Thursday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* Dick Durbin’s efforts to de-fund Dick Cheney’s office is running into some serious resistance from the Senate GOP: “Though Vice President Cheney’s contention that he is not part of the executive branch has provided endless fodder for late-night comedians, Senate Republicans are not going to be shy about defending him from attempts to strip his office of funding.” Apparently, Senate Dems aren’t even unanimous on this one.

* NYT: “Undercover Congressional investigators set up a bogus company and obtained a license from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in March that would have allowed them to buy the radioactive materials needed for a so-called dirty bomb…. The undercover operation involved an application from a fake construction company, supposedly based in West Virginia, that the investigators had incorporated even though it had no offices, Internet site or employees. Its only asset was a postal box. [NRC] officials did not visit the company or try to interview its executives in person. Instead, within 28 days, they mailed the license to the West Virginia postal box, the report says.”

* IHT: “The robbery, of $282 million from the Dar Es Salaam bank, a private financial institution, raised more questions than it answered, and officials were tight-lipped about the crime. The local police said two guards engineered the robbery, but an official at the Interior Ministry said three guards were involved. Both confirmed that the stolen money was in American dollars, not Iraqi dinars. It was unclear why the bank had that much money on hand in dollars, or how the robbers managed to move such a large amount without being detected. Several officials speculated that the robbers had connections to the militias, because it would be difficult for them to move without being searched through many checkpoints in Baghdad.”

* Dems on the House Judiciary Committee authorized — but did not issue — subpoenas for White House emails stored on RNC servers that might relate to the U.S. Attorney scandal.

* We haven’t had a really big progressive blogosphere feud in quite a while, but today seems to have started a new one. Ezra Klein wrote this about healthcare reform at the state level, prompting David Sirota to blast Ezra here, prompting Ezra’s biting response here. I think Ezra’s ahead on points, but I suspect Sirota isn’t done yet.

* Sara Taylor’s version of events on former U.S. Attorney Bud Cummins’ firing is almost certainly not true.

* Rep. Artur Davis (D-Ala.) makes a very compelling case that, with commutation already out of the way, Scooter Libby should be pardoned immediately. “Davis’ rationale? Since the commutation allows Libby continued appeals to contest his conviction, he would assert his Fifth Amendment rights in the event that Congress calls him to testify about the Plame leak. ‘If a pardon had been granted this committee could have immunized him and brought him here,’ Davis said.”

* If Chris Matthews could at least pretend to not have a huge man-crush on John McCain on the air, I’m sure his viewers would appreciate it: “Let me — let me be — let’s get into the really worst part of my job, which is to talk about what happens if he does continue to sink.” Matthews went on to gush over McCain’s “experience” and “heroism.”

* As far as Tony Snow is concerned, it’s perfectly acceptable to deny reality, but more importantly, it’s equally acceptable to mock reporters who dare to bring reality up during a press briefing.

* William Kristol tends to embarrass himself when he attempts to talk about Iraq policy. He’s no more competent when it comes to Democratic presidential candidates.

* I’d really hoped to get into this in more detail today, but ran out of time. Nevertheless, here’s my favorite part: “[CIA Director Michael] Hayden catalogued what he saw as the main sources of violence in this order: the insurgency, sectarian strife, criminality, general anarchy and, lastly, al-Qaeda. Though Hayden had listed al-Qaeda as the fifth most pressing threat in Iraq, Bush regularly lists al-Qaeda first.”

* O’Reilly’s homophobia is becoming even more ridiculous: “On the July 11 edition of Fox News’ The O’Reilly Factor, host Bill O’Reilly called the San Diego Padres’ decision to host a gay pride night and a children’s hat giveaway promotion during the same July 8 baseball game ‘insensitive,’ ‘dumb,’ ‘almost unbelievable,’ and a ‘mistake.’ He called it ‘insane’ to ‘cluster’ gay men and lesbians during a ‘hat giveaway for any kid under 12.'”

* Lady Bird Johnson died yesterday at age 94.

* And finally, Richard Nixon might have engaged in a variety of crimes in 1972, but he still took time to wonder why people didn’t appreciate his gentle side. As the AP noted today, Nixon called that side of him “the whole warmth business.” In 1970, he “wrote an 11-page, single-spaced memo detailing his acts of kindness to staff and strangers and expressing regret that he was getting no credit for being ‘nicey-nice.'”

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

Under the use immunity provisions in the U.S. Code, Congress can obtain an immunity order from a judge and compel Libby’s testimony even without a pardon. Any such testimony could not be used in future proceedings against Libby, but as the likelihood of a successful appeal and future trial is slight, there is little downside to proceeding in this manner.

  • The bankrobbers in Iraq obviously need to cultivate a relationship with VP Cheney. If they were his friends, a check for the full amount would have just been mailed to them.

  • Most evil people are at least somewhat “nicey nice”. What cracks me up is how some conservatives held fast to Nixon’s innocence until they heard him swearing like a sailor on the tapes. He could do anything he wanted to the constitution, but swearing… that’s a no-no.

    Morons.

  • If there’s one person in the progressive mediasphere I just wish would StFU, it’s David “Der Kommissar” Sirota. I guess it’s a marginal step up that he’s taken time from his usual activity of attacking Democrats who aren’t far enough left for his tastes to attack what he perceives as a DC-centric ‘tude… but he somehow managed to get wrong both Klein’s conclusions and his basis for reaching them.

    Klein’s finding–that federal health care reform to achieve universal coverage is vital because states can blow it through forces entirely beyond their control–is pretty well grounded in the sad experience of past efforts. Hawaii, Washington, Oregon, and Tennessee all went down this road, then had to beat ignominious retreats. What advocates of those programs hoped to see was success that would serve as a salutary national example; what actually happened was a depressing series of retrenchments culminating in abandoned efforts and an even stronger sense that the coverage problem couldn’t be solved.

    Sirota’s a decent polemicist. I just wish he’d stop pointing his guns the wrong way, and firing with such relish.

  • CB… Usually there are a few things in this post that pick me up at the end of the day. This one is just plain depressing. Seems like it’s just same as it ever was. I was hopeful when the Dems got elected majority… now not so much.

  • Nuclear Regulatory Commission

    What a class act. [/snark]

    $282 million from the Dar Es Salaam bank

    Whoa, that’s like something from the movies.

    Several officials speculated that the robbers had connections to the militias, because it would be difficult for them to move without being searched through many checkpoints in Baghdad.

    What a total FUBAR. Employees of the U.S. federal government are doing a hell of a job. [/snark]

  • few things in this post that pick me up at the end of the day.

    What the hell are you talking about?

    There’s:

    -security problem exposed so it can be fixed– congress doing something effective.
    -fun blogosphere feud to read about.
    -CIA director confirms that liberal sense is right / conservative bluster wrong about role Al Qaeda is playing in Iraq.
    -San Diego Padres host a gay pride night, and a kids’ hat giveaway
    -Nixon is fun to laugh at.

    The world is full of love and happiness.

  • Morbo must be passing bricks…from TPM:
    Christian Right Activists Disrupt Hindu Chaplain In The Senate

    The three protesters, who all belong to the Christian Right anti-abortion group Operation Save America, and who apparently traveled to Washington all the way from North Carolina, interrupted by loudly asking for God’s forgiveness for allowing the false prayer of a Hindu in the Senate chamber.

    “Lord Jesus, forgive us father for allowing a prayer of the wicked, which is an abomination in your sight,” the first protester began.

    “This is an abomination,” he continued. “We shall have no other gods before You.”

  • Christian Right Activists Disrupt Hindu Chaplain In The Senate

    I really, really wanted to do a post on this before the end of the day, but didn’t get to it. I also didn’t want to include in the mini-report, because I knew I’d get to it tomorrow.

    I’ll tell the whole fascinating story, with all the fun details.

  • Re #9: We shall have no other gods before You.

    Yea. And neither shall anyone else.

    I understand words like idolatry were also bandied around by the “conscientious objectors”.

    Interesting how Islamic fundamentalists have exactly the same attitude to idolatry. Brothers under the skin, huh?

  • As for that bank robbery, things got much more interesting after the initial NYT story. For the full monty, you really can’t do much better than turn to my post here.

  • If Chris Matthews could at least pretend to not have a huge man-crush on John McCain on the air, I’m sure his viewers would appreciate it: “Let me — let me be — let’s get into the really worst part of my job, which is to talk about what happens if he does continue to sink.” Matthews went on to gush over McCain’s “experience” and “heroism.”

    Chris… next time you see McVain…can you please ask him if he dropped Carpet bombs or Agent Orange on the civilians of Vietnam?

    Which is to say:
    I want to worship Johnny-got-his-jet-plane too…

    But for me:
    I just have to know how he “heroically” splated those small, brown-skinned commies walking around in reed sandals.

    So Chris…
    Was it:
    Carpet bombs or Agent Orange?
    Or was it…
    [insert expectant hush of right-wing excitement here]
    NAPALM!!!
    [Insert clamorous right-wing cheers here]

    Thank you Christy!
    I just can’t wait to gush over Johnny’s heroism too!
    So hurry and ask him will ya’ !!!

  • re #14: Thank you Christy!

    Now this I totally managed to miss.

    When is Chris planning to become Christy? Will McCain be divorcing his current wife? Or will he just be banging Christy on the side?

  • LOL @ J Flowers.

    re: Shrill O’Lielly. I assume this 24k fuckwit is hinting the icky gays will do something dreadful to the kiddies. But why does Shrill’s concern only extend to kids under 12? Does he know the age of consent is a little bit more than 12 years old? Does he care?

    What a worthless piece of shit. He doesn’t just piss me off, he creeps me out. I still say we’ll see him in handcuffs one day soon and it won’t be for shoplifting.

  • Christian Right Activists Disrupt Hindu Chaplain In The Senate

    As they say in Hindi, that little incident was some ool-jalool.

    They should read the Wikipedia page on Hinduism like I did- they might learn something.

    There is one truth, butit reveals itself by many names.

    When we come to the journey’s end, we will find ourselves back where we were at the beginning, but with the difference that we will have discovered where the beginning is. -Some German philosopher

  • I don’t know how anyone can look at the slate of possible Republican nominees and bring themselves to vote for any of them – not when the likelihood is that you’d be voting for 4 more years of a Bush-like presidency, and a Supreme Court vacancy is likely to be part of the package. As it is, it’s a toss-up whether the majority of the current Court can bring itself to uphold the Constitution, but another vacancy filled by one of these Republicans is more disaster than we can contemplate.

  • Anne @ 19 – It would probably be easy to pick a candidate if you were only looking for someone who had shoulders you could land a jetliner on or who delivered the best one-liners. One thing is for sure, we’ve seen what can happen when you place a simpleton in a position that requires complex solutions.

  • Tweety and McCain, sitting in a tree, K – I – S – S – I – N – G!

    I thought was in love with Mitt Romney… and Fred Thompson…

    What a slut.

  • Trying to get through the Klein, Sarota, Newman string about State and Federal universal health care…

    Everyone makes many very good arguments, and together could really brighten up the issue…

    But man, getting through the anger is exhausting. Why do liberals do this to each other?

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