Monday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* A growing number of U.S. military officials are pressuring the White House to “accelerate a troop drawdown in Iraq and bulk up force levels in Afghanistan.” Apparently, conditions in the “other” war are deteriorating quickly, and some administration officials now believe Afghanistan may pose a “greater longer-term challenge than Iraq.”

* Last week, Sen. Kit Bond (R-Mo.), the senior Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee compared waterboarding to going for a swim. In the face of criticism, Bond told C-SPAN that his comments were misconstrued, saying he only meant to say “there are different kinds of waterboarding, and different kinds of swimming.” And people wonder why I can’t take Republican lawmakers seriously on policy matters.

* Congrats to New Jersey: “Gov. Jon S. Corzine signed into law Monday a measure that abolishes the death penalty, making New Jersey the first state in more than four decades to reject capital punishment. The bill, approved last week by the state’s Assembly and Senate, replaces the death sentence with life in prison without parole…. The measure spares eight men on the state’s death row. On Sunday, Corzine signed orders commuting the sentences of those eight to life in prison without parole.”

* CREW put together the top 10 biggest ethics scandals in government from 2007. There are quite a few doozies in there, though I’d like to think last year’s list was slightly worse. (Remember the Republicans’ culture of corruption? It made picking 10 quite a challenge.)

* The controversy surrounding the alleged Halliburton/KBR rape in Baghdad isn’t going away: “Today, the House Judiciary Crime, Homeland Security, and Terrorism Subcommittee announced a hearing on the “Enforcement of Federal Criminal Law to Protect Americans Working for U.S. Contractors in Iraq.” Members will address the recent alleged rape of a former KBR/Halliburton employee, among other cases. The hearing will take place Wednesday, December 19, at 10:15 a.m. in room 2141 of the Rayburn House Office Building.”

* It wasn’t enough for Rudy Giuliani to say he was a good U.S. Attorney; he had to say he cleaned up an awful U.S. Attorney’s office that he inherited. Now, his predecessor is hitting back, explaining that Giuliani is needlessly lying about this, too.

* “Rep. Julia Carson, the first black and first woman to represent Indianapolis in Congress, died at home Saturday morning following a battle with lung cancer. She was 69. Carson’s death comes just weeks after she announced the cancer, which she was in remission before, was back with ‘terminal vengeance.'”

* It’s tragic it even came to this, but the pardon is better late than never: “King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia pardoned a teenage girl sentenced to six months in jail and 200 lashes after being gang raped in a decision swiftly welcomed by Washington on Monday…. The girl, who was 18 at the time she was raped, was attacked at knifepoint by seven men after she was found in a car with a male companion who was not a relative, in breach of strict Saudi law. The king also pardoned the male companion, the justice minister announced.”

* Voting-machine problems haven’t dominated the headlines much lately, but that doesn’t mean the problem is a thing of the past: “All five voting systems used in Ohio, a state whose electoral votes narrowly swung two elections toward President Bush, have critical flaws that could undermine the integrity of the 2008 general election, a report commissioned by the state’s top elections official has found. ‘It was worse than I anticipated,’ the official, Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner, said of the report.”

* In response to reality that shows the ineffectiveness of abstinence-only programs, “at least 14 states have either notified the federal government that they will no longer be requesting the funds or are not expected to apply, forgoing more than $15 million of the $50 million available.” Good for them.

* If the writers’ strike isn’t resolved soon, the studios are going to lose a lot of writing talent to some online start-ups.

* “While violence is down in Iraq, Americans continue to die and fall badly wounded, and suffer severe stress and trauma caused by 15-month tours of duty. A remarkable article on Friday in the Army Times is titled: ‘Not us. We’re not going: Soldiers in 2nd Platoon, Charlie 1-26 stage a ‘mutiny’ that pulls the unit apart.'”

* Keith Olbermann nearly left MSNBC in 2003 over Michael Savage. I can’t say I blame him.

* I feel like we need to get political reporters everywhere to write, “I will not use the word ‘maverick‘ anymore.”

* Harry Reid may not be handling the FISA debate well, but at least he has the good sense to prevent Bush recess appointments over the winter holidays.

* And finally, Jonah Goldberg’s to-be-released-eventually “Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning,” is poised to be the single most mocked book in publishing history. Here’s an excerpt from the book jacket highlighting why: “The quintessential liberal fascist isn’t an SS storm trooper; it is a female grade-school teacher with an education degree from Brown or Swarthmore.” He’s not kidding.

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

“conditions in the “other” war are deteriorating quickly,”

The Bush administration is going to leave this mess for the next President, H.R. Clinton, to clean up. They will blame her for it, with the support of a compliant media.

The Democratic Party will apologize for screwing up.

Business as usual. I’m going out for a double bourbon.

  • not that i ever saw the attraction, but if Bush allegedly won in 2000 because he was a guy you’d want to have a drink with, JulieAnnie must not have a chance in hell. by the time election day gets here, will there be anyone left that doesn’t hate JulieAnnie for some needless slight, some stealing of credit or baseless blame?

    what a jerk. (and thats not even getting to things like telling your wife about your mistress by showing up with her on TV.)

  • Poor Jonah. In his world, you can be terrorized by “a female grade-school teacher with an education degree from Brown or Swarthmore”.

    What a freaking worthless bag of crap. No wonder he’s so adamant about not joining the fight he wants others to perform, he’s afraid the Iraqi insurgents are recruiting female grade school teachers!

  • Does anyone think the culture of corruption people wouldn’t take advantage of voting machines that can be hacked?

    Anyone?

    And yet we still have some liberals demanding to see proof that theft occurred, even though the hack wouldn’t be hard to cover up. Maybe it’s time to get busy so they can’t do it again?

  • Not to jump back to an earlier thread topic, but it is an open thread. . . presumably JoeLie still had some D’s on his staff, people that had been with him a while. Has anyone heard if the McCan’t endorsement has caused any staff resignations? And the only response I have seen from Reid is a statement that while he respects Joe, he “just can’t agree” with his endorsement (wow, there is some party discipline for you!) How about coverage in Connecticut?

    I’m just curious how it is playing and hopeful that there is some price to pay somewhere for his JoeLie-ness.

  • * Congrats to New Jersey: “Gov. Jon S. Corzine signed into law Monday a measure that abolishes the death penalty,

    Good.

  • Wow, it really took a long time for the supposedly feminist, anti-human slavery White House to get this King Abdullah guy to reverse one of the common convictions in the Arab world against a rape victim for being alone with an unrelated male, didn’t it?

    In response to reality that shows the ineffectiveness of abstinence-only programs, “at least 14 states have either notified the federal government that they will no longer be requesting the funds or are not expected to apply, forgoing more than $15 million of the $50 million available.” Good for them.

    Yeah, good for them.

  • Jonah Goldberg is soooooooooooo silly. It’s not that I don’t think there are young, liberal grade school teachers who think they know everything, when they really don’t, and if they thought about it, would probably realize they don’t have any good reason to think they know everything, but he’s blowing liberals’ problems with this waaaaaaaaay out of proportion, as is needless to say.

    Keith Olbermann nearly left MSNBC in 2003 over Michael Savage. I can’t say I blame him.

    Well, it’s a good thing he stuck it out, eh?

    It may have been annoying to him, but what was probably annoying to him was nothing to a lot of people who payed no attention to Michael Savage (because they realized he was a buffoon) and a lot of attention to Keith Olbermann (because they realized he was a talented guy they wanted to see more of). We are all better off for Olbermann’s career sustaining.

  • Did anyone else watch the David Gregory interview with Hillary? I have always thought that she is the very definition of a weasel politician but that interview made my mouth literally drop open. Her Cheney like inability to just give one nugget of an honest answer to fairly easy questions scares the crap out of me. I think that if she is nominee then elected the Dem party is toast because she is Bush-lite. I was not inclined to vote for her before because Hillary is all about the past, not the future.

    Just to clarify before the last few months I had problems with her but was willing to hold my nose. Now there is no way I will in good conscience vote for someone who has such a problem with the truth that she can’t just give one straight answer.

  • Is anyone live-bloggin the Dodd filibuster?

    Has anyone offered an explanation of Reid’s not honoring Dodd’s hold?

  • * Harry Reid may not be handling the FISA debate well, but at least he has the good sense to prevent Bush recess appointments over the winter holidays.

    Why would Bush even bother making recess appointments? It’s not as if the Senate would deny him the confirmation of any of them after making some pro-forma rumbling noises.

    * It’s tragic it even came to this, but the pardon is better late than never: “King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia pardoned a teenage girl sentenced to six months in jail and 200 lashes after being gang raped in a decision swiftly welcomed by Washington on Monday…

    It’s not “better late than never”… It’s only “better than nothing”; their justice system is *still* screwed, if their courts could have even reached that verdict. The next girl thus raped and sentenced may skim under the radar of the international public scrutiny (not every lawyer in Saudi Arabia will have the guts to even defend her) and where will she be?

    But I think that’s exactly the kind of justice system that Bush would like to see here too; a system which does not depend on *just laws*, but which would depend, solely, on the whim and benevolence of the patriarch. He certainly seems to think that the hungry should depend on the whim of the private charity; why should not the disenfranchised have to depend on the same kind of benevolence?

    BTW… One could wish that the yahoo writers were a tad more careful in forming their sentences: “after being gang raped in a decision swiftly welcomed by Washington on Monday” just doesn’t sound right.

  • The quintessential liberal fascist isn’t an SS storm trooper; it is a female grade-school teacher with an education degree –

    So are these among the 77 virgins guaranteed Muslim martyrs?

  • If there are recent Brown- or Swathmore-educated elementary teachers out there, either they have trust funds, or they’re streetwalking on weekends to pay their tuition loans…

  • Also, as a proud Brown grad, I say to Jonah: fuck you. We all would have been better off if you’d dribbled away down the leg of your evil whore mother.

  • Someone told me today that Corzine salary as Gov. is $1.

    I’m no political wonk or wag…
    And until today, I’ve never heard of Corzine…
    But that $1 salary was enough to convince me of one thing:
    Corzine had to be a Democrat.

    Why?

    Because… there ain’t one stinky republican on this planet who would work for $1 a year.
    Not one.

    ‘Nuf said.

  • Why would Bush even bother making recess appointments? It’s not as if the Senate would deny him the confirmation of any of them after making some pro-forma rumbling noises. — libra
    That’s actually not true, they would’ve blocked at least a couple. It’s also why the democrats held pro forma sessions through Thanksgiving, to prevent Bush from pushing James Holsinger through.

    Also, congratulations goes to Chris Dodd for being willing to stand up for the Constitution. While is disappointing that Reid would even consider telecom immunity, at least he pulled the bill.

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