends over $30 million on last year’s elections, flouting every FEC reg on the books, and gets fined only $750,000. That’s not a deterrent, that’s just the cost of doing business.”

* Dave Johnson and James Boyce had some good follow-up on the right’s latest attempts to smear Al Gore.

* Reader D.S. alerted me to a very funny clip about Karl Rove, which spoofs an Eminem video.

* An Army spokesperson denied today that recuperating troops at Walter Reed are forbidden from talking to the media, but added that those who want to exercise their free speech will have to a) get permission from the hospital’s press relations office; or b) leave the premises. What if reporters want to speak to a reporter without getting approval from a PR office? “They can go to Starbucks,” the spokesman said. Asked whether this was a reasonable solution for patients recuperating from physical and mental trauma, he said yes. “It’s just a short trip, and many of them want to get out [of the hospital] anyway.”

* And finally, in a story that will make a lot of politicians awfully nervous, a prominent DC madam, facing federal charges, is reportedly considering selling 13 years’ worth of phone records to help raise money for her legal defense. Her lawyer explained, “The records identify the telephone number of the customer. Since 2000, the customers and the independent contractor escorts of the service almost exclusively used their personal cellphones, their identifying information is readily and publicly available.”

If none of these items are of interest, consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.

CNN reports, “The top general at Walter Reed Army Medical Center was fired Thursday, the military announced, following revelations of poor conditions in the building where troops who were wounded in Afghanistan and Iraq are treated. Maj. Gen. George Weightman’s firing was the first major military staff change after reports surfaced last month about substandard conditions in a building that is part of the facility.” Good. I hope he’s not the last.

Unlike WingerWorld, in the military, the guy on top is responsible whether he knew what was happening or not, on the theory that a commander should know what is going on.

As to Dennis Miller, he was spectacularly unfunny when he was a liberal, and is even moreso now.

  • In addition to all of his other problems, CNN’s Glenn Beck can be very creepy.

    Hell, that’s just standard operating procedure with right wing white supremacists. Women are supposed to fall down before them because that is the position women must have with men (assuming Beck is a man – a fact not in evidence).

  • Weightman’s fired, just as Aravosis, I and so many other bloggers called for. Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa fucking Claus.

    Twenty Bucks, Same as in Town. Featured: Jon Swift on Sam Fox and the Veterans for Truth named after him, The Rude Pundit on Fox’s priorities, BAGnewsNotes gives us the most tragic wedding day photo you’ve ever seen and Rants From the Rookery gives us a juxtaposition between the real and the fake #43 after Katrina. All this and much more.

  • This is what cracks me up about Dennis Miller and his ilk: it’s not that they’re unaware of the facts, it’s that their platform demands their unawareness. Even at the cost of becoming that way through a physical effort.

  • The top general at Walter Reed Army Medical Center was fired Thursday

    For letting conditions deteriorate or for letting reporters find out?

  • The second last item:

    An army spokesman died today …

    Is that supposed to be “denied?”

    Sad to think that writing “An Army /blank/ died today” doesn’t set off the automatic typo warnings in CB any more.

  • The top general at Walter Reed Army Medical Center was fired Thursday

    Steven M writes:
    “For letting conditions deteriorate or for letting reporters find out?”

    To paraphrase Grampa Simpson: A little from Column A and a little from Column B.

  • Is that supposed to be “denied?”

    Oops. Two small letters, one big difference.

  • So, unions who are trying to unionize a workplace will be able to identify those employees who voted against the union. I’ve read elsewhere that in order to vote, the union will require the worker to sign his/her ballot. Do any of you see anything nefarious in this?

  • The campaign 2004 indignities continued this week for Senator John Kerry. On Tuesday, Kerry’s Foreign Relations Committee confronted Sam Fox, the President’s nominee for ambassador to Belgium, also a Bush “Pioneer” and a $50,000 contributor to the Swift Boat Vets in 2004. And on Wednesday, Kerry learned that the Federal Election Commission slapped a record $750,000 fine on Progress for America, a conservative 527 group which spent almost $30 million on President Bush’s reelection.

    For the details, see:
    “Conservatives 527, John Kerry 0.”

  • I didn’t get to hear Wolf Blizter’s report on the pResident’s visit to NOLA, but when I saw he was at some family’s house, I wondered how long and how hard they had to search before the found someone willing to let him in the door. While I am sure there are still some people in my old stomping grounds, that wouldn’t mind the pResident, it would still have been difficult even in the Lakeview area (if he was in the city proper itself) which looks to be where he went.

  • a story that will make a lot of politicians awfully nervous

    Not just politicians. How about media types, pundits, consultants? Chris Matthews, for example, might be wondering whether his “incredible prostitute” has gotten his number on the list.

  • […] a prominent DC madam, facing federal charges, is reportedly considering selling 13 years’ worth of phone records to help raise money for her legal defense. — CB

    Palfrey (what a perfectly *splendid* name for a madam and/or a prostitute) had tried to be more subtle first– set up a website for donations to her defense fund. Apparently, that didn’t bring in enough, so she’s now engaging in a spot of soft-sell blackmail which can’t even be called blackmail but which is likely to bring in the cash in barrelfulls, as all the past customers and others will try to outbid one another (some to escape scrutiny, some to get the goods on others)

    Gotta hand it to her for smarts.

  • The thing with Dennis Miller and others (such as Ron Silver and regular people) who used to be fairly reasonable had something in their brain snap on 9/11 (as most of us did) only they’ve never snapped back to normal brain functions as Dubyaland has lied about and bungled one thing after another. At this point, Miller has become like Howard Beale in Network after Ned Beatty gives him the corporate cosmology speech.

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