Friday, June 30, 2006

Various matters

(1) The Nation has published an interesting article by Jennifer Nix regarding how books can be used to force ideas and arguments into our national political dialogue, and it uses How Would a Patriot Act? as its model. Jennifer notes that the book succeeded even though it "has received very little mainstream coverage" [despite remaining on the New York Times' Best Seller list for 4 weeks (and counting), not a single newspaper or magazine has reviewed it] and, more surprisingly, it "has not received help from the big membership groups." Despite being the only book focused on the Bush administration's abuses of executive power, MoveOn, for instance, has explicitly refused -- in response to numerous requests -- even to mention the book to its readership or promote it in any way.

Many on the Left seem to have some sort of instinctive aversion to promoting products which are for sale or ventures which generate profit, as though such activities are impure or even wrong. The Right long ago realized that the economic success of its political products translates into all sorts of critical benefits -- from creating the perception that its ideas are popular and credible to ensuring its advocates widespread media access. That's why they expend so much effort to ensure the success of their books -- even going so far as to have organizations purchase them in large bulk and then sell them at a huge loss -- and it's also why it is so important to them to disparage the economic viability of liberal media projects. For better or worse, the impact which a political product can have is a function of its economic viability.

In addition to my book, there have been several books that have enjoyed surprising commercial success -- including David Sirota's Hostile Takeover and Eric Boehlert's Lapdogs -- which critics of the administration ought to be excited to promote and push into the mainstream media. The more the ideas and arguments advanced by those books are heard, the better. Books develop ideas and have the power to persuade and shape political debates in a way few other things can. And yet organizations and even magazines which ought to be devoted to the promotion of those ideas have all but ignored them and -- with rare exception (cited in Jennifer's article) -- refused to pay any attention to them. The books have succeeded despite what appears to be an odd resistance by the very media outlets and organizations which one would think would naturally support them.

(2) Dick Morris, who embraces every tenet of the neoconservative agenda, unsurprisingly heaped praise on Joe Lieberman and urged his re-election, and in the process, said this (h/t Mark Coffey -- a pro-Bush conservative who is a self-proclaimed "huge fan" of Lieberman's):

As surely as an American soldier on patrol in Iraq, his [Lieberman's] very presence in the Democratic primary provides a tempting target for those who want to vent their frustration at American foreign policy.

So, those who oppose Lieberman's pro-war stance are just like the Iraqi insurgents who attack and kill American soldiers. Are there any neo-conservatives left anywhere who are capable of engaging in a single political discussion without insinuating that those who disagree with them are either terrorists or terrorist allies? If so, I don't ever hear or read them.

(3) Speaking of whimsical accusations of being pro-terrorist, it's a given, of course, that the 5 Justices who ruled against The Commander-in-Chief in his Glorious War are liberal America-haters who are on the side of terrorists. In an article linked to (but not, of course, approved of) by Instapundit, former Boston University Law School Dean Ronald Cass mindlessly trots out every empty cliche to tell us that the administration's efforts to fight terrorists are "opposed by The New York Times, the left side of the Democratic Party, and most of France" -- an Axis of Treason now joined by the 5 members of the Supreme Court who had the audacity to commit the ultimate sin: they "second-guessed the President"! Moronically, Cass laments that the decision "gave hope to One-World-ers by leaning on international common law to interpret U.S. federal law" -- arguing that it was improper for the Court to examine the requirements of the Geneva Conventions even though federal law requires that military commissions adhere to the Geneva Conventions.

The Hamdan majority is composed of some rather unlikely traitors. One of the Justice is a devout Roman Catholic appointed by Ronald Reagan. Another is a Justice appointed by George Bush 41. And the author of the Court's opinion is a Bronze Star winner from the combat action he saw in World War II. Isn't it amazing how many American combat veterans and war heroes become pro-terrorist traitors and enemies of the United States in their next job? And it's equally amazing how so many one-time conservatives turn into socialist allies of America's enemies. It reminds one of those lovely days of the Schiavo controversy when life-long conservative Southern Baptist State Court Judge George Greer overnight became the symbol of secular-liberal-Godhating-judicial-activism because self-proclaimed "conservatives" did not like the results of his rulings.

For all their talk of judicial activism, Bush followers reveal themselves as the ultimate judicial activists whenever they discuss judicial decisions. The crux of the decision yesterday turned on relatively obscure and legalistic questions involving the legal effects of Congressional enactment of the UCMJ, rules of statutory construction as applied to Common Article 3, and the retroactivity of jurisdiction-stripping statutes. Among most Bush followers purporting to condemn this decision as an act of judicial tyranny, you won't find any discussion of those legal issues, because they know nothing about them and don't care about them.

All they know is that the Court reached a result they don't like, and worse, it is a result that contradicted the President's will, so it is, by definition, the by-product of pro-terrorist judicial activism. Within hours -- and certainly without even having the time to read the opinions -- Bush followers who never thought about the UCMJ or statutory construction issues concerning Article 3 were able instantaneously to condemn this decision as the by-product of judicial overreach. As always, "judicial activism" has no meaning other than "the reaching of a result by a court which those who wield the term dislike."

(4) USA Today followed up today on its initial reports about the massive data base of domestic calls which the Administration is compiling (with no oversight or legislative authority, naturally), and in doing so, reported this:

In the weeks since the database was revealed, congressional and intelligence sources have offered other new details about its scope and effectiveness.

"It was not cross-city calls. It was not mom-and-pop calls," said Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, who receives briefings as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Defense subcommittee. "It was long-distance. It was targeted on (geographic) areas of interest, places to which calls were believed to have come from al-Qaeda affiliates and from which calls were made to al-Qaeda affiliates. . . ."

Other lawmakers who were briefed about the program expressed concerns that gaps in the database could undercut its usefulness in identifying terrorist cells.

"It's difficult to say you're covering all terrorist activity in the United States if you don't have all the (phone) numbers," Chambliss said. "It probably would be better to have records of every telephone company."

So, according to Sen. Stevens, there is no reason to worry because they're only collecting this data with regard to long-distance domestic calls to "geographic places of interest," not on "mom-and-pop calls," whatever any of that might mean. But Sen. Chambliss admits that the real goal is to compile telephone records "of every telephone company" -- meaning that the Government would have a permanent, complete record of every single domestic and international call made and received by every single American. But don't worry -- the Bush Administration is good and there is no reason to worry about how they will use this.

The American way is to place blind faith in our political officials and let them operate in complete secrecy, especially when it comes to spying on American citizens on U.S. soil. Anyone who disagrees must want to help Al Qaeda commit terrorist acts against Americans. What other reason would anyone object?

31 comments:

  1. Anonymous12:26 PM

    Your "mindlessly trouts out" link is broken.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you - I fixed it. I would not want anyone to miss that article. It really reaches new heights in intellectual dishonesty and just plain stupidity -- from the ex-Dean of Boston University Law School, no less, desperate to depict the Supreme Court's opinion as the work of international socialists, Al Qaeda allies, and the French.

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  3. Anonymous12:43 PM

    I have to admit that I have not yet read 1984. I never had the desire or need toread it un itl recently. I am going to hiding in the woods this weekend and just bought the book so i can see what life will be like in the next few years.
    While I don't necessarily call myself a liberal, I am definitely not a conservative by today's standards. I don't just see things in the black or white, for us or against us mentality. I just wish that the people we elected would just act in the real best interest of the people and do their recently pay-increased jobs.

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  4. when will people wake up and realize
    1) Al Qaeda is propaganda tool more than a real terrorist organization
    2) 9/11 was an inside job and the WTC was brought down by demolition
    3) the "war on terror" is completely bogus

    All this legal manuevering is based on a giant lie that both the left and the right have bought, more or less hook line and sinker.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous1:28 PM

    Are there any neo-conservatives left anywhere who are capable of engaging in a single political discussion without insinuating that those who disagree with them are either terrorists or terrorist allies?

    No. It appears that they have deliberately misunderstood the Hamdan holding in order to further their agenda of "making stuff up" about what non-Bush supporters believe.

    And, what's ironic about this is that the person they think is "saving" them from the terrorists is the very person whose policies have created an increase in terrorism. Those who seek to have the Constitution enforced and international law followed do so, in part, to help stem the tide of anti-American sentiment which causes terrorist attacks in the first place. (Wasn't it, in fact, Bush who just announced that Gitmo is harmful to our reputation in the world?)

    For all the right's crying about how the libs every action is based on "hatred of Bush," it appears that the right's every action is because they "hatred of people who don't support Bush."

    --Kristin

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  6. You're touching on one of the biggest issues I've been facing, and trying to figure out how to fight. (If you look at my blogs, you'll probably assume that I've decided that tyranny has a corn allergy, and that many corny but sincere blog entries will help turn the tide :-) ).

    See, truth is complicated. I don't know, for example, that global warming is happening and likely caused in large part by human actions. I have to trust someone to give me the truth. I can't verify that I'm not being lied to.

    If George W., alone, said that global warming was fake, no one would believe him. But if he says it, and it's repeated by a bunch of pro-business conservative commentators and a few key conseravative "entertainers", then people hear that, and they trust that it must be true. After all, these good, conservative people wouldn't lie, and if enough trustworthy people repeat something, well, it must be true, right?

    Not everyone is a liar, or stupid, or misinformed. In fact, it only takes a few liars who are trusted to start the process. The echo chamber effect does the rest.

    But while those few liars are willing to continue to lie boldly and arrogantly, those people who have an interest in believing them will continue to believe.

    And that interest in believing in them doesn't have to be financial, or even political. Someone who thinks Rush Limbaugh is a wise sage of conservative truths doesn't want to admit that s/he's been a complete knucklehead for having been played for a fool by Rush all these years. It can seem much better to believe that Rush is that wise sage, or, at the worst, that he once was.

    Or, there's the years of people repeating how icky and America-hating liberals are... admit that those icky people were, well, "not-wrong"? Eeeew!

    I repeat to myself that love is stronger than hate, and the truth stronger than lies, and that the biggest lie ever told is that a single heart's love can't make a difference.

    But there are days when it's hard to believe. Thankfully, today, it's just a tiny bit easier. (Sorry; I'm still floating from remembering that the SCOTUS did the right thing; I'll go back to being cynical about how they're being reviled for it soon.)

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  7. Anonymous1:47 PM

    "Spooked said...
    when will people wake up and realize
    1) Al Qaeda is propaganda tool more than a real terrorist organization


    Actually, they're a breath mint AND a mouthwash.

    2) 9/11 was an inside job and the WTC was brought down by demolition

    Uh-oh, here we go. Thanks for the laugh (ok, in a sick perverted way), but hell it's his silly conspiracy theory not mine.

    3) the "war on terror" is completely bogus

    Replace "bogus" with "misguided".

    Guess everyone's left for the weekend. Bart-free Friday?

    We can only hope.

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  8. Anonymous1:48 PM

    j"Spooked said...
    when will people wake up and realize
    1) Al Qaeda is propaganda tool more than a real terrorist organization


    Actually, they're a breath mint AND a mouthwash.

    2) 9/11 was an inside job and the WTC was brought down by demolition

    Uh-oh, here we go. Thanks for the laugh (ok, in a sick perverted way), but hell it's his silly conspiracy theory not mine.

    3) the "war on terror" is completely bogus

    Replace "bogus" with "misguided".

    Guess everyone's left for the weekend. Bart-free Friday?

    We can only hope.

    ReplyDelete
  9. spooked:

    when will people wake up and realize
    1) Al Qaeda is propaganda tool more than a real terrorist organization
    2) 9/11 was an inside job and the WTC was brought down by demolition...


    Please take this c*ap over to alt.conspiracy.raelians-and-chubacapras

    We don't read it and we don't need it here.

    Thanks in advance for your co-operation.

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  10. It Was Reviewed

    By my rinky-dink biweekly. (A different review than the one online at My Left Wing.)


    Sorry, Paul - I ~didn~t meant to overlook your genuinely excellent review (the version of which appeared on My Left Wing is, as you know, linked on the side).

    I'm not surprised that we've had difficulty inducing large media outlets to review it, because they are so stagnant in how they get their material - months ahead, from the same small set of corporate PR people -- that we expect it to take a lot of time and effort. But it's the refusal to do anything by the more anti-Bush magazines and organizations which ought to be receptive -- The American Prospect, MoveOn, the ACLU, Nation - which is perplexing and frustrating. I really think they view the promotion of books as beneath them.

    And, as I said, it isn't just my book, but Eric and David's, too (and David's debuted on the NYT list this week). It just seems like some pretty obvious - and potentially valuable - opportunites that aren't exploited.

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  11. maineiac-- Another good book with glimpses of the present and future is Sinclair Lewis' "It Can't Happen Here," written in 1935 about the rise of a fascist dictatorship in the United States. I read it last summer and had to stop for a few days midway through because of horrible nightmares.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous2:36 PM

    ... not a single newspaper or magazine has reviewed it ...

    Hey, what are we, chopped liver? (Yes, that's a blog post, but it reproduces verbatim what was published on our print edition's Sunday book page.) :-)

    ReplyDelete
  13. Anonymous2:38 PM

    paul:
    We have tons of incredibly thoughtful, detailed analytical work done in academia, and in think tanks, and likewise, no PR infrastructure to get the ideas out the door.

    glenn:
    I really think they view the promotion of books as beneath them.


    It's true. I work at a public health journal published by a major public health nonprofit, and I can tell you from experience: the general attitude among all the academics with which I come in contact is that (a) free government money is good (presumably because it's clean of self-interest) and (b) all money from profit is dirty. I think this attitude stems not entirely from the lingering Marxist attitude that capitalism is inherently unjust, but also because it makes a researcher look biased too make money. For them, I admit, it is a practical as well as a political principle to be careful about taking money. It's also foolish and shortsighted when it is applied blindly and across the board to any way of making money.

    The association needs money to pay the bills, but making money is bad—we can only beg for it. It's crippling us in our ability to get ideas out there. I guess even the political types suffer from this pathetic ideology.

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  14. Anonymous3:02 PM

    Your posts continue to get better and better, Glenn.

    Despite being the only book focused on the Bush administration's abuses of executive power, MoveOn, for instance, has explicitly refused -- in response to numerous requests -- even to mention the book to its readership or promote it in any way.

    Judging from the unbelievable hate emails I have gotten in the last few days from all my "atheist" lefty Jewish friends (I don't talk about Israel with religious Jewish people because I don't want to start actual wars) when I sent them one of Justin's articles that had a picture of that little girl on the Gaza beach screaming in anquish in the bloody sand which surrounded her after 8 members of her family had just been slaughtered, I would say maybe the reason nobody in the media or the mainstream left is reviewing your book is very simple: you are not an Israel-is -always-right-apologist.

    I am getting sick of being bombarded by these wacko Christian fundamentalists "friends" of mine on the right (thank God, few in number) but they don't bother me half as much (because they are not mental giants to begin with) as the really vicious stuff I am getting from these atheist Jews on the left. These people are intelligent, but my god, I never saw people capable of being more vicious.

    So here's my own analysis so far (I'll leave Opus Dei for another day...)

    l) The orthodox religious Jews are a lost cause. I don't even want to get into it as I have had personal issues with them for a long time concerning their subhuman treatment of animals;

    2) The atheist Jews on the left are among the most despicable and most gullible people I now know.

    3) Almost all "reform" Jews that I happen to know are intelligent and rational.

    4) The atheist Jews on the "right" (and by this I don't mean the blogosphere, Fox "right" but what you might describe loosely as paleo-Republicans re: economic matters and liberal re: civil rights and compassion for others) constitute the group most of my close friends fall into and to a person they all were wildly enthusiastic about Glenn's book which I sent each of them and they all think about this administration and Congress and the war the same way most of us here do.

    But this group #2 is the group that really ticks me off.

    Yikes. Oh vey. Etc.

    In the slim chance there is someone out there I have not already offended, I offer this:


    Israel's Appalling Bombing in Gaza
    Starving in the Dark


    .......Nevertheless, politics should not be the greatest international concern. For over in Gaza, one appalling act must now eclipse all thoughts of "road maps" or "mutual gestures": on Wednesday, Israeli war planes repeatedly bombed and utterly demolished Gaza's only power plant. About 700,000 of Gaza's 1.3 million people now have no electricity, and word is that power cannot be restored for six months.

    It is not the immediate human conditions created by this strike that are monumental. Those conditions are, of course, bad enough. No lights, no refrigerators, no fans through the suffocating Gaza summer heat. No going outside for air, due to ongoing bombing and Israel's impending military assault. In the hot darkness, massive explosions shake the cities, close and far, while repeated sonic booms are doubtless wreaking the havoc they have wrought before: smashing windows, sending children screaming into the arms of terrified adults, old people collapsing with heart failure, pregnant women collapsing with spontaneous abortions. Mass terror, despair, desperate hoarding of food and water. And no radios, television, cell phones, or laptops (for the few who have them), and so no way to get news of how long this nightmare might go on.

    But this time, the situation is worse than that. As food in the refrigerators spoils, the only remaining food is grains. Most people cook with gas, but with the borders sealed, soon there will be no gas. When family-kitchen propane tanks run out, there will be no cooking. No cooked lentils or beans, no humus, no bread ­ the staples Palestinian foods, the only food for the poor. (And there is no firewood or coal in dry, overcrowded Gaza.)

    And yet, even all this misery is overshadowed by a grimmer fact: no water. Gaza's public water supply is pumped by electricity. The taps, too, are dry. No sewage system. And again, word is that the electricity is out for at least six months.

    The Gaza aquifer is already contaminated with sea water and sewage, due to over-pumping (partly by those now-abandoned Israeli settlements) and the grossly inadequate sewage system. To be drinkable, well water is purified through machinery run by electricity. Otherwise, the brackish water must at least be boiled before it can be consumed, but this requires electricity or gas. And people will soon have neither.

    Drinking unpurified water means sickness, even cholera. If cholera breaks out, it will spread like wildfire in a population so densely packed and lacking fuel or water for sanitation. And the hospitals and clinics aren't functioning, either, because there is no electricity.

    Finally, people can't leave. None of the neighboring countries have resources to absorb a million desperate and impoverished refugees: logistically and politically, the flood would entirely destabilize Egypt, for example. But Palestinians in Gaza can't seek sanctuary with their relatives in the West Bank, either, because they can't get out of Gaza to get there. They can't even go over the border into Egypt and around through Jordan, because Israel will no longer allow people with Gaza identification cards to enter the West Bank. In any case, a cordon of Palestinian police are blocking people from trying to scramble over the Egyptian border--and war refugees have tried, through a hole blown open by militants, clutching packages and children.

    In short, over a million civilians are now trapped, hunkered in their homes listening to Israeli shells, while facing the awful prospect, within days or weeks, of having to give toxic water to their children that may consign them to quick but agonizing deaths.

    One woman near the Rafah border, taking care of her nephews, spoke to BBC: "If I am frightened in front of them I think they will die of fear." If the international community does nothing, her children may soon die anyway.

    The astonishing scale of this humanitarian situation is indeed matched only by the deafening drizzle of international reaction. "Of course it is understandable that [the Israelis] would want to go after those who kidnapped their soldier," says Kofi Anan (while the Palestinian population cowers in the dark listening to thundering explosions demolish their society), "but it has to be done in such a way that civilian populations are not made to suffer." Even as Israel bombs smash Gaza's roadways, the G-8 stands up on its hind-legs to intone, "We call on Israel to exercise utmost restraint in the current crisis." How about the Russians, now angling for position in the new "Great Game" of the Middle East? "The right and duty of the government of Israel to defend the lives and security of its citizens are beyond doubt," says Russia's foreign ministry, as though poor Corporal Shalit warrants any of this mayhem, "But this should not be done at the cost of many lives and the lives of many Palestinian civilians, by massive military strikes with heavy consequences for the civilian population."

    And what says noble Europe, proud font of human rights conventions, architects of the misión civilizatrice? "The EU remains deeply concerned," mumbles the mighty defenders of humanitarian law, "about the worsening security and humanitarian developments." Seemingly soggy phrases like "deeply concerned" are diplomatic code for "We are seriously unhappy." But under these circumstances, "remains deeply concerned" suggests that this staggering crime is just one more sobering moment in the failed "road map."

    Diplomatic bubbles of unreality in the Middle East are the norm rather than the exception, but at some point the international community must face the very unwelcome fact that it needs to change gear. A country that claims kinship among the western democracies of Europe is behaving like a murderous rogue regime, using any excuse to reduce over a million people to utter human misery and even mass death. Plastering Corporal Shalit's face over this policy is no more convincing that South African newspapers emblazoning the picture of one poor murdered white doctor over their coverage of the 1976 Soweto uprising.

    Israel has done many things argued to be war crimes: mass house demolitions, closing whole cities for weeks, indefinite "preventative" detentions, massive land confiscation, the razing of thousands of square miles of Palestinian olive groves and agriculture, systematic physical and mental torture of prisoners, extrajudicial killings, aerial bombardment of civilian areas, collective punishment of every description in defiance of the Geneva Conventions--not to mention the general humiliation and ruin of the indigenous people under its military control. But destroying the only power source for a trapped and defenseless civilian population is an unprecedented step toward barbarity. It reeks, ironically, of the Warsaw Ghetto. As we flutter our hands about tectonic political change, we must take pause: in the eyes of history, what is happening in Gaza may come to eclipse them all.


    -Dr. Virginia Tilley

    OK. Now, like everyone else here, I am a victim of what I read. If the facts are false, my conclusions will also be false.

    Maybe this author is lying. Maybe she is simply wrong in her description of events.

    Maybe anti-war.com is a bigoted site which is anti-Semetic.

    Maybe. How would I know? But if none of the above is true, I am really started to detest Israel because I define them by their actions of late.

    PS. Paul Rosenberg, you cited Vincent Bugliosi! He's another one of my few biggest heroes. I haven't seen any mention of him lately although I have looked, and that worries me. Do you know what he has been up to in the last five years?

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  15. Anonymous3:33 PM

    Are there any neo-conservatives left anywhere who are capable of engaging in a single political discussion without insinuating that those who disagree with them are either terrorists or terrorist allies? If so, I don't ever hear or read them.


    Is this perhaps the reason that the ratings are down at Fox, Talk Radio and right-wing blogs? With more and more people questioning the war, if not turning against it, these repetitive smears of “traitor” or “terrorist allies” might be getting just a little tiresome.

    Maybe this downturn is only temporary, I’m not sure. But surely there are lots of Americans with relatives, neighbors and co-workers who are no longer thrilled with this war - and the idea of them as “terrorist supporters” is really just plain silly. I think such exaggerated rhetoric may be starting to backfire.

    After all, with Bush’s popularity hovering somewhere in the thirties, is it really reasonable to declare that those who don’t support him are insane, suffering from the mental disorder of Bush Derangement Syndrome?

    And this list just goes on and on. Some right-wing religious nut is comparing Bill Gates and Warren Buffet to Nazis (for supporting birth control etc). The vast majority of the scientific community is regarded as either Marxists (for believing that humans contribute to global warming) or that they’re immoral atheists (for believing in evolution).

    All of this rhetoric bears no resemblance to reality anymore – and I think there might be a few more “Shiavo” moments looming in the future for the people spewing this stuff.

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  16. Anonymous4:41 PM

    Fortunately, the SCROTUS ruling yesterday renders this illegal program really, honestly illegal. The ACLU and other organizations, and any congressional reps who still have their testes (or ovaries) now have a big weapon to shut down the entire thing.

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  17. Anonymous4:41 PM

    Fortunately, the SCROTUS ruling yesterday renders this illegal program really, honestly illegal. The ACLU and other organizations, and any congressional reps who still have their testes (or ovaries) now have a big weapon to shut down the entire thing.

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  18. Anonymous4:51 PM

    I think Bill Mauldin may have explained sixty years ago why all those combat heroes become "traitors" in their next job. In Up Front, his memoir about his WWII service, he observed that when he was on leave he could always tell who the soldiers were who hadn't been to the front. They were the ones getting into fights.

    I've never been in a war and hope never to be, but I suspect that he's onto something there. I think my first hour of combat would have been enough for a lifetime.

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  19. Anonymous5:01 PM

    Cass trots out... Liberty may have been the traditional casualty of war, but common sense is its new colleague...

    Truth is traditionally the first casualty of war. If you are willing to get into it and pick up a gun and join your brothers in arms in the slaughter, it's often the first time you will ever feel really free.


    "War is really the only time, I suppose, that you're actually a free person . . . And there's also a democracy, an equality about being in the war--everybody's the same. In the field, it's like a bunch of heavily armed monks in this weird brotherhood."

    --Interview with Gustav Hasford, Los Angeles Daily News, 1987

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  20. Anonymous5:02 PM

    "Isn't it amazing how many American combat veterans and war heroes become pro-terrorist traitors and enemies of the United States in their next job?"

    Given the number of American combat veterans and war-heros who become 'terrorist traitors' perhaps a scaling back of the U.S. military is in order, and perhaps we should try to avoid combat situations so that we get fewer future 'traitors'.

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  21. Digby has an excellent post up about Lieutenant Commander Charlie Swift, Salim Ahmed Hamdan's lawyer.

    There's also a very interesting intervoewq with him from 2004 here

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  22. Anonymous5:23 PM

    Isn't it amazing how many American combat veterans and war heroes become pro-terrorist traitors and enemies of the United States in their next job?

    It's been like that since Vietnam.

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  23. Anonymous5:48 PM

    I could not agree more. Dean Cass should be ashamed to have written a pure propaganda piece (and you left out the recycyled-from-2004 RNC talking points Cass uses about Sen. Kerry and Davos). I have taught in law school, and this piece would receive an "F" from any vaguely objective professor. What a farce. I guess if you want to be a Bush supporter, you really do need a full frontal lobotomy, no matter what brains you might have started with

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  24. Anonymous5:49 PM

    "...the administration's efforts to fight terrorists are "opposed by The New York Times, the left side of the Democratic Party, and most of France"[...] 5 members of the Supreme Court [...] many American combat veterans and heros [...] many one-time conservatives..."
    Even when they are all alone on their side of the line, I doubt they will get it. It's hard remaining right when you're wrong, but they will find a way.

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  25. Anonymous6:48 PM

    The real question is, how did OBL get to the justices? Did he use blackmail? Were they sleeper agents? Did they have contact with terrorists in their pasts? Unexplained trips to Berkeley, Manhattan, Baghdad, or Minneapolis? Are the black robes so they can sneak around at night? They must have had professors who "turned" them and who must be exposed.

    Who appointed them to this platform by which they arrogate to themselves supreme judicial power over our Fatherland? The public has a right to know. And when we find these people, a harsh justice shall be visited upon them.

    Liberal terrorists must be rooted out wherever they are found, and, sadly, they can be found anywhere.

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  26. Anonymous6:54 PM

    Liberal terrorists must be rooted out wherever they are found, and, sadly, they can be found anywhere.

    Oh, ain’t it the truth:

    “It’s Addington,” he said, “He doesn’t care about the Constitution.”

    Who is this terrorist-loving traitorous slimeball who dares to say this about Dick Cheney’s distinguished chief of staff?

    Who should we send to the gas chamber with Bill Keller?

    The answer, apparently, is: Colin Powell.

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  27. Hey Glenn, I'm reading your book right now, and it's great stuff. I'm certainly going to be recommending it. You may not be getting the press, but the word of mouth is that it's excellent work, and I agree.

    I was just recently thinking about the fact I'm not seeing any media exposure for progressive/liberal books. Greg Palast's book came out the same day as the book of She Who Shall Not Be Named, and who got the attention? What a world.

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  28. Anonymous8:51 PM

    Stevens is still living in the time when long-distance calls were rare, special, expensive events that average people didn't experience very often. In his mind, "Mom and Pop" almost never make or get such calls, and when Mom does answer one, she shouts out to Pop that it's "Long distance!"

    Of course nowadays with most cell phone plans there's no reason to notice or care whether a call is long-distance or local, as long as it's within the US.

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  29. Anonymous9:27 PM

    Many on the Left seem to have some sort of instinctive aversion to promoting products which are for sale or ventures which generate profit, as though such activities are impure or even wrong.

    And who exactly are these mysterious "Many on the Left"? I think you're granting a tiny minority a megaphone.

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  30. Anonymous5:26 AM

    Looking for truth in all the wrong places

    I'll read anything in a quest to get information, and if that means going to a marxist site, that doesn't bother me.

    Since Glenn mentioned her, I decided to read up on Jennifer Fix and Working Assets. I am sure this will bring on the "anons" who I believe all work for Working Assets.

    Don't ever say 'Third Party.' It incites them to riot..... A piece of bread only has two sides to receive butter.

    intro: AN ‘ALTERNATIVE’ ROAD
    …defenders of Left capitalism argue that “some good comes of it all,” “it’s still better than nothing,” or the current favorite, “well, anything’s better than Bush and the Republicans.” That is the same logic behind the repeated insanity of voting for so-called Dem/Left candidates, and supporting corporations that contribute to the Democrats, as means to end war, globalization and corruption. Good luck and good night.

    …“The militarization of America is a project of a the US corporate elites, with significant divisions within the corporate establishment on how it is achieved . . . the Democrats’ ‘Progressive Internationalism’ is viewed by these sectors as a more effective way of imposing the US economic and military agenda worldwide…The Democrats are not opposed to the illegal occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. Nor are they opposed to the militarization of civilian institutions. Moreover, their perspective and understanding of 9/11 and the ‘war on terrorism’ is broadly similar to that of the Republicans.”… Michael Chossudovsky

    Running From One “secret room” to Another
    By Larry Chin
    Online Journal Associate Editor
    http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/printer_852.shtml

    In fear and protest over the National Security Agency (NSA)/AT&T wiretapping scandal, and the Bush administration’s spying on US citizens, more than 1,000 individuals have switched their telecom services to Working Assets, according to the San Francisco Chronicle. In addition to probably doing nothing to safeguard their own privacy, switching their long distance and credit cards to “progressive” Working Assets simply moves money from one branch of the established political and economic order to another. In other words, it is a zero sum game.


    Working Assets, and Bush and Kerry

    Working Assets is but one company in a large and growing “liberal capitalism” industry, and shares connections and political affiliations with a larger elite Left business and information network. This apparatus is rife with incestuous foundation capital, deep political connections, and ties to US intelligence agencies, as exposed by LeftGatekeepers.com and the QuestionsQuestions.net web site.

    In Alternative Media Censorship, Bob Feldman wrote:

    “Based in San Francisco, Working Assets Inc. is a privately-held, secretive telecommunications company that discloses very little financial information about its for-profit business to either its customers or to U.S. consumers in general.

    “One of its founders was Tides Foundation President Drummond Pike. A trustee of Mills College in recent years, Laura Scher, is a top executive at Working Assets Inc. Another top Working Assets Inc. executive, Michael Kieschnick, has also been involved until recently with the board of the National Network of Grantmakers, which also includes representatives of the Funding Exchange and the board of Mother Jones magazine/Foundation for National Progress.

    “Kieschnick still sits on the White House Project Advisory Board between folks like PBS CEO Pat Michell and former U.S. Vice President Walter Mondale. The White House Project Advisory Board was set-up to promote the presidential candidacies of mainstream women politicians such as U.S. Senator [Hillary] Rodham-Clinton. Another Working Assets Inc. official in recent years, Lawrence Livak, has also been the Tides Foundation Treasurer in recent years.

    “Because Working Assets Inc.’s stock is not sold on the stock market, it is not legally obligated to post much financial information about its business operations onto the Internet. In addition, executives at Working Assets Inc. have been reluctant to reveal to Movement writer-activists what kind of salaries it is presently paying its top executives.”

    In its marketing materials, Working Assets touts donation-linked products and services that help build a better world, “making it easy to make a difference.” The company claims to have raised $50 million for progressive groups and causes through their services, which include credit cards, long distance, shopping, and investments.

    All this feel-good begins to evaporate with a closer look at the groups and individuals that partner with Working Assets, as well as those chosen to for donation links.

    The Working Assets credit card is issued by MBNA, which has been one of George W. Bush’s top campaign contributors. On MBNA’s board is Charles Cawley, a long time Bush family friend who is not only a George Bush “pioneer”, but also sits on the board of the George Bush Library.

    Those who use the Working Assets credit card are essentially putting money directly into the pocket of a bank, and a man, who have been pouring money directly into the Bush family’s coffers, and were instrumental in putting George W. Bush into power, and keeping him there. Do the progressives and liberals who are gleefully shopping with the Working Assets card realize this? A few have figured it out, and they are outraged.

    Translation: if Working Assets had its druthers, it would be funneling customer credit card money into John Kerry’s bank war chest, not George Bush’s — the neoliberal wing of the war/globalization/corporate establishment. The neoliberals share similar (if not identical) views about militarization, war, the “war on terrorism,” and globalization. Does this make progressives happy?

    Why does Working Assets insist on working with corporations that are members of the New World Order, instead of untainted companies, groups and individuals that have no elite ties (and are genuinely starving for funding)? Working Assets claims it is stuck with MBNA because of an existing contractual agreement. Is that the best excuse they can come up with?


    And the rest is just as interesting.....

    Honey pot for the manufactured Left

    Every year, Working Assets selects a list of nonprofit organizations to receive grants, the list reportedly culled from nominations of Working Assets customers themselves. The 50 recipients for Working Assets grants this year includes a number of interesting groups of various sizes, in four categories. On the surface, the list appears to be a creative and eclectic collection of Left causes and activism. A little homework, and some context, exposes the more odious aspects.

    Amnesty International, one of many organizations whose funding and origins are associated with George Soros and his Open Society Institute, which, is a multinational intelligence operation connected to the CIA.

    In the recent past, Working Assets has funded the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, headed by Washington and business bigwigs, with ties to the Rockefeller Foundation and Hill & Knowlton (both long tied to Washington and the intelligence community) and others. Another recent recipient was the Natural Resources Defense Council, on whose board of directors sat Laurance Rockefeller, now deceased, along with dozens of big corporate CEOs.

    Human Rights Watch, another former recipient, is a joint venture between George Soros and the U.S. State Department. Global Exchange has enjoyed an affiliation with Working Assets for years. GX has received funding from the likes of Soros, as well as the MacArthur Foundation.

    Possibly the most pernicious names found on Working Asset’s donor list have been media nonprofits with overlapping memberships and alliances, run by premier Left political consent manufacturers. (For a full analysis, read “The Gatekeepers of the So-Called Left” By Charles Shaw, Part One and Part Two, and go to LeftGatekeepers.com and the Left Gatekeepers article archive.)

    This year’s recipients include AlterNet. According to Al Giordano (of the truly independent and powerful investigative web site NarcoNews.com), AlterNet allegedly has been guilty of numerous ethical violations. Not surprisingly, there is a George Soros/Open Society connection to AlterNet as well.

    Muckraker.org, the web site for the Center for Investigative Reporting (CIR) is a strange beast. This Working Assets recipient supports the work of established mainstream-type journalists and reporters, including Seymour Hersh, Bill Moyers (whose Schumann Foundation also funds the same liberal media apparatus), Daniel Schorr, and Mike Wallace, who funnel mainstream news stories back to mainstream networks, such as CNN, ABC, and nearly-mainstream Salon.com.

    While CIR is perhaps of some value (at a time when mainstream corporate media is almost completely bereft of substantive investigation and reporting), one must ask why well-heeled, personally wealthy, and deeply-connected celebrity journalists need, or deserve, additional funding from grassroots “progressives” to write the stories that they should be writing and selling anyway. And why don’t sources of truly independent and alternative “muckraking” (such as Online Journal) get showered with the same largesse? Because certain publications and groups that refuse to carry water for elite Left aren’t invited into the club.

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  31. Anonymous9:41 PM

    I though about two talking points about Cass' piece. Beside cheap rhetoric, I noticed three points.

    1. Invoking 3rd Article of Geneva Convensions is stupid because it makes our soldiers liable for war crimes.

    Verily, if only our own SCOTUS would never mention these conventions, we could use them freely to accuse others of "crimes against humanity" without any possibility of being guilty ourselves.

    By positing that such an implication exists, it appears that to Cass, an international treaty can be duly signed by a President and approved by the qualified Senate majority, and it is still not operational UNLESS SCOTUS utters its name. Or the name of a particular article of the treaty.

    2. By invoking "international common law" SCOTUS is ready to take lessons from Zimbabwe, Iran, Venezuela etc.

    I would say that Cass's point would be stronger if he could point to an argument that the SCOTUS majority borrowed from Zimbabwe, Iran or Venezuela.

    It also seems to me that it is the Administration that copies ideas from these countries.

    3. SCOTUS should defer to the President on the matter in which President is an expert and SCOTUS is not. The matter is: what does, and what does not, constitute a minimally adequate procedure for trials. My education is in science, but it seems like a LEGAL question.

    I must say that the most puzzling part of the article was a disparaging comment about "most of France". I thought that this idea is long burried.

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