Tuesday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* A couple of years ago, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao said the strength of the stock market is the “final arbiter” of the success of the president’s economic policies. Something to keep in mind when we consider today’s Wall Street free fall.

* Considering the right-wing talking points about U.S. immigrants, I found it fascinating to learn that the demand for English classes is outstripping the supply. More immigrants “are waiting months or even years to get into government financed English classes.”

* Dan Froomkin has a good job exploring what constitutes “mainstream” public opinion.

* ABC’s John Stossel, appearing on Glenn Beck’s radio show (now there’s a combo) claimed that “you can’t deny that the globe has warmed” but added that global warming “may be a good thing.” Stossel also asked: “And is it a catastrophe, where we have to wreck the lives of poor people and turn our freedom over to Al Gore and he’ll tell us what we can drive and whether we can air-condition our house? And even if he does that, it’s not going to make any difference.” Wow.

* Fred Barnes: “The sudden embrace of social conservatism by top Republican presidential candidates has been widely misunderstood. It’s been portrayed, particularly in the media, as political pandering of the first order-and nothing more… But for a Republican seeking his party’s nomination, shifting to the right on social issues is hardly shocking. Rather, it’s quite normal, it’s absolutely necessary, and it’s likely to work.” In other words, the GOP candidates’ pandering is being characterized as pandering, when in fact, it’s actually pandering. Thanks to Barnes for clearing that up.

* Dick Cheney’s ongoing overseas trip has been marred by electrical problems, unexpected stops, skeptical allies, and unfriendly locals. Then the Taliban apparently tried to kill him. Quite a trip, isn’t it?

* Ed emailed me an interesting item about the new owners of the Seattle Sonics, who want taxpayers to finance a new arena pleasure palace. Now that locals have learned the same owners gave $1.1 million to anti-gay-marriage causes, their financing deal is in jeopardy.

* Apparently, women’s health is 25% less important this year than last year.

* Pizza parties with John Ashcroft, now that he’s a high-priced DC lobbyist, are a no-no for Justice Department employees.

* Bush’s new Lebanese friend has had some interesting things to say about U.S. casualties and anti-Semitism.

* If you have a minute, Richard Perle’s interview with NewsMax is so odd, so over-the-top, that I’m hard pressed to excerpt just one exchange. The whole thing is bizarre.

* I can’t think of a comparable conservative rival to Brookings, either. On the ideological spectrum, if 100 is all the way to the left and 0 is all the way to the right, I’d put Brookings at 55. Is there a think tank that’s a 45? I can’t think of any.

* Remember the EFPs from Iran? They may not be from Iran.

* ABC News: “A new law requiring daylight savings time to start March 11, three weeks earlier than normal, threatens a widespread, Y2K-like computer glitch in U.S. computers preset for the later start date of April 2.”

* And, finally, I wanted to note with sadness the fact that The Gadflyer is closing its doors. I’ve really enjoyed the site, its terrific writers, and its top-notch content for years. I especially appreciate the fact that Schaller, Waldman & Co. were kind enough to run a few articles of mine. So long, Gadflyer; you’ll be missed.

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

Stossel, Give Me a Fucking Break. As I’ve said before. “Go eat a fucking ecoli laced hamburger and spinnach salad so you can enjoy the, er, fruits of unregulated food.”

  • Dick Cheney’s ongoing overseas trip has been marred by electrical problems, unexpected stops, skeptical allies, and unfriendly locals. Then the Taliban apparently tried to kill him.

    At least breakfast was excellent.

  • Wow, that Fred Barnes bit is amazingly stupid. Does the Weekly Standard really have no one who can write something resembling a coherent argument?

  • You’re just ahead of the Gadflyer pack, CB. They’re all out starting their own blogs and you beat them to it.

    Maybe we should hire some of the Taliban for our intelligence services. Pretty good trick to know that Cheney was going to be there then. Just as a lot of young Americans are surprisingly good at metric weights: kilos etc. a lot of the Afghans who work for the Americans are getting good at English so they can get overheard remarks from Americans about troop movements and such to report to the Taliban.

    The conspiracy continues. Once again the MSM has suspiciously ignored my comments about a coming Black Monday (or Tuesday) in the stock market and the fact that Republicans are required to be hypcrites in order to run for office. (Guiliani seems like he spends a lot of time running for orifice.)

  • Perle is a war crimes trial candidate. He’s also a really bad liar.

    “I think Colin Powell was a disaster. He never liked the president’s policies. He did almost nothing to get them implemented. ”

    Yeah, Richard, if Powell hadn’t given his UN speech, you think we’d have invaded Iraq?

    “It is very popular now to suggest that because we didn’t find WMD, he wasn’t the threat. What we didn’t find in truth was stockpiles of WMDs. He certainly had the capacity to produce chemical and biological weapons again when he wanted to do so, and so I believe he was a threat, and I think we had the right to respond to that threat.”

    So anyone with the capacity to make WMDs is a threat and should be invaded? How many countries is that exactly? Funny how we only invade the ones Israel hates.

    More interesting info on Richard Perle, AIPAC and the mother of all scandals:

    …Larry Franklin worked in the Pentagon Office of Special Plans, run by Richard Perle, at the time Perle (who was caught giving classified information to Israel back in 1970) was insisting that Iraq was crawling with weapons of mass destruction requiring the United States to invade and conquer Iraq. There were no WMDs, of course, and Perle has dumped the blame for the “bad intelligence” on George Tenet. But what is known is that the Pentagon Office of Special Plans was coordinating with a similar group in Israel, in Ariel Sharon’s office…

    http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/motherofallscandals.html

  • Just as Darth Vader was reviled throughout the universe, so too is Darth Cheney reviled throughout our earthly planet. -Kevo

  • I’m not at all convinced that the Taliban tried to kill Cheney, and it might be better for the liberal blogosphere to stop accepting that as an accurate description of the event. I think this TPM reader has it right:

    But because a Taliban spokesman was clever enough to link the attack to Cheney, a fairly routine bombing is now a leading story around the world, and the Taliban has been able to turn a partly thwarted attack (the bomber was forced to detonate his load outside the base) into an enormous propoganda coup. […]

    It’s in the Taliban’s interest to convince the world that they’re well-organized enough to have targeted Cheney, and in Cheney’s interest not to expend too much effort rebutting that claim. But it’s in our national interest not to take the Taliban’s claim seriously in the absence of corroborating evidence — buying into this unsubstatiated claim undermines our efforts to reconstruct the war-torn country, and bolsters Cheney’s reputation at the very moment he was becoming a laughingstock.

  • mac sent me a dst upgrade a couple of weeks ago. sorry if all you pc people are lagging behind. why not drop a line to bill gates.

  • What is a good Christian to do when Jews and Muslims want to kill each other in the Middle East? Answers may vary. -Kevo

  • Cheney’s having a bad day. Some fool blows himself up making a kerfuffle out of his visit with Karzai, and then he hears that back in Washington they’re talking about actually talking to Syria and Iran! He can’t even trust the people back home to behave while he’s away. I guess it’s like they say, if you want to run a belligerent, egotisitical, short-sighted, self-defeating ideological quest for world domination right, you’ve got to do it yourself.

  • Unbelievable…

    Israel will ask the U.S. government to significantly increase its military assistance to the country as part of a new multi-year aid agreement.

    A high-level Israeli economic delegation led by Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer and Finance Ministry Director General Yarom Ariav will meet with an American team in Washington this week.

    The present package, which ends this year, covers $2.4 billion in annual military aid.

    Israel’s request comes due to the military challenges and restraints it will have to face in the upcoming years and the weakening dollar. […]

    Washington asked Israel last week not to ask for a specific amount at this stage, but rather present its needs in principle.

    The actual numbers will be raised in negotiations in the upcoming months…

    http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/830502.html

    I predict that almost the entire congress will line up to approve this bullshit.

  • Y2K-like computer glitch in U.S. computers preset for the later start date of April 2.

    If I’m not mistaken Microsoft has addressed this issue as well, at least for home users. I seem to recall reading an article about this a couple of weeks ago and they stated that it was large corporate networks that were most in danger of not having the updates to handle the time change.

    It might be interesting to find out how the open source crowd (Linux) is handling this.

  • * I can’t think of a comparable conservative rival to Brookings, either. On the ideological spectrum, if 100 is all the way to the left and 0 is all the way to the right, I’d put Brookings at 55. Is there a think tank that’s a 45? I can’t think of any.

    I think an argument can be made for Hoover. RAND is in a similar place, but they seem less partisan to me, somehow…

  • “A couple of years ago, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao said the strength of the stock market is the “final arbiter” of the success of the president’s economic policies.”

    Right. Wages, net family income, the cost of housing or fossil fuels or health insurance or a GD loaf of bread have nothing to do with anything. (As for the market, just remember, “greed is good.”)

  • Re: Fred Barnes

    Me thinks you are being unfair.

    Take abortion for example

    I can think of a lot of pro-choice Republicans who are now pro-life.
    I can think of a lot of pro-life Democrats who are now pro-choice.

    I can’t think of a single Democrat or Republican who moved the other way.

    Are there any pro-life Democrats who used to be pro-choice? Are there any Republicans who went the other way?

  • Let the owners of the Seattle sports team, and others like them, get their funding from a Faith Based Organization.

  • global warming “may be a good thing.”

    As I reckon, that pegs Stossel as a Class 4 Idiot, on the following scale:

    1.) There’s no such thing as global warming.
    2.) There’s global warming, but it’s a cycle.
    3.) The warming is a linear trend, but there’s no proof humans are causing it.
    4.) Humans may be causing it, but it’s not a bad thing.
    5.) Even if it’s bad, there’s nothing humans can do to fix it.
    6.) Humans can reverse global warming, but the fix is costly and impractical.
    7.) Global warming can be solved easily, but we’d better not, because it would mean that I’ve been wrong all this time.

  • You know, I wouldn’t be surprised if we see Cheney go after Afghanistan when he comes back. He’s got a vengeful streak — just consider Valerie Plame.

    I was surprised that he didn’t immediately go into hiding. I’ve always assumed that he hid after 9/11 because he was a coward. But now I’m wondering if perhaps he had a heart attack…

  • Hey CB, are you going to sort out this Al Gore power bill nonsense for us? Surely the busy hamsters of the left blogosphere must be busy googling a debunking?

  • Ed emailed me an interesting item about the new owners of the Seattle Sonics, who want taxpayers to finance a new arena pleasure palace. Now that locals have learned the same owners gave $1.1 million to anti-gay-marriage causes, their financing deal is in jeopardy.

    Good! All these sportz teams are owned by far right “free market” types, so let them all go finance their bread-and-circus schemes themselves

    Thank God professional football is gone gone gone from Los Angeles and no force on earth is going to resuscitate that zombie.

  • “Then the Taliban apparently tried to kill [Cheney]. Quite a trip, isn’t it?”

    Great, now the big Chicken Hawk will have to start another war to prove his manliness to himself.

  • Regarding the Seattle Sonics arena:

    State Senate Ways and Means Chairwoman Margarita Prentice, D-Renton, has been one of Bennett’s [managing partner] biggest advocates in the Legislature.

    She said the co-owners’ political activities are irrelevant.

    “I think this is probably the first time that I’ve known that we are demanding ideological purity when someone comes to invest in our state,” she said. “The whole notion that we have to start examining things like that is really odious, and it shows the desperation because it’s obvious that we are gaining some momentum.”

    Let’s pretend for a moment, call it a thought experiment, that the co-owners had give 1.1 million to the KKK. Apparently for Chairwoman Margarita Prentice that would be inconsequential. One shouldn’t dig too deeply, in fact it’s ‘odious’ to investigate the moral and ethical character of those seeking state funding.

    How ridiculous. I hope people in Seattle see this for what it really is.

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