Friday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* Quote of the Day #1: Republican Sen. Gordon Smith of Oregon has offered tacit support for the war in Iraq for years, but he’s done. Smith said he is at, “the end of my rope when it comes to supporting a policy that has our soldiers patrolling the same streets in the same way, being blown up the same bombs, day after day. That is absurd.” he said, adding, “It may even be criminal.” Smith concluded, “I, for one, am tired of paying the price of 10 or more of our troops dying a day. So let’s cut and run or cut and walk, but let us fight the war on terror more intelligently that we have because we have fought this war in a very lamentable way.”

* Quote of the Day #2: House Page Board chairman John Shimkus on why he didn’t tell Page Board member Dale Kildee about the inappropriate e-mail messages Mark Foley sent to a former page: “Dale’s a nice guy, but he’s a Democrat, and I was afraid it would be blown out of proportion.”

* I can’t believe William Safire is going to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian award. Then again, given this president, maybe I shouldn’t be too surprised.

* Ruth Marcus has an amusing column lamenting the fact that Dick Cheney’s openly gay daughter did not get pregnant during the 2004 campaign.

* Washington, D.C., has a ban on smoking in federal buildings and in private workplaces, but members of Congress exempted themselves from both. Nancy Pelosi, however, is currently “thinking of banishing tobacco from the most popular smoking spot in the building: the Speaker’s Lobby outside the House chamber.”

* I honestly can’t figure out how Imus gets away with what sounds like transparent anti-Semitism.

* The good news: Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) will spend the night in the Louisiana State Penitentiary tonight. The bad news: it’s a p.r. stunt intended to show the benefits associated with the prison’s taxpayer-financed faith-based prison ministry.

* It’s a process riddled with fits and starts, but federal voting guidelines and upcoming congressional legislation will likely lead to “sweeping changes” in how Americans cast ballots by the 2008 presidential election, according to the NYT. “In the next two years I think we’ll see the kinds of sweeping changes that people expected to see right after the 2000 election,” said Doug Chapin, director of electionline.org, a nonpartisan election group. “The difference now is that we have moved from politics down to policies.”

* This AP story makes it sound as if the Senate is going to start governing more in secret. I’ve learned, however, that the report about “closed sessions” is wrong and only refers to a one-time ceremonial meeting at the beginning of the next Congress.

* It got lost in the shuffle, but the Iraq Study Group had some interesting things to say about the administration’s failure to properly budget for the war in Iraq, too.

* Don’t let the door hit you on the way out, Bill Frist.

* Why are so many Massachusetts Dems urging John Kerry to run for president again? One interesting theory: to help shake up the delegation and make room for new people to run for new offices.

* The AP is still fighting back against charges from right-wingers about the story on six Iraqis who were allegedly set on fire two weeks ago.

* Kudos to the New York Sun’s Josh Gerstein for reading publicly-available documents that his colleagues seem to consistently overlook.

* Chris Bowers makes a compelling case that impeachment won’t be, and probably shouldn’t be, on the congressional agenda.

* And on the Senate floor yesterday, after Bill Frist’s farewell speech, Harry Reid “bearhugged” him. The WaPo reported, “As man-hugs go, this one was definitely uncomfortable to watch.”

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

Frist In Farewell Address: “Let Us Not Allow…Destructive Partisanship On This Floor”

Sounds like the poor guy is afraid of something. Payback. Y’think?

Wiping the subspecies known as “ReThuglius Infidelis Stupidicus” would not, in my mind, be a form of genocide….

  • I can’t believe William Safire is going to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian award. Then again, given this president, maybe I shouldn’t be too surprised.

    This raises the question, what does Safire know and why does Bush want to keep him quiet?

    Also, today the Richard Mellon Scaife Tribune-Review weighs in on the ISG report.

    It is not exactly a lightning bolt of revelation that, according to the Iraq Study Group, the situation in Iraq is “grave and deteriorating.”

    The ISG’s report came a day after Secretary of Defense-designate Robert Gates stated the obvious before the Senate Armed Services Committee: The United States is not winning the war. […]
    So, as Americans spoke last month in the midterm elections, they must also continue to speak, demanding of parties Republican and Democratic an end to this debacle.

    In additon, checkout the paper’s editorial cartoon. I think this is a sure sign that Bush has lost his wingnut base when he loses the Tribune-Review.

  • Kudos to law enforcement for their work on the Rockford, IL hand grenade incident, if indeed this guy is guilty of attempting to pull something like this off. Another knucklehead off the streets.

    One thing that REALLY bugs me, though, is the disgusting double standard that the media takes towards cases like this. Just imagine if this guy was not a Muslim but instead a white-supremacist. How would the media handle such a case? Would be headline news at every single media outlet?

    Guess what, you don’t have to imagine it. There have been more than a dozen cases since 9/11 of terrorists caught with plans to use explosives, heavy-duty weaponry, and REAL WMDs (stuff a little bit worse than hand grenades) against American citizens and our government.

    Just last WEEK, a guy in Tennessee was sentenced for trying to procure C4 explosives and sarin gas to use against Congress. He had long standing ties to Neo-Nazi groups. Utterly ignored by the press, except for mentions in local media. Just imagine if this guy was a Muslim. Imagine the attention from the press and the outrage from the right-wing noise machine. Just think about it for one second, and you’ll see just how sick our discourse has become.

    Here’s a link:

    http://www.jacksonsun.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061129/NEWS01/611290311/1002

    Like I said, there are many more examples just like this. It just seems nuts to me to define terrorism as that which can only be perpetrated by Muslims. Islamic extremists certainly are a real threat, but Neo-nazis and their allies are just as dangerous, if not more so.

    (posted here just so it doesn’t get lost in the other thread. This is an open thread, afterall. But I thought this is important enough since I haven’t seen this mentioned anywhere else in the liberal blogosphere.)

  • CKT – If you’re interested David Neiwert writes extensively about the underreporting of homegrown terrorists over at Orcinus

  • is brownback sure they’re going to let him out? and is something else going to be brown tomorrow morning?

  • Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) will spend the night in the Louisiana State Penitentiary tonight.

    That reminds me… Did I mention that an Alaska state legislator was jailed last night on federal bribery charges?

    http://www.adn.com/news/politics/fbi/story/8476303p-8369942c.html

    This is the crumbbum who married a fellow legislator and then moved into her house across town — necessarily outside of the district he was elected from. He continued to represent a district he no longer resided in because, hey, the rules only say you have to live there to get elected, not to serve!

  • * Washington, D.C., has a ban on smoking in federal buildings and in private workplaces, but members of Congress exempted themselves from both. Nancy Pelosi, however, is currently “thinking of banishing tobacco from the most popular smoking spot in the building: the Speaker’s Lobby outside the House chamber.” — CB

    Well, that does it; I’m not running for Congress, no matter what. 5 day work week, no pay rises and now a smoking ban too? Whatever next? Check-in my AK-47 at the door?

    Re Frist’s farewell: At least there were people there to hear his speech and give him a consolling hug. Nothing like what Allen got. Which is, perhaps, a pity, because insted of urging the parties to play nice in the furture, Allen apparently threatened that he’s not done with politics. So now everyone here (in my state of VA) is attwitter about his plans: run for Senate again (should Warner retire) or run for governor again? Could California reclaim the slimy SOB? Pretty please?

  • Concerning Kerry, I could not care less what are the motivations of Meehan, Markey, and a few others. I could have told Kevin Drum a long time ago this was part of the reasons and anybody from MA could have as well, so it is no great secret.

    However, I hope that he will run. People have declared him dead so often in the last 4 years that I am tired of reading the news of his death.

  • Zogby: Bush at an alltime low 30%. Want to get that number even lower? When he says that he talks to families that die, when wings take dream, that working parents put food on their families, that OB/GYNs ought to practice their love for women, laugh at him. Use those index fingers to point at him while you do so.

    And then, for that final, delicious Scanners moment, tell him that the twins had a threesome with Hugo Chavez in Argentina.

  • And then, for that final, delicious Scanners moment, tell him that the twins had a threesome with Hugo Chavez in Argentina.

    And considering that Bush probably can’t tell Argentina from Venezuela, he’ll probably fall for it.

  • “I hope they have plenty of croutons,” Sen. Brownback was heard saying, delighted at the news that the inmates wished to include him in the time-honored tradition of “tossing the salad”.

  • Brownback in Angola. Hummm….. While I am quite certain that he will be kept apart fromt he truly dangerous. This is Angola. And Angola has a bit of reputation as be more than just a bit of a hell hole.

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