Thursday, January 24, 2008

Songs from the Site Meter Part II A: The Military Loves J-7


SITE METER
--Granted, I wasn't serious about ('aboot' in Canada) giving anyone a chicklet (TM), but it was a military man who answered my question, possibly a big-shot. He read a long time, and he was probably sitting a few-doors-down from Ronald Roughead. Or was it the retired Colonel himself? Doubtful, he's retired, and what would someone lobbying for SAIC be doing working at the Army's Inspector General Agency?

Some words of advice to the IGA: INVESTIGATE SHIRLINGTON LIMO AND CHRISTOPHER D. BAKER, AND START DOING A THOROUGH JOB OF IT. START DRAGGING CONGRESSMEN BEFORE HEARINGS ON ILLEGAL LOBBYING. RANDALL CUNNINGHAM IS ONE-OF-MANY CRIMINALS. Just my two-cents.





Domain Name
army.mil ? (Military)
IP Address
199.10.37.# (USA Inspector General Agency)
ISP
USA Inspector General Agency
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Continent : North America
Country : United States (Facts)
State : Virginia
City : Alexandria
Lat/Long : 38.7909, -77.0947 (Map)
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English (U.S.)
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Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Songs from the Site Meter: Military Intelligence? Naw, that's a contradiction-in-terms

SITE METER--This one has me a little puzzled. A chicklet (TM) to anyone who figures-out who they are and why they came to J-7!

Domain Name
dla.mil ? (Military)
IP Address
131.70.204.# (DLA NeMO)
ISP
DLA NeMO
Location
Continent : North America
Country : United States (Facts)
State : Virginia
City : Woodbridge
Lat/Long : 38.6485, -77.3108 (Map)
Language
English (U.S.)
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Microsoft WinXP
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Cheney to Congress: "Make warrantless wiretapping permanent"

"While EFF appreciates the attempt by Senator Specter to craft a compromise to save the litigation, the bill contains serious flaws that undermine the goal of allowing the courts to decide whether the carriers and the president broke the law when they engaged in over five years of warrantless surveillance of millions of ordinary Americans." --Electronic Frontier Foundation press release, December 5th, 2007.

Washington D.C.
--Today's rare glimpse of the vice president all appears to have begun over a letter written by Senate majority leader Harry Reid (D-Nv.) urging the White House to allow for more time to consider provisions of a bill to extend the government's abilities to wiretap domestically. Reid and others want oversight provisions and more. In an unsurprising move, the ever reclusive Vice President crawled-out of his secret bunker and issued an ultimatum to Congress today demanding that spying on American citizens--as well as foreigners--be made permanent. What the vice president and president want is the addition of a feature in the sunsetting "Protect America Act" (Public Law 110-55), a bill that was rashly passed by the 110th Congress at the end of August of 2007, and against the will of the public.

The White House has vowed to veto any version of the renewed act that doesn't include specific provisions. What does Cheney want? The Bush administration (Cheney) wants a provision that gives retroactive immunity to the telecoms (all-but-one complied without warrants) over aiding in perhaps thousands of FISA violations under an illegal NSA wiretapping program that failed to obtain warrants from the oversight court. Blah-blah-blah, "9/11," blah-blah-blah, "war on terrorism," and more blah-blah-blahs, were the reasons given to offer law-breaking communications corporations like AT&T, Verizon, Southern Bell (SBC), MCI, and many others (some unknown at this writing). Does haste make waste? My Grandmother always said it did:
"We're reminding Congress that they must act now," Cheney told the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. The law, which authorizes the administration to eavesdrop on phone calls and see the e-mail to and from suspected terrorists, expires on Feb. 1. Congress is bickering over terms of its extension. On Tuesday, Senate Republicans blocked an effort by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to extend the stopgap Protect America Act without expanding it, raising stakes for an expected showdown in the Senate later this week on a new version of the law. (AP, 01.23.2008)
And so, we've established that Richard Cheney didn't have such a great Grandma and that it actually does appear that Democrats in the Senate are trying to kill the Protect America Act (or make it reasonable). Sunsetting the PAA would be the traditionally American thing to do when a law threatens the liberties of its citizens and so clearly violates the Constitution of the United States, but Congress appears to be taking-its-time. This is acceptable. At least the Democrats are finally beginning to understand what a threat this all poses to them and the rest of us. Yet, somehow, Cheney seems to think he can operate without any mandate--he should, he's been doing so for almost eight-years now.

The 2008 elections loom large on the horizon. Is Senator Reid just trying to give Democratic incumbents the appearance of an opposition party, or is this a real shift from their timid and co-conspiratorial behavior from 2000-on? Nonetheless, the vice president's speech is being heavily-hyped by our corporate media in an attempt to drown-out all other voices on the issue, just as they did to the run-up to the invasion of Iraq.

As usual, Cheney's speech was made on unconsecrated ground, where nobody with any sense would laugh or balk at the vice president's statements today: the Heritage Foundation, where expressing common sense and reason are career-liabilities. None of this matters, action speaks louder than words. Congress is likely to capitulate on this issue unless we nearly break-their-hands forcing them to let the Protect America Act sunset and die after February 1st, 2008. Will they, or won't they? Regardless of the desire to scratch the immunity provision on-the-part of the Democratic majority, they still want to extend the program of spying on Americans, just with oversight by Congress.

But is the threat that bad, is it real? How could you even prove it was until there was an attack? It's all about instilling fear, and most incumbents are thinking on the same level as the White House: milk the war on terrorism for political-points. In-addition, the public isn't taking Congress or the White House at their word as they did in the immediate aftermath of September 11, 2001, which a simple glance at the polls has made clear since as early as late-2004 (about the time that the NYT discovered the warrantless surveillance programs).

Economic woes are only going to exacerbate the dislike for incumbents, especially if they don't start delivering broad-based reforms. The next sweeping-out of Congress could very well mean an end to this political generation and the rise of a new one. Several interconnected DC-scandals could finish the job. The Democrats understand this dynamic of the mandate better than the GOP, and the pressures must be immense at this writing. Preserving Democratic-gains made from the 2006 midterms will require giving the public something, and something will have to go.

On this note, Senator Harry Reid seems to be leading-the-charge against the immunity provisions, so we must assume that it's becoming a mainstream issue within the Senate itself. The reality is that it's been senators like Russell Feingold (D-Wi.), Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), and Christopher Dodd (D-Ct.), who have been keeping this issue alive. Other than Arlen Specter, there have been no progressive voices coming from GOP incumbents on this issue. Surely, civil libertarians of all-stripes are pelting Congress with angry e-mails, phone calls, and letters as this is being written. If they aren't, they'd better start doing it immediately, criminals cannot reform themselves. For that matter, they cannot be trusted to investigate or arrest themselves. Going widely unreported by the mainstream press are the actions by Sen. Christopher Dodd who is threatening once again to filibuster the bill in the Senate. What are his chances of succeeding? Not bad:

Efforts to pass the Senate FISA bill stalled in December when Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) pledged to filibuster any measure that provided phone companies with immunity. Reid pulled the bill from the floor so the Senate could finish its other work. Dodd on Wednesday again said that he would work to defeat any efforts that included such protections. “I’m just not going to give them a free pass,” Dodd said. Before filibustering, he said he would support an amendment that Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) plans to offer that would strengthen the FISA court and does not include immunity for the carriers. Leahy’s amendment is based on the bill passed by the Judiciary Committee, which he chairs. He would not say on Wednesday whether he would support a filibuster by Dodd. (theHill.com, 01.23.2008)
If the Democratic Party wishes to retain the Congress after this next election cycle, they must stand firm on this issue and block any attempts by the GOP to force passage of this legislation. As Republicans aren't in the majority, it will be the fault of the Democratic one if this legislation is renewed in a form acceptable to the White House. The rule of law has been thwarted long enough by the GOP and her operatives within the State. Predictably, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) is calling for a 'compromise' that replaces the telecom carriers as the defendant in all of the telecom lawsuits (nearly all alleging unlawful and unconstitutional violations of privacy) with the government. Ask any honest former-prosecutor if this is acceptable (meaning, 'not Arlen Specter, Rudolf Giuliani or Thomas DiBagio').

Retroactive immunity is like letting the primary accomplices to a major crime off-the-hook so that they can commit the same crimes again-and-again for a future administration, presumably Republican. Granting immunity will absolve this administration and her allies of an unknown number of high crimes, possibly even treason, and it will create dangerous precedents. It should be clear to anyone that Sen. Specter is acting-on-behalf of his party, doing his best to protect the GOP from a long-delayed justice. This is un-American in every respect.

Are Senator Reid and others in Congress starting to listen to the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)? EFF's contention back on December 5th, 2007 was that Congress shouldn't rush things--exactly the opposite of what the White House is calling for. This mess has been ongoing since December of 2005 when the existence of the NSA's warrantless surveillance program was revealed in The New York Times. They had been sitting on it for a year. We can wait to pass this bill until it resembles something Americans can be proud of.

'NSA Class Actions': http://www.eff.org/cases/att

'EFF Calls on Senate Judiciary Committee and Full Senate to Take More Time and Not Let Telephone Companies Off the Hook: http://www.eff.org/press/archives/2007/12/05

The Hill (yes, the Hill) on the wiretapping battle, 01.24.2008: http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/battle-over-wiretapping-is-heating-up-on-the-hill-2008-01-24.html

The sound of our liberties dying, 01.23.2008 (AP): http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5jRICMUBI8QvePywA5BLklcJJApcAD8UBQAT80

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Fred Thompson Leaves the Presidential Race


Fredland
--When someone like Richard M. Nixon refers to you as 'stupid,' you have to take it seriously. Fred didn't, and now he looks more the fool. Considering that Karl Rove and his former U.S. Attorney pupil Tim Griffin were part of the effort to force Fred on the American people, we can all assume they're going to gravitate to whoever the winners are at this moment. Rove and company might have to leap-frog from one GOP hopeful to another--they had best be careful it's not someone they burglarized.

That man would the shell-shocked John McCain, current waterboy for the Bush administration and their war crimes in the Middle East. It appears that all of those break-ins of the campaign offices of Thompson's running mates in 2007 yielded as much useful data as the Watergate job. Goodbye to a very ugly, stupid, whore-mongering half-man. We don't have to hear about you anymore. Now, if Giuliani can realize it isn't 1993, he might be able to swallow his ego and also admit that the public doesn't like him, and quit too.

[Ed., 09.19.2008-It should be noted that around this time Palfrey began talking more about Larry Flynt's list--that John McCain, Fred Thompson, and Dick Cheney were found in the phone records. Palfrey also began corroborating it in comments. All three appear to have been fashioned out of mud, just like Richard Nixon.]

Monday, January 21, 2008

Sam Eardth, Where Art Thou?

Planet Eardth--Do a little search on this name here at this site, a name that had to be invented by a half-wit, a name that never existed in the history of mankind. 'Smith' would have been a wiser choice. The moment I began writing about the legal situation of 'DC Madam' Deborah Jeane Palfrey, Sam Eardth emerged out of the aether, fully-formed...well, not exactly. He was a little malformed, like an ugly little demiurge, the afterbirth of God.

'Sam' sent me several 'CEASE AND DESIST' e-mails, but wouldn't identify themselves through their clumsy pseudonymn. One can imagine why with all of the lawsuits cutting-loose these days. We are--after all--a litigious society, and that's OK. To Sam & Co.: You're assholes. If you had any balls or credibility at all, you'd reveal who you are. I'm not intimidated.

Sam, if you're part of the prosecution team under D.C. 's U.S. Attorney Jeffrey A. Taylor, you're harassing me under the color of authority. That's a major crime, but realize that there is nothing that's going to cause the removal of the material published on this site about the 'Hookergate' scandal--a scandal that's really about institutionalized and illegal lobbying of Congress. Congress--being a slut--is known to happily oblige as much as possible, regardless of who's in power.

It is a political event, and the media are colluding in covering it all up. The use of women to obtain government contracts is being sidelined so it doesn't affect the GOP so badly in 2008, but it's not going away. Rep. Louis Slaughter has called for further inquiries into Shirlington Limousine, the other government contractor involved in the Cunningham scandal. U.S. Attorney scandal? You bet there's a connection, the exposures are coming. Shirlington Limousine and Christopher D. Baker could possibly be the crux of several scandals, which is why investigations are being blocked.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

No Country for Old Men (2007) review, by the Uncredible Duke

I know it has been out for a while now, but I just got around to watching No Country For Old Men. I live in the boonies, so I don't always get to see the first run. Anyway, the film is quite engaging. If you're the sort that doesn't like to think too hard when you watch films, you might want to skip this. Also, if everything has to make sense and be force fed to you like some Gerber's on a spoon, you might want to pass this one by. Otherwise, I think you'll like it. Sure it has the "surprise abrupt ending", but it's not too awfully abrupt. Part of the reason that it seems like an abrupt ending while you're watching it is the treatment of the Tommy Lee Jones character, Sheriff Bell.

I kept waiting for his involvement to be more meaningful. This is a bit of a spoiler, but Sheriff Bell is not really very personally involved in the action of the film whatsoever. He's more of a Narrator. Except he doesn't really ever narrate what is going on. He just sort of pops up here and there with little bits of background information on some of the characters and places and tools [Ed.--Yes, actual tools.] used in the story. It's clever, but it's definitely one of those things that needs to roll around in the mind.

A second watch will surely be in order. I suspect that when the DVD comes out, I'll probably watch with the Closed Captions ON so that I can tell what is being said. Old Joe is getting old and I don't always hear so well anymore.
As far as this being a Coen bros. film, don't come looking for O' Brother Where Art Thou?, or Raising Arizona. There are very few laughs [Ed.--Sounds like 'Blood Simple,' their first movie, and the 'Man Who Wasn't There,' with Billy Bob Thornton.], and the ones that are present are mostly the nervous kind. One recognizable aspect from the Coens' other work in No Country is their use of iconography.

The characters certainly are larger than life, especially that of Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem). Chigurh is the bad motherfucker of the piece, and he is the mother of all bad motherfuckers. Any fan of bad motherfuckers should see this film just for this characterization. You will not be disappointed.
I don't really want to give too much away, but No Country isn't much of a populist film. If you like stories that make you think, this one will be special to you. I can't think of much higher praise than that.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

The Poe Toaster Enjoys an Unmolested Anniversary


Baltimore, Maryland--He's been doing it since as early as 1949, and he got to do it again this year without being molested by Sam Porpora or a bunch of punks. It appears that Mr. Porpora is still claiming his false title of being the 'real Poe toaster,' but the legend itself was allowed to continue into another year.

Each year the anonymous toaster comes in his nondescript outfit, leaving three red roses and a partially-emptied bottle of cognac at the original site of Edgar Allan Poe's grave at the cemetery of Westminster Presbyterian Church.

Here's to keeping a mystery alive, we need them. There's no mystery to the fact that the Poe toaster isn't Sam Porpora, one only needs to know how to count-backwards. This isn't 'The Gold Bug,' it's a demented old man clutching pathetically at fame.

Friday, January 18, 2008

McCain states to South Carolina supporters: 'Federal spending is out of control,' misses the irony

"We're all Keynesians now."
--President Richard M. Nixon, 1971.

Florence, South Carolina
--That we are. Senator John McCain is a man who has truly lost what was left of his PTSD-addled mind. The Hanoi Hilton won. Having just authorized his most recent 'OK' vote for more-and-more spending for the war in Iraq and Afghanistan just wasn't enough for shell-shocked John McCain, that other Vietnam War hero who isn't named 'Randall Cunningham.' And he went as far as to allude to Randy in his comments to prospective South Carolina voters. Wasn't that nice? According to John McCain, Cunningham's kind of corruption won't happen 'when [he's] president.' Sure. Fine words, but does he mean it and is he even capable of achieving such lofty goals without disbanding the GOP as a national party? Face it America: it's in the DNA of the Republican Party to collude with corrupt Big Business and dirty banking, and they have no intentions of changing (and neither do many of you).

But what about his comments on federal spending? We all know that Senator McCain has been an avid supporter of the war--especially when it's going well--and has continued to vote for appropriations to continue it, alongside all his fellow incumbents currently occupying Congress (Democrats and Republicans). Back in July, there was the publicized 'Graham-McCain amendment'
to the July appropriations (H.R. 1585) for the war. Since then, it seems the president keeps asking mom for more allowance, and mom is real enabler--even when she's out of money.

The proposed amendment for longer military leaves went nowhere, which is what it was designed to do. Yet, it did give McCain that hint of possibly being on-the-side of the American public (he's not) who are still majorally against the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and who have even greater numbers when it comes to a possible war with Iran. We don't want one (McCain does, as well as a decades-long occupation of Iraq). The public has spoken about its disenchantment with the war, and Congress has done its best throughout 2007 and recent days in 2008 to avoid hearing it. The problem is, eventually they have to listen. The laws of physics aren't going to be suspended anytime soon.

Graham-McCain and other legislative and speech-making gambits have had another purpose, a subtext-of-sorts: to give John McCain the appearance of being against the war while he has been voting for every appropriations bill to keep it going. That makes his own politics and attempts at a mixed-message congruent with the president's wishes and agenda. This is also true of the voting records of Hillary Clinton, Joe Lieberman, and the majority of the incumbents in Congress at this writing. Somehow, the senator came down with a case of amnesia today, forgetting he helped authorize most of the aforementioned 'overspending' he's acting so upset over:
McCain blamed overspending in part for the nation's economic troubles. "As a Republican, I stand before you embarrassed. Embarrassed that we let that spending get out of control, and it led to corruption. Now we have former members of Congress residing in prison," McCain told a town-hall style meeting at the Carolina Hospital East Campus in Florence. "If I'm president, it's going to stop." "I'm not too astonished," by the bleak news, McCain added. "We let spending get totally out of control, and it continues today, and I'm sorry to tell you this."(AP, 01.18.2007)
The honorable thing would be to resign and not run for president. The average citizen should also understand that Senator McCain has either voted for more appropriations, or been absent from voting on Iraq and several other issues. He has a 56% truancy, he doesn't show up for over half of the votes he's supposed to. A significant number of them are hot-button issues, but the most important have been plans for withdrawal from Iraq--he just doesn't want to be pinned-down on it in the public mind when the war is unpopular. I'd be embarrassed too if I were a Republican, but who's that stupid these days?

Millions, naturally, it's just they're very embarrassed to admit it in public or at parties. Of course, they should feel this way irregardless of the state of the economy at any given point in our history. In any political era, simply being a Republican is adequate criteria for self-embarrassment. But some people insist on it and revel in parading it around. McCain is just a symptom of this sense of denial among so-called conservatives, it being a clutching-at-straws of a dying ideology.

Few strident supporters of the GOP are going to get that light-bulb moment of epiphany where they finally understand that what they believe in has little objective basis in reality and that the frontier mentality might work for some, but not for the many. This is what makes the Bush administration's stimulus plan so amusing. He's arguing for what some Democrats in Congress have prodded him to do all along. Belatedly, he's only halfway getting the picture, somehow thinking that tax cuts are the panacea for everything. The world doesn't resemble the world in the minds of GOP, it requires state intervention, and not the kind that benefits the major shareholders of Lockheed or Halliburton and the rest of America's elites.

What's truly interesting in all of this is George W. Bush's momentary turning away from military Keynesianism ('barracks Keynesianism,' otherwise known as our bloated defense budget, which is similar to what the Soviets had) to a standard Keynesianism that's typified by social spending to stimulate the economy. Also interesting were Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's veiled-barbs on the 17th of January against the 2000 tax cuts for America's wealthiest, noted by the Wall Street Journal in an online op-ed:
Appearing before Congress, Mr. Bernanke told Democrats what he thought they wanted to hear. The former academic economist blessed a "fiscal stimulus package," as long as it is "explicitly temporary." How new federal spending can be "temporary," he didn't say, as if a dollar collected in taxes or borrowed and then spent can be recalled. The "temporary" line was thus a dagger aimed directly at the heart of Mr. Bush's desire to make his tax cuts permanent. The Fed chief did aver that, "Again, I'm not taking a view one way or the other on the desirability of those long-term tax cuts being made permanent." But of course refusing to endorse something is itself a point of view -- a point Democrats were already joyfully repeating yesterday. (Wall Street Journal, online edition, 01.18.2007)
The current administration confirms this--cut taxes, and give-out a $145 billion (by 6:00 PM EST it was upped to '$150 billion') rebate to American taxpayers, while retaining the 2000 tax cuts into progressive taxation that provided economic stability for the nation for more than 50 years. During those 50 years, the GOP was in the dog house, confined to being a collared opposition party that had little more than red-baiting for a political tool (and no vision, funny how things don't change--even when they change). For the Republicans, it's just more of the same 'let the working-class pay for everything' MO, and less paid by the ultra-rich. Great, what happens after everyone's spent their checks? Bernanke seems to be saying, 'I don't stand behind your 2000 tax cuts, either in principle or in reality.' Neither does most of America if you ask the right questions, but pollsters have mortgages to pay (sorry, I didn't want to mention that uncomfortable fact).

It all begs-the-question that most die-hard conservatives ask whenever one suggests social spending of almost any sort: 'Yeah, but where's it going to come from?' Coupled with the 2000 tax cuts for the rich, it's hard to imagine where any of the money for all of this is coming from. McCain was smart enough to state the obvious fact that it will only be a 'temporary fix,' but he wants to be president (he still will after January 21st, 2009). Isn't the temporary fix what the GOP is all about? It's funny how it doesn't matter with war and defense spending, it's never an issue for either party overall. Yes, where is it all going to come from?

One thing's certain: the president must be in very big trouble indeed to start throwing money he doesn't have at the public again. He's officially back to what he was before September 11th, 2001, an embattled and ineffectual joke without a plan, Dick Cheney's monkey. George W. Bush and his administration have been an unfortunate and extremist phenomena that clawed its way into office, ensuring the demise of an ideology whose time had come to die. Be careful what you wish for (too late). You have to say one thing about the president: no vision, but he can change without changing. That's quite a trick, and you'll never hear of the president calling the vice president by any nicknames.


Dueling banjos--Bernanke VS. George W. Cheney (Wall Street Journal, January 18th, 2007): http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120062129547799439.html?mod=opinion_main_commentaries

US Politics on 'Graham-McCain,' July 2007:
http://uspolitics.about.com/od/wariniraq/a/sen_2078_amend.htm

The AP on Senator McCain's Bloviating all over himself (and South Carolina), January, 18th, 2008:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080118/ap_on_el_pr/republicans_economy

When Johnny came marching home, he called for more defense spending (Hurrah! Huraah! McCain's defense spending record in the Senate):
http://votesmart.org/voting_category.php?can_id=53270&type=category&category=22&go.x=7&go.y=6

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Steven R. Little, R.I.P.

This is probably one of the hardest things I will ever have to write: A dear friend of the family has died in his home in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Mr. Steven R. Little. Steve was a good man who watched out for us neighborhood kids (not just his own) during the early-80s on Whitehall Dr., in South Bend. Steve was a tough but a fair man, and was known to his children as "dear old dad." He was a father to us all on Whitehall. All of the kids on our block respected him and loved him. His suffering from a terminal illness is over and he will be missed. He died last evening.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Sometimes They Come Back: The Return of IAG

SITE METER--Yep, definitely over Ronald Roughead...

Domain Name
iag.com ? (Commercial)
IP Address
64.172.226.# (LPL Financial)
ISP
SBC Internet Services
Location
Continent : North America
Country : United States (Facts)
State : California
City : San Diego
Lat/Long : 32.7977, -117.1322 (Map)
Language
English (U.S.)
en-us
Operating System
Microsoft WinNT
Browser
Internet Explorer 7.0
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 6.0; SLCC1; .NET CLR 2.0.50727; .NET CLR 3.0.04506; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; InfoPath.2)
Javascript
version 1.3
Monitor
Resolution : 1024 x 768
Color Depth : 32 bits
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Jan 15 2008 6:42:38 am
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6 minutes 32 seconds
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Visit Number
26,908

"Congress Unlikely to Block Arms Sales to Saudi Arabia"

Washington D.C.--Thanks Democratic incumbents (more like recumbents, or "prone"), and thanks for reminding us all why most of you are going to be gone after the next couple election-cycles. We can all feel safer now, knowing that our "leaders" are selling smart bombs to the nation that supports radical Islamic terrorists more than any other, our beloved Saudis. Won't it be nice to see smart bombs crashing into the New York City skyline soon? And how is Jerry Bruckenheimer (Schmidt, his name is my name too) going to top that? Will there ever be a "Top Gun" sequel...aww, now you had to bring up Randall "Duke" Cunningham again. Right, someone has to. And while we're at it, why not bring up Shirlington Limousine, its CEO Christopher D. Baker, Mitchell Wade, and Brent Wilkes? The time has come to open the records of Shirlington Limo, Congress, it's overdue.

"I'll sell my soul to the Devil," an observation...

Washington D.C.--Why is it that Republican politicians have to beg-the-question so much?

Monday, January 14, 2008

Garbo (SAIC) Talks


SITE METER
--They're back, and from two separate geographical locations. Who is Justin Cox, and what's his connection to SAIC. Thanks IAG!

Domain Name

saic.com ? (Commercial)
IP Address
198.151.13.# (Science Applications International Corporation (SA)
ISP
Science Applications International Corporation (SA
Location
Continent: North America
Country: United States (Facts)
State: Maryland
City: Kensington
Lat/Long: 39.0256, -77.0772 (Map)
Language
English (U.S.)
en-us
Operating System
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AND...

Domain Name
saic.com ? (Commercial)
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198.151.12.# (Science Applications International Corporation (SA)
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Science Applications International Corporation (SA
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IAG (Independent Adviser Group) Visits J-7 Over Investor Qualms at SAIC?


SITE METER
--"The Independent Advisers Group (IAG) is dedicated to providing investment professionals with premier fee-based investment platforms. IAG provides advisers with the tools and resources necessary to partner with clients and work toward common objectives such as creating, growing and protecting wealth." That's what you get on the home page of IAG, and it appears that SAIC is a client who has some concerns over what gets published on this site about them.

They should be, and there's more-to-come in the intervening months. In case you don't know, Ret. Col. Ronald Roughead is found in the phone records of "DC Madam" (called that by the media) Deborah Jeane Palfrey in late-2005. It's a certainty that he was--and likely still is--employed by the ninth largest defense contractor in the United States. What's also likely is that he's been lobbying for them. One has to question whether most (or any) of it has been "aboveboard."



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iag.com ? (Commercial)
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64.172.226.# (LPL Financial)
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SBC Internet Services
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Sunday, January 13, 2008

Mr. "Bridge to Nowhere": Is the Fix on for Senator Ted Stevens?

Washington D.C./Anchorage, Alaska--Is this investigation ever going to conclude? Right, wait until the elections are over, the usual MO. Since the first summer 2006 raids on his home and the homes of six other Alaskan state and congressional representatives, we haven't seen much. Sure, there was another one this July, but that was five-months-ago. Shouldn't we just have another one for good measure, just for the hell-of-it? It's a safe bet Stevens will be breaking-the-law when the feds come barging in. There have already been trials for the Alaskan state reps, but what about Senator Ted Stevens and Representative Dan Young? Either you have something, you don't, or you're just sitting on it.

The Sunlight Foundation has a good page on Bill Allen, former CEO of VECO involved in the investigations of Stevens and Young, he's been dragged into court to testify in some of the Alaskan state representative trials and we should be seeing more of him for future ones...but when? What's the holdup? Ted Stevens and Dan Young are not men, but then, hardly anyone in Congress is a genuine adult. The real question is whether the Bush administration is attempting to put the brakes on further actions in the investigations of Stevens and Young (and Vitter, and Hastert, and Delay, and Foley, and Doolittle, and Lewis, and on-and-on...). It seems many Democrats have also willingly sold their souls to the highest-bidder (take note Barbara Boxer, your employer is Boeing). Please allow me to introduce myself...

"I'll Sell My Soul to the Devil...", The Washington Post, 11.12.20007: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/11/AR2007111101585.html?hpid=topnews&sid=ST2007111200534

Sunlight Foundation on Bill Allen (a panoply of articles and context):
http://www.sunlightfoundation.com/taxonomy/term/1009

Friday, January 11, 2008

Tears of a Clown: Bush Reminisces on Auschwitz

"God bless Israel, [signed] George Bush."

Jerusalem, Palestine
--This visit by President George W. Bush to Israel's Holocaust memorial had a peculiar ring of familiarity to it. During Ronald Reagan's second term-of-office, he visited a German war dead cemetery in Bitburg, West Germany in 1985. It was one of those embarrassing moments as an American that one would equate with Bush, not Reagan. That's because people tend to forget how much of a clown Reagan was. Even we, the public, had advance warning that there were Waffen-SS soldiers buried at the bone yard, but Reagan went anyway. It was truly an appalling moment to be American. How is this the same you're asking? The lack of any sense of irony in the president, naturally.

Purportedly, Bush was teary-eyed today in his hour-long visit to the memorial to the Shoah and its "Hall of Remembrance." This was all easily written-off as another silly ass PR photo junket (wrapped inside an junket, inside an enigma of an administration). This wasn't enough for George W. Bush, oh no, because genuine brutish stupidity has no sense of irony, and therefore parades itself to anyone and everyone it can. Amazingly, and in-character, President George W. Bush decided that he wanted to spread the message of vengeance once again, but with a curiously garbled irrationality only he can muster: "We should have bombed it [Auschwitz]." Would it have worked? This wasn't clear from the president's incoherent message. "Bomb Auschwitz?" I thought. "Wouldn't that have killed the inmates?" There I went again, using logic.

Not being a total idiot (mostly a dry-drunk), Bush had connections that allowed the peculiarly American words to be voiced (in Hebrew) by the chairman of the memorial, Avner Shalev in an anecdote about the president and his Secretary of State, Ms. Rice having a discussion on the subject on the Air Force One flight to Jerusalem. These folks understand vengeance well, old testament style-and-all. Yet, there's a problem with the president's logic--there's an absence of it. A number of Israeli holocaust scholars have some quibbles with the president's readin'-n'-learnin' on history:
[Noted Israeli holocaust scholar Tom] Segev said the question of a bombing was not so clear cut, noting that it wasn't certain the United States had the ability to carry out such an operation. In a response to a request that U.S. forces bomb Auschwitz and the rail lines, John J. McCloy, Roosevelt's assistant secretary of war, laid out the U.S. rationale for inaction. "Such an operation could be executed only by the diversion of considerable air support essential to the success of our forces now engaged in decisive operations elsewhere and would in any case be of such doubtful efficacy that it would not be warrant use of our resources," he wrote in an Aug. 14, 1944, letter. (AP, 01.11.2008, http://enews.earthlink.net/article/int?guid=20080111/4786f7d0_3ca6_1552620080111649273848)
And so there's the "Bush II" doctrine on foreign policy when you have a problem to deal with--bomb em.' Worry about the results later. How does any of this make him different from all other U.S. presidents? Hardly at all. Bill Clinton bombed Iraq (causing the deaths of 500,000 Iraqi children as a result) and the Balkans repeatedly for most of his time in office. Reagan bombed Panama, Grenada, Libya, etc. . They like things that go "boom" alongside brown people, it's a presidential thing--you wouldn't understand.

In other words, George W. Bush was convinced that bombing Auschwitz was such a good idea, he had it related to the chairman to deliver to the Israeli and world press. He is likely to have insisted on it as a good idea to harp on, that he "cares" about people, especially when they're of strategic interest to the State Department, even if they've been dead for 63 years. Hey, it's worked for the right-wingers in Israel. Yet, it's very likely that bombing Auschwitz (never mind all the other death camps) not only wouldn't have worked, but that tens-of-thousands of Jewish refugees and inmates of the camp would have been killed in the process. Oh yeah, and several thousand Soviet P.O.W.s, European Gypsies, homosexuals, women, children, interned Poles and German dissidents and leftists, and-on-and-on. In other words, not only weren't the logistics there to pull-it-off correctly during WWII, but it was even money that the end result would have been a human rights catastrophe resembling Iraq. Why does it seem to me that nobody will be able to convince Bush otherwise?

Bush isn't not alone, however, and the most extremist voices on this issue, naturally, emanate from American Jewish scholars. One can only imagine why, they being in-league with similar extremists in Israel who hold the same views on maintaining the status quo in Palestine. What we have here is a tweaking of the iconography, the final days of "yeah, but the holocaust" to justify inhuman policies towards Palestinians. The saddest part is that these extremists are in-the-minority in Israel and the United States, they just have big mouths and hijacked the bully pulpit of the Shoah decades ago. Nothing of any lasting value will emerge from this "Middle East Peace tour," nothing at all. The client state will mouth what its master wishes to hear (for now), but sometimes it wags its owner. If the president wasn't pathological, he might have shed a few tears over the bodies of his own victims...but that would require a sense of irony.