Archive for February, 2006

Long Weekend

Friday, February 17th, 2006

It’s Presidents’ Day Weekend. A time of reflection and relaxation for most. I know that I’ll be doing some of each myself. Today, I’m reminded of Nixon’s trip to China. It was a legendary diplomatic achievement, one of our nation’s finest. Despite the transgressions of Watergate and the ensuing scandal, no one can take China away from Nixon. So how will scholars and historians view the current administration? I have a theory.

Based on everything we’ve seen so far, the incompetence, the bold faced lies to congress and to the American people, the political manhandling of our nation’s scientists, the blatant violations of international law and treaties to include the Geneva Convention, and the current struggle to consolidate more power in the executive branch than has ever been allowed, I think that they’ll view the current administration as the greatest our country has ever known.

George W. Bush, will be celebrated as a visionary leader who laid the foundations for a peaceful, democratic middle east. His administration, though dogged by an overly critical class of digitally enabled navel gazers and fringe elements of the mainstream media, will be universally recognized for its efficiency, competency, and fiscal acumen. By the end of the century, George W. Bush will be immortalized on Mount Rushmore.

Let’s face it. The GOP currently controls both houses of congress, the white house, and the supreme court. They have successfully managed the media portrayal of every political topic from abortion to the environment to the economy to the extent that the average American thinks things are OK right now. This is bad.

How bad is it? Let’s put it this way, last weekend, the vice president shot a man in the face, and this was enough to set the news media into enough of a frenzy that that the unwarranted wiretapping of perhaps millions – and at least thousands – of Americans will escape a congressional investigation. Not only that, but Congress is now drafting a bill which will exempt NSA wiretapping from the 1978 FISA laws.

As a former service member specializing in communications intercept and translation I was subject to these laws. I know very well the guidance and restrictions they provide to protect American civil liberties. And to those who consider the current circumstances of the so called War on Terror to be grounds to waive strict adherence to these laws, I say this:

These laws were designed during the Cold War. The United States waged this war against an enemy who threatened not the destruction of one of our cities, but a war of such profound proportion as to promise the swift and sure eradication of human existence as we know it. And yet during this war the FISA laws were proposed, enacted and adhered to by the NSA and every other intelligence gathering agency in the United States of America because that’s who we are.

The world DID NOT change on September 11, 2001. We have ALWAYS been under threat, and yet have maintained the faith that every individual in this nation is “endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.”

If we turn a blind eye to FISA now, we might as well start chipping away at Rushmore today.

Stupefied

Thursday, February 16th, 2006

Just when I try to get this blog up and rolling again, the shit hits the fan. Once upon a time I was worried about the fate of our nation under the current administration. Specifically I was concerned with the long term consequences of what I viewed as a misguided foreign policy. Today there’s so much wrong with where our nation has gone and what has been done in our name that I don’t know where to even begin when choosing topics to included in this electronic screed of mine.

In the past week the vice president has proven himself to be above the law by having dismissed local law enforcement seeking to investigate a hunting accident he was involved in. Conspiracy theories aside, the man is an American citizen and subject to the laws of this land. He should have – at the very least – been interviewed by local authorities. In avoiding this he has sullied the reputation of the United States as a lawful nation of the people, by the people and for the people. Dick Cheney is a disgrace.

Also this week, a top NASA scientist – previously gagged by woefully unqualified administration appointees – announced that Greenland’s ice shelf is melting far faster than previously thought. The resulting rise in global ocean levels is only one possible consequence. North Atlantic ocean temperatures will drop due to the increased inflow of ice melt, greatly improving the chances of a stalled Gulf Stream. Should this occur, Europe will suffer a dramatic climate change.

Pictures of abuses inflicted upon innocent Iraqis by US service members and Pentagon contractors at Abu Ghraib were released by an Austrailian news service. These images were then immediately republished around the globe where they were met with universal scorn and criticism. Well…almost universal. Here in the US, no news outlet made a very big deal of the images, and the administration dismissed them altogether stating that those responsible had already been punished, and refusing to accept that the 1,000+ images indicated that the torture which occurred was indeed systemic in nature and not the act of a handful of individuals.

On top of all of this Secretary of State Condi Rice lied point blank to congress. As did former FEMA head Michael Brown, and current Department of Homeland Security Head Michael Chertoff.

Meanwhile the list of former administration officials and functionaries who now criticize their former masters continues to grow. Paul Pillar, the CIA’s national intelligence officer for the Middle East and South Asia from 2000 to 2005, and Ari Fleischer who served as President George W. Bush’s first press secretary joined those growing ranks this week.

When will this ship of the damned finally sink?

Good Stuff All Around

Wednesday, February 15th, 2006

Had a corporate training today.

I’ve never thought myself the type to say it, but it was mostly painless. In fact I actually enjoyed it. I do have some feed back for the higher-ups, but that’s neither here nor there.

At the moment I’m listening to dj BC’s first and second (.torrent) Beastles albums via boing boing while trying to fine tune an install of Ubuntu on an old POS P3 box. Sweet beyond words. The music and lyrics are a confluence of ideas that approach an ideal conversation that I never quite reached with my father. I would like to think that we could have listened to this together and enjoyed it thoroughly.

Maybe his grandchildren will appreciate the sentiment if not the execution.

Here’s hoping.

Turncoat Trifecta

Sunday, February 12th, 2006

The foundations of the BushCo powerstructure is collapsing. Last week saw a gaggle of former Administration loyalists under the gun, and everyone of them pointed up the chain.

Court filings show that I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby implicated his boss, Vice President Dick Cheney, in the CIA Plame scandal. Libby’s defense is that Cheney and other senior administration officials authorized him to leak classified information to smear the reputation of former ambassador Joe Wilson, Plame’s husband, after Wilson had written an editorial piece for the New York Times discrediting alleged intelligence that served as the basis for the war in Iraq. Libby has retained the services of Oliver North’s former lawyer. We can expect to see more Administration stonewalling and late-night, White House shredder parties as special prosecutor Fitzgerald tries to gain access to evidence material to the case that the Administration has classified.

Michael “Brownie” Brown
, the unqualified political appointee formerly in-charge of FEMA, dropped a dime on the Department of Homeland Security and the White House while testifying to congress about the hurricane Katrina response effort. Emails from Brown show that the DHS and the White House were notified of the disaster the day the levees broke, contradicting Bush’s assertion that he and his staff did not know about the situation until days later. This now puts Michael Chertoff, head of the DHS, in the hotseat.

Finally, Jack “I’m GOP Slut” Abramoff outted Bush as an outright liar. As the White House struggles to maintain distance from the stench that is Abramoff the man himself claims that he met with the president a dozen times, and that Bush knew him well enough to joke with Abramoff about his children. White House press secretary Scott McClellan is going to have fun squirming his way out of this one.

It just goes to show, there is no honor among thieves.

Election 2006: Let’s get this party started

Sunday, February 12th, 2006

America is at a crossroads. Expect this trite but true little bit of rhetoric to be a central theme in 2006. The message will be pounded in the brains of the American voter by every Democrat worth their salt from now straight through until November 2008.

Some have already started preaching the word, but not everyone appreciates the strategy. After all, if the DNC makes the case that the upcoming elections are not between the right and the left, but rather between the past and the future, what will become of all those Dems who have gone along for the ride this far? Aren’t they part of the past? I’m looking at you Hillary. Sorry, but 2008 isn’t your year.

Aside from the sour grapes, I think this is a winning strategy. Using the future as a launching pad for the elections is brilliant. Don’t polarize the nation with a debate on abortion. Shit the neo-cons and their fundy pals are trying to roll us back to arguing evolution. Responsible science initiatives (i.e. breaking that “oil addiction”), and a firm stance on consumer rights with regard to digital media are issue that the average American can understand. Gas tanks and iPods.

Lets get this one right. We may not have another chance.