Wednesday’s Mini-Report

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* Yesterday’s 5-4 Supreme Court ruling on discrimination was truly awful: “The Supreme Court on Tuesday made it harder for many workers to sue their employers for discrimination in pay, insisting in a 5-to-4 decision on a tight time frame to file such cases.” (August J. Pollak has a good post on the ruling.) Today, House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller (D-Calif.), in response to the ruling, recommended clarifying the Civil Rights Act to extend stronger protections against discrimination.

* Price Floyd, a 17-year veteran of the State Department, wrote a fascinating op-ed on Bush’s approach to foreign policy: “We have eroded not only the good will of the post-9-11 days but also any residual appreciation from the countries we supported during the Cold War…. Collectively, these actions have sent an unequivocal message: The U.S. does not want to be a collaborative partner. That is the policy we have been ‘selling’ through our actions, which speak the loudest of all…. We need a president who will enable the U.S. to return to its rightful place as the ‘beacon on a hill’ — a country that others want to emulate, not hate; a country that proves through words and deeds that it is free, not afraid.”

* The scandals at the Justice Department aren’t going away, they’re growing more intense: “In a letter today, the Justice Department’s Inspector General and head counsel for the Office of Professional Responsibility notified the Senate Judiciary Committee that their joint probe into the U.S. attorney firings had expanded to include a broad array of allegations ‘regarding improper political or other considerations in hiring decisions within the Department of Justice.'” Goodling’s and others’ hiring decisions are on the table, as are allegations concerning hiring practices in the DoJ Civil Rights Division.

* It’s the second anniversary of Dick Cheney declaring that the Iraqi insurgency is in its “last throes,” at which point he also predicted, “[T]he level of activity that we see today from a military standpoint, I think, will clearly decline.” Since then, 1,799 U.S. soldiers have been killed in Iraq, roughly half of all U.S. fatalities. At least 12,378 U.S. soldiers have been wounded.

* Everyone has seen Joe Lieberman’s Michael-Dukakis-like picture, right?

* As for the upcoming Democratic debate co-sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus Institute and Fox News, Chris Dodd and Bill Richardson officially announced today that they will not participate. Three candidates have agreed to attend: Biden, Kucinich, and Gravel.

* A religious activist in Georgia has been engaged in a court fight in the hopes of banning Harry Potter books from Gwinnett County school libraries. The mother, Laura Mallory, believes the books promote witchcraft. Yesterday, a judge rejected Mallory’s case. She’s considering taking the matter to federal court.

* To say that Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons (R) is off to a rough start in his new job is a dramatic understatement.

* Amazingly, Glenn Beck’s ratings are lower now than when he started a year ago. The more people see him, the less they watch. (Note to CNN: people who want to watch right-wing blowhards already have a network to tune into.)

* The ACLU filed a lawsuit today charging that a Boeing subsidiary knowing provided service to the administration’s unlawful “extraordinary rendition” program.

* Speaking of lawsuits, some friends of mine asked a court in DC today to release the pre-sentencing letters that were submitted on Scooter Libby’s behalf. That ought to be interesting.

* TNR’s Christopher Orr on my favorite franchise: “Serenity (2005): The directorial debut of pop genius Joss Whedon (‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer,’ ‘Angel’), this big-screen adaptation of his ‘Firefly’ series is the best space opera since the first two Star Wars movies and one of the most criminally neglected entertainments of the last decade. Had it been cursed with a gluttonous budget, a raft of ‘stars,’ and the requisite McDonalds tie-ins, it would have made a quarter-billion dollars. Instead, it made about a tenth as much — but is a much better movie for it.”

* The U.S. Marine Corps is threatening to revoke the honorable discharge of two anti-war protestors? Can they do that?

* And finally, Concerned Women for America, always a bastion of dignity and class, has lashed out at Dick Cheney’s daughter for having a baby with her lesbian partner. The White House issued a birth announcement, identifying the women as the baby’s “parents,” which annoyed the religious right, as the CWA statement makes clear: “Heather Poe is Mary Cheney’s live-in lesbian lover…. If the Vice President and his wife Lynne are joining their daughter Mary in playing this homosexual game of ‘house,’ then all have chosen their roles and designated lesbian lover Heather Poe as the ‘Daddy.’ Everyone knows there can only be one REAL biological Mommy. We are all grown adults. Playing ‘house’ is a game for children, not for The White House or the Vice President and his wife.”

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

In a recent Mason-Dixon poll, just 28 percent of the 625 registered Nevada voters questioned said they had a favorable opinion of the [Gibbons]

Well, the Gibbon has something in common with the other unpleasant primate.

Concerned Women for America … has lashed out at Dick Cheney’s daughter for having a baby with her lesbian partner.

Interesting. I thought all of those folks were pro-life. Once Mary got pregnant shouldn’t they have shut up?

I really hope Secret Service has tripled their guard on Mary, Heather and their baby. With “people” like Cs With Attitude making a stink I’m sure at least one unbalanced bastard hears the Baby Jesus telling him to kill the baby lesbian spawn.

  • Is it outrageous & cynical to suggest that it sure is convenient that Mary Cheney had her immaculate conception after GW and her Dad became lame ducks? A little too convenient? As in, no chance in hell she would’ve become acquainted with that turkey-baster while there were still elements of “the base” to con?

    As always, the outrageous and cynical approach to these guys is probably closest to the truth.

  • Can they do that?

    You can do anything you want, in Alice’s restaurant. Especially when the directions to the restaurant say: “Go straight, through the looking glass.”

  • Sorry CB, I gotta disagree with you. Serenity?

    I didn’t think it was all that good. I agree that Faux screwed it over with the time slots, but I didn’t think it was any better than a Berman Star Trek (low blow.) Of course, YMMV.

    Well compared to this year’s “blockbusters” I would say that Serenity is a better movie, but not really.

    And no I wasn’t a Buffy Fan either.

  • DOJ should be forced to re-open every civil service hire made under questionable circumstances. If some people lose jobs, then they probably shouldn’t have had them in the first place. Perhaps we’ll have fewer dunces from Regent at the end of the process.

  • Serenity

    I’ll give it a shot if you say so, CB. I think I have bad luck picking out movies. It seems my curiosity often overcomes my judgment when I should know better. The other night at the video store I asked the guy working there whether Hostel or Silent Hill was better, and judging from the length of his hesitation in answering, he probably doesn’t watch shitty movies like I do and probably hadn’t honestly seen either of them.

    Recent bad movies I’ve tolerated:

    -300
    -King Arthur

  • Everyone has seen Joe Lieberman’s Michael-Dukakis-like picture, right?

    Is anyone else reminded of a toddler whose parents have dressed him up warmly against the elements? He even has that blank “Where am I?” look.

  • Yeah, that Leiberman picture definitely looks more like McCain’s stunt than Dukakis’s.

    Also, can you source the claim that Gravel is going to attend the Fox News/CBC debate?

  • I’ll second the three cheers for Firefly and Serenity. Perhaps the only good sci-fi serial to come out in years and a great movie follow-up to boot! Creative, funny, great characters, great stories.

    Unfortunately, Whedon is now gun-shy about doing anything more in the Firefly universe after the lame treatment he got from Fox, et al.

  • Buffy definitely had some of the best camp/sci-fi writing for a good long while. Actually, the “Hush” episode, where no one spoke was one of the best. I could not get into Firefly though. I’m all about Heroes and Battlestar Galactica now though.

    Former Dan @5: “YMMV” – sorry man, wrong website for that talk….

  • “Overall, what I’d say I see here today is progress, significant progress, from the last time I was here in December. And if you can see progress in war, that means you’re headed in the right direction.”

    I love how his spot check becomes “You” can see progress, becomes “movement in the right direction.” Only your bowels at the thought of something going kaboom, you freak.

    Let’s review Memorial Day in Iraq: Ten US soldiers dead. Five British civilians kidnapped, from the Finance Ministry in broad daylight by people in fucking police uniforms!

    And this arsehole calls that progress, significant progress. Well, I guess you could say the guys the US is fighting are making progress. Is that what ya meant Joe?

    Or should I be charitable and assume he was refering to the site of a car bombing that has been cleaned up since December? Nope. Don’t think I will.

    Fuck. You. LIEberman. I just hope the soldiers who have to come into contact with the McLiar brigade this get a special disinfectant scrub afterwards.

  • There was actually a good deal of dialogue at the beginning of Hush. And a little at the end. I’ll stop now.

  • Yesterday’s 5-4 Supreme Court ruling on discrimination was truly awful: “The Supreme Court on Tuesday made it harder for many workers to sue their employers for discrimination in pay, insisting in a 5-to-4 decision on a tight time frame to file such cases.” (August J. Pollak has a good post on the ruling.) Today, House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller (D-Calif.), in response to the ruling, recommended clarifying the Civil Rights Act to extend stronger protections against discrimination.

    Not only was this decision awful, but the five assholes even quoted decisions made by previous conservatives on the court that were overturned by Congress in the Civil Rights Restoration Act (passed by a bipartisan majority in 1992). How’s that for a thumb in the eye?

    Hey, Ralph Nader: tell me again how there’s no difference between a Gore or a Bush Administration, can you? Can you???

  • Lieberman, in a fit of Sargeant Shultz-esque tunnelvision, looks around at all the heavily-armed soldiers protecting his sorry hide and quips:

    I SEE NOTHING! NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOTHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINNNGGG!!!

  • * The U.S. Marine Corps is threatening to revoke the honorable discharge of two anti-war protestors

    Well, it would be a long-term saving, no? The guys would have to pay back for their college ed, would have no rights to military pension, etc…

    re Mary Cheney’s baby and “Everyone knows there can only be one REAL biological Mommy.”:

    If they lived in a place (not Virginia) which allowed same-sex couples to adopt, then it Heather wouldn’t have to “play Daddy”. And an adoptive Mommy is as good as a biological one, or are “Concerned Women” against adoption as well?

    OT today, but on topic of yesterday’s Mini Report, re: L’affaire Ewa Sowinska, the children’s rights representative in Poland, who wanted Teletubbies researched for “promoting homosexual life style”…

    *Big* ho-hah, in Polish press, in EU comission, in Parliament… In Parliament, the speaker begged her (publicly), not to make the position (children’s rights representative) the object of world’s derision. Subsequently, Ms Sowinska has withdrawn her request of “psychological analysis of Teletubbies”.

    There’s some hope for Poland yet 🙂

  • “The U.S. Marine Corps is threatening to revoke the honorable discharge of two anti-war protestors? Can they do that?”

    That would be a first.

    I don’t recall John Kerry getting his honorable discharge revoked.

    Or decorated Marine veteran and anti-war protester Ron Kovic.

    Hell, why doesn’t the Army revoke MY honorable discharge? I’ve said some pretty nasty shit against the Iraq war both here and elsewhere.

    They met the obligations of their enlistment, and are therefore warranted military discharges that are honorable.

    What they partake in after their military service should not affect their record, outside of an actual case of treason (like, oh I don’t know, if one of them publicly revealed the name of an active CIA officer).

  • Holy Joe looks as if he’s dressed up like a Dalek, from Dr. Who – or maybe like my Mom’s old upright-style wringer washing machine from when I was a kid. It really looks like the place is getting safer, he only needs as much armor as a Bradley.

  • Love Buffy. Love Firefly. Hate FOX. Hate hate hate HATE FOX for killing Firefly right when the story arcs were just coming to their peak development in the series. “Serenity” was a fantastic movie but it should’ve been the complete seasons 1 and 2 of Firefly.

  • Re the Marine Corps threatening honorably discharged veterans. Once upon a time scare tactics such as those would have been seen as ridiculous and dismissed as un-American. Now we have moved so far to the right, and the Pentagon become so powerful, that the military’s assertion, evidently, of a lifetime right to control the behavior of veterans is no laughing matter. The Marine Corps may lose this oneif it goes to court (I doubt they will let it go that far), but the chilling effect is what they really want, and that they will get, IMHO.

  • Let’s see…

    In addition to the usual risks involved, one can now expect to give up one’s freedom of speech for eternity if one signs up with the armed forces.

    Have recruitment efforts improved THAT much?
    I guess we can call off all those extended tours now!

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