Thursday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* All things considered, I’d consider today’s hearing a success: “House Democrats on Thursday accused Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice of grossly mismanaging diplomatic efforts in Iraq and concealing information from Congress. The charges put a visibly frustrated Rice on the defensive. At a hearing by a congressional watchdog committee, Democratic lawmakers said the State Department under Rice had been too lax with armed security contractors, ignored corruption at the highest levels of the Iraqi government and was sloppy in overseeing construction of the costly new U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. ‘I think there was a huge gap between what she said and reality,’ said Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.”

* There’s progress in Southern California, but the fires burn on: “The Santa Ana winds that helped fires explode across Southern California were dying down Thursday, but the fight was far from over: Despite a massive aerial assault, several blazes remained far from containment as flames drew perilously close to thousands of homes.”

* The White House acted today to make the Kyl-Lieberman amendment U.S. policy: “The United States announced harsh new penalties on the Iranian military and state-owned banking systems Thursday, raising pressure on the world financial system to cut ties with a regime the West accuses of bankrolling terrorism and seeking a nuclear bomb. The U.S. sanctions on elements of Iran’s vast armed forces and its largest bank are the most sweeping since 1979, when the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran ruptured diplomatic, business and military ties. The sanctions are the first of their type imposed by the United States specifically against the armed forces of another government.”

* I don’t usually think of House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) as a progressive champion, but he said some very encouraging things today about retroactive telecom immunity: “Simply stated, it would be grossly irresponsible for Congress to grant blanket immunity for companies without even knowing whether their conduct was legal or not.”

* On a related note, the “hostage” standoff may be improving: “The White House will allow leaders of the Senate Judiciary Committee to access documents on the Bush administration’s secret spying program, in an effort to win their support for retroactive legal protections covering the telecommunications firms that participated in the program, Democrats said Thursday.”

* The Republicans’ filibuster of the DREAM Act really didn’t make any sense at all, and only punishes kids for their parent’s decisions: “A bill to grant legal status to illegal immigrants who are high school graduates was defeated Wednesday in a test vote in the Senate, significantly dimming the prospects for any major immigration legislation this year.” The majority got 52 votes, eight short of bringing the measure up for a vote. If this bill can’t pass, no immigration bill can.

* Once in a while, O’Reilly makes me laugh: “During the October 24 edition of his Fox News show, Bill O’Reilly asserted: ‘[I]t seems to me, and the studies indicate, that most teachers — high school and college in the United States — are left-wingers. That they bring in a [sic] anti-American viewpoint to the sense that they don’t preach about the nobility of America, they teach about the deficits. Now, I think you have to teach both.'” I’m curious, what “studies” might O’Reilly be referring to?

* A new LAT/Bloomberg poll shows public attitudes about healthcare policy, which seem to lean in a progressive direction, but as Kevin Drum explained, the results are really a garbled mess.

* Reuters: “Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice admitted Wednesday that the United States had mishandled the case of a Canadian [Maher Arar] who was deported to Syria and who has said he was tortured there, but she stopped short of an apology…. ‘We do not think that this case was handled as it should have been,’ Ms. Rice told the House Foreign Affairs Committee. ‘We do absolutely not wish to transfer anyone to any place in which they might be tortured.'”

* There have been several developments in the Scott Beauchamp story. John Cole runs down the details, while Greg Sargent notes that Army officials have acknowledged they’re investigating the leak of private materials to Drudge.

* Senate Dems, most notably Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), want to see the testimony CDC Director Julie L. Gerberding was going to give before the White House “eviscerated” it.

* The Bush administration spent $8 million to train 500 Iraqi government employees in various ministries to use a computerized accounting system. The Finance Ministry refused to drop its paper spreadsheets.

* Say what you will about the House of Representatives, but the chamber sure does hold a lot of votes.

* Rick Santorum is now a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer. What liberal media?

* Rosa Brooks: “Forget impeachment. Liberals, put it behind you. George W. Bush and Dick Cheney shouldn’t be treated like criminals who deserve punishment. They should be treated like psychotics who need treatment. Because they’ve clearly gone mad. Exhibit A: We’re in the middle of a disastrous war in Iraq, the military and political situation in Afghanistan is steadily worsening, and the administration’s interrogation and detention tactics have inflamed anti-Americanism and fueled extremist movements around the globe. Sane people, confronting such a situation, do their best to tamp down tensions, rebuild shattered alliances, find common ground with hostile parties and give our military a little breathing space. But crazy people? They look around and decide it’s a great time to start another war.”

* And finally, yesterday, Dick Cheney literally fell asleep during a cabinet meeting. The day after tomorrow, he’ll be wielding a shotgun. I hope his hunting partners keep a nice, healthy distance.

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

I don’t usually think of House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) as a progressive champion, but he said some very encouraging things today about retroactive telecom immunity…

And I’ll believe those encouraging words when they’re followed up with real action instead of a “compromise” that sells us down the river.

Lucy. Charlie Brown. Football.

  • ‘We do not think that this case was handled as it should have been,’ Ms. Rice told the House Foreign Affairs Committee. ‘We do absolutely not wish to transfer anyone to any place in which they might be tortured.’

    Utterly meaningless both for the use of the passive voice and the WH’s tap dancing around the definition of torture.

  • Actually given the reality of electricity in Iraq – how many hours a day is it available? – I would opt for paper spread sheets too. Maybe the State Department wants to be able to blame computer problems to explain the vanishing money and double entries.

  • House Democrats on Thursday accused Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice of grossly mismanaging diplomatic efforts in Iraq and concealing information from Congress.

    They will, of course, apologize for their intemperate remarks on Monday.

  • “The White House will allow leaders of the Senate Judiciary Committee to access documents on the Bush administration’s secret spying program, in an effort to win their support for retroactive legal protections covering the telecommunications firms that participated in the program, Democrats said Thursday.”

    It doesn’t matter. Bush’s secret spying program is unconstitutional, period. Prosecution of the telecoms must continue, and the information gained must be used to prosecute the Bush administration.

  • The charges put a visibly frustrated Rice on the defensive.

    Visibly frustrated because her hero, George W. Bush, wasn’t galloping to her rescue to pull her out of there, and declare the hearing illegal through his executive power as Commander In Chief of our military?

  • […] pressure on the world financial system to cut ties with a regime the West accuses of bankrolling terrorism […]

    At the risk of sounding overly pedantic… US — except in its own mind — isn’t even all of America, much less all of the West… Bush’s megalomania is quite obvious, but that’s no reason for AP to aid and abet his notions.

    […] it would be grossly irresponsible for Congress to grant blanket immunity for companies without even knowing whether their conduct was legal or not.” — Hoyer

    If their conduct had been legal, they’d not be clamouring for immunity — *they wouldn’t need it*; only Dem pols get sued on trumped up charges. If, however, their conduct had been illegal — as their panic seems to suggest — then it would be grossly irresponsible for Congress to let them get off the hook. In short, immunity should be denied, period, whether we know what they’d done or not.

    Jen Flowers, @3. I think it’s 2-4 hrs a day, though more in the Green Zone. But that was my reaction, precisely — under the circumstances, I wouldn’t trust them ‘puters with my accounts, either. For that matter, I don’t trust them *here* and we only have an *occasional* power break 🙂 I took notice of what the University’s and Law School’s libraries did when they converted to the online catalogue (I was helping with the conversion): books were bar-coded, bar-codes scanned into the ‘puter, and a fireproof vault was built to house the old card catalogue… Better safe than sorry, belt *and* suspenders work better than either one on its own, etc…

    * And finally, yesterday, Dick Cheney literally fell asleep during a cabinet meeting.

    Bush was talking about California wildfires… Wouldn’t *you* have fallen asleep? It’s not as if Bush has anything interesting or new to say at anytime, but on disasters he’s particularly bad (he’s good at creating them, but that’s a different issue altogether). And, anyway, Cheney wrote his remarks — he knew them all. Besides… He wasn’t asleep, he was *meditating* 🙂

  • What’s a girl got to do to get an act of congress pursuant to its authority under the Constitution declared illegal, here?

    Stamp her foot outside the Oval Office? The DOJ?

  • The Bush administration spent $8 million to train 500 Iraqi government employees in various ministries to use a computerized accounting system. The Finance Ministry refused to drop its paper spreadsheets.

    That’s only $16,000 per Iraqi.

    Or if you will…. the equivalent of a semester at the College of William and Mary (Va.).

    I hope everyone involved ate a lot of doughnuts and drank a lot of coffee!
    At least then, I’d feel like I got my taxpayer’s money’s worth.

  • In Iowa yesterday, GOP frontrunner Rudy Giuliani followed Bush Attorney General nominee Michael Mukasey in playing dumb on the subject of torture. It should come as no surprise that Giuliani would argue that whether waterboarding violates the Geneva Convention depends on what the definition of “torture” is. Even less surprising is that the same man who in May endorsed “every method they could think of” would now jokingly claim that he was a victim of torture himself.

    For the details, see:
    “Giuliani Flip-Flops on Waterboarding, Jokes About Torture.”

  • They say this war will cost every American $8,000 dollars. Imagine what that would be for every Iraqi if the money was just given to them.

  • Sorry, Can’t go there with you on DREAM, CB.

    If I heard the language right (from a SUPPORTER, mind you), a 16 year old can be a citizen after graduating at 17.
    Isn’t this an incentive for parents of teenagers to slip into the country for as little as 21 months?

    Then wouldn’t we be heartless monsters to make a 17 year old American citizen leave the country or send his parents home without him?

    Why all the stupid backdoor sh*t? Why do we contrive mechanisms by which a child slips in through a technicality that RELIES ON illegal immigration as the first step?
    Just grease the wheels of the standard immigration system and raise the quotas if we need more people. Reward the people who have done everything by the book and take away the argument that the legal system takes too long.

    Of course, this would produce more American CITIZENS and that has never been the goal of corporate America. Citizens can vote, unionize and sue their employer. Why do that if you don’t have to? Bring on the H1B’s and green cards! Besides, once these illegals become citizens, they’ll be Americans and as we know, we need illegals to “do the work Americans don’t want to do.” (at the price offered, hush hush)

    Anyone who doesn’t understand the mentality behind the corporate/conservative immigration reform mindset needs only pick up Steinbeck’s “Grapes of Wrath” (it’s available on DVD for Fox news viewers) and substitute “Mexicans” for “Okies” and you’ll get the idea of what they see as utopia.

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