Friday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* I’ve been reading tons of great items from all over about fascinating events at YearlyKos today, but in light of the conference, the Republican National Committee, which can level as ugly a smear as anyone in the business, has decided to turn its guns on DailyKos with a new video. It’s surprisingly sad, even by the RNC’s rock-bottom standards.

* Regrettably, Valerie Plame suffered another court setback today: “The ex-spy whose unmasking led to the conviction of Vice President Dick Cheney’s top aide cannot disclose the dates she worked for the CIA because the details were never declassified, a federal judge has ruled. The decision, made public on Friday by U.S. District Judge Barbara Jones, was a victory for the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, which sought to block former agent Valerie Plame Wilson from including the dates in her upcoming memoir, ‘Fair Game.'”

* The House GOP and its allies are in a major uproar after some vote shenanigans on the House floor last night. As it turns out, they may have a point. I know Republicans pulled some offensive, over-the-top stunts during their reign of error, but I want Dems to set a much higher standard.

* Tom Tancredo recently asserted that he, if elected, would let the Muslim world know he would consider attacking Muslim holy sites such as Mecca. Today, Tancredo adviser Bay Buchanan defended the comments, telling CNN that the candidate’s threat would show the Middle East “that we mean business,” A spokesperson for Bush’s State Department told CNN that Tancredo’s comments were “reprehensible” and “absolutely crazy.”

* Chris Dodd defended YearlyKos on Bill O’Reilly’s FNC program last night and did an excellent job. It’s worth checking out.

* Speaking of clips to check out, reader AYM alerted me to a very clever short film about how World War II would have turned out if Roosevelt acted like Bush. Great stuff.

* Last night, there was an announcement at YearlyKos that Hillary would not conduct a breakout session after the Presidential Leadership Forum, which was not well received. Today, the Clinton campaign announced that she would appear at a breakout session after all. (Love her or hate her, Clinton takes the netroots seriously. You have to give her that.)

* Kevin explains the netroots to reporters who seem surprised at how normal we all are: “What’s happening now isn’t a youth revolt, and it’s not powered by free love, free acid, or fear of being drafted. It’s powered by a lot of bog ordinary moderate liberals who have been radicalized by George Bush and the Newt Gingrichized Republican Party. I think a lot of journalists … don’t quite get this because they haven’t internalized just how far off the rails the modern Republican Party has gone. Until they do, they’re going to continue to misunderstand what’s happening.”

* Leslie Southwick’s judicial nomination cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee because Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Ca.) sold out the party and the party’s interests. Harry Reid and others still hope to defeat the nomination on the Senate floor.

* As you’ve no doubt heard by now, the Senate passed the major S-CHIP expansion bill last night, by a veto-proof 68-31 margin. The Senate bill needs to be reconciled with a more generous House version, though Bush opposes both.

* The Campaign for America’s Future put together a new web video to highlight the Senate GOP’s obstructionism. It stars Seinfeld’s Jason Alexander.

* I haven’t forgotten about Friday Cat Blogging, and Smithers is fine, I’ve just fallen a little behind on taking pictures and getting them ready to be published. I’ll get back to it soon.

* E&P: “This spring, it looked like Ann Coulter’s alleged voting-fraud troubles might be over after a high-level FBI agent made unsolicited phone calls to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office in Florida to vouch for the conservative columnist. But the Palm Beach Post’s Jose Lambiet now reports that the Universal Press Syndicate pundit may not be completely off the hook.”

* For crying out loud: “On the August 1 edition of MSNBC’s Hardball with Chris Matthews, discussing an August 1 speech in which Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) proposed a comprehensive strategy to fight global terrorism, WashingtonPost.com staff writer Chris Cillizza said: ‘Democrats still know they need to prove to the American public that they can keep them just as safe as Republicans can.'”

* At a book-release party for Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.), Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.) joked with the largely Democratic crowd, telling them, “Hell, I don’t know what party I belong to any more.”

* And finally, here it is, the Quote of the Week: “Oh, George Bush, don’t go by the bridge! You’ll just make things worse!” — Katie Fecke, age 4, after learning that the president would visit the 35W Mississippi River Bridge site in Minneapolis on Saturday.

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

a high-level FBI agent made unsolicited phone calls to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office in Florida to vouch for the conservative columnist.?

What the hell can the FBI do, change the district lines retroactively so Coulter didn’t break the law?

What a crock.

  • Screw the higher standard of conduct! That’s like being thrown into a fight and getting murdered because you ‘renounce violence’. The thuglies have shown every intention of breaking any tradition or convention to keep USSA bush alive and kicking well past 2009. It may be time to escalate from fisticuffs to a knife fight!!

    Impeachment, and then War Crimes Trials !!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • I know Republicans pulled some offensive, over-the-top stunts during their reign of error, but I want Dems to set a much higher standard.

    the dems can set a higher standard and tweak those SOBs.

    as long as it’s not illegal or unconstitutional, i say the dems ought to do anything they can to raise the GOP’s collective blood pressure (or otherwise sucker punch them), especially in the less-than-august house.

    tom “the insect” delay was a real motherscratcher … you’ve gotta laugh at the old white shrivelled turds of the GOP who’re complaining now that the tables have turned.

  • Take the CB’s advice and watch “Lord Rovemort and the Sorcerer’s Stonewall” featuring Jason Alexander as the Dark Lord, doing the bidding of He Who Cannot Be Shamed. It’s very well done, and hilarious.

    In addition to CB’s link, it’s here:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LT9kUslHfBY

  • Heh, that little flash cut is close to my retort to a Conservative friend said “if Iraq were like WW2 then Hitler would still be alive.”

    “If Bush were in charge of the US in WW2, then the US Army would have been only 12 divisions instead of the 88 that were raised and the occupation force would have been an unarmed platoon and a case of beer.” He changed the subject.

  • * The House GOP and its allies are in a major uproar […]

    Stormed out of the House, did they? Temper, trmper… They’re not gonna like it, if Bush keeps them at it for the whole, hot August.

    * Leslie Southwick’s judicial nomination cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee because Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Ca.) sold out the party […]

    First Schmuck Schumer on hedge funds now Finestein on civil rights… Fine stone she’s not.

  • The loudest Republicans are typically the exception to the rule that even a broken clock is right twice a day. But here’s the Newt, actually making sense, from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Gingrich says war on terror ‘phony’

    Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said Thursday the Bush administration is waging a “phony war” on terrorism, warning that the country is losing ground against the kind of Islamic radicals who attacked the country on Sept. 11, 2001.

    A more effective approach, said Gingrich, would begin with a national energy strategy aimed at weaning the country from its reliance on imported oil and some of the regimes that petro-dollars support.

    “None of you should believe we are winning this war. There is no evidence that we are winning this war,” the ex-Georgian told a group of about 300 students attending a conference for collegiate conservatives.

  • Dianne Feinstein: selling out Democrats and masquerading as a progressive since 1969 (when she was first elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, a vote in her favor I cast as a then-member of the San Francisco electorate that I have regretted ever since).

  • Regarding the Plame ruling. There is a **huge** implication of this judgement. Sure it’s a setback for Plame’s ability to release her memoirs….however, it reinforces yet again that she was **classified** and that the Bush team mis-handled classified information. Should the anti-Plame zealots try to trot out this ruling as part of their jihad against Plame and, by extension, Wilson, then they have to concede the larger point that her career was a secret according to the government which ultimately betrayed that national security trust. While some of the specifics of her service dates may have been declassified as part of the Libby trial resolution, it’s also important to know that info was declassified only because of the Bush team perfidy and the subsequent investigation, not because she stopped being classified. The Bush/GOP partisans are going to gag on this if they try to use it as a talking point.

    It’s yet another nail in the coffin for those Bushies who still guzzle the ‘No-See-Um’ flavor of Kool-Aid.

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