Tuesday, June 13, 2006

The whole world changed in two weeks

(updated below)

George Bush paid a surprise visit this morning to Iraq and, according to the immediately solidified media consensus, this is but the latest step in the heroic political comeback of George W. Bush, and yet another sign that things are "turning around" in the war. It is always so striking how heavily this administration relies upon political theater, and how eagerly and giddily the national media consumes it. In just the first few minutes of coverage, scores of reporters pranced across the television set struggling to contain their excited admiration for the President's audacious survey of his conquered land.

No matter how many times one flips through news channels this morning, one hears the same thing. The new Iraqi government has been formed. We killed Zarqawi. Bush has a "new team" in place. Karl Rove has been "cleared" in the Plame matter. Polls after Zarqawi's death show an "uptick" in support for the war. And now the President plans a secret mission to visit Iraq in order to meet with the new Prime Minister. Happy days are here again.

The media is desperate to find "big stories" every day. As a result, events which are so plainly inconsequential from a perspective which spans more than the last ten minutes of world events -- such as Bush's stunt this morning in secretly materializing in Baghdad -- are endlessly seized upon as evidence of some grand world change. The president's approval rating has been humiliating low and collapsing for almost a full year now, but one new poll shows a two-point increase to still-embarrassing levels of unpopularity, and -- presto! -- the President is recovering and is becoming popular again. Every event is reported and analyzed based exclusively on what has happened in the last five seconds, with the events of the prior week, or month, or year, all but ignored.

Our occupation of Iraq is three years old. As of two weeks ago, the long-standing consensus outside of the ever-dwindling circle of True Believers is that the Iraq invasion was a failure -- a mistake -- and the best we could hope for was to figure out a way to extricate ourselves from that country without triggering even worse disasters. For months and months, polls have showed that solid majorities of Americans believe the war was a mistake. That consensus didn't arise as a result of a single event, or a report of a car bomb, or because one bad thing happened. It was because the war itself has been failing fundamentally. Nothing that we wanted to accomplish was actually being accomplished. Everything we said before the war about why we needed to wage it turned out to be false and has been discredited. Far from winning "hearts and minds" in the Muslim world, few things have harmed how we are perceived in that part of the world (supposedly the current aim of our war effort) more than our occupation has.

These are fundamental, deeply entrenched problems with our war effort. But to the media, a photo op here, a cosmetic personnel change there, and the death of a single terrorist -- and all of those problems magically vanish. In two short weeks filled with melodramatic, exaggerated media events, both the Iraq war and the president's deep political problems have fundamentally improved. Big news! The President has turned all of this around. He is now bold and successful again. And his oh-so-brave flight to Iraq symbolizes how strong and successful he is. How long before we hear from Brit Hume or Candy Crowley about some apocryphal anecdote about the covert Air Force One flight or the folksy but audacious comment made by the Commander-in-Chief when he came up with this idea and insisted that he go despite the urgent pleas from his aides that it wasn't safe enough?

The realities are ignored in favor of the breathless media events. The fact that Iraq is such a dangerous and anarchic place -- a full three years after our invasion -- that the President still can't visit except by unannounced theater demonstrates how disastrous the situation is there, not how successful our occupation is. And the fact that a single poll shows the President's pitiful approval ratings increasing by 2% in the wake of non-stop media adoration over the Zarqawi killing hardly shows some political reawakening, particularly since several other polls show the Zarqawi killing having no effect whatsoever on the president's shattered approval ratings.

Iraqi death squads? Iranian control of internal Iraqi affairs? Abu Ghraib and Haidatha and the invasion itself causing Middle Eastern Muslims to think even worse of the U.S.? The destruction of U.S. credibility? All of that was interesting for awhile, but now, none of it matters, because the President staged one of those exciting movie events again, Karl Rove isn't going to prison, and the USA Today poll shows a two-point increase in the President's approval rating after he bagged a bad guy. We are seeing a new and emboldened president and a new and successful war. The pictures have been so dramatic and this is all so very, very exciting indeed.


UPDATE: According to the Times, nobody in the Iraqi government, including the Prime Minister, was trusted with the information that Bush was coming. They were not even told until after he arrived. He's going to stay a whole "five hours" in the country, and is confining himself to the heavily fortified Green Zone. These plans don't exactly suggest that the administration believes that Iraq is secure, to put it mildly.


UPDATE II: Jon Henke at QandO says that I'm "missing the secondary importance of these events. Not that Bush is somehow brave or popular for visiting Iraq — that is quite irrelevant — but that these things are happening because there are important political accomodations—progress—being made in Iraq." His point that war opponents may be too slow to recognize improvements in Iraq (just as war supporters refused to recognize the succession of failures) is fair enough, but I hardly see how the formation of a new government, by itself, constitutes progress of any kind, let alone meaningful progress in the context of the deep and fundamental problems in that country.

Iraq had a government prior to this one which was subservient to the Iranians and practiced death squad tactics with an enthusiasm which rivaled Saddam's regime. The creation of a new government is not progress until one knows how it will govern, the actions it will undertake, the alliances it forms, etc. Put another way, until we are closer to achieving our claimed goals -- (a) a democratic Iraq that is our ally and (b) an improvement in how Middle East Muslims perceive us -- it is baseless to talk as though we are making "progress." The mere formation of a new government does not, in and of itself, bring us closer to those goals.

(Speaking of QandO, there is a provocative guest post by Mona, who posts in Comments here under "Hypatia," concerning how the Schiavo matter was the first of many events to expose the fundamental incompatibility between Republicans and principled libertarians. It is a post which I highly recommend. It has led to all sorts of conflicts and reactions -- a reflection, I believe, of the real (under-exploited) vulnerability Republicans have as a result of being taken over by the most un-libertarian wing on the political spectrum).

92 comments:

  1. Anonymous11:11 AM

    The media hounds have to buy into these made up events. Otherwise, how do you get to act all surprised later when something like a November romp by the Democrats occurs?

    If you keep to your conventional wisdom, any change gives you the chance to act like something that's been apparent for months is stunning.

    Lindsey

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  2. Anonymous11:14 AM

    If we ever needed further proof that Bush is being enabled by the so-called news media - this is it.

    It would be farcical if it wasn't so damned deadly, not to mention criminal.

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  3. Anonymous11:19 AM

    So, is this an example of what happens when a great deal of energy is invested in ignorance and the need for comforting illusion is both desperate and deep?

    The only other examples we've had of such psychosis to date are Bart and his fellow contrarians, and to be honest their routines are getting a little stale.

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  4. Anonymous11:20 AM

    Gosh, What a man! I'm sure Bart will agree. This man would have made one helluva warrior! Fearless, strong of conviction, doesn't let little things like laws intrude on what he knows is right. We are so lucky!

    Sarcasm of course. The boy king is an intellectually incurious little wimp whose political party is dependent on the votes of the uneducated, the ignorant, and bigots.

    I know intelligent people that voted for the idiot and their rationalizations boil down to 'I don't like Bush, but my taxes...'.
    Like some of the Bush syncophants on this page their primary reason is pure and unadulterated greed. To hell with everything else.

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  5. Excellent post. It's disgusting how desperate the media seem to be to exonerate and exalt Bush.

    I was looking for news on cable TV last night around 10:30pm-- the closest thing I could find was on Anderson Cooper 360-- a story titled "A Bush Bounce?" Blehhh. The rest was even worse-- there was NO real news!

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  6. Anonymous11:48 AM

    ....or the folksy but audacious comment made by the Commander-in-Chief when he came up with this idea and insisted that he go despite the urgent pleas from his aides that it wasn't safe enough?


    Absolutely agree with that comment Glenn ...GWB will be a hero again...I really think this is part of a Josh Bolten/Karl Rove scenerio in which Bush can claim he "talked" to the Prime Minister and also "viewed the situation on the ground" and has come to the conclusion that we can pull troops out...and that will coincidentially coincide with the Nov elections......

    Repubs know Iraq is pulling the party down...immigration, gay marriage, and Zarqawi have all failed to pull the numbers up ... I would not put it past this Admin to hastily withdraw troops to shore up poll numbers

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  7. Anonymous11:50 AM

    Just one question: has any member of this administration ever made a visit to Iraq that was scheduled and announced in advance, or have they all been "surprises?"

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  8. Anonymous11:51 AM

    As Glenn is certainly aware, Rove has not been "cleared". We have not seen the letter to Luskin from Fitz, probably won't, until the trial, and "does not anticipate" is a far cry from "will not" indict. It suggests that Rove may have flipped on Cheney to save his own ass, and as much as we would like to see Rove get nailed, Cheney is PNAC and the bigger fish.

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  9. Anonymous11:53 AM

    If we would just accept that this is not a democracy and we do not have a free press, we would respond better to this kind of propaganda. We would greet it with howls of laughter and derision instead of despair.

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  10. Anonymous11:56 AM

    And Joe and Valerie may just sue the little toad in civil court.


    Statement from Christopher Wolf, attorney for outed CIA officer Valerie Plame Wilson

    RAW STORY
    Published: Tuesday June 13, 2006


    Statement of Christopher Wolf, Proskauer Rose LLP, Counsel for Ambassador Joseph Wilson and Valerie Plame Wilson

    "We have become aware of the communication between Mr. Fitzgerald and Mr. Luskin concerning Karl. Rove's status in the criminal investigation. We have no first-hand knowledge of the reason for the communication or what further developments in the criminal investigation it may signal. While it appears that Mr. Rove will not be called to answer in criminal court for his participation in the wrongful disclosure of Valerie Wilson's classified employment status at the CIA in retaliation against Joe Wilson for questioning the rationale for war in Iraq, that obviously does not end the matter. The day still may come when Mr. Rove and others are called to account in a court of law for their attacks on the Wilsons."

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  11. Anonymous11:56 AM

    A cursory perusal, if that is not, in fact, an oxymoron, of today's news includes the gloating Ozymandias in an antique land; a repugnant political debaser exonerated - perhaps, "off-the-hook" is more apt; the pendragon death dance at Camp David over the weekend by a gaggle of ghouls; and the exhilarating story of Police Run Over, Kill Sunbather in Calif.; et cetera, in a portentious shift in political winds that could define the picture of Democrats winning in November as trompe l'oiel.

    A human face drawn 27,000 years ago in an oddly Modigliani style has been found in a cave in France... for some, probably obvious, psychological reason, this story gives me a moment of joy in an otherwise lugubrious morning. Of course, my cynicism has become so predominant that I fear the beautiful painting will turn out to be a hoax. Besides, it has Bush's nose. Pure calumny, or more Rovian "genius"?

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  12. Anonymous12:08 PM

    I've got a new name for the blog. The "The Grinch of Greenwald Glenn".

    I understand that liberalism involves the push for an ideal world, but does it have to be so unrelentingly dismal?

    A couple of bright spots in the war on terror have happened and yet all you can do is denigrate them and remind all concerned that it's a momentary and probably false respite from the overweaning Doom and Gloom of the "Liberal Way?"

    As I written elsewhere, the biggesst problem with wanting an ideal world is that it isn't possible to have one. Anyone fully invested in absolute right is always going to be dissappointed. Meanwhile the folks trying to merely make the world better within the constrictions of reality can occasionally enjoy the happiness of an unqualified success.

    "We had a terrific turnout for elections", or "we killed a plague upon the populace" are worthy events in themselves. Progress is often made in small steps.

    Do you want to be outside the process throwing rocks at it, or influence it's direction? in either case, one has to celebrate on the rare occasion. Humans need it, and schadenfreude doesn't count.

    The alternative is to become a wearer of sackcloth and ashes beating one's self with a scourge proving one's worthiness to enter the kingdom of God. Or in this case, Yearly Kos.

    Aside from unrelenting gloom being bad for one's state of mind, it labels you as a Bush Hater, incapable of taking joy in anything associated with Bush.

    I can't see someone with your smarts wanting to be pigeonholed.

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  13. Anonymous12:14 PM

    It would be foolish for the democrats to ignore the good news, orchestrated and not, the republicans have gotten the last two weeks. The democrats had better start actively stating the unreality of what has happened the last 6 years, or those polls will "tick up" a lot more.

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  14. Anonymous12:23 PM

    Speaking of pigeonholed, Anonymous, you sound an awful lot like the stereotypical Bushbot - your mission today is to convince us that if we just look at the good things that happened, we might just overlook the reality of the situation - like the corporate media does so well for you.

    Thankfully, we have people like Glenn Greenwald who are able to cut through the fog of 24/7 televised propaganda and remind us where reality lies.

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  15. Anonymous12:25 PM

    When has the label 'Bush Hater' had a negative connotation?

    Given the little idiot's record, it's actually a commendation.

    Shooter, perhaps you should take off your rose colored glasses or go over to Coulter or Malkins pages.

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  16. The media does love spectacle.

    Unfortunately, like your typical Hollywood release, the Bush administration rarely (if ever) lives up to the hype.

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  17. Bush's slight upticks in his approval ratings

    Balloons don't un-pop.

    He'll never see the sunny side of 45% approval again, not if he heals lepers, pitches six perfect innings for the Brewers, not if he wins American Idol.

    He's already been declared irrelevant, inadequate, and just plain embarrassing, effective four or five months ago, by the lion's share of his countrymen.

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  18. Anonymous12:43 PM

    Another insightful post, Mr. Greenwald.

    If there was a real opposition party in this country they'd be asking, loudly, why the "bold" president doesn't stay in Iraq for a week... or a month. To get to know the new government and take the measure of its members to enable constructive interaction. To visit with the people of Iraq and their leaders to learn first hand of their concerns. To survey the military situation up close and talk frankly with soldiers from the top to the bottom of the command chain. And, certainly, to thank them for the sacrifice that they and their fallen comrades have made for their country and freedom in Iraq.

    Now that would be a truly bold president. One who just might be able to actually influence events instead of merely opinion.

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  19. Our occupation of Iraq is three years old.

    Three U.S. dead away from the 2500 milestone. May even happen while Dubya's in Iran ... Irack ... Iraq ... something like that.

    And the overall coalition casualties are inching towards the 3000 mark, at which point there will be more dead there than there were on 9/11 (which, as we all know, was an unprecedented horror).

    Cheers,

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  20. So what's the big headline for Bush's Iraq publicity stunt? As a PR activity, it shows:

    1) Bush thinks Iraq is safe enough to visit Iraq contra the perception that Iraq is falling apart, 2) Bush is in control contra indications that events in Iraq were spiraling out of control, 3) Bush the decider knows risks and through sheer gumption and grit defies the terror and chaos that he says are threatening the world, 4) the Iraqi government is now consecrated with Bush's laying on of hands, 5) Bush is a man of surprises, flying against the negativity and pessimism and exhibiting imaginitve and creative flights of political acumen that leave his political enemies stupefied and flabbergasted.

    Which image plays well in Peoria is undecided. Certainly, as a photo op the image of Bush braving terror and violence gives the illusion that he's at the front lines of the war on terror. "Yes, America, the Pres truly does understand the dangers, but he believes so much in what he's doing that he's willing go into the maw of death (like Daniel in the lion's den?) and face the horror show that our soldiers must embrace every day."

    Again, however, the improtant thing here is in the sheer imagistic quality of the visit. Its (perceived) audacity defies reason and in its bravado forestalls rational debate about the underlying issues. To cast aspersions at it, to question its true audacity or even to ask questions concerning the President's reasons for doing it will come across as the sour grapes that really motivates the President's political opposition.

    These images are meant not to evoke debate and discussion but to stop the talk that might undermine the entire rationale for being in Iraq and the wisdom of the foreign policy approach currently at work in the WH.

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  21. Anonymous1:24 PM

    Don't worry about the theatre and its lasting effect. Even if Bush brings the troops home, the public will not forgive the liars and the lies that took us over to Iraq, just as the public finally woke up and pushed us out of Viet Nam. There are always repercussions for every action, even if it takes awhile. Disgust with this President and this Congress is not going to disappear. It will only be reinforced, because there is so much cynicism out there about the process.

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  22. Anonymous1:33 PM

    How the mighty have fallen. From "Best Blog" and high principle to whining posts like today's. Sad.
    Then that ignorant pig Mr. Langsetmo gloats over rising causualty figures. New lows everywhere.
    Conflating disapproval of Bush and approval of this dreck is a serious miscalculation.

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  23. margaretek: Even if Bush brings the troops home, the public will not forgive the liars and the lies that took us over to Iraq, just as the public finally woke up and pushed us out of Viet Nam. ... Disgust with this President and this Congress is not going to disappear. It will only be reinforced, because there is so much cynicism out there about the process.

    As much as I want to believe this, I do not think it is true. A US Today poll shows: The new poll found that 48% believe the United States probably or definitely will win the war, up from 39% in April. It also found that 47% believe things are going well in Iraq, up from 38% in March..

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  24. notherbob2: Then that ignorant pig Mr. Langsetmo gloats over rising causualty figures.

    I don't think he said anything of the kind, and you know it. On the other hand, I do believe it was or perhaps it was your soulless double who believe in the notion that Haditha was a standard operating procedure glitch, or was that Falluja?

    How much innocent blood will it take to fill your soulless heart with life? oh, sorry, that's just a rhetorical question...

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  25. Anonymous1:52 PM

    Glenn:

    Taking down Zarqawi and then nearly 200 of his followers in subsequent 140 raids was not headlining the press because of the affect it might have on George Bush's approval poll numbers.

    It is fundamentally important for its own sake to take down a terrorist who has murdered far more than bin Laden.

    Likewise, Mr. Bush's poll ratings have nothing at all to do with the fact that we have accomplished all of our strategic goals in Iraq and have already started to draw down our troops, not in defeat but because the Iraqis are taking over their own security.

    Mr. Bush's poll numbers are meaningless.

    He is not running for reelection.

    So far, the GOP and the Donkeys have all won the races they should have. So far, no Donkey landslide or even marginal gains because voters are equally unhappy with everyone.

    Indeed, Bush has better approval numbers than many Donkey leaders.

    However, if meaningless poll numbers are an adequate substitution for actually winning elections, by all means may the GOP always have poor poll numbers.

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  26. The press and its objectivity, slant, laziness, or what you will has been a continual source of discussion on this blog for the last few days. I think that is indeed apparent that the press has lost its bearings--the reasons for which range from capiatlist dominated stooges to inept lazy bones to pro-Jihadists.

    Juan Cole posted a guest commentary from William Beeman at Informed Comment that, I think, goes some way to explaining the current malaise that we see the press exhibiting in its reporting about/from/on Iraq:

    It is so sad now that governmental bodies are no longer calling on academic experts for public testimony in even the most crucial matters where they have unique knowledge. On no subject is this more true than in the Middle East area. If you are not in a think tank in Washington, apparently your expertise matters not at all. Never mind that that the think tank denizens were never in the region, don't know the languages, and never did any research in their lives. If their ideology is in line with the White House, that is good enough.

    The media bears a great deal of responsibility in this matter. Lazy, news-cycle driven and subject to the pressure of ideology and publicity flackers, it is so much easier to just call the think tank down the street, or a PR firm like Benador Associates where someone is on call and already in suit and tie, or skirted suit to get to the studio within the next 20 minutes, than to spend the extra half-hour trying to locate an ISDN feed in . . . Minneapolis or Austin to get the best possible expertise on a subject at hand. For the print media a quote--any quote--is often good enough to anchor a story. No time to wait for someone to call back after a seminar! If the reporter can't get the quotable phrase on the first phone call, its on to the next, or once again, to the on-call quotables at the think-tank around the corner.

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  27. Anonymous2:12 PM

    From Bart at 1:52pm:

    "It is fundamentally important for its own sake to take down a terrorist who has murdered far more than bin Laden."

    "Likewise, Mr. Bush's poll ratings have nothing at all to do with the fact that we have accomplished all of our strategic goals in Iraq and have already started to draw down our troops, not in defeat but because the Iraqis are taking over their own security."

    The worst part is I think you really believe all that. You honestly think killing al-Zarqawi will make a difference and that we'll see a genuine drawdown of our forces there.

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  28. It is always so striking how heavily this administration relies upon political theater, and how eagerly and giddily the national media consumes it.

    The mainstream media is acting like they have the popcorn franchise in this 'political theater.' That is after all where all the money is to be made. They have chosen to stay in the lobby, and have no interest in how bad the movie is.

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  29. Glenn, what do you think of this scenario?-

    Leopold (I know, I know, but hear me out) reports that Rove is indicted the week of May 10. The same day during that week that Fitz met personally with the GJ, a Sealed v. Sealed case appears on the court database.

    Yesterday, Fitz met with Judge Hogan, who oversees the GJ, and today we get an announcement.

    Now, considering that Rove is a minion compared to that powerful member of the ruling elite, Cheney, and Rove would be toast personally and professionally if he rolled over on him-(PTB don't tolerate disloyaly from their retainers)

    Don't you think it is a possibility that indictments against Rove (and perhaps others) have been quashed?

    Most importantly, can Fitz reveal the fact that indictments have been quashed?

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  30. Anonymous2:27 PM

    Just another serving of fake turkey from Bush & Company.

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  31. Anonymous2:44 PM

    Glenn,

    For the first time I couldn’t agree more w/ you. The media should be reflecting on other things, for example:

    The 12.9% increase in tax revenue which could possibly reduce the deficit by half, by the fiscal end 2006. That is dwarfed only by last year’s 15.5% increase of tax revenue. The reduction in the deficit is 3 years a head of schedule & according to the Congressional Budget Office, tax receipts have risen faster over the first eight months of fiscal 2006 than in any other such period over the past 25 years.

    Or if you prefer, Kennedy pleads guilty to DUI

    Can’t help but notice neither story has gotten the press coverage, nor your personal response for that matter, which Rove’s “pending” indictment did.

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  32. The media in America today is about as bad as the news media was in Germany in the 1930s.

    Every day I come across countless bloggers who wholeheartedly support the President's policies. I feel that this can only be attributed complete and utter ignorance; the media keeps re-iterating the neo-con talking points, and as such (they're hearing it all the time from so many sources) people actually believe that the people of Iraq are living in "freedom" with "democracy" and are thankful to have been "liberated." They don't seem to grasp the fact that American actions in Iraq (up to this day) have created a massive recruitment pool for Al-Qaida where one never existed before. Just yesterday I came across a photo of a young Iraqi father holding the corpse of his very young son; the son's head was hanging open, split in two in a coalition "precision" airstrike against "Zarqawi supporters." That kind of picture engenders the kind of rage that leads people to fly planes into buildings.

    After 9/11 G.Bush asked "why do they hate us?" He's answering his own question through his atrocious policies, but the realities of the situation are hidden from the majority of Americans. So many just don't know, and as such the aforementioned "why" question is fairly understandable. I find that level of common ignorance worrysome.

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  33. Speaking of Republicans and libertarians, Ronald Bailey has said that he'll be voting in his first Democratic primary ever because he's reached his breaking point with Republicans. See here.

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  34. Anonymous3:00 PM

    Bart wrote, "He is not running for reelection."

    Perhaps not now. The problem with the Republicans is that there is no leader with Bush's charisma in their party, execpt perhaps for Hillary who may or may not be a member of Bush&Co now that her family has become so close to pappa and the family.

    Interestingly, a resolution to repeal the 22nd Amendment limiting George's term has already been introduced in the House of Representatives in House Joint Resolution 24. To read its text go to Thomas and search on "22nd Amendment".

    I wonder if we will even have a meaningful election in 2008?

    Bart, are you tied to an budding dictator?

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  35. Anonymous3:06 PM

    June 13, 2006
    Probably a Plus for the Insurgency

    by Ivan Eland
    The death of the sadistic sociopath Abu Musab al-Zarqawi shouldn't bring a tear to anyone's eye, but it is primarily a short-lived public relations triumph for the Bush administration that may mask an actual victory for the Sunni insurgency.

    Inside the Washington beltway, public relations is often more important than reality. Good policy is less important than posturing to appear that progress is being made solving important public problems. This sleight of hand avoids hard choices, wins elections, and keeps politicians in office. The approach has worked so well at home that U.S. administrations have taken it on the road to use in their military adventures abroad. Because many Americans are accustomed to nasty villains on TV and in the movies, U.S. administrations demonize authoritarian foreign leaders – for example, Slobodan Milosevic and Saddam Hussein were compared to Adolf Hitler by the Clinton and Bush administrations before the U.S. bombing began – or use their formidable public relations operations to enhance the reputation of mere mortals into poster boys for evil. In the latter case, the U.S. government's propaganda machine has made al-Qaeda the most overrated organization in the world and its leaders, Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri, the controlling force behind worldwide violent Islamic jihad – even though they act mainly as inspiration for the movement.

    Similarly, in Iraq, the U.S. government needed a villain to personify the rather faceless Iraqi insurgency. The vicious and brutal Zarqawi fit the bill perfectly. The Bush administration demonized Zarqawi's foreign jihadists as the instigators and dominant force of the much larger Sunni insurgency to demonstrate that foreigners were causing most of the problems in Iraq rather than Iraqis who wanted to oust the occupying superpower. After building up Zarqawi and the jihadists, the administration could shore up sagging public support for the war at home by nailing the bad guy in classic Hollywood fashion.

    Yet the administration's public relations coup is likely to be temporary and do a favor for the Iraqi insurgency and maybe even bin Laden and Zawahiri. Although Zarqawi was charismatic – to those jihadists who were especially bloodthirsty – and drew foreign fighters into Iraq, his cruel tactics made even bin Laden and Zawahiri cringe. Zawahiri sent Zarqawi a letter asking him to turn down the volume a bit, but Zarqawi ignored him and remained ever maniacal in his indiscriminate slaughter. Since the al-Qaeda leadership thought Zarqawi was giving the radical jihadist movement bad publicity, perhaps even bin Laden and Zawahiri breathed a sigh of relief when Zarqawi bit the dust.

    The larger Sunni insurgency certainly did. The Sunni nationalists, who make up about 90 percent of the insurgency, had long had enough of Zarqawi. His butchery and foreign origin (he was Jordanian) had made him extremely unpopular with most Sunni Iraqis. To be successful, it is critical for an insurgency to maintain the support of the population, which provides cover and sustenance. Zarqawi's activities were counterproductive to this end.

    By killing Zarqawi, the U.S. government no longer has a well -known "evildoer" to rally lagging U.S. public support for the war, and has made it more likely that the Iraqi guerrillas can retain Sunni popular support for their insurgency. And the killing doesn't even get rid of the foreign jihadists in Iraq, who will continue to contribute to sectarian violence – now an even bigger problem for the U.S. occupation than the Sunni insurgency. The decentralized structure of the jihadist organizations makes it tough to kill the beast by simply cutting off the head.

    Thus, Zarqawi's death has probably helped the larger Sunni insurgency, will do little to slow the escalating sectarian violence, and may even come as a relief to the al-Qaeda leadership. As with the killing of Saddam Hussein's two sons, the cheering within the Bush administration probably will be short-lived.

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  36. Anonymous3:09 PM

    pmain -

    Please note your sources for this news.

    Plus, are these real revenue increases or simply projected? What impact, if any, will they have on the ongoing trade deficit?

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  37. Anonymous3:21 PM

    I'm really disappointed in this post. Nowhere does it mention the fact that the USA has not been hit by an asteroid since GW has been presnit. Your ignoring of this good news, which I believe illustrates our leader's direct access to the Lord and His almighty protection, shows just how much of a Bush hater you are. Happy happy joy joy! (snark) On a serious note, the Media, members of the same social class as Mr. Bush, will not desert the ship until they're sure it is sinking. The Donkeys have snatched defeat from the jaws of victory so many times recently that the media is just continuing to cover their butts for now.

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  38. Isn't it nice that Iraq is a sovereign, free nation--now...? Helena Cobban notes:

    AP's Terence Hunt writes that Bush's ostensible "host" there in the Baghdad Green Zone, PM Nuri al-Maliki, was given all of five minutes warning about the "guest" who, unbeknownst to him, had already flown into his country and was now anxious to meet him in the Republican Palace.

    So much for Iraq's sovereignty".


    I'm glad to see Bush getting out of his bubble and meeting people--in other people's houses! On the other hand, with Bush listening in on what's going on in my bedroom via the NSA, he might as well be living with me too...

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  39. Glenn:

    Put another way, until we are closer to achieving our claimed goals -- (a) a democratic Iraq that is our ally....

    That may be simply impossible. For a real good rundown on such, please read the book "Overthrow" by Stephen Kinzer (which I just finished). It explains that U.S. interests have long been opposed to actual democratic reforms in countries it has invaded/interfered with over the last century plus a score. It's an essential read for anyone who wants a clear-headed view of the problems we're facing.

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  40. Anonymous3:29 PM

    There is an obvious other fact about Bush going to Iraq; while they have taken every precaution they have also considered the possibility of some weapon or insurgent penetrating the GREEN ZONE- martrydom- not just a Islamic idea.

    ReplyDelete
  41. Anonymous3:31 PM

    Tomaig asked, Are you suggesting that these Democratic congressmen (hoyer, berman, sabo, and pallone) are pushing for a third term for GWB?

    No, but nothing is beyond possible in this coopted Congress. Perhaps the Dems want Bill back.

    The question is whether the Bush's and the Clintons have joined forces for a shared dominion? Bill has been very chummy with 41 and Hillary's votes almost always support issues of increasing government power. Remember that the Patriot Act was initially drafted by Democrats.

    I recall 41 making a statement to the effece that he wanted a Bush-Clinton-Bush-Clinton-Bush succession. I wish I could find the quote.

    An examination of votes might convince a careful student Washinton politics that there is a broad, bi-partisan movement to end the American democracy and cement the power of Bush&Co (or, perhaps, BushClin&Co) in power.

    Power is a hard thing to surrender. History is full of countries ruled by family alliances.

    One thing is certain and that is that individual liberty and democracy is under great threat here in America.

    ReplyDelete
  42. notherbob2 does his usual schtick:

    Then that ignorant pig Mr. Langsetmo gloats over rising causualty figures.

    Pardon me, but where, oh where, is the "gloat[ing]"?

    I'm deeply saddened by the loss of life on 9/11/2001 (as were the "9/11 widows", contrary to the outrageous claims of one of notherbob2's fellow travellers in Dubya butt-sucking), and I am saddened just as much by the even larger loss of life in Iraq.

    I just pointed out that throwing away more lives, for no discernible purpose, to no discernible effect, based on a mistaken (or malignantly dishonest) rationale, is every bit as awful as the original attacks.

    Such "nuances" would escape notherbob2 here, though. He's drunk the Kool-Aid.

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  43. Anonymous4:18 PM

    Glenn:

    UPDATE II: Jon Henke at QandO says that I'm "missing the secondary importance of these events. Not that Bush is somehow brave or popular for visiting Iraq — that is quite irrelevant — but that these things are happening because there are important political accomodations—progress—being made in Iraq." His point that war opponents may be too slow to recognize improvements in Iraq (just as war supporters refused to recognize the succession of failures) is fair enough, but I hardly see how the formation of a new government, by itself, constitutes progress of any kind, let alone meaningful progress in the context of the deep and fundamental problems in that country.

    Iraq had a government prior to this one which was subservient to the Iranians and practiced death squad tactics with an enthusiasm which rivaled Saddam's regime. The creation of a new government is not progress until one knows how it will govern, the actions it will undertake, the alliances it forms, etc. Put another way, until we are closer to achieving our claimed goals -- (a) a democratic Iraq that is our ally and (b) an improvement in how Middle East Muslims perceive us -- it is baseless to talk as though we are making "progress." The mere formation of a new government does not, in and of itself, bring us closer to those goals.


    Our prewar objectives were:

    1) Remove the Baathist dictatorship because it was an ongoing danger to the region which was not going away when Saddam gave way to his pathological spawn.

    2) Ensure that Iraq was disarmed of all WMD and WMD programs because after 12 years it was plain that the Baathists were not giving up that objective.

    3) Remove Iraq as a uncontested sanctuary for Islamic fascist terrorists which had been invited in since 1993. Post 9/11, the combination of objectives 2 & 3 gained new importance.

    4) Establish a democratic Iraqi government.

    5) Establish a de-Baathified Iraqi military. To allow the old army to remain would have given the Iraqi Sunni a springboard to retake power through a coup. With the military reflecting the population, there is no longer any chance of this.

    Establishing security in Iraq and being liked by the rest of the ME were never objectives.

    We have achieved the first 4 objectives and have achieved the 5th objective to the point where it is no longer possible for the Baathists or al Qaeda to take power.

    We will be gradually drawing down our forces from Iraq over the next two years, mainly leaving behind supply personnel to help the Iraqis develop an logistics system and command teams to help develop an Iraqi large unit command and control system.

    The low scale insurgency will continue for some years as the Iraqi government gradually gets on its feet. However, it has no chance whatsoever of taking power.

    ReplyDelete
  44. Anonymous4:22 PM

    There's a whole lotta pretense going on!

    It's obvious that the msm wants a bush comeback so they tirelessly work, with every "stage play" the admin enacts to make it so.

    The msm is part of the DC establishment. the msm is not reporting news, but creating it.

    One word: PATHETIC!!

    however, Fantasy scenarious and stories will not, in the end, trump reality.

    ReplyDelete
  45. davidbyron:

    [Arne]: And the overall coalition casualties are inching towards the 3000 mark, at which point there will be more dead there than there were on 9/11 (which, as we all know, was an unprecedented horror).

    I assume the part in parenthesis was sarcasm?

    Somewhat sarcastic, I guess. While quite horrific for those involved, really no more horrific than the beheading of Nicholas Berg was to Micheal Berg, for instance. But in the grand scheme of things, horrific and appalling as it was, it is not the kind of thing that will bring down a nation (or excuse the onslaught on the Constitution, civil liberties and the rule of law that the Dubya maladministration has waged in its name). Which is what I was hinting at. We lost a similar nuber due to Dubya's cluelessness and lack of competence in the Katrina disaster. And far more every year in gunshot deaths.

    The death toll of 9-11 has been decreasing ever since 9-11 itself and is now well below 3000.

    Don't want to play a "numbers" game, but the latest counts I saw for dead on 9/11 was 29 hundred something, yes.

    Especially if you only count US citizens. I think there were only about 2500 of those. So if you want an irony day you better watch out you don't miss it.

    I won't celebrate, if that's OK by you....

    But the exact numbers don't matter. But I'd like to take this "Remember Sept. 11! Did you see what they did to us!" crap and shove it in their faces, wrapped in the 2500+ flags of the U.S. servicemen that lost their lives as well, due to the insane and inhumane politics and avarice of the Rethuglicans.

    Two wrongs don't make a right.

    Cheers,

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  46. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
  47. Anonymous4:29 PM

    yankeependragon said...

    The worst part is I think you really believe all that. You honestly think killing al-Zarqawi will make a difference and that we'll see a genuine drawdown of our forces there.

    Time will tell whether al Qaeda will be able to replace Zarqawi and continue their mass murder bombing campaign against the Iraqi Shia and their assassination campaign against Sunni sheiks cooperating with the new unity government.

    However, we do know that Zarqawi was the driving force behind both of those strategies in the past and any reduction of either by killing Zarqawi and rolling up some of his network would be welcome.

    As for a drawdown, that has been in the works for over a year since the Brit press broke the story around January 2005. The trigger for the drawdown was formation of the final government.

    Since that formation, the US has already announced that they would not be rotating in a 1st Infantry Division Brigade from Germany this month to replace other units rotating home.

    A couple days ago, Bush had a much publicized teleconference with some military experts in DC and the military commanders in Iraq discussing revising the force structure in Iraq. This will be a prelude to announcing further troop drawdowns at the "request" of the military.

    The Iraqis have been blabbing to the press about plans in place to draw down total coalition forces to around 100,000 by the end of 2006 and far less by the end of 2008.

    ReplyDelete
  48. Anonymous4:34 PM

    nsadirectdial said...

    Bart wrote, "He is not running for reelection."

    Perhaps not now. The problem with the Republicans is that there is no leader with Bush's charisma in their party, execpt perhaps for Hillary who may or may not be a member of Bush&Co now that her family has become so close to pappa and the family.


    Bush = charisma? The man can barely make a passable speech.

    Guliani, McCain and Allen are all better candidates and will be running in 2008.

    The country and the GOP will have had enough of the Bushes for awhile, which is too bad for Jeb Bush, who has been a very good governor in Florida.

    ReplyDelete
  49. Anonymous4:45 PM

    anonymous:
    A couple of bright spots in the war on terror have happened and yet all you can do is denigrate them and remind all concerned that it's a momentary and probably false respite from the overweaning Doom and Gloom of the "Liberal Way?"

    There are certain people who are incapable of victory. The reason being that they are incapable of staying focused on the ultimate goal. Here we have an anonymous poster who wants more celebration (of Zarqawi's death, of Bush being able to stay in Iraq for 5 hours without getting shot), without even thinking (or explaining) how this impacts the long-term goals of the War on Terror.

    Somebody points out that this will have a minimal impact on ultimate victory, and all of a sudden we're "doom and gloomers"? It's easy to celebrate victory in the first quarter or at halftime, but real competitors who really want to win have a word for people like you: idiots.

    ReplyDelete
  50. Anonymous4:45 PM

    anonymous:
    A couple of bright spots in the war on terror have happened and yet all you can do is denigrate them and remind all concerned that it's a momentary and probably false respite from the overweaning Doom and Gloom of the "Liberal Way?"

    There are certain people who are incapable of victory. The reason being that they are incapable of staying focused on the ultimate goal. Here we have an anonymous poster who wants more celebration (of Zarqawi's death, of Bush being able to stay in Iraq for 5 hours without getting shot), without even thinking (or explaining) how this impacts the long-term goals of the War on Terror.

    Somebody points out that this will have a minimal impact on ultimate victory, and all of a sudden we're "doom and gloomers"? It's easy to celebrate victory in the first quarter or at halftime, but real competitors who really want to win have a word for people like you: idiots.

    ReplyDelete
  51. HWSNBN drinks the Kool-Aid:

    ... we have accomplished all of our strategic goals in Iraq...

    Pardon my ignorance, but what were those "strategic goals" again? Or at least (to make things easier), what are they as of today at press-time?

    ... and have already started to draw down our troops, ...

    You mean like this?

    ... not in defeat but because the Iraqis are taking over their own security.

    But the number of combat-ready battalions of Iraqi troops has been going down, not up.... That's quite the "progress".

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  52. whig:

    Glenn,

    This is not one of your better posts. I had to wonder if it was yours or one of the other contributors to this blog.

    It's not that I disagree with the sentiment expressed at all, but there are literally dozens of other blogs I can go to if I want to read this kind of thing....

    Then do so, if you find them better suited for your tastes. Or at least add some substance. Or start your own blog if you don't like the topics covered here.

    Your opinion is noted, I'm sure.

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  53. Glenn: His point that war opponents may be too slow to recognize improvements in Iraq ...

    What improvements? The Iraqi government is run by the US as a satellite state. The country has been in a civil war (by many standards, most notably the Lebanese civil war) for some time, and areas under insurgent/militia control continue to grow (most notably Basra, as well as northern Iraq).

    The prospect of a US pullout from Iraq is nowhere in the cards for at least 50 years, contrary to Bushco propaganda and the continual false impression that it's even a possibility which the press continues to foster by asking the inane question, "when are we pulling out of Iraq?"

    It is perhaps sobering to realize what everyday life in Iraq means. The Baghdad morgue can't handle the number of dead rolling in. Fear is a constant presence--a mortifying fear not only for the present but for women facing a future filled with the inevitability of losing the small freddoms to dress, walk, work, and act like they wanted to under Hussein.

    On the other hand, you say, there's democracy. But this word in the mouths of Bushco and most people these days just about means as much as you want it to mean. Does anyone dare even think that Iraq will be democratic in any way that resembles the US or any other nation that can reasonably be called democratic? How many years to accomplish this, then?

    Maybe that's what those super-bases are for: to ensure that Iraq is democratic. Yes, I imagine that Iraqis will find it edifying to see the American way of life through barbed wire, concrete berms, and soldiers with automatics patrolling the perimeters--to make sure the natives stay out.

    What is democracy looking into this mess? I imagine democracy means whatever ensures that the US gets what it wants, whatever ensures its security, makes us all feel warm and fuzzy at home while the horrors vistied on the natives go undocumented, unheard, unseen.

    Of course, much of this will sound like pacifist claptrap to those who wallow in visions of ersatz wars against the armies of darkness. But even a soldier's soldier, or at least a soldier's academic, agrees. Israeli military historian Martin van Creveld (whose books are required reading at West Point) recently wrote in his article, "Costly Withdrawal Is the Price To Be Paid for a Foolish War," that this war is the worst military blunder in over 2,000 years.

    ReplyDelete
  54. Anonymous5:17 PM

    Glenn, thank you for the link to my guest post at QandO. You also note and link to "tristero's" unfortunate response to it, as well as to a subsequent QandO post reflecting "conflict" about mine. However, there is yet another QandO post about the whole discussion and tristero'sextremely shallow understanding of libertarians in general, and of me in particular.

    "All liberals have treason in their hearts." Insulting, and a grotesque mischaracterization, isn't it? Libertarians can be insulted and caricatured, too. Tristero and his commenters did a yeoman's job of both, in response to a post where I was promoting Dems to libertarians. Very helpful of them.

    ReplyDelete
  55. HWSNBN lists the BushCo tripe:

    1) Remove the Baathist dictatorship because it was an ongoing danger to the region which was not going away when Saddam gave way to his pathological spawn.

    Actually, we supported (and I mean Republicans) Saddam as a counter to Iranian influence.

    But after GWI, Saddam lost the power to frighten even a mouse.

    2) Ensure that Iraq was disarmed of all WMD and WMD programs because after 12 years it was plain that the Baathists were not giving up that objective.

    HWSNBN is blissfully ignerrant of reality, IC.

    3) Remove Iraq as a uncontested sanctuary for Islamic fascist terrorists which had been invited in since 1993. Post 9/11, the combination of objectives 2 & 3 gained new importance.

    Ditto last comment. HWSNBN gets his "news" from WhirledNutzDaily and Freeperville, though, and is living in a parallel plane away from the "reality-based world".

    4) Establish a democratic Iraqi government.

    HWSNBN needs to read Kinzer's book (link above).

    5) Establish a de-Baathified Iraqi military. To allow the old army to remain would have given the Iraqi Sunni a springboard to retake power through a coup. With the military reflecting the population, there is no longer any chance of this.

    HWSNBN ignores even folks in the maladministration that have come to the conclusion that the "de-Baathification" was one of the major blunders of the maladministration.

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  56. Anonymous6:21 PM

    Thank you, Arne. As usual, your rebuttal is far more eloquent and to the point than I could manage.

    ReplyDelete
  57. Anonymous6:21 PM

    how do u defend the re-election of this guy in the first place?

    IMHO, AMerica is one of the least free places in the world. Especially for non whites.

    IMHO, my own country is lots more free.

    IMHO,please stop treating me like a terrorist just because I want a visa to your country. I do NOT want to come to America. My company wants me to go do some work there for a couple of weeks. i need my bread and butter and have to do some rather unpleasant things in the process. Your coountry is one of them. It is NOT anyone's preferred destination any more, so stop pretending that it is. Companies are finding it harder to fiind people who will come and work in the US, even for a week. Most just quit when they are asked by their companies to come to the US for long.

    IMHO, GET A DAMN LIFE!

    ReplyDelete
  58. David Byron:

    You give them too much credit when you believe they care about even the dead soldiers.

    I don't. And they don't. I wish they did.

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  59. You've got to wonder why HWSNBN doesn't tire of his continued rhetorical evisceration by Arne and others on this blog...

    ReplyDelete
  60. Anonymous9:59 PM

    bamage said...

    You've got to wonder why HWSNBN doesn't tire of his continued rhetorical evisceration by Arne and others on this blog...

    With utter bemusement...

    Name calling does not equal rhetoric.

    Pathological fixation with me does not equal evisceration.

    However, I am glad you are entertained as I am.

    ReplyDelete
  61. HWSNBN sez blissfully and cluelessly:

    However, I am glad you are entertained as I am.

    Tozhe, tovarich!

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  62. bamage:

    You've got to wonder why HWSNBN doesn't tire of his continued rhetorical evisceration by Arne and others on this blog...

    He brings a literary slant to these pages. Outside the numerous fictions he brings, he's our own modern-day Don Quixote....

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  63. According to the Times, nobody in the Iraqi government, including the Prime Minister, was trusted with the information that Bush was coming.

    Tell us again how Iraq has a new sovereign democratic government...

    ReplyDelete
  64. Anonymous10:20 PM

    bamage said...

    You've got to wonder why HWSNBN doesn't tire of his continued rhetorical evisceration by Arne and others on this blog...


    He stopped calling 1-900-ABUSEMENOW when he figured out the NSA was listening. Most members of the GOP pay good money for that kind of abuse and personal attention in D.C. But they expect and get discretion Bart can't expect from a 900 number.

    ReplyDelete
  65. Anonymous10:28 PM

    krog said...
    The last lines of Update 2 is very important and critical to rebuilding the Democratic alliance.

    Why are libertarians part of the Republican party? Libs are opposed to big government. Why are they opposed to big government programs that foster individualism, like Social Security?

    I have yet to get anywhere with my question. Conservative Dems argue that there is no place in the party for libertarians. Has this more to do with not wanting to share their agenda than ideology?

    IGNORE this question at peril of missing a key dilemma in rebuilding the Democratic alliance and agenda, (agendas for emphasis only, Sister Mary Edna.)


    The "American Libertarian Party" is a joke. The number of fools like Hypatia involved in it are minimal at best and running as a libertarian, as opposed to stealth campaigns running as a Republican, have seen a few get elected locally as dog catchers. The Green Party has more people elected running as Greens. All liberals are libertarians in the original, classical sense. They are called by other names elsewhere, like Mutualists or Georgists. The American Libertarian party is the Party of Oxymoron. Individualists unite!

    ReplyDelete
  66. Anonymous10:38 PM

    Bart...Guliani, McCain and Allen are all better candidates and will be running in 2008.

    McCain wasn't a better candidate in 2000 and none of these fools were better in 2004. The fact is there isn't a GOP candidate running in 2008 who has a snowball's chance in hell of being elected. You have said as much yourself.

    Bart...The country and the GOP will have had enough of the Bushes for awhile, which is too bad for Jeb Bush, who has been a very good governor in Florida.

    SPEW! Coffee>>>>>monitor!

    ReplyDelete
  67. Anonymous10:43 PM

    Bwahahaha!



    Mary Cheney's book setting records


    I can't imagine too many books that have delivered results quite like this. Impressive.

    "Last week, a grand total of 574 books were sold. Not too shabby for a first author with not a huge amount to say. But recall that this manuscript cost its publishers a cool $1 million. The publisher therefore spent around $170 for every book sold without even counting the marketing budget."

    ReplyDelete
  68. Anonymous10:56 PM

    Compared to these oxymoronic morons and the current state of the right wing coalition that put the GOP in power, the Democratic party, liberals and the left in general looks downright harmonius. Divide and conquer

    ReplyDelete
  69. There won't be any "romp" by the Democrats in November. It's just not in the script.

    None of this will change until Americans respond to this administration in an organized, anti-establishment manner.

    40 years ago, in Chicago, 3 days of rioting in the Puerto Rican community here completely turned around a seemingly intractable situation of racism. Young people were regularly beaten and tortured by the police. The CPD "red squad" watched for any political organization by the Puerto Rican community and disrupted it before it could get off the ground. Within 2 weeks of the riots, reforms started that within a decade turned this horrible situation around for the better. Today, the Puerto Rican community in Chicago is organized, successful, hardworking and their neighborhoods are well-kept, schools improving.

    For those of you who think that civil disobedience and unrest can't help us, I suggest that it may be the only thing at this point that CAN help us.

    ReplyDelete
  70. Dear Glenn,

    I think you're missing a couple of points, but it was intended that way - We are all supposed to be missing them.

    1.) The media is lazy, and they tend to report on that which is dropped into their laps.

    2.) Karl Rove took care of the media, and dropped a great big ol' story in their laps. Part 2 of the story, and Part 3.

    Shock and awe. It's hard to believe that there are people like this in the world, much less that they're running the country. We've spent most of the last six years trying to convince ourselves that what has happened HAS really happened. We keep looking for proofs that Bush and Republicans are as conniving and dastardly as we think they are, and once we get the proof, it then becomes a question of "What can we do about it?"

    Until they start rounding us up and extreme renditioning us to secret prisons, nothing. And then it'll be too late.

    Most of us still haven't come around to fully realizing the full scope of the situation and think that we'll be able to vote them out in November. Anybody who believes that should think again. The primary election results last week should have set off alarm bells nationwide, but then again so should the election results of 2004, and 2000.

    ReplyDelete
  71. Anonymous11:15 PM

    People become numb to bad TV. Soaps are bad and everyone knows it but if you watch one long enough you tend to forget because you get caught up in the story. Same with bad news shows. Don't watch CNN for a month or so--get it completely out of your system. Then turn it on and see if you can sit through even five minutes of it without wanting to scream.

    I was feeling self-destructive today after the Rove news and so I turned on CNN to make myself feel REALLY bad. Wolff was interogating some guy who just got out of Gitmo (perhaps to make him feel more at home?); some other lapdog did five minutes on how clever Bush was sneaking into Iraq (by the way,wasn't the meeting he snuck out in the middle of the big TWO day pow-wow on Iraq? So I guess it was only a big ONE day pow-wow?); and the Chief of police from NYC was compaining about Iranian agents spyin in the Big Apple (let the anti-Iran spin begin!). CRY!

    ReplyDelete
  72. Anonymous11:24 PM

    bamage:

    Bart: Pathological fixation with me does not equal evisceration.

    Exhibit 1: May favorite ankle nipping doggie, arnie, was the first to respond to my comments.

    Exhibit 2: Count all of my posts and all the posts which arne uses to respond to each of my posts.

    Pathological fixation defined.

    ReplyDelete
  73. Anonymous11:40 PM

    Anonymous said...

    Bart...Guliani, McCain and Allen are all better candidates and will be running in 2008.

    McCain wasn't a better candidate in 2000 and none of these fools were better in 2004.


    McCain stumbled by calling Christian conservatives stupid just before heading south. He isn't repeating that mistake again and has been sucking up at every evangelical meeting which will allow him to show up.

    Guliani and Allen were busy winning state elections at that time.

    The fact is there isn't a GOP candidate running in 2008 who has a snowball's chance in hell of being elected. You have said as much yourself.

    :::chuckle:::

    When did I ever say such a thing?

    2008 is easy.

    Hillary wins the Donkey primaries over whatever wingnut the left backs.

    Either Guliani, Allen or McCain wins the Elephant race in about that order of likelihood.

    Both McCain and Guliani lead over Clinton by double digits in most preliminary polls and that will get worse when you lefties go beserk losing to her in the primaries and stay home.

    2008 is a stone cold lock for the GOP.

    Seriously, watch out for Rudy.

    This CW about how he can't win among Christian conservatives because of his social stands is largely crap. Christian conservatives are also very pro military and law and order types who love Rudy's image cleaning up NYC and then leading NYC after 9/11.

    I just attended an business leadership and investment seminar attended by a number of Christian business groups and Guliani received a thunderous applause when he spoke as the headliner with more than a few shouts of "Run Rudy Run!"

    I am pro life but I am leaning towards Rudy because he is the best war leader I see running. I do not think I am alone.

    Bart...The country and the GOP will have had enough of the Bushes for awhile, which is too bad for Jeb Bush, who has been a very good governor in Florida.

    SPEW! Coffee>>>>>monitor!


    People, YOU are the one's with the fixation on George Bush.

    YOU are the one who claim that everyone who takes the opposite position to you somehow is mind numbed robot Bush follower.

    I think the man is an average President whose main redeeming quality is that he is prosecuting the war without concession to the naysayers and polls.

    To you folks, he is the undefeatable boogie man.

    ReplyDelete
  74. HWSNBN thinks this means something:

    Exhibit 2: Count all of my posts and all the posts which arne uses to respond to each of my posts.

    When there's multiple misstatements, sometimes it's better to just take them on one by one rather than write some "War and Peace" to cover the whole gamut. HWSNBN seems to have a problem with that. I can only suggest that he limit himself to a single outrageous claim per post. Problem solved.

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  75. HWSNBN is clueless (as usual):

    Guliani and Allen were busy winning state elections at that time.

    Well, I haven't been following the career of "Guliani" [sic] too closely (I'm not that familiar with him, nor, apparently is HWSNBN), but Rudy Giuliani hasn't done all that well at "state elections". ;-) As for Allen, the guy is a shoe-in with the CRW crowd, he's dumb as a rock. Perfect for the GOP.

    Like I was saying, I think that HWSNBN must be getting some "kick" out of getting his ignerrent a$$ busted again and again ... he keeps coming back and saying, "Thank you, sir, may I have another?..."

    ROFLMAO.

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  76. Clueless HWSNBN:

    ... This CW about how he [Giuliani] can't win among Christian conservatives because of his social stands is largely crap....

    "Harriet Miers".

    ;-)

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  77. Juan Cole reprints sermons by Iraqi Imams this last weekend. It seems that Pres Bush sure does know the Eyeraqi culchral newences:

    Moreover, the channel cites the representative of Grand Ayatollah Al-Sistani, Shaykh Abd-al-Mahdi al-Karbala'i, imam and preacher of Al-Husayn Mosque in Karbala, as saying that eliminating "terrorist elements" is a great step toward ending the atrocities committed against the Iraqi people. Shaykh Al-Kabala'i also stresses the need to restore sovereignty to Iraq and put an end to foreign interference in Iraqi affairs.

    Additionally, the channel cites Hazim al-A'raji, representative of clergyman Muqtada al-Sadr in the city of Al-Kazimiyah, as congratulating the Iraqi people on the death of Al Al-Zarqawi, while urging the worshippers to stand firm against the Takfiri [excommunication] ideology.

    Furthermore, Al-Sharqiyah reports that Shaykh Ali al-Nu'mani, affiliated with the Al-Sadr movement, held the US forces responsible for the deteriorating state of security in Iraq and organized killings. Al-Nu'mani maintains that violence in Iraq is carefully orchestrated by the US forces to disrupt the work of the Iraqi government and parliament.

    Moreover, the channel cites Friday preachers in Al-Anbar Governorate as calling on Iraqis to work toward restoring calm in governorate cities, "which have been witnessing volatile tension since the US invasion of Iraq three years ago."

    Additionally, Al-Sharqiyah reports that Shaykh Ahmad al-Nasir, imam and preacher of [the Sunni] Al-Furqan Mosque in Al-Fallujah called on worshippers to be vigilant in the face of US conspiracies to divide the Iraqi people.'
    [my emphases]

    ReplyDelete
  78. HWSNBN has problems with plurals and possessives:

    People, YOU are the one's with the fixation on George Bush.

    YOU are the one who claim that everyone who takes the opposite position to you somehow is mind numbed [sic] robot Bush follower.

    The booze is taking hold. Bet he's an expert DUI "criminal" lawyer.

    OBTW, the fact that rational people see pretty much everything that Dubya's done as a complete bollix is an inevitable consequent of sober reality. That they see anyone that thinks that Dubya is good for something as deluded or worse is hardly surprising. That they think that anyone that defends Dubya no matter what outrage he manages to perform (such as HWSNBN) has drunk the Kool-Aid is just common sense.

    Cheers,

    ReplyDelete
  79. Anonymous12:33 AM

    Bart reminds me of the Nazi playwright, Franz Liebkind, who penned Springtime for Hitler in The Producers. The play may be a big success on Broadway as musical comedy but it won't get into the White House on election day in 2008.


    Franz Liebkind: Ja. Not many people know this, but the fuhrer was descended from a long line of English queens.

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  80. Anonymous12:37 AM

    David Byron...She's the brain trust on that board, and one of the few who appear to have any principles.

    That says all you need to say about those foolios over there.

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  81. Lawrence Davidson on the privatization of foreign policy:

    It also should be noted that there are quite possible disasters that might act to further entrench the powers that be, rather than call their policies into question. For instance, the longer present policies are adhered to the more likely it is that the US will suffer another 9/11 style attack. That is the sort of disaster that will certainly magnify present anti-Islamic paranoia and allow the Bush administration to shut down all criticism as if it were high treason, while simultaneously mobilizing the nation for further war in the Middle East.

    Thus, the United States appears to be caught between Scylla and Charybdis. We are in a race to see what sort of disaster will befall us first – the type that will likely entrench the powers that be, or the type that may stimulate questioning and possible change. One must hope for the road that will lead to a possibility for positive change but, either way, more foreign policy misfortunes are in the forecast.

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  82. Anonymous1:06 AM

    Nittacci, I hate to agree with you, but I can imagine the day when even civil unrest is not enough, and we will have to take to the hills with rifles. If things continue as they are and we end up as a vast Third World country . . .

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  83. Juan Cole on Bush in Iraq:

    In almost surreal rhetoric, Bush said Iranian interference in Iraqi affairs must be curtailed. He said this after the Iraqi vice president and the head of the biggest bloc in parliament both went off to Tehran and praised Iran's stabilizing role. If Bush thinks that Shiite Iranians are the problem in fanatically Sunni Ramadi and Adhamiyah, we're in even bigger trouble than I thought.

    Bush tried to define down victory to a general ability of people to go about their lives. He said it was unreasonable to expect to end "all violence." But Mr. Bush, no one suggested that you end "all violence." The goal here is to win the guerrilla war.

    During a guerrilla war, people always go about their daily lives, except when a bomb is going off in their specific neighborhood. So if the goal is that Iraqis should be able to buy bread and go to school and drive to work, most of them have that already most of the time. It is just that little problem of some 12,000 people a year being blown up, assassinated, or beheaded and their heads wrapped in cellophane and stored in banana crates along the side of the road that remains.
    [my emphases]

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  84. Anonymous2:27 AM

    Bart said:

    Our prewar objectives were:

    1) Remove the Baathist dictatorship because it was an ongoing danger to the region which was not going away when Saddam gave way to his pathological spawn.


    Yup, Saddam was removed, to be most likely replaced with a religious theocracy aligned with Iran.

    2) Ensure that Iraq was disarmed of all WMD and WMD programs because after 12 years it was plain that the Baathists were not giving up that objective.

    There weren't any WMD as we all know and as Bush and crew knew before the war.

    3) Remove Iraq as a uncontested sanctuary for Islamic fascist terrorists which had been invited in since 1993. Post 9/11, the combination of objectives 2 & 3 gained new importance.

    Iraq was never a terrorist haven until we invaded and created an Al Qaida insurgency in reaction to our illegal invasion and occupation of a middle eastern country that had done noting to us. Read the 9/11 commission report.


    4) Establish a democratic Iraqi government.

    That has happened sort of. Remains to be seen whether it is successful and whether or not it turns into a religious theocracy aligned with Iran.

    5) Establish a de-Baathified Iraqi military. To allow the old army to remain would have given the Iraqi Sunni a springboard to retake power through a coup. With the military reflecting the population, there is no longer any chance of this.

    It is generally acknowledged by both the military and our politicians that getting rid of Saddams Army was one of the major mistakes made after the invasion

    Establishing security in Iraq and being liked by the rest of the ME were never objectives.

    LOL, and just how do you expect that any of the other objectives can be achieved without security?

    We have achieved the first 4 objectives and have achieved the 5th objective to the point where it is no longer possible for the Baathists or al Qaeda to take power.

    Methinks you are doing the mission accomplished thing once again and with the same results as the first one. Think I'll save this post to show you a year from now.

    We will be gradually drawing down our forces from Iraq over the next two years, mainly leaving behind supply personnel to help the Iraqis develop an logistics system and command teams to help develop an Iraqi large unit command and control system.

    LOL again. Bush is spending hundreds of millions to build four major military bases in Iraq not to mention his green zone palace. In fact the Repubs tried to strip a statement the other day saying that we would not seek permanent military basing in Iraq.

    The low scale insurgency will continue for some years as the Iraqi government gradually gets on its feet. However, it has no chance whatsoever of taking power.


    We'll see. I don't recommend anybody hold their breath waiting though.

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  85. Anonymous2:39 AM

    Anonymous said...

    I've got a new name for the blog. The "The Grinch of Greenwald Glenn".

    I understand that liberalism involves the push for an ideal world, but does it have to be so unrelentingly dismal?

    A couple of bright spots in the war on terror have happened and yet all you can do is denigrate them and remind all concerned that it's a momentary and probably false respite from the overweaning Doom and Gloom of the "Liberal Way?"

    Well gee we've had the "Mission Accomplished" the "Purple finger successful elections" and other "We've turned the corner" events and nothing has changed.

    Oil production is still below prewar levels (remember that was supposed to pay for the war). The Iraqs still don't have reliable electricity, water or plumbing. The country is still so dangerous that Bush can't announce in advance that he is going there (has to sneak in like a theif in the night). Terrorist attacks have not decreased. And 21 billion dollars of US taxpayer money is missing.

    So the question is what is there to celebrate? That Zarqawi is dead? Indeed he was a bad guy but he has already been replaced. That the Iraqis finally announced their last two ministry picks. Don't see where either has made any difference as of yet.

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  86. Anonymous3:04 AM

    Bart said:

    "I think the man is an average President whose main redeeming quality is that he is prosecuting the war without concession to the naysayers and polls."

    Spewing more coffee, on your monitor.

    The man that has eliminated the separation of Church and State by giving Government (taxpayer) money through contracts to religious organizations.

    The man that has trashed the fourth amendment with illegal domestic spying.

    The man that has allowed the torture of detainees, and the indefinite holding of others including at least one American citizen. All held indefinitely without any charges ever being filed. In fact one detainee that was found innocent at his military tribunal is in fact still being held at Guantanamo despite that fact.

    The man that considers himself to be above the law by including signing statements that exempt him from provisions that have been passed by both houses of Congress. 750 of them to date.

    The man that has raised oil prices to over 70 dollars a barrel and gasoline to over 3 dollars a gallon in no small part due to his ill conceived illegal wars and threats against oil producing countries that have done nothing to us.

    No this is no average President. In fact he is well below average. Does the picture of a snakes belly at the bottom of the Mariana trench in the Pacific ocean conjur up any images? Because that is about where Bush is in the history of Presidents.

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  87. Anonymous4:39 AM

    Political theatre to be sure. But I wonder if it is meant more for the base than anybody else. If the polls are correct, nobody but the base is believing it. Much like gay marriage and flag burning. Nothing happened except to shore up the base.

    It may have also been a FU to the insurgents.

    By the way, part of his base is the media.

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  88. Anonymous5:32 AM

    Venezuela; Holding the Line against Drug Trafficking
    Washington’s annual certification debacle: Bush

    Administration blasts Chávez, positive research results be damned.

    WASHINGTON - June 13 - U.S. specialists are currently awaiting the White House’s next drug certification report, which is normally released in September, to see whether the Bush Administration will continue to use the document as a political tool rather than a piece of objective research.

    Ambassador Nancy Powell, “the [U.S.] President determined that the Government of Venezuela had not addressed the increasing use of Venezuelan territory to transport drugs to the United States.” But her claim merely transposed the responsibility for making the accusation to the U.S. president, and did not definitively authenticate Venezuela’s role in the drug trade. Indeed, there is ample evidence that Venezuelan President Chávez has been as vigilant over this issue as any of the “partner” nations supposedly cooperating with Washington.

    The allegations against Caracas are all the more slanderous when laid next to other official U.S. compilations of data. Statistics provided by the U.S. International Narcotics Control Strategy Reports (INCSR) in 2005 gave positive marks for Venezuela’s anti-narcotics efforts.

    Over the past few years, Venezuelan authorities have been increasingly successful in intercepting drug shipments. The 2005 INSCR report supports these findings, with statistics from 1998 to 2004 indicating that over that period seizures rose from 8.6 tons to 19.07 tons. According to Venezuelan government sources, 58.5 tons of cocaine, 18.3 tons of marijuana, 869 pounds of heroine and 766.7 pounds of crack were intercepted in 2005, which representing an 87% increase from the previous year – hardly the mark of a lackadaisical or uncooperative anti-narcotics effort.

    The long list of investigations, arrests and legislation which have been undertaken by the Chávez government are not suggestive of a country that is failing “to meet international treaty obligations.” The incontrovertible conclusion is that without any justification, Washington deliberately discredits Venezuela’s anti-drug efforts, defaming a nation whose major pecado is not its laxity in the war on drugs, but rather its willingness to defy the will of Uncle Sam on repeated occasions over the issue of not so much drugs or terrorism or human trafficking, but of sovereignty.

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  89. Anonymous6:22 AM

    semanticleo: Because Fitz is a total phoney meant to distract and a happy warrior on the pathway to a police state. He's shown his true colors more than once. People desperate for heroes will make heroes out of villians. That's what we see here with Fitz.

    Don't be so easily fooled by appearances. Check the facts.

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  90. Anonymous7:12 AM

    Florida House Candidate to Face Litany of Criminal Charges After Alleging Vote Fraud
    By Miriam Raftery
    Raw Story

    Monday 12 June 2006

    In an exclusive interview with Florida House of Representatives candidate Charlie Grapski - arrested after he filed a lawsuit alleging voting fraud against Alachua County City Manager Clovis Watson, RAW STORY learns of corruption allegations that can only be
    described as not seen since the days of Boss Tweed.

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  91. Anonymous11:31 AM

    bart said:
    Indeed, Bush has better approval numbers than many Donkey leaders.

    Liar. Bush doesn't have better approval ratings than any Democrat, and you know that.

    At least try to come up with some plausible bulls--t.

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  92. Anonymous11:32 AM

    bart said:
    Indeed, Bush has better approval numbers than many Donkey leaders.

    Liar. Bush doesn't have better approval ratings than any Democrat, and you know that.

    At least try to come up with some plausible bulls--t.

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