Thursday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* CNN spoke to White House aides who described Gonzales’ performance today as “going down in flames.” One prominent Republican described the AG’s testimony as similar to “watching a clubbing of [a] baby seal.” Ouch.

* We know that far too many on the right have been blaming Virginia Tech students for this week’s tragic shootings, arguing that the students didn’t do enough to defend themselves. Meteor Blades explained how wrong the right is: “What we now know is that some of those who faced the gunman at Virginia Tech did selflessly risk their lives to save others.”

* Interesting timing: “President Bush gives speech on the War on Terror during Gonzales testimony.”

* It’s safe to say Rep. John Doolittle (R-Calif.) has a very serious problem on his hands. The FBI has raided his home, he’s had to resign his seat on the House Appropriations Committee, and he’s throwing his wife under the bus. The GOP’s Culture of Corruption continues, even after losing their majority.

* How ridiculous have things become at the DoJ? “Apparently you can’t even get considered for the intern program anymore if you’ve demonstrated any identifiable liberal traits.”

* If you read one only one piece on yesterday’s abortion ruling from the Supreme Court, read Dahlia Lithwick’s take: “Kennedy invokes The Woman Who Changed Her Mind not once, but twice today. His opinion is a love song to all women who regret their abortions after the fact, and it is in the service of these women that he justifies upholding the ban. Today’s holding is a strange reworking of Taming of the Shrew, with Kennedy playing an all-knowing Baptista to a nation of fickle Biancas.”

* A deputy to Paul Wolfowitz urged the World Bank chief on Wednesday to resign in the interests of the institution. Good idea.

* Speaking of the World Bank, Wolfowitz’s policies on family planning alone should be enough to get him fired.

* The NRA really should be more careful about using imagery from Mein Kampf on the cover of its magazine.

* For all the far-right ranting and raving about “amnesty,” a national consensus seems to be emerging: “A USA TODAY/Gallup Poll taken last weekend found that 78% of respondents feel people now in the country illegally should be given a chance at citizenship. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., who is drafting legislation to grant illegal immigrants an opportunity to stay in the USA, said: ‘As with so many issues, the American people are ahead of Washington on immigration reform. They know that only a plan that offers a path to earned citizenship will fix our broken system.'”

* Michael Froomkin wonders why the nation isn’t throwing a bigger fit over the politicization of the rule of law. He has several options to choose from, though my guess is that people just don’t realize what’s happening in their own country with their own government.

* For the one millionth time, Bob Casey was not denied a role in ’92 convention because of his views on abortion. It’s one of politics’ more annoying (and enduring) myths.

* Civil unions got a big boost in New Hampshire yesterday thanks to an endorsement from Gov. John Lynch (D).

* Former Washington Post columnist Colbert King thinks the paper’s editorial board needs to make some serious improvements.

* Charles Krauthammer is still trying to link Cho Seung Hui to Islamic terrorism. Pathetic.

* And finally, Dan Froomkin, noting that Harry Reid told the president to his face yesterday that his Iraq policy is a failure, asks, “Could this have been the first time Bush has come face to face with someone willing to confront him so bluntly on the signature issue of his presidency?” I have a hunch we know the answer to that one.

Anything to add? Consider this an end-of-the-day open thread.

One prominent Republican described the AG’s testimony as similar to “watching a clubbing of [a] baby seal.”

And Shrill O’Lielly will compare Democrats to people who stomp baby seals in 3…2…1…

  • Gonezales’ flaming death spiral was depressing, because our democracy has fallen so far, but uplifting, because this criminal gang’s lawyer was beaten like a rug by Republicans and Democrats.

    Michael Froomkin is right there with Lee Iacocca. Where is the outrage?

  • Nothing to add except “Whew!”

    All those stories in such a small space. It’s really astounding to me that the Bush Crime Family hasn’t been been impeached, prosecuted and imprisoned en masse by now. No other democracy in the world would tolerate so much wrong doing. Not one.

  • Here’s another story, the US has released a former CIA operative and Cuban terrorist on bond awaiting trial. See how many ironies you can spot…

    EL PASO, Texas — Anti-Castro militant Luis Posada Carriles, an aging ex-CIA operative suspected in a decades-old airliner bombing, was released from U.S. custody Thursday pending his trial on immigration fraud charges.

    Posada is wanted in Cuba and Venezuela, where he is accused of plotting the 1976 bombing of a Cuban jetliner that killed 73 people. A U.S. judge ruled that he couldn’t be deported to those countries because he might be tortured

    http://www.nbc6.net/news/12520575/detail.html

  • The Usurper-In-Chief gives a speech on the War on Truth during Gone-zales testimony.

    New legal pad and ink pen: $25

    New suit, shirt, silk tie and shoes: $2500

    Lying to the American people in your testimony before Congress: Priceless

    There are some people in life money can’t buy… for everyone else there’s perjury charges.

  • Watching Gonzales squirm before the Judiciary Committee, I almost started to feel sorry for him. Then I vividly recalled a report from around the time of the 2000 election or thereabouts discussing Gonzales’ role as Governor Bush’s General Counsel in the early 1990s.

    In that capacity is was Gonzo’s responsibility to brief the Governor on reports from the State Clemency Board and to ensure that he was aware of any other substantive issues relating to the fate of prisoners on Texas’ death row. Those meetings with Bush were generally considered the last word before the death warrant was signed.

    As the NPR story had it, the meetings were usually light-hearted affairs in which the briefing of the governor by his general counsel seldom lasted more than five minutes, and never resulted in a stay, much less a commutation. I remember thinking at the time that a better term for that office would have been Lord High Executioner. So while I’m still fascinated by the spectacle before the committee, the feelings of pity seem to have dissipated.

  • I posted this in the D’souza thread but probably the round up is a better place. Please forgive my bandwidth hogging.

    http://www.onenewsnow.com/2007/04/poll_could_the_supreme_court_b.php

    Todays Onenews poll

    What has contributed MOST to the lack of respect for human life seen in America today?

    Banning prayer in public schools

    Teaching the evolution theory as fact

    Legalizing abortion-on-demand

    Glorifying violence in the media

    Failing to reach the lost with the Gospel

    I can’t decide, I mean they all fit so well and cover the only possible reasons for things like VT.

  • It’s safe to say Rep. John Doolittle (R-Calif.) has a very serious problem on his hands. The FBI has raided his home, he’s had to resign his seat on the House Appropriations Committee, and he’s throwing his wife under the bus. The GOP’s Culture of Corruption continues, even after losing their majority.

    This guy got into office in 1980 because of Jimmy Carter running up the white flag at 5pm Pacific Time on election day. This depressed participation in Sacramento by probably 35-40% among reliably-Democratic voters, which resulted in Sacramento – which had previously been a solid-D town – becoming almost solid-R in its congressional delegation. So for that self-righteous prick to “get his” now is particularly satisfying, particularly since it’s a “morals charge.”

  • ***“President Bush gives speech on the War on Terror during Gonzales testimony.”***

    Now there’s a “Look! A shiny Thing!” moment if I’ve ever seen one….

  • I’m not in the habit of defending the NRA, but the octopus tentacles isn’t confined to the field of anti-semitism. In the progressive era political cartoonists used the same depiction to go after over-zealous monopolies. This time we liberals might be looking too hard.

  • The Wolfowitz affair deserves broader attention because of its increadibly tangled web of wrongdoing. Wolfie has known Shaha Riza posssibly since before he was asked to join the Bush administration. She had been working for several group trying to overthrow Saddam and working for democritization of the Middle East and for increased human rights for women.

    You may not tell by the looks of him but Wolfie is a womanizer. He became seperated from his wife around 2000 because of an affair he had in his previous post as head of the SAIS school at Johns Hopkins. This married father of three was also accused of using his position of authority over women, presumably for sex, though those reports are sketchy.

    After his separation, Wolfie could play the field again and became besotted with Riza who, despite her being an Arabic woman and he a Jewish neocon, had much in common with the other neocons Wofie palled-around with. She may have been an influence on Wolfie, who is widely regarded as the chief architect of the Iraq war, for pursuing the whole democracy gambit in Iraq and also pushed for the war on feminist grounds (anyone else remember the disheartening stories of Saddam’s “rape rooms” as a reason we should attack?)

    So when the Iraq war starts hitting the crapper, Wolfie, for some strange reason, gets sent to head the World Bank where lo and behold his girlfriend works. After staff complained about the impropriety of this arrangement, even before he assumed the post, Wolfie moves Riza to work as a World Bank employee at the Department of State with a salary that is even bigger than the head of that agency, Condi Rice. Who does she work for over there? None other than Liz Cheney, where they will be responsible for disbursing World Bank monies throughout the Middle East. How convenient, having a World bank insider helping to use World Bank monies to fund Bush administration operations in the Middle East.

    This whole affair stinks to high heaven. This is not about a dalliance Wolfie had and a nepotistic raise, this is a woman who had influence over Wolfie in the run-up to the Iraq war (some call her the most powerful Arab woman in Washington) and their continuing machinations to move forward Bush doctrine with the unwilling assistance of the World Bank.

  • One thing to add:

    Looks like the debate rages on at the Dunces’ Corner over John Dippshite’s asinine remarks regarding the VT shooting victims. I peeked in to see if there was any new right-wing reaction to the Gonzalez testimony to be had, but it looks like they’re mostly still more interested in Dippshite.

  • I agree with you petorado, but I have to admit that I’ve enjoyed this mess as petty as it might be. Apparently Wolfie lets little Wolfie do the “thinking” for him. If little Wolfie was doing the thinking on the Iraq planning, no wonder things went the way they did.

    Knowing a little about how these guys think, I suspect that this whole, uh, affair is killing him. Having “lessors” point and say “J’accuse!!!” is humiliation. Guys like Wolfie feel they are above us mere mortals and the mocking/laughter/accusations/humiliation kill these egomaniac shits.

  • ” Interesting timing: “President Bush gives speech on the War on Terror during Gonzales testimony.”

    Interesting result: Nobody gave a damn.

  • Jim @ #6:

    But remember that the Lord High Executioner had to behead himself before he got to any victims…

    If only we could be so lucky!

  • May the fates strike down all the incompetent neocons spawned and nurtured in the past six years in this administration. Meritocracy has never looked so good.

    Wolfie is a womanizer?!? Only Anna-Nicole could think of him in those terms.

  • Interesting timing: “President Bush gives speech on the War on Terror during Gonzales testimony.”

    The good news: The Emperor has found some clothes.
    The bad news: It’s a clown suit.

    I’m starting to think Karl’s The Math is telling them that 85% of the people still approve the pResident. Turn the chart over Karl.

    A slightly sick side thought: Do you think BushBaby was dissapointed when the found out the VT shooter wasn’t Muslim? Personally I think he was wanking along with Debbie Schussel.

  • The Michael Froomkin piece is, or should be, the biggest story here.

    For whatever reason–and I’d personally assign blame as about 60 percent cable news, 10 percent other cultural factors, 28 percent Gingrich/DeLay/Bush/Rove legacy, and 2 percent Clinton legacy–we evidently have come to take it as an immutable law of the universe that politics is all pervasive. It’s now expected that whoever is in power will try to use the mechanisms of governance to perpetuate that power.

    What I’d like is some kind of commitment from the presidential candidates, on both sides, to draw a bright line within the bureaucracy that political considerations absolutely cannot cross. I think it’s possible the Democrats would do this–though probably not Hillary, whom I believe is a closet unitary-executive thinker–but the Republicans won’t, because they’re all either craven (Romney), psychotic (Rudy) or both (McCain). Besides, doing so would imply criticism of the Deciderer, whose greatness among The Base is sacrosanct and unquestionable.

    It’s very, very frightening. Thank the gods we have a Democratic congressional majority–or else we wouldn’t even have known about this pervasive politicization until it was too late. For that matter, it still might be too late.

  • “Here’s another story, the US has released a former CIA operative and Cuban terrorist on bond awaiting trial. See how many ironies you can spot…”
    Racerx… maybe one more irony. he was released from a New Mexico jail:
    Doesn’t it just make you wonder who the U.S. Attorney was? Could it have been one of the newly appointeds?

  • * CNN spoke to White House aides who described Gonzales’ performance today as “going down in flames.” One prominent Republican described the AG’s testimony as similar to “watching a clubbing of [a] baby seal.” — CB

    Juxtapose with this Bush statement:
    http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/013745.php

    Conclusion:
    The Boob *enjoys* watching baby seals being clubbed to death. Who’d’a thunk?

  • On the timing….I think it both sends out a signal from the WH (or tries to) that “this isn’t worth even watching…look, I’m not watching it even, cause we got a war on Terra to attend to…making mericans safe” as well as a great stick-fingers-in-ears-and-chant-la-la-la-la-la-I-can’t-hear-you-la-la-la gesture.

    I have my own gesture for this. I am wondering what the hell public television…you know the one everyone has access to but doesn’t watch? What they were doing not televising the hearings.

    Or networks, that televise Bush doing the same speech over and over, the wag his finger speech, as if it were news, but not this.

    Left wing press indeed. Sheesh. Those are our airwaves, and cable runs through right-of-way on our common land, in our country. They can use it to make money, but have a duty to inform the citizenry about pertinent events in our political world. They fail MISERABLY.

    Remember Watergate? I was around 15-16 then, and not all that interesting in old fogeys bloviating on TV…but it was on enough channels (and we had fewer channels then) and no remote control…I would be channel surfing manually…and go by it, but because it WAS televised, I “got” that it was maybe important…even better, I would be cycling through the channels, and some exchange would peak my interest…I’d watch. I got hooked. It was fascinating. I watched a large portion of the hearings for several days. The ACCESIBILITY of it, clued me in that this was historical, interesting, and putting a stopper on abuse of power.

    Today, you’d need a PC (not EVERYONE has one you know…especially, I’m guessing, the people that need MOST to be informed), to hear this fully. Turn on the TV, nothing clues anyone in that this is important.

    It is a scandal. AS much as AG himself. It ought to be an issue.

  • “One prominent Republican described the AG’s testimony as similar to “watching a clubbing of [a] baby seal.” ”

    The important difference, of course, being that the baby seal doesn’t deserve the punishment it’s being dealt…

  • …78% of respondents feel people now in the country illegally should be given a chance at citizenship…

    I’m obviously in the minority, but I’m a big fan of following the rules and I don’t advocate rewarding those who didn’t obey the law over those who did. Society relies on the existence and adherence to a set of rules. (That’s not to say that I don’t advocate challenging or changing rules, but there are proper ways to do so.)

    If we’re going to start extending citizenship to illegal entrants, let’s first extend it to those who have been patiently waiting and following the current immigration rules and restrictions.

    Otherwise I think it creates the dangerous perception that following the law is not the way to achieve goals, but rather breaking it is.

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