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March 31, 2008

The "Good" War

On Friday Vladimir Poutin will offer NATO logistical access for the ISAF.

Which of the following is really important?

  • Access to Afghanistan via the Stans. To, like, win George's Number One War.
  • Integration of Georgia and the Ukraine in NATO. To prevent the succession of separatist regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
  • 10 GBI silos in Poland and an X-band BMD radar in the Czech Republic. To defend Europe against the Iranian Strategic Nuclear Rocket Forces.

Bush is in Eastern Europe this week. I don't suppose the Hero Twins will notice. Still, the Sov's offering NATO free passage deeper into Afghanistan is pretty funny.

Where economics, politics and foreclosure meet...

Go read Tanta. All of it. To the end.

Brilliant.

Earth to Arianna

In which of the following four states are the votes of the Electors of the Electoral College not already known?

  1. Maine
  2. Maryland
  3. Virginia
  4. New York

Which of the following is not running against John McCain for President of the United States in the general election?

  1. Chellie Pingree
  2. Donna Edwards
  3. Tom Perriello
  4. Eric Massa

In which of the following congressional districts is there a real, honest to goodness, competitive general election contest?

  1. Maine 1st
  2. Maryland 4th
  3. Virginia 5th
  4. New York 29th

And finally, the same again, but for the Democratic primary contest?

  1. Maine 1st (Brennan, Cote, Lawrence, Pingree, Strimling)
  2. Maryland (done)
  3. Virginia (done)
  4. New Yor (done)

If you can read it without wishing and hoping and thinking and praying ... that Arianna isn't singing to your candidate's political director, enjoy the silliness -- link.

With any luck the DNC won't spend all of its money trying to win the general election in these four CDs. I'm sure Chellie can use the HuffPo copy, but Dems, congressional or national should do better than this.

Historic vote by Mi'kmaq in Newfoundland

250px-Cooks_Karte_von_Neufundland.jpgThe nine Mi'kmaq of Bands located in western and central Newfoundland (Isle) overwhelmingly endorsed an agreement-in-principle over the weekend with the federal government that will give them recognition as status Indians.

The Federation of Newfoundland Indians has around 10,500 members, of which about 8,000 were eligible to vote. A total of 3,232 ballots were cast in Saturday’s vote and the preceeding Tuesday's advance polls. Of those 2,913 were in favor of the agreement-in-principle announced by the FNI and the federal government last fall.

This means that the members of the Federation of Newfoundland Indians will obtain recognition under Canada's Federal Indian Act.

The federation chose to pursue status as a landless band, because so many of its members live in different communities and did not want to move from their homes to a reserve.

There is a very nice piece on the election at The Western Star.

This is an approach that is foreign to the US Federal Indian Law experience, yet Native Hawai'ians, and California Mission Indians until rather recently (and my neighbors, the Esselens and just about every other non-gaming California Indian Band), and the Lumbees and ... actually exist in landless, status limbo(s) (note the plural).

The turn-out was an order of magnitude greater than the CNO's last attempt at democracy. Something to keep in mind, Tribal elections don't have to be complete cock-ups.

h/t Acee's Indianz.com

National Popular Vote...

This is something I just signed up for the other day on Facebook, and yet I missed the fact that Florida Senator (and anti-disenfranchisement advocate) Ben Nelson is proposing a Constitutional Amendment to replace the Electoral College with National Popular Vote:

Sen. Nelson: End Electoral College system

Sen. Bill Nelson, the Florida Democrat whose state is embroiled in a presidential primary debacle, said Thursday that he will pursue a constitutional amendment that would replace the Electoral College system with a national popular vote.

Nelson also proposed a new presidential nominating system featuring six primaries comprised of six groups of states that would take turns selecting candidates. This plan would "give both large and small states a fair say in the nomination process," Nelson said in a speech before the Florida state Senate.

"My fight has been based on the principle that in America every citizen has an equal right to vote," he said. "It is based on a belief that we all deserve a say in picking our presidential nominees.

"The blessings of liberty cannot wait," he added. "I believe the time for reform is now."

Nelson said he plans to introduce legislation when the Senate returns from its recess. Florida and Michigan were penalized by the Democratic National Committee last year after both states moved up their primary dates from March to January.

A small victory?

In response to Ian Buruma's anti-NDN slur in the LA Times last week, Wampum commenter Adam Bailey sent off a letter to the editorial board. Today, it was published.


Re "Last of the Tibetans," Opinion, March 26

Ian Buruma has many good points about the dangers Tibetan culture faces from Chinese modernization, but his opening sentences that describe American Indians as "doomed" and "reduced to peddling cheap mementos" call into question his ability to make such an assessment. Indeed, American Indians are going through a cultural renaissance wherein more of our youth are learning their languages, practicing their traditions and attaining more educational success than ever before. One need look no further than Harvard University's Honoring Nations awards for proof.

This is not to say that native peoples don't face many challenges, but to declare that we are little more than "tourist attractions" is as false as it is insulting. Is his take on Tibet based on similar romantic notions of a culture that isn't his own?

Got (less) "Responsibility"?

Nuri Kamal al-Maliki just folded up military operations.

[1] "Iran is liquidating its no longer useful proxies" theory (which would fit this general line of speculation about Iran's doubts about Sadr and preference for the simultaneously-US backed ISCI) to the generally most prevalent (in the Iraqi and Arab, not just Western, media) [2] "Maliki and ISCI are liquidating their more popular rivals ahead of the provincial elections" theory; the optimistic [3] "Sadr has lost power and now's the time to take him out" theory (thus far not borne out by the course of the fighting, but who knows - it's early, or it could be a miscalculation); [4] Maliki's own "it's time to establish state sovereignty over a 'lost' province" theory (which Bush, of course, has embraced, and is supported by the reporting that the Iraqi Army began its preparations for the attack months ago; but then why isn't he taking on the other militias and warlords? and why would he start now, and in Basra?); and [5] Reidar Visser's "Maliki is trying to build a power base in the Iraqi Army" theory. [note: numbers added to make Kevin Drum happy.]

via another theory for the pile

So much for the last two theories in the pile, nos 2 and 4.

I wonder what Eaton et al have published this week to account for all this "responsibility". If they announced they were registering as foreign agents, say, for the Islamic Republic (of Iran), there'd be some internal consistency to their works and wisdom.

March 30, 2008

We saw five of these today

condor119.jpg

Jonah got it right. I tilted his head up as one sailed overhead and he said "airplane".

Got "Responsibility"?

If you entertained some of these librettos just 24 hours ago to accompany your tone poem of an American hand rocking the cradle of Iraq's democratic destiny (think of Wagner), you may want to give your librettist a heads-up.

First, Iran is on record that it wants military operations halted, and has closed the Shalamsheh border crossing, near Basra. Scratch [1]. Second, the Badr Corp (aka "Iraqi Army") hasn't managed any territorial gains and units of the "Iraqi Army" and "Iraqi Police" have defected/surrendered to the Basra defense forces. scratch [3]. Third, repeat the previous and scratch [5].

[1] "Iran is liquidating its no longer useful proxies" theory (which would fit this general line of speculation about Iran's doubts about Sadr and preference for the simultaneously-US backed ISCI) to the generally most prevalent (in the Iraqi and Arab, not just Western, media) [2] "Maliki and ISCI are liquidating their more popular rivals ahead of the provincial elections" theory; the optimistic [3] "Sadr has lost power and now's the time to take him out" theory (thus far not borne out by the course of the fighting, but who knows - it's early, or it could be a miscalculation); [4] Maliki's own "it's time to establish state sovereignty over a 'lost' province" theory (which Bush, of course, has embraced, and is supported by the reporting that the Iraqi Army began its preparations for the attack months ago; but then why isn't he taking on the other militias and warlords? and why would he start now, and in Basra?); and [5] Reidar Visser's "Maliki is trying to build a power base in the Iraqi Army" theory. [note: numbers added to make Kevin Drum happy.]

via another theory for the pile

It probably isn't the best message in a primary that the "civil war" in Iraq, or the "civil war" between Shi'ite factions, isn't a "civil war", between a semi-legitimate "government" and some semi-illegitimate "criminal gangs" (the DoD pressers reads like something the PRC put out during the haydays of the Gang of Four), but is a class war between the wealthier expats parachuted into Iraq from Iran by Paul Bremer to "form a government", and the poorer Iraqi resistance to Saddam, who like the poor everywhere, wicked outnumber the rich and can't be trusted to form political parties or wield a ballot.

However, if you bet your "Responsible Plan" narrative on libretto #2, you may be stuck with an aria extolling Nouri al-Maliki and the (pro-Iranian) Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, and a Democratic favorite -- why voter suppression is a win for democracy, in Florida and in Iraq. If you bet on libretto #4, the aria has to extol the virtues of the Fadhila Party, a splinter from the Sadrist movement to which the Governor of Basra, Mohammed al-Waili, is a member, and is widely credited with running all the oil smuggling operations in the province, and sing long and loud about the beauty of oil and petro-dollars in the hands of the blessed few.

Today Nouri al-Maliki managed to say this while the cameras were rolling


We used to talk about al Qaeda. Unfortunately it seems there are some among us who are worse than al Qaeda.

There are two important messages there. First, the political opposition to Nouri al-Maliki and those who sail with him, that is, the Basra defense forces and the militia that has unilaterally "stood down" for most of 2007 and ceased military operations against US forces, though they are politically opposed to the Occupation and collaboration with the Occupation Forces, are "worse than Al Qaeda". Second, when was the last time you heard your pony in the Iraqi democratic horse race mention Al Qaeda? If that "war" is over, what is your theory of operations?

dirtyfuckinghippie-418x264.jpgIt probably isn't the best message in a Democratic primary that Democrats should, no, must, for reasons of state secrets electabality, support reactionary expat elites using death squads and foreign mercenaries to massacre popular majorities, in El Salvador and in Iraq, because it is best for Reagan and Bush I and Bush II.

Good thing I'm not doing message for any primary races this cycle, I'd want to put a "Dirty Fucking Hippie" sticker on the microphone and have my guy or gal rework JFK's "I'm proud to be a liberal" speach, substituting "DFH" for "liberal", and let the other primary campaigns message on how wise and foresighted the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld/Bremer/rinse-and-repeat team are, except for the one little thing they overlooked, the plainly marked "correction" knob on the Totally Awesome Adventure Machine. The wee little knobiee that they have screwed themselves up to the sticking point and are now, bravely prepared to turn in the proper direction, unlike the DFHs, who've gotten everything wrong this time, just like they did the last time.

780,000 €

TintinFSNB-03.jpgIn 1981 I spent a few days in a hospital in Bruxelles, memorable for two reasons, the televisions in the patient commons room was where I saw an episode of "Dallas" for the first time, and I shared a room with an elderly illustrator from the Hergé works, and learned a little bit about Tintin and the production of BDs in Bruxelles.

In a catty moment I remarked to MB that Ian Buruma may have "learned about Indians" from Tintin during his childhood.

Still, I like Tintin, if only for Snowy, a dog with a point of view.

March 29, 2008

Chad goes to Geneva

Chad's been working the United Nation's High Commissioner for Human Rights, here's a copy of his pleadings, and here's a link to the controlling text -- International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, lovingly known to its friends as the CERD.

During the lifetime of the triballaw mailing list, which I suppose really I should restart, now that I've got the resources to host it (and MB's going to law school), where Robert Williams (Getches, 3rd) and I parted company was on the question of whether FIL practitioners should (prospectively) have some exposure to International Treaty Law. It was a long and interesting thread on TL on the subject of our various critical frameworks for the hundred or so of us then contributing to TL.

So, if you had to pick your first case where an Indian claim was argued before any part of the UN system, would you pick the {Chad Smith / Wilma Mankiller / Ross Swimmer} cause of action (lack of electoral love for Ross by Cherokee Freemen, continued into the present), and the Congressional Black Caucus' mild and mindless counter cause of action (unwillingness to review the Oklahoma Acts, or the larger Rehnquist framed conception of race and personal jurisdiction as the definition of citizenship), or is there something slightly less non-serious somewhere hiding in plain sight?

Liveblogging Esche-Thingiee

click here.

Command and Control

The central theory of agency, that is, that there is the non-trivial possibility of controlling events in Iraq, and therefore of acting "responsibly", is at the heart of the Eaton plan, now the Iraq Plank of 40 House and 4 Senate campaigns. Politically, in the domestic calculus of American primary and general election races, the "responsible" message distinguishes the campaign from competitors who message "out now and damn the consequences", as it promises to "manage, not damn" the consequences that matter. It similarly distinguishes these campaigns from competitors who message "stay the course" by the promise of "withdrawal", albeit "responsibly".

MB's view is that its smart to campaign with a shared message. I'm doubtful, as the DCCC's "Nursing Dems" and "Fighting Dems" of the last two cycles didn't pay off as anticipated, and it isn't what we learned from the special elections -- the voters don't buy message that their vote will bring about glamorous new programs in a congress controlled by Republicans and "moderate" Democrats, but they do buy the message that their vote can stop abusive existing programs, or at least that "NO" is unambiguously uttered.

Whether or not it is smart, the authors of the "responsible plan" should have public comment up now on the conflict initiated by Nouri al-Maliki, in particular, they should have selected one of five or more theories:

[1] "Iran is liquidating its no longer useful proxies" theory (which would fit this general line of speculation about Iran's doubts about Sadr and preference for the simultaneously-US backed ISCI) to the generally most prevalent (in the Iraqi and Arab, not just Western, media) [2] "Maliki and ISCI are liquidating their more popular rivals ahead of the provincial elections" theory; the optimistic [3] "Sadr has lost power and now's the time to take him out" theory (thus far not borne out by the course of the fighting, but who knows - it's early, or it could be a miscalculation); [4] Maliki's own "it's time to establish state sovereignty over a 'lost' province" theory (which Bush, of course, has embraced, and is supported by the reporting that the Iraqi Army began its preparations for the attack months ago; but then why isn't he taking on the other militias and warlords? and why would he start now, and in Basra?); and [5] Reidar Visser's "Maliki is trying to build a power base in the Iraqi Army" theory. [note: numbers added to make Kevin Drum happy.]

via another theory for the pile

Of course there is a 6th, or a 7th, or an 8th, there has to be, consistent with the core theory of US agency, and therefore command and control, hence the "responsible" element of the "responsible plan". The change of command at CENTCOM is causal or the November (US) and not the October (Iraq) election is causal or in spite of their public silence, General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker, together with Dick Cheney, decided to make a bonfire out of the Surge's vanities.

The authors of "the responsible plan", and the users of "the responsible plan", simply have to explain Nouri al-Maliki's offensive in Basara, and the Madhi Army's counter-offensive in Baghdad and Khadhimiyah, and their explaination has to place them at the locus of control, it has to put their, perhaps numb hands, on the levers of cause and effect.

As a parlor game, the run rate for right or wrong is approximately a trillion USD per congressional campaign, and since the surprise no-quarter offensive began in Basara on Saturday, 75 people have been killed and 498 wounded in fighting in the Sadr City district of Baghdad, another 17 have been killed in the Khadhimiyah district of Baghdad, the Green Zone is under heavier fire than usual, and at least 23 people have been killed in Basara, where the militias identified as "the Iraqi Army" and "the Iraqi Police" have been unable to penetrate or overrun the militias identified as "something else".

We had this moment five years ago, when the "liberal hawks" joined the overtly insane and cheerlead George Bush's triumphal, flower petal strewn entry into a joyous Baghdad. Rise, Repeat.

Over the Green Monster

Robert Warrior was kind enough to send us a link to a piece by his former student Steven Salaita, which appeared at The Corner Report -- Why I Won't Vote for Barack Obama.

I've written a lot about the Middle East and South West Asia here at Wampum, and I have to say that Steven gets it 10 for 10. There's a non-secular state, occupied by an armed sect that has appropriated both "Israel" and "Palestine", and two-staters here, on the back of the turtle, are not part of any solution, they are just the enablers of that armed sect.

We're Fenway-centric, and Professor Salaita has hit this one over the Green Monster.

And we still don't endorse either of the Hero Twins, or Saint John.

March 28, 2008

Brennan Campaign on Three Defense Questions, policy and politics

Nine days ago I wrote Attention Maine Primary Campaigns -- three questions not every candidate or campaign may have thought about yet -- what have you (or your campaign manager) got to say about the next BRAC round, about the pretense that the US "controls events" in Iraq, which is the core assumption in all the "responsible" models, and the economic priority of Iraqi refugees during a recession.

I wrote to Peter Asen (Michael Brennan), Corey Haskell (Ethan Strimling), Lisa Prosienski (Chellie Pingree), Marc Malon (Mark Lawrence), Emily Boyle (Adam Cote), and Valerie Martin (Tom Allen), letting each know I'd posted three questions, and offering all of them a generous "gotcha-free" reading. There were responses from Peter Asen, on behalf of Michael Brennan, and from Marc Malon, on behalf of Mark Lawrence. Peter provided substantive responses on behalf of his candidate, and Marc expressed the hope that he could do so in the near future.

On the BRAC:

Michael is the only candidate to publicly support a 10% reduction in military spending. He believes that the future of the maine economy is more sustainable economic development, and wants to get us out of the cycle of being on pins and needles each BRAC cycle. That said, he does think Maine should be treated fairly and will push for Maine to be treated fairly, but he also thinks we can, should, and must develop new sustainable good jobs that are not contingent on defense spending.

On the question of control:

Michael does not believe we can control the situation in Iraq. Our role is to get our troops out of the country, acknowledge to the world community that we've made a mistake, engage with Iraq's neighbors and the world community on moving forward, and provide economic support to help rebuild the country's infrastructure and economy. That is the best we can do.

On the economic priority of Iraqi refugees during a recession:

Michael believes we must talk about the economic cost of the war to the US; the toll of the war on the US standing in the world; the toll of the war on American servicemen and women and their families; and the impact of the war on Iraqis and other people of the middle east. None of this is an either or proposition. And he doesn't focus on one piece at the expense of the others.

I asked a follow-up question whether the 10% figure is real (inflation-adjusted), and if relative to the 2009 budget, which is 74% over the last Clinton/Gore budget for discretionary defense spending, or more generally, which the Congressional Budget Office projects to be down to 3% in 2017, that is, to 2.7% of GDP. I have the impression that the answer is both. Down 10% off the Bush/Cheney numbers, either on the last Rumsfeld, or the current Gates run rates, and down 10% as a long-term policy, so towards 2.7%. The average since Kennedy is 5% (as high as 12% during the heights of the Vietnam War), and the average since Reagan is 4%.

These were good answers. Like anyone who isn't distracted by actually running a campaign, I could "improve" on each answer, but keeping in mind what it is like to have scores of reasonable, and unreasonable questions and "push messages" come in over the course of a campaign, these were as responsive as they needed to be, and actually quite good, so I opened up my checkbook and contributed $100 to Michael Brennan via the campaign's Act Blue page. If you happen to click on the blue image below, you can reward the Brennan campaign, either for taking a Maine blog seriously, or for having wicked good answers to my best three questions for Mainiacs intending to represent Maine in the Congress -- the body charged by the Constitution with the awful responsibility under Article I, § 8, to declare War, to raise and support Armies, and to provide and maintain a Navy, and ultimately, under Article II, § 2, to make an end to the current Wars, and re-enter into Treaties.

actblue-logo.gif

March 27, 2008

The base price

Effective October, the price for names ending in .com will be $6.86, and for names ending in .net the price will be $4.23.

That doesn't include any additional fee to ICANN, nor the registrar mark-up, or mark-down where overcharging for hosting packages provide the offset.

Mumia Abu-Jamal

The death sentence has been struck down.

Le Monde vs the National Intelligence Estimate

Le Monde reports that it has obtained documents which attest that Tehran pursued a nuclear military program after 2003, contradicting the NIE of 3 December 2007 -- National Intelligence Estimate: Iran: Nuclear Intentions and Capabilities.

I'll provide translations in the morning.

March 26, 2008

And just to remind myself...

That some non-native journalists actually "get it", here's Danny Westneat's editorial on Makah whaling in the Seattle Times (which, unfortunately, also published an anti-native screed today.) (Via Indianz, with a h/t to for Adam reminding me this has not been an overall good week to be NDN in America.)

The words of another renowned journalist...

Who believed that modern Indians were mere shadows of once proud cultures:

Sitting Bull, most renowned Sioux of modern history, is dead. He was not a Chief, but without Kingly lineage he arose from a lowly position to the greatest Medicine Man of his time, by virtue of his shrewdness and daring. He was an Indian with a white man's spirit of hatred and revenge for those who had wronged him and his. In his day he saw his son and his tribe gradually driven from their possessions: forced to give up their old hunting grounds and espouse the hard working and uncongenial avocations of the whites. And these, his conquerors, were marked in their dealings with his people by selfishness, falsehood and treachery. What wonder that his wild nature, untamed by years of subjection, should still revolt? What wonder that a fiery rage still burned within his breast and that he should seek every opportunity of obtaining vengeance upon his natural enemies. The proud spirit of the original owners of these vast prairies inherited through centuries of fierce and bloody wars for their possession, lingered last in the bosom of Sitting Bull. With his fall the nobility of the Redskin is extinguished, and what few are left are a pack of whining curs who lick the hand that smites them. The Whites, by law of conquest, by justice of civilization, are masters of the American continent, and the best safety of the frontier settlements will be secured by the total annihilation of the few remaining Indians. Why not annihilation? Their glory has fled, their spirit broken, their manhood effaced; better that they die than live the miserable wretches that they are. History would forget these latter despicable beings, and speak, in later ages of the glory of these grand Kings of forest and plain that Cooper loved to heroism. We cannot honestly regret their extermination, but we at least do justice to the manly characteristics possessed, according to their lights and education, by the early Redskins of America. Saturday Pioneer, December 20, 1890.

And this editorial a few weeks later (and after the Wounded Knee massacre, where over 300 men, women and children saw this call for genocide carried out):

The peculiar policy of the government in employing so weak and vacillating a person as General Miles to look after the uneasy Indians, has resulted in a terrible loss of blood to our soldiers, and a battle which, at best, is a disgrace to the war department. There has been plenty of time for prompt and decisive measures, the employment of which would have prevented this disaster. The PIONEER has before declared that our only safety depends upon the total extermination of the Indians. Having wronged them for centuries we had better, in order to protect our civilization, follow it up by one or more wrong and wipe these untamed and untamable creatures from the face of the earth. In this lies safety for our settlers and the soldiers who are under incompetent commands. Otherwise, we may expect future years to be as full of trouble with the redskins as those have been in the past. An eastern contemporary, with a grain of wisdom in its wit, says that 'when the whites win a fight, it is a victory, and when the Indians win it, it is a massacre.

The words of L. Frank Baum, later heralded around the world for his novel, The Wizard of Oz. Baum justified his calls for genocide on the very fact that Indians were, in his mind, "reduced to being little more than a tourist attraction, peddling cheap mementos of what was once a great culture." He, and many Americans at the time, did not find it a big step to move from such language to the extermination of living peoples. It's pretty sad that a purported professor of human rights isn't aware that such words as his have a history in this country.

So, tell us what you really think...

For anyone who doesn't understand why the national discussion of race needs to address more than just African-American concerns, here's exhibit one, from today's LA Times editorial page:

Are the Tibetans doomed to go the way of the American Indians? Will they be reduced to being little more than a tourist attraction, peddling cheap mementos of what was once a great culture? In Tibet itself, that sad fate is looking more and more likely.

Of course, the Left is so completely outraged that they'll spend many hours directing endless pixels at the LA Times, expressing said outrage, no? Yeah, didn't think so.

Update: Other than Susie, who is honorary Abenaki anyway, I've yet to see any outrage on the Left over this. Perhaps if I change the source from the LA Times to Senator Hillary Clinton, we'll have 5 million comments by this time tomorrow.

BTW, the author, Ian Buruma, is the Henry R. Luce Professor of Human Rights and Journalism at Bard College. His email is buruma@bard.edu.

Something not about the Hero Twins

wilkins-ice-shelf.jpg

In other news, at least 20 lives were ended and another 100 were profoundly harmed by the endless Bush/Cheney criminal enterprise in Iraq, and the primary candidates and their entourages enjoyed another happy day of heavy breathing in the media outlets.

Joe, you'll want to read this ...

link.

March 25, 2008

Valentine's Day in the rear view mirror

On Februaty 14th, a column by then Governor Eliot Spitzer appeared in the Washington Post. The column was Predatory Lenders' Partner in Crime, How the Bush Administration Stopped the States From Stepping In to Help Consumers.

I didn't read it.

On March 10th the New York Times broke the sex story that resulted in his resignation on March 17th. I read that, from a kitchen table in Geneva.

The next morning conversing on our way to the office, my friend compared the European reaction to a sex story in politics and the American. I assented to the obvious, but pointed out to my friend that there was something wrong in this ... the wrong unit was involved, and ... there was something wrong in this.

Now I've read Spitzer's column on the misuse of the OCC, and an awful lot of the Friends of W are on the much better off side of the digital credit divide.

h/t Cookie Jill via Avedon

Remember the Coast Guard?

I'm surprised that Norm Dicks (D-WA-06) and Todd Tiahrt (R-KA-04), chair and ranking member of the House Interior Appropriations subcommittee, view the best means to cure the defect introduced by the outgoing regime's cuts in the funding for Forest Service is to move it from Ag to Interior.

Shades of Joe Lieberman's bi-partisan legislative ghost!

March 24, 2008

Egyptians shot by US vessel in Suez

One dead, two wounded. Details as they shoot by.

The Global Patriot is a RORO ransporting used US military equipment from Dubai. Mohammed Fouad and his two companions were attempting to selling local merchandise to the vessel waiting in the Zenobia Lighthouse basin (Port Said).

20k pink slips

Ronie Lowenstein at the Independent Budget Office (IBO). The pages of sub-prime sin.

Also, I learned from my mom today that the economy is doing just fine. She knows this because that's what's on talk radio.

Monochrome America...

Seems I'm not alone in viewing The Speech as part of the continuing binary kabuki established a half-century ago. (via Indianz.) Granted, Giago falls into the Western Indian trap that all racism against Indians occurs in The West (oh, you mean there are Indians in Maine, Virgina and Florida?) But all and all, he repeats many, though not all, of my concerns; I still have a comment in a previous thread from our friend Robert to address on that subject.

The Peace Canal

Peres-Cheini-1_wa.jpg

When John Edwards went to the Herzliya Conference in January of 2007 he said a passel of things Dick Cheney also says, stuff like "Israel should even be made a member of NATO" and the US - Israel relationship is "a bond that will never be broken" and "in order to ensure Iran never gets nuclear weapons, all options must remain on table" and ...

As if AIPAC was going to make him the Golden Boy and shower him, but not his primary competitors, or his general election competitor, with money.

g_map-1.jpgYou want to see Ralph Nader affect the '08 general, for real this time? Imagine him in Florida, reading the best of Uri Avnery's weekly columns for Gush Shalom to a demographic that cares about Jews and wants peace and a narrative other than mutual assured destruction. Imagine Nader talking about buying 500 million cubic meters/year of water from the Ceyhan and Seyhan rivers in Turkey and moving via a water project no grander than the California Aqueduct, to the Golan, the Jordan Valley, Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza. As an absurd plus, a sop to the insane, the canal is a tank barrier, preventing rapid movement by anything heavier than a flock of ducks, across the Golan.

If imagining Nader doing that, anywhere, but in particular in Florida and in particular this fall, or in Michigan, or in any other of the competitive states, makes one uncomfortable, how comfortable is knowing that no Democrat can substantively differ from Dick Cheney's script, or talk about clean drinking water and agriculture in a desert until "peace" has been achieved, through overwhelming military superiority

h/t to Alex at Josh Landis' SyriaComment for the Peace Canal Plan, and for those of you interested in Uri Averny's personal choice between the Hero Twins and Saint John, read TWO AMERICAS . Don't miss the paragraph

All three candidates have groveled at the feet of AIPAC. The fawning of all three before the Israeli leadership is disgusting. They all show a lack of integrity. But I know that they have no choice. That's how it is in the USA.
Then ask, what charge shall Democratic aparatchiks lay against Nader for not groveling at the feet of AIPAC, in Florida, and everwhere else that the 33 Day War is seen as a blunder the size of Texas. Just how many Floridians, more, or less, than 97,488, are convinced that Likud is not the Party of the Messiah?

Time again for my McCain PSA...

Jonathan Singer of MyDD reposted his interview with John Kerry in which they discuss John McCain's approaching Kerry in March, 2004, regarding switching to the Democratic Party. Not being able to contain myself, yet again, I chimed in via comments, with this:

Also, less than a month later...

The heavens opened and rained gold down on McCain - in the form of Abramoff's Greenberg-Traurig emails - many of which implicated dozens of Senators, Congressmen and Bush Administration officials, all the way up to Rove himself. McCain had subpoenaed the emails in early March, when he called for the Abramoff hearings in the Senate Indian Affairs Committee the week after the story broke in the WaPo; however, until the emails arrived on his desk in mid-April, he had no idea that he was in possession of enough blackmail material to demand the Republican nomination in 2008. Heck, who needed to be VP under Kerry when you could be king!

I wouldn't be surprised if McCain approached Kerry after calling for the Abramoff hearings, thinking he would be persona non grata in the GOP. But almost immediately after seeing the treasure in the Abramoff files, he sent Weaver on a second mission - to meet in mid-May with Karl Rove. Three weeks later, McCain was campaigning with Bush, and the Abramoff hearing were postponed until further notice.

Yes, I keep beating this dead horse, but it's amazing how it fits more and more with all the new details which come out over time. If only Kerry paid attention to our trivial little Indian committee, he'd probably be President today.

Just a PSA to remind people, as I have since early 2006, that John McCain is the GOP nominee today through extortion and blackmail - and at the expense of Indian justice.

March 23, 2008

Going to Water

Jonah and I went down to the river. After flirting with the mud at the water's edge he turned to me and said "swim trunks". We walked back to camp and in a few minutes he was flitting about in his green trunks, ready to go, so back we went.

We walked out into the current and up river, Jonah periodically throwing himself into the flow and swimming in a short arc down stream. Just the two of us. We'd a perfectly indigenous day.

Found, and Lost, in Maine

join-or-die-08.jpgIt is a cute reworking of the single most important political graphic in Ango-American colonial history, the 1754 cartoon by Ben Franklin, for political union during the Seven Years War. Mind, political union had taken place in 1643, between the Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth Colony, Connecticut Colony, and New Haven Colony, see the Avelon Project for The Articles of Confederation of the United Colonies of New England; May 19, 1643.

However, in Maine, regardless of how the dedicated participants of each faction respond to each other, or the rest of the Party, or the broader, non-party political base, the down-ticket races -- Tom's against Susan, and oneof {Brennan, Cote, Lawrence, Pingree, Strimling} against who ever wins the Republican primary for the 1st CD, ensure that the electoral votes are already cast.

Where the graphic should be found, and what the names of the eight colonies in the original Franklin cartoon should be, is in Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Colorado and Iowa.

Of course, just as it is desirable to put the Bush-Cheney tax cuts, the profiteers and the war criminals in leg irons, it may be necessary to put some campaign properties, and this cycle's crop of the unbalanced and self-validating opineratti in leg irons too.

The day the Obama Campaign denounces something orange and sends cease-and-desist letters to a handfull of misogynistic Haka posturing Destructocrats is the day this cartoon will be something other than a vision of what might have been, like the vision of Al and Tipper asking us if we'd like them to kiss and make up the Republic.

h/t for the image from PolitickerME.

A wrong turn

Lori Ann Piestewa died in hospital from head wounds five years ago today, in Nasiriyah.

March 22, 2008

The Three Faces of Peeve

election-3candidates.gifBecause not paying attention is one of my core competencies, I've no idea what Senator Obama, representing the 13th district to the upper house of the Illinois state legislature, accomplished while a member of a state legislature prior to 2004, when he was elected to the upper house of the federal legislature. But I do know that he ran for a seat in the lower house of the federal legislature in 2000, so for at least the last eight years he has had the opportunity to think about issues that are germane to the federal legislature. So this quote in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, Dec. 23, 2007 surprised me some -- after eight years running for the federal legislature, when a core Indian economic and development issue is on the table, the federal legislator ego takes a powder, leaving the state legislator id's finger on the yea-or-nay button.

If it was just taking the ethanol pledge when-in-Iowa, or the nuclear pledge when-in-Labland, if he was in a non-gaming state pulling the wool over the willing eyes of the local, non-gaming rubes, whether Xtian moralists or no-special-rights Injun Fighters, that would be bad policy judgment excused by good political judgment, to be forgotten when no longer convenient. However, it was in Clark County Nevada, where even the lizards take the neon glow from the Strip for granted.

I can't think of a Tribal Executive, current, former, or prospective, whom we know, who is looking for the BIA and DOI billets of the Transition Team, or the long-term political appointments to the BIA and the DOI that will fall due in 2009, or the Article III judges, particularly to the 8th, 9th, and 10th districts, that will fall due before 2013, to be selected by a state legislator certain of the principal of state superiority over tribes within the state's territorial boundaries.

Which is not to say that there are no Indians, some in tribal government, who do not personally support Senator Obama over Senators Clinton or McCain, only that their rational may not be centered on transactional collective self-determination.

Turning to Senator Clinton, first there is her position on the legitimacy of the St. Regis Mohawk (Akwesasne) claim to operate gaming in the Catskills, but there is also the record of her partner -- in early November of 2000, Bill Clinton used the power of their administration to affirm tribal sovereignty through an executive order. The executive order directed federal agencies to work closely with tribal governments and give them "the maximum administrative discretion possible" in enforcing federal law and regulations. The order prohibited federal agencies from proposing legislation that would hurt tribal governments, and requires agencies to designate an official to handle relations with tribes.

Federal agencies were required to consult with tribes early in agency rule-making processes and provide tribal leaders with information regarding the financial impact of agency decisions.

Today, there is nothing more important in federal-tribal relations than fostering true government-to-government relations to empower American Indians and Alaska Natives to improve their own lives, the lives of their children and generations to come. We must continue to engage in a partner-ship, so that the First Americans can reach their full potential. So, in our Nation's relations with Indian tribes, our first principal must be to respect the right of American Indians and Alaska Natives to self-determination. We must respect Native Americans' rights to choose for themselves their own way of life on their own lands according to their time honored cultures and traditions.

Bill Clinton added: "We must also acknowledge that American Indians and Alaska Natives must have access to new technology and commerce to promote economic opportunity on their homelands."

While he didn't mention Indian Gaming, Bill and Hillary Clinton were aware that the most important reservation commercial enterprise in history is gaming, and it can't be a coincidence that his statement relating to access to new technology echoed the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act's emphasis on tribes' use of new technologies in the operation of bingo games, particularly since his executive order came just five weeks after the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that fast-play bingo games that utilize satellite and other technology are legal Class II games under the IGRA.

It may not be glamorous or play well in Peoria, for large values of Peoria, some of which are in Indian Country, it is something every Tribal Executive can take to the bank, and everyone of them has to take something to the bank, or find another line of work.

Turning to Senator McCain, his record is far more problematic, as MB has documented in the DOI & DOJ Corruption, the Abramoff & the Injuns, and the McCain 08 sections of Wampum. However, he has a record from 1983, when he was elected to the House and assigned to the Committee on Interior & Insular Affairs (now the Committee on Natural Resources), and eventually to the chairmanship of the Republican Task Force on Indian Affairs. In 1987 he became a member of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, where he helped preserve ICWA as we know it, a territory far from taxes and gaming, the staples of his Federal Indian legislative advocacy, and in 2002 was one of the founders of the Senate Native American Caucus.

Again, it may not be glamorous or play well in Peoria, for large values of Peoria, some of which are in Indian Country, but that's a lot of handshakes and overlapping histories.

Silver lining indeed...

Susie, as usual, is able to tease out the hidden benefits of the economic meltdown:

One silver lining in this obscene housing crisis is the effect it will have on credit ratings as a whole. Now that ratings for educated, privileged white folks are crashing and burning, you can be damned sure there will be legislation forbidding the use of credit ratings to screen job applicants.

Al Writes

Dear Friend,

Global warming is a problem of unprecedented magnitude and that's why we've launched the largest mobilization campaign ever. Actions by individuals like you will be the driving force behind this campaign and our ultimate victory. We're going to succeed, but I need your help today.

More than 850,000 people have already joined us, but if leaders in business and government are going to make stopping climate change a priority, we need you to urge your friends to get involved today: http://wecansolveit.org/invitealliance

We need to grow to 1,000,000 members by April so we can send a loud message that we want action now. That is why I need you to forward the email below to all of your friends and family right now and ask them to add their voice.

Thank you,

Al Gore

P.S. You can donate to our efforts here.


The Martin Agency is running We Can Solve It for the signature side. The donations and mailing list management functions are run by David Geller's What Counts.


In 2003 the Inuit Circumpolar Conference (ICC) initiated legal work, leading to the filing, in 2005, of a petition to the Inter American Commission on Human Rights, seeking relief from violations resulting from Global Warming, caused by acts and omissions of the United States.
While many in the South characterize climate change as an environmental and/or economic issue, to us it raises questions of culture and survival.

It seems odd to me that in the climate change community, the effect on agriculture, and therefore human misery, in Black Africa, is front-and-center, yet in the civil rights community, the quest for social solidarity that transcends race ends at the waters' edge, and contemporary Africans are no more necessary than contemporary Inuits, or particulate and gases (other than greenhouse) on urban populations.

The bar is set...

Cobell proposes a number. From Indianz:

Cobell plaintiffs seek $58B for Indian trust beneficiaries Friday, March 21, 2008 Filed Under: Cobell

In papers filed on Wednesday, the Cobell plaintiffs asked a federal judge to put $58 billion in the Indian trust.

Citing more than a hundred years of mismanagement, attorneys said hundreds of thousands of Indian beneficiaries are owed the money for misuse of their land and assets. The 80-page filing accused the federal government of enriching itself by failing to disburse trust payments to tribal members across the country.

...

Based on data provided by the Interior Department and the Osage Nation of Oklahoma, the plaintiffs added up the money they say should have been in the Individual Indian Money (IIM) from 1887 to 2007. The numbers show IIM beneficiaries and Osage "headright" owners are owed $58 billion for the 120-year period.

The figure is more than twice the amount that the Cobell plaintiffs and other Indian organizations said they would accept to resolve the case. In June 2005, the plaintiffs proposed a $27.5 billion settlement for the historical accounting of the IIM trust.

Key members of Congress responded with an $8 billion proposal, which the plaintiffs gave serious consideration. But the Bush administration waited until March 2007 to offer $3.5 billion to resolve the accounting, pay for future damages claims and terminate its liability for the trust.

Despite the diverging views, lead plaintiff Elouise Cobell, a member of the Blackfeet Nation of Montana, said $58 billion was low. Prior calculations by her lawyers put the accounting as high as $176 billion, but that figure included interest, which the plaintiffs are not seeking as part of the litigation.

In addition, Indianz has John McCain's Native American policy position paper - 817 words, two days after his Senate colleague expended two on the subject in a seven-page speech on race. McCain is also running ads on Indianz, seeking to make inroads into a demographic which has traditionally gone overwhelmingly Democratic for decades.

Pull out the saran wrap...

Lambert does the dirty work of a Florida/Michigan disenfranchisement wrap up and asks the critical question, "how can we make the voters of FL and MI whole?"

The road to the White House leads through?

Chris Bowers, an Obama supporter, understands that The Math is not the only asphalt which paves said road:

While I understand the Obama campaign's suspicions surrounding a Clinton-funded revote in Michigan, I still place more of the blame for this mess at their feet. They seem perfectly content to allow this to head to a credentials fight and a floor fight, probably because they know they would win such fights. Also, while the Clinton campaign has presented a detailed proposal for how they think Michigan should be seated via a re-vote, I have not seen any coherent proposal on how to seat the Michigan delegation from the Obama campaign. Further, this would not even be a problem if Obama had not removed his name from the Michigan ballot. Had Obama stayed on the Michigan ballot, he would be ahead by about 70 delegates even with Michigan included, and need less than 50% of the remaining delegates in order to reach 2,208.

The Obama campaign apparently considers a Michigan re-vote somehow more damaging to their chances to win the presidency than a credentials fight and a floor fight over the Michigan delegations. That is their calculation to make, but I completely disagree. If John McCain ends up as the next President of the United States, his road to victory will have been significantly paved by the inability of the Clinton campaign, Obama campaign, and Michigan Democratic Party to agree on how to seat the Michigan delegation before the end of June.

How many Michigan voters, along with those dissed in Florida, do Democrats lose along the way? How many others, like me, do the Dems lose along the way? (Albeit, like me, many herald from unimportant states.)

March 21, 2008

0

That's the projected growth of the US economy in the second trimester, according to the OEDC.

Just a reminder, the growth of defense spending since the last Clinton/Gore budget is 74%, using the 2009 budget numbers.

March 20, 2008

This morning's laughter

Melissa asks What is your worst fear, if any, about the current economic situation? (via Susie)

This morning's mail brought two tin cup shakes, one from the DSCC, penned by the only candidate I'd vote for in the general (I'm still registered in Maine's 1st CD, and it would take an act of Dog to turn that electoral vote a lighter hue of indigo), the other penned by the only other candidate I contributed to in Iowa (before he endorsed one of the Hero Twins).

According to SurveyUSA, 67% of us phlegmatic Yankees (I'm working on my transplanted values, like some other guy) worry there may be a run on the banks.

So where in the two tin cups was there anything outside the red meat envelop of swiftboaters and slash-and-burn politics and yatta yatta by those bad GOP meanies, the smallest awareness of the target as something other than a victim of talk radio and/or Wal-Mart blogger road rage? Something on the order of "hey, I know you're worried about a run on the banks, but I'm asking for money anyway, 'cause ..."

No where. In the broadest targeted outreach to the base of the party of the poor. That's good for a laugh.

About those calm, pragmatic New England Yankees...

Even they're [wicked] worried about the state of the US economy:

In New England, the latest SurveyUSA poll, conducted exclusively for WBZ-TV Boston, paints this picture of the economy:

* 56% say the U.S. Economy is "weak."
* 74% say the USA is already in a Recession.
* 35% say someone in the immediate family is out of work.
* 84% worry about being able to pay the bills.
* 58% worry about losing their job.
* 46% worry about losing their home.
* 83% worry about having enough money for retirement.
* 67% worry there may be a run on the banks.
* 86% worry the USA may be headed into an economic Depression.

67% believe their could be a run on banks? Perhaps it's time to invest in stocks of shovels and coffee cans?

Well, that worked out well now...

Didn't it? From USNews:

GOP Sees Good Signs In Florida For McCain

Republican Party officials, buoyed by the division in Democratic ranks over holding a do-over primary in Florida and new Sunshine State polls showing a surge of support for Sen. John McCain, are expressing new hope of winning the critical electoral-vote state in the fall, US News Political Bulletin hears. "Republicans are excited about McCain's prospects in Florida," said a GOP strategist on background. Republicans officials said that the Democratic fight and possibility that their delegates won't be seated at the convention in Denver is pushing voters their way. They also point to President Bush's $1.5 million take at two Republican National Committee fundraisers this week as evidence the state Republican Party is still strong. And GOP strategists today have been circulating two new polls of Florida voters showing a McCain victory over both Sens. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

March 19, 2008

Attention Maine Primary Campaigns (Updates)

I'm looking for answers from the 1st CD candidates -- that's Chellie Pingree on the distaff side of the aisle, and on the non-distaff side of the aisle, Michael Brennan, Adam Cote, Mark Lawrence, and Ethan Strimling.

I'm also looking for answers from Tom Allen, who's running statewide.

1. For those who read Wampum, which is about as likely as Ken's opening a lobster pound in Paris, I've written a bit on the last BRAC round. The short of that is three-parts. First, Olympia, Susan, Tom, Michael and the usual collection of local luminaries weren't effective in saving the Brunswick NAS, and more credit for saving the Portsmouth Yard goes to the oddly patriotic Duncan Hunter of San Diego, who decided that Don Rumsfeld's plan to scuttle the North Atlantic submarine fleet didn't meet his standards for rational thought, than to the amateur hour production. Second, the 8th Air Force (B-52s and B-2s), the 12th Air Force (B-1Bs), the 20th Air Force (500 Minuteman II and 50 Peacekeeper missiles), and Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay Georgia (SSBNs) were not on the reduction list, and should have been. Third, the BRAC process cannot, unless Congress buys this particular pony, legally substitute the judgment of the worst SecDef in modern history, or better ones, for the Congressional authority, and responsibility, to select the weapons, and therefore the conflicts, the United States may prudently enter.

Question: During your second term in office the 2010 BRAC process will take place. At this point in your national defense policy issues basket, do you have any candidates for what can be cut, or should be preserved or increased? This is a general principals question, to see if you have a theory of Congressional authority, and/or a theory of national interests and military spending, or are a "let the experts decide" kind of gal or guy.

2. Its been five years since George W. Bush issued the movement order that initiated the invasion of Iraq. Periodically candidates and others write think pieces, from Wesley Clark's hire-the-Saudis-to-get-OBL, to Carl Levin's out-without-a-date-to-motivate, to ... the electoral political and defense policy woods are full of such magic phoenix birds.

Question: In the next months of your campaign are you going out to the voters with the message that events in Iraq can't be controlled by the United States, in particular that Nuri al-Maliki and his band of intransigents may end up on the ends of ropes if they don't get their act together while the US attempts to exit Iraq, and possibly even if they do, or that events in Iraq can be controlled by the United States, and that the US can, if it doesn't blunder further, create "stability and peace" that keeps the "government" created by Paul Bremer in 2003 and its successors-in-interest in power and not back in exile in Tehran? This is a general principals question, to see if you have a theory of the Occupation, and/or Exit, or are a "let the experts decide" kind of gal or guy.

3. Americans are not very concerned with the plight of the 4.2 million Iraqis displaced by the war, or the number of Iraqis killed by the war, whether one takes the lower figure, on the order of the population of the 1st CD, or the higher figure, on the order of the entire population of Maine. The few thousand US KIA and the tens of thousands of US WIA narratives get much more media attention than "civilian collateral damage" or the "reconstruction interrupted" narratives.

Question: Will you frame your position on the Occupation primarily in terms of cost and linkage to the narrative of domestic economic necessity, that is, immediate voter self-interest, or will you frame your position in other terms such as international law, reparations for aggression, and humanitarian assistance, that is, to the expectation that voters can act against their immediate self-interest and pay to rebuild Iraq during a sharp domestic economic downturn? This too is a general principals question.

I've no expectations about responses, having filled out plenty of push paperwork from interest groups targeting legislative candidates, it takes time and Wampum isn't a one of the "liberal" Wal-Marts of the blogosphere (y!sitp!) or anyone's ATM, but there may be responses, and I'll read any generously.


Update: I've received a response from the Brennan campaign to each of the three questions, and asked for clarification on one part. The Lawrence campaign hopes to respond in the near future too.

So, I'm not impressed...

I finally got around to reading all of The Speech. I was told, for the fifty-millionth time, that race in America is black and white. Yeah, whatever.

Periphery and Center

Monday a week ago one of my co-workers, an attorney from Barcalona, and I talked about our respective horseraces. My friend is nominally "for" José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero and the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE), however, he didn't vote for Zapatero. Instead, on March 9th, he voted for whatever insipid idiot the PSOE put on his ballot.

My friend transfered his frustration with having a meaningless ballot to the Americas, to Florida in particular. He expressed to me his genuine outrage that the DNC had disenfranchised the voters, and the not quite so organic theme (available in the trans-Atlantic print media) that the PLEOs shouldn't have a determining effect on the selection of the party's nominee.

I explained that Florida voters are always ignored because of how, in "normal cycles", the early contests determine the outcome long before the Florida primary, and ... there is a lot to explain, and my co-workers don't let me off the hook, I mean after all, they've got a hack married to a hack trapped over pizza and beer to cross examine ... basically took the position that I've written about here, that the general comes down to Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania and possibly Michigan, and that disenfranchisement in Florida would make Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan mandatory if the surviving Hero Twin is to beat Saint John.

But I wasn't listening as closely as I should have. So what if a Catalan lawyer from Barcelona wasn't happy that the one time his vote might have counted in the Spring primaries, it wasn't? The Fall general is where his vote is counted, unless he's in Miami-Dade or ... and this time we'll have better ballot protection than we had in '00 ...

So I heard, but didn't attend, when my friend said that if a political party from the distant capital treated his vote, and the votes of all of his city, all of Catalonia, with such indifference, he wouldn't vote for them, he would not permit the distant owners of expectations and outcomes to continue to treat a vote in a democracy like a vote in a dictatorship.

Now that I'm back, the prospect of an enduring message, from the people who make up the FDP, to the people who make up the DNC, seems vastly more likely than not. At this point, it seems prudent to me for the candidate who cared to express her condolences to the colony of Florida, and put every dime into Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and look hard at Wisconsin, Minnesota and Colorado, just in case Michigan is also lost-in-advance.

I understand there's an idiot at an orange site that thinks this is a really good thing.

Journamlism in Review

Not to distract from pretending to solve-for-iraq or pretending to solve-for-race or ... but Hoder's republished a historical gem -- the New York Times published the linked editorial on August 15, 1953. On August 19, 1953 ("28 Mordad 1332"), Kermit Roosevelt's Operation Ajax was executed by General Fazlollah Zahedi and Colonel Nassiri. The coup replaced an elected democracy with the dictatorship.

Here's the link to a star in the crown of the Grey Lady -- Mossadegh plays with fire. Enjoy the best of American critical thinking!

March 18, 2008

Just a blip...

Sorry posting has been light to non-existent today (for me - Eric's his prolific self.) After 11 days of single-parenting very sick kids (and self), the car needed a new battery, Eric left his iBook cable in Geneva, the laundry was beyond overdue (as is, nothing to wear - seriously), and real food needed to be hunted down and gathered. All that's left for tomorrow is to dump the trailer tanks - and then I'm free and clear to devote my life to the DNC's voter disenfranchisement campaign.

Except I need to start planning our move to Geneva for a year.

Lack of Responsibility (continued)

Mark Lynch has a post up on the plan Darcy Burner commissioned Paul Eaton, Larry Korb, John Johns, and Larry Seaquist to draft, which Chellie Pingree and eight other candidates are "presenting" withdrawl, a theme of the text mentioned in strike through [Thanks to commenter Nell for a correction]. Mark's title is Thinking Through Withdrawal, and Mark also is not greatly impressed by the plan claims offered for responsible withdrawl [Thanks Nell].

I don't know if its worth looking at the races Burner and the eight others are in, or looking up what PACs the ten share that their primary competitors don't. I may, as there is something less to this than what we tried with Cynthia Pool's November Victory list in 2006 to coordinate message, generally by poor and generally progressive candidates taking on comfortable incumbents of either party.

Juan Cole and Josh Landis haven't weighed in yet.

It really is walking in the air to opine upon the Iraq War and not draw some inference about the political claims of the Israeli state and its military dependency upon the United States.

Hmmm...

I appreciate that Senator Obama thinks that slavery was "our" (meaning the US, I think) "original sin".

Frankly, I would have thought it was genocide. So did Grace, our 11 year old.

An event I missed, dishes having a superior claim on my mind

dessindujour.jpgI know that a speech was given today, in friendly Philly, not someplace awkward like any second-tier city in Pennsyltucky, or divided Pittsburgh for that matter, and that it is supposed to offset a three-day slide in the Harris tracking poll, and its supposed to be wicked important in spite of being made by a gifted orator, for a "crisis" that was as calendar-certain as filing taxes on April 15th, and to an audience that may have included a disproportionate number of AIPAC donors.

Not to mention giving a free pass to some friends with investments that touch on the modern history of the the Susquehanna River, where nothing happened at 4am, March 28th, 1979.

The Nine Billion Names of God

"Look," whispered Chuck, and George lifted his eyes to heaven. (There is always a last time for everything.)

Overhead, without any fuss, the stars were going out.

I enjoyed Clarke as a teen. If you'd like to reread this one, here's the link.

Lack of Responsibility

Jonah kept Central European time and so we awoke at a decent hour, 2:30am PDT, but really much later in the day in Geneva. We snuggled for a bit and turned on the light to "read book" -- my French is a lot better after ten days of use -- and shortly before the sky lightened, went out to look at the stars and spend time skipping around in the camp bathroom.

At some point I looked at the blog-o-gon (hexagon for Yankee writers rather than French witches) and saw (via Avedon, who I'm now gratefully many hours behind, rather than one hour ahead), that Senator Clinton spoke yesterday on the need for "a responsible plan" [the full thing is a 36pp .pdf located here]. There was another reference to the plan in email from Chellie Pingree's campaign. Jonah was kind enough to fall back asleep after dawn, giving me time to read the whole thing over coffee before doing some accumulated dishes and cleaning up after four wicked sick people (Jonah being, as usual, unclaimed by any passing plague).

So what is wrong with "a responsible plan"? Fundamentally, that it is "responsible", that is, it continues to attempt to contain or control events in Iraq, and contains more references to what has gone wrong in the Republic that had no need to stop and reflect on September 12th, 2001, but went off to war untroubled by doubt about either the nature of the conflict it co-created, or the nature of the administration created by an executive who could barely speak coherently with assistance, and appointed by the faction of the Court formed by William Rehnquist, Anthony Scalia, Clarance Thomas, Sandra Day O'Conner and Anthony Kennedy, than it has to the actual conflict between the United States and Iraq.

The "responsibility" of the "responsible plan" is a domestic political responsibility, one that has no need to state facts as I understand them. From General William Odom, one of the earliest advocates of an immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, his Six brutal truths about Iraq with my interlinear comments:


Truth No. 2: There was no way to have "done it right" in Iraq so that U.S. war aims could have been achieved.

Virtually every new book published on the war, especially Cobra II, Fiasco, and State of Denial, reinforce the myth -- the illusion -- that we could have won the war; we just did not plan properly and fight the war the right way. The Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and most other major newspapers have consistently filled their opinion pages with arguments and testimonials to support that myth. (Professor Eliot Cohen of Johns Hopkins University offers the most recent conspicuous reinforcement of this myth in the Wall Street Journal, December 7, 2006.)

The fragmentation of the country, civil war, and the rise of outside influence from Iran, Syria, and other countries -- all of these things might have been postponed for a time by different war plans and occupation polices. But failure would have eventually raised its ugly head. Possibly, some of the variables would be a bit different. For example, if the Iraqi military had not been dissolved and if most of the Baathist Party cadres not been disenfranchised, the Sunni factions, instead of the Shiites, probably would have owned the ministry of interior, the police, and several unofficial militias. The Shiites, in that event, would have been the insurgents, abundantly supplied by Iran, indiscriminately killing Sunni civilians, fighting the U.S. military forces, blowing up the power grid, and so on.

A different U.S. occupation plan might have changed the course Iraq has taken to civil war and fragmentation, but it could have not prevented that outcome.

EBW: Odam should have addressed the rationality of U.S. war aims, not the outcome of a particularly poor set of choices. The US was defeated in its initial political goals (an Iraqi government as independent as that of Alaska) by the Iraqi investment in education from Abdul Karim Qassim to Saddam Hussein, which obsoleted operational dependence. The strategic capability that pre-determined the outcome of the conflict was stated quite plainly in another guest contribution to Juan Cole's blog. William Polk's What is to Be Done in Iraq?

When I first lived in Baghdad in 1951, the whole country had only 5 mechanical engineers.

Today, the situation is entirely different. Iraq has one of the highest rates of literacy in the Middle East and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis are highly trained professionals. In my example, it now has thousands of mechanical engineers. In sum, the Iraqis are not an "underdeveloped" people. It should be evident that they cannot be fooled with a façade in place of a government.

The US was defeated in its initial military goals (universal monopoly on violence) when it abandoned 400,000 organized, and defeat-accepting Iraqi regular Army career officers and soldiers to unemployment in a non-state with non-law, and carried out the ground offensive of Days 11 through Day 18 of the 18 Day War. Failure to accept terms has caused the Iraqi regular Army career officers and soldiers, and armed civilians to acquire sufficient operational advantage to drive US forces into cantonments and divert US forces from independent force projection to force protection and dependent force projection. See Odam's Sixth Truth At present, U. S. military forces in Iraq merely facilitate arrests and executions by Shiite officials in the police and some army units

Having created the conditions of persistent universal political non-dependence and persistent universal operational capability pervasive in the former Iraq, universal command and control objectives are not possible, and the unsettled issues from the 1980-1988 war, in which the United States assisted Iraq, are not possible to not contest.

Truth No. 3: The theory that "we broke it and therefore we own it," with all the moral baggage it implies, is simply untrue because it is not within U.S. power to "fix it."

The president's cheerleaders in the run-up to the war now use this theory to rationalize our continued presence in Iraq, and in that way avoid admitting that they share the guilt for the crime of breaking Iraq in the first place.

No matter how "responsible", how nuanced, how careful any political director may attempt to steer his or her candidate, control over the freedom of action of the message, the candidate and the campaign has been given away. The media, targeted as corrupt in the "responsible plan", will defend itself, its past as a party to the War, and savage the message as "cut and run".

I suggest the better course is to start with "cut and run", and make the case that at least one primary campaign isn't going to attempt to slide into an office on the Hill or into 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue on a diet of frosted flakes. That the US has been defeated politically and militarily, that SSBNs and main battle tanks simply are as useless as dreadnoughts in this particular theater of operations, meaning that force posture review is much more prudent than continuing to jump into "easily won wars" armed only with ineffective weapons, and the political goal of influence or control is possible if the tool chosen is education and development, rather than the destruction of education and development.

That's the hard part. We lost. We got beat. We're done. Everything from this point on is on par with the waste of lives and countryside by the CSA after Gettysburg. Jeff Davis ordered Robert E. Lee to kill more men to stave off the day when Davis had to admit that supporting the hotheads in Charleston who fired on Fort Sumter was a strategic error that doomed the possibility of a favorable outcome of the compromises from 1820 onward, that he was outthunk by John Brown. Robert E. Lee accepted the order to match waste for waste, from the Wilderness to Richmond, for a total of 18% of all white males aged 13 to 43, nearly half after the 20th Maine shot down windrows of massed men at close range attempting the slopes of Little Round Top.

Every member of the 111th Congress will vote on a Defense Appropriations Bill. Its one of thirteen regular appropriations bills the Congress considers each year. The number will be on the order of a half a trillion dollars, or a total of a trillion dollars each Constitutionally mandated two year cycle. If we "cut and run", the last Defense Appropriations Bill fatally compromised by bipartisan cooperation with the pro-war party, with the "responsible" party, will be the two voted by the 110th Congress, the winners of the miracle of the 2006 election, who then did nothing with a majority, for fear of being something other than "responsible".

The difference between spending time in a European airport and spending time in an American airport is that in the latter CNN is blaring away, in every bar, from every waiting room, from everywhere an outside world could possibly be visible. There's no radio, and no free wireless, so other than the stale magazines and the papers, which mostly feature the same content, it's Wolf Blitzer and Friends. Yet still, the public support for the "responsible" narrative is less than GOP registration in Rhode Island, and the public is now hearing even the "responsible" narrative include "recession" and "depression" and "Great Depression".

I think the Maine primary election can be won, on the customary and familiar battleground of the Democratic primary demographic in Maine, by Maine Dems who are capable of running to govern the governable, beating Maine Dems who are running to win, but leaving the "responsible" beltway, and Iraq, both ungovernable.

I also think the Democratic primary contest can be won, on the familiar battleground Bobby Kennedy came to California to contest in 1968, the primary delegate and PLEO accumulation contest and the Convention floor, by national Dems running to govern, not just win and throw away yet another full measure of Jeff Davis' -- our George W. Bush's -- extravagant futility.

To conclude otherwise is to conclude that in Maine, the majority of the primary demographic in the 1st CD is content with Wolf Blitzer's product, and I know that's simply not true.

Update: MB, who's been FD for a campaign executing in the ME-01, and who's familiarity with the 116th district equals mine (number of doors done), concludes that the majority of the primary demographic in the 1st CD is content with Wolf Blitzer's product, or rather, the NYTimes' product, and that the national meme of "responsibility" is a smart one to pick up.

Two hacks, two opinions.

Ice is calming, its absence is inevitable

Bear Sterns broke in Switzerland yesterday, we talked about how UBS got into the sub-prime market and how risk is detected -- the mortgages were being paid, at least prior to reset, and that was the primary mechanism for risk detection. From the risk audit point of view, what we're observing is successful hacking the financial risk audit system, and therefore what is being bailed out by public capital institutions is not "homeowners" or "lenders" but a risk audit system, that is, the lack of staying current in the arms race, by major private capital institutions. If that is too abstract, imagine Haliburton got the contract to defend the Pentagon, and built an Israeli Apartheid wall, providing perfect defense, on all four sides.

Only there are five sides and the creative post-KGB or the creative-PLA managed to execute their plan of attack on the fifth side of Haiburton's perfect four-sided defensive perimeter. Into Haliburton's highly profitable shoes steps ... men and women making $218/mo (Uniformed Services Pay Act of 1967), adjusted for inflation.

There was extensive sea ice off the coast of Labrador, a reassuring sight. I've returned to a place where not swooning over a charlatan is a confession of racism, and the alternative is an empty embrace.

I've no idea what it will cost to simply provide reasonable care for the 4.6m Iraqi refugees, let alone reconstruct some of Iraq, but it won't be appropriated while war continues to consume a trillion dollars every biannual defense appropriation cycle, and no objectively anticipated future defense appropriation cycle offers a domestically acceptable exit point, at which a change from war to peace is possible.

March 17, 2008

Florida throws in towel on revote

Sad day for Democrats, a sad day for democracy:

Florida Democrats Concede Defeat on Mail-In Vote
By Kate Phillips

The possibility of a mail-in vote for Florida’s Democrats has officially been killed.

Karen Thurman, head of the Sunshine State’s Democratic party, has issued a letter acknowledging defeat for the idea, much as she knew it was a long-shot possibility last week when she first sent around a draft proposal outlining the ways it could have been accomplished.

The state’s Congressional Democratic delegation opposed it; the Republicans who control the state Legislature opposed it. Opponents cited the inability to verify signatures as one hurdle; the cost estimated at more than $10 million also was a significant obstacle.

The Florida delegation now needs to be seated as is, there's no other possibility. This will test the mettle of Obama - is he willing to allow his delegate lead to be dented slightly, in order to enfranchise Florida voters, or is he the one who "will do anything to win"?

Dear Mr. Could-Have-Been-Pres....

Melissa writes a letter (via Avedon):

Dear Al Gore:

This is all your fault.

The sniping, the griping, the blaming, the shaming, the bickering, the snickering, the derision, the division, the fighting, the biting, the sneering, the jeering, the whining, the maligning, the name-calling, the caterwauling, the excuse-making, the deal-breaking, the constant complaining, the GOP framing, the misrepresentations and recriminations, the shucking and jiving and look at her crying, the she's periodically feeling down and he's lucky to be a black man-about-town, and every other imbecilic expression of stark illiberalism and intolerance which has turned this Democratic primary season into a frighteningly juvenile and ferociously nasty exercise in national ignorance, a complete clusterfucktastrophe of mythic proportions, with the compelling draw of a train wreck and nearly as much carnage -- every last bit of it is all your fault.

If you had just run like I asked you, none of this would have happened.

Read it all. I think I'll send one of my own.

Are some rules meant to be broken?

Avedon, pointing to a comment made on the Sideshow by our hero Bryan, of Why Now, asks for further discussion of DNC rule 11A. To do this, let's look at the Delegate Selection Rules of the DNC :

No meetings, caucuses, conventions or primaries which constitute the first determining stage in the presidential nomination process (the date of the primary in primary states, and the date of the first tier caucus in caucus states) may be held prior to the first Tuesday in February or after the second Tuesday in June in the calendar year of the national convention. Provided, however, that the Iowa precinct caucuses may be held no earlier than 22 days before the first Tuesday in February; that the Nevada first-tier caucuses may be held no earlier than 17 days before the first Tuesday in February; that the New Hampshire primary may be held no earlier than 14 days before the first Tuesday in February; and that the South Carolina primary may be held no earlier than 7 days before the first Tuesday in February. In no instance may a state which scheduled delegate selection procedures on or between the first Tuesday in February and the second Tuesday in June 1984 move out of compliance with the provisions of this rule.

The first Tuesday in February was the 5th, so that 22 days prior would be January 14th. Thus, the Nevada caucuses could be held no earlier than the 19th, the New Hampshire primary could be held no earlier than January 22nd, and so on. Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina all moved their caucuses in violation of DNC rules, and yet suffered no penalty, not even the standard 1/2 reduction in delegates. So why were Michigan and Florida afforded such draconian treatment?

Crash?

Well, this makes me feel safe and secure. From Bloomberg, which now has a permanent open tab on my browser:

Stock Market Veterans Granville, Stovall Predict More Losses
By Elizabeth Stanton and Jeff Kearns

March 17 (Bloomberg) -- Joseph Granville and Robert Stovall, octogenarians who've seen every financial market downturn since the 1950s, say the current one may be the worst and is far from over.

Granville, born in 1923, remembers his banker father's bad moods following the stock-market crash of 1929. The younger Granville began his career at defunct brokerage E.F. Hutton in 1957, quit in 1963 to begin publishing a weekly newsletter and wrote nine books on investing.

``We're in a crash,'' Granville, 84, said in a telephone interview from Kansas City, Missouri, where he lives and works. ``This is the worst I've seen, and I've studied every bit of history all my life.''

U.S. stocks plunged to the lowest since August 2006 today after JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s purchase of Bear Stearns Cos. for less than a 10th of its market value sent financial shares falling around the world. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index neared a so-called bear market drop of 20 percent from its Oct. 9 record.

March 16, 2008

Tired of the Primary wars?

Distract yourself with real election reform: The National Popular Vote Campaign.

Problems brewing in Texas...

I've been hearing anecdotes of the massive problems regarding verifying the Texas caucus results from two weeks ago, but never saw anything put the whole thing together. Today, a diary at MyDD did just that. The gist of the matter is that less than half of Texas precincts have produced their caucus sign-in sheets, and for those that did, there appear to be some significant problems.

In Texas, Democratic Party caucuses are done with sign-in sheets as a verifiable paper trail for deciding the proportion of delegates to be awarded to each candidate for President. That is, each attendee signs in and identifies who they are representing in writing. There is no provision for 'hand counts' or other methods of counting votes for delegates. All caucus attendees are required to prove that they voted in the primary in order to be included in the final count. If for any reason an attendee does not have their voter registration card with them, the voting rolls from the early vote and the on-the-day vote are available to precinct workers to refer to prior to allowing an attendee to sign in as an eligible attendee.

For the last 2 weeks, there have been a multitude of reports of misbehavior, sloppy math (when determining final caucus totals), people who attended -- and voted -- in the caucuses who were not even registered to vote (some of these were even selected as delegates) and more and more and more.

The Texas Democratic Party -- at a minimum -- is supposed to 1) verify that the caucus attendees were registered voters, 2) determine that the math was done correctly and 3) provide lists of (at least their own) delegates to each campaign. The TDP has been so overwhelmed, both with the numbers of attendees to check and the size and frequency of the problems, that they say they cannot accomplish these tasks prior to the scheduled County/State Senatorial Conventions on March 29.

The Clinton campaign has written to the Texas Democratic Party asking the state/county conventions be delayed until the votes are verified; since such a mess could equally benefit Obama's final tallies, I suspect (would hope) his campaign will join in the call. Like Florida and Michigan, this is an issue which goes to the core of being Democrats -- counting every vote.

March 15, 2008

Human Rights Swatch

dessindujour.jpgA few people with flags and a few more with leaflets were at one square. At another, a man with a bike was doing double duty as flag bearer and leafletter. I picked up one of each and went on, my friend was telling me about one of the Afghans who own the street kiosks, one who was in the Afghan War, on the Soviet side -- for the socialist government cut to pieces by Ronald Reagan's "heroic Afghan Resistance".

That makes food for thought. Are opium poppy warlords and Taliban armed moralists better or worse than imperfect social democrats? Are lamas the best government and should another batch of imperfect social democrats just watch as lamas manage to keep most of the 20th (and some prior) centuries out of Tibet? Are education and electricity human rights?

In the evening I caught a film by one of the Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria survivors. It was unusual in the histories of "revolutionary lefts" in that it was centered on the experiences, past, and the present recollection and social lives of women MIRists. The history of the auto-critique of MIR, the fundamental personal questions, did they die in vain, was it worth it, didn't attempt the question of whether armed struggle made the Pinochet dictatorship, hunting down and killing or capturing and systematically torturing "extremists" (the word "terrorist" not yet in vogue to "provoke" state violence), more, or less legitimate.

The film was shown as the finale of the 6th Festival du Film et Forum International sur les Droits Humains, and so preceded with snips from films shown earlier in the week. One featured Mumia Abu-Jamal (Wesley Cook), and mention was made during the awards of the statistics on executions in the US, as well as the killings this week in Tibet, and the confinement of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and periodic use of force by the military junta known as State Peace and Development Council (SPDC) on electoral political parties and protests in Burma. As my friend pointed out, the soldiers used by the Chiliean dictatorship were from the same "tranche popularie" (marginally employed poor) as the people the MIR were organizing, but not protected by the same human rights (no death penalty) the audience would like to extend to Mumia Abu-Jamal et al.

So that troubled my companion.

I was troubled by what wasn't present. There was a film on Gitmo, but not on the 1m plus Iraqi killed, or the 4.2m Iraqis displaced or in exile abroad, mostly in Syria, Jordan, and Iran. The magnitude of the state brutality given a pass, when compared to the absurdly smaller numbers selected, and the utterly predictable political opportunism (is anyone surprised that the Beijing Olympics in the Summer of 2008 and some campaigns for boycott may not be accidentally coincident?) were unfortunate, given Geneva's position in the UN's organization, and before that, the League of Nations, and all the attendant NGOs, foundations and so on.

It was oddly MSM, even as a product of the sophisticated romantic international Droits Humains protagonists, and very minor edits other than voice over would have been needed to make the show palatable to the war-liberates-women-in-veil-o-stan ribbon base, business was not involved, and Davos is not really very far away at all.

The Indians who went to war with the Europeans left plenty of examples of where armed struggle may lead, and few wrote reflective memoirs.

Forget 10,000 years B.C....

How about 20,000 years B.P.?

Genes link 95 percent of American Indians
Published: March 15, 2008 at 1:40 AM

SALT LAKE CITY, March 15 (UPI) -- Genetic researchers said 95 percent of American Indians are descended from six ancestral mothers who crossed Asia to the Americas 20,000 years ago.

It is the first time all known American Indian mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences and lineages have been compiled, corrected and organized into a single tree with branches dated, the Utah-based Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation and Italy's University of Pavia said in a release.

The study released identifies the six surviving Native American mtDNA lineages that are dated to approximately 20,000 years ago, designated as A2, B2, C1b, C1c, C1d and D1. The study also confirms the presence of five geographically limited genetic groups: X2a, D2, D3, C4c and D4h3.

The findings are published online by the Public Library of Science.

Lead author Dr. Alessandro Achilli of the University of Pavia, said the five more rare genetic groups will help researchers isolate branches within the pan-American groups. "For example, we learned one branch is only found among Aleuts and Eskimos," he said. "The presence of these additional subgroups suggests different migratory events from Asia or the Bering Straits.

So, what about the other 5%? Just curious.

March 14, 2008

"A good first step"...

From the AP a few minutes ago:

Michigan Dems Agree on June 3 Do-Over

By KEN THOMAS -- 33 minutes ago

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Michigan Democrats agreed Friday to push a do-over primary in early June to give them a say in the close presidential race between Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama.

Amid talks with the two campaigns, the four Michigan Democrats said in a statement they were "focusing on the possibility of a state-run primary in early June which would not use any state funding." Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, one of the Democratic participants, said a likely date is June 3.

"This option would require the passage of legislation by the state legislature, and we look forward to working with the members of the legislature in the coming days to see if this option can be made a reality," the Democrats said.

Other Michigan Democrats working on the plan were Democratic National Committee member Debbie Dingell, Sen. Carl Levin and United Auto Workers President Ron Gettelfinger.

Mark Brewer, chairman of the Michigan Democratic Party, said the potential privately funded primary was "a good first step" toward seating the state's delegation at the Democratic National Convention.

Wiretapping is (il)legal because ...

aztec-peyote.gif

Nahua demons teach us so.

I'm pleasantly surprised.

Down-ticket dreams of the DCCC

The Dtrip sent out the current targeted races list, and anyone with more time than I have can pull up the numbers for the following:

Florida GOP Incumbents and open seats:


  • FL-08 Ric Keller
  • FL-09 Gus Bilirakis
  • FL-13 Vern Buchanan
  • FL-15 open (As a POA I appreciated Dr. Weldon's position on Autism more than I'd appreciate any ignorant member from either party)
  • FL-18 Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
  • FL-21 Lincoln Diaz-Balart
  • FL-24 Tom Feeney
  • FL-25 Mario Diaz-Balart

Florida Democratic incumbents:


  • FL-16 Tim Mahoney won Mark Foley's seat. The district is (charitably) votes only 43.6% Democratic
  • FL-22 Ron Klein

Michigan GOP Incumbents and open seats:


  • MI-06 Peter Roskam, who got a 5% (2xMoE) margin in the last cycle

Michigan Democratic incumbents:

  • Melissa Bean, looking for her 2nd re-elect in Phil Crane's lifetime-ultra-R seat

I wonder how the CM's running the campaigns in these districts are calculating the effect of { disenfranchisement | vote theft | revote } on their fund raising and over all projections. But I'm in Geneva, so how could I know if the RNC has managed to save 8 seats and take 2 more in Florida?

A strong voice for Michigan voters...

Marcy Wheeler (Emptywheel) is one of my favorite bloggers on the planet, and Michigan Dems are lucky for such a strong and intelligent voice, since she's one of them! Click here for her view (strong language) on the 50/50 split being floated by Obama surrogates.

50/50 a non starter...

Yes, Lambert of Corrente and Jeralyn of TalkLeft are Clinton partisans, but that does not lessen the point they make that splitting the Michigan, and especially Florida, votes is election theft. From Corrente:

The audacity of election theft Submitted by lambert on Fri, 2008-03-14 09:54.

[UPDATE Via TalkLeft, what do they know that we don’' (yet)?]

50/50 takes votes from one candidate and gives them to another, as if the Party or the candidates owned the votes.

But voters own their votes, not the Party or the candidates.

So the 50/50 plan is stealing, plain and simple.

What Jeralyn said:

On January 15, 2008, 594,398 Democrats went to their polling places and voted in their state's primary. The official Michigan election results are here.

328,309 Democrats in Michigan voted for Hillary Clinton. She won all but two counties, Washtenaw and Emmet. 238,168 voted uncommitted. 21,715 voted for Dennis Kucinich. 3,845 voted for Chris Dodd. 2,361 voted for Mike Gravel.

Hillary got 55% of the vote. The uncommitted, who either were truly uncommitted or for Obama, Edwards or Biden, all three of whom voluntarily withdrew their names from the ballot, got 40%. Kucinich, Dodd and Gravel won 5% of the vote.

Barack Obama now proposes he get 50% of the state's delegates. That would be vote-stealing. It would be disenfranchising 5% of Hillary's voters. It would be assuming that every uncommitted voter and every voter for Kucinich, Dodd and Gravel now want their vote to go to Obama.

That's called stealing an election.


New Email from DNC

According to TalkLeft, the DNC wants you to use this email address to send mail regarding the Florida/Michigan delegate issues.

Wannabes...

Susie sent me the link on Monday (when I was only half-dead from flu) and I forgot to blog it until seeing it again over at my favorite Crank's place. David Treuer in Slate on Why do writers pretend to be Indian?

It's official...

We're in a recession, and probably a bad one. Not that most Americans didn't know this already.

Damage already done...

One of the arguments made against seating the delegation in places like the bowels of the Orange Site is that turnout for the Florida primary, while a record at 1.75 million, was still significantly lower relative to other states, and so it "wouldn't be fair" to seat them. I was having a difficult time addressing this issue myself, until I read this amazing comment thread on the subject at Why Now? Here's an excellent comment from hipparchia:

There was a primary and it was against the rules which were previously agreed to, but through no fault of the Florida Democratic party, therefore the correct thing to do is address the rule violation to the rules committee with an explanation, and the rules committee then approves the delegation.

florida has offered and is still offering explanations galore, but throughout the entire kerfuffle the dnc hasn't been listening. at this point, there is zero reason to believe that they will ever listen.

But nobody has been disenfranchised if the delegation is seated.

that's not entirely true. we really don't know how many people stayed away who might have otherwise voted, simply because they believed their votes wouldn't be counted. sure, nobody forced them to stay away from the polls, they could still have gone and voted, but convincing people that their vote won't count is still disenfranchisement.

and by "seating the delegates" do you mean "the nominee is first chosen and then overrides the rules and seats the delegates" [not an unprecedented action], or do you mean "florida's delegates will be counted in determining the nominee"? because the first scenario is arguably the most likely, and it's still disenfranchisement.

Some Floridians, such as Why Now? editor Bryan have already left the Democratic Party, and, frankly, for good reason. But many, many more voters are at risk is this situation is not dealt with fairly and quickly.

Update: I meant to include this comment from Bryan as well,

Michael, how does the rules committee undo the damage caused by the passage of Amendment 1 to the Florida constitution, the real reason for the Republicans to change the date?

They designed this to suppress Democratic voters, so the amendment would pass. Over 50% of registered Republicans voted, but only 40% of registered Democrats, the lowest Democratic turn out from any state this cycle, and the DNC made this possible.

You really don't want to know what school districts and local governments who have lost millions in revenue because of Amendment 1 think of the Democratic Party.


Dean makes good on reaching out to NDNs...

Unlike most of the blogosphere in 2003, we were not enamored by the presidential campaign of Gov. Howard Dean. Dean had a long history of controversial treatment of the native peoples of Vermont, and it colored our view of how he would act in the Oval Office. However, during his campaign, he did appear to begin significant outreach to some tribes, though mainly "real" Indians in Western States (you know, versus us fake Indians east of the Mississippi.) Because of his all around effort in growing the grassroots, we did support his election as Chairman of the DNC and feel, despite the mess in Florida and Michigan (which both have significant NDN populations) he's done a good job.

Today in High Country News is an article which illustrates just how much Dean has reached out in his tenure as DNC chair:


"In the past, Native American voters have been ignored, or thought of in the last minute," says Laura Harris of the Comanche Tribe. "What (Democratic National Committee Chairman) Howard Dean has done is incorporate us into the process, not just for our vote, but for our participation and economic support, too. It's an exciting time to be a Native American and take our place in the political process of the U.S."

Harris, who serves as the executive director of the nonprofit Americans for Indian Opportunity, is one of an "unprecedented" six Native Americans appointed to the Democratic National Convention's standing committees. She's just one example of how the Democratic Party is recognizing Native American issues and courting Indian voters.

When Dean took his seat as chairman of the Democratic Party in February 2005, he initiated the party's "50 State Plan," in order to "not write off voters who we didn’' expect to win, and not take for granted voters we thought we already had," according to Democratic National Committee spokesman Damien LaVera.

The national party is working with state parties to hire full-time staff to reach out at a state level, rather than engaging only voters in key demographics or during election years. Every state, says LaVera, now has at least three full-time party employees. And four states -- Arizona, Oklahoma, Alaska and New Mexico -- have full-time Native American party organizers.

The 50 State Plan also encourages American Indians to seek office. "The Democratic Party has always said everyone deserves a place at the table," says La Vera. "But Chairman Dean said that wasn't enough. He said Native Americans needed a place on the ballots."

The plan is working, he adds, noting that in 2006, a record 64 Native Americans were elected to state legislatures in 14 different states.

Dean has also put the DNC's money to work in Indian Country, depositing two million into the Native American Bank in Denver, money that will be used to economically develop Indian communites throughout the US.

Kudos to the Chair. Now work on getting those delegations seated so that McCain doesn't appoint the next Interior Secretary.

Al in Geneva (in English)

Lost in the clutter of browser tabs was Al Gore arrives in Geneva, which has the advantage of being in English. Enjoy!

Florida appeals original DNC action...

From the Palm Beach Post:

...another emerged from a Florida member of the Democratic National Committee, who claims the DNC didn't follow its own rules and should reinstate at least half the state's delegates.

The committee charter says a state's delegation can be reduced only by half, said Jon Ausman, who plans to file his appeal to the DNC today.

If the committee agrees, it would validate the results from Florida's Jan. 29 primary. If that happens, Hillary Clinton would gain about two dozen more delegates than Barack Obama.

March 13, 2008

Transitions :: Lazare Ponticelli

The last person who served in the French Army during the 1914-1918 conflict died today.

It is worth a moment of reflection. The survivors didn't know what the 1914-1918 European conflict had engendered.

No matter which of the Hero Twins or Saint John manages to win Florida, the 6 million refugees, the 1 million killed, the permanent dominance of AIPAC/Likud ...

It is really optimistic to claim, that when the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of our year rolls around, that when the cannons stop, that what is past is worse than any future.


The latest news doesn't look good...

From the AP:

Fla. Presidential Primary Re-Do Unlikely By BRENDAN FARRINGTON – 28 minutes ago

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Florida Democrats on Thursday proposed a vote-by-mail presidential primary to solve the high-stakes delegate dispute while acknowledging the plan's chances are slim.

Democrats in Florida and Michigan have been struggling to come up with an alternative to ensure their delegates are seated at the national convention this summer after the party punished them for holding early primaries. The pressure to resolve the issue has increased amid the protracted fight for every delegate between Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama.

Karen Thurman, chairwoman of the Florida Democratic Party, offered a mail-in/in person proposal for voting and urged state leaders, the national party and the presidential candidates to sign on. Under the plan, all of Florida's 4.1 million Democrats would be mailed a ballot. They could send it back, or cast a ballot in one of 50 regional voting centers that would be set up. The election would end June 3, a week before a Democratic National Committee deadline to name delegates.

The estimated cost is $10 million to $12 million.

Asked if the plan will be implemented, Thurman said, "I have a feeling that this is probably closer to not, than yes."

Now Michigan's turn at bat...

The Detriot Free Press reports:

Party may pay for primary do-over Legislature's OK would be needed

BY KATHLEEN GRAY and TODD SPANGLER
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITERS

As negotiators continued to work Wednesday on developing an acceptable plan for a possible do-over Democratic presidential primary in Michigan, the prospect of a state-run -- but party-funded -- primary was raised as a potential alternative to an election conducted through the mail.

The prospect of a state-run primary had been initially shelved because of the cost and Gov. Jennifer Granholm's insistence that the taxpayers not be stuck with a bill that could exceed $10 million.

But with Democratic leaders, including Govs. Ed Rendell of Pennsylvania and Jon Corzine of New Jersey, promising to raise money, there could be a mechanism for a state-run primary paid for at party expense.

It would require the Legislature's approval.

The possibility of a mail-in contest remains on the table as well. Sen. Carl Levin has called it the most practical approach, though the Obama campaign has raised concerns about ballot security, access and tabulation of the ballots with no system currently in place to hold such an election.

Clinton surrogates hit the OpEd pages for enfranchisement...

Clearly a partisan move, but John Corzine and Ed Rendell lead the call for revotes:

Even if there were no other choice, having our nominee decided by superdelegates in the back rooms of Washington - or Denver, at the convention in August - would be less than ideal. But allowing superdelegates to determine the outcome of our nominating process while 366 pledged delegates, elected by more than 2 million Democrats in Michigan and Florida, remain unseated is especially undemocratic and risks squandering the feelings of hope and optimism about a Democratic presidency that these two candidates themselves have done so much to engender across the country.

Fortunately, we do have another, more democratic choice: We can choose to enfranchise Democrats in Florida and Michigan, thereby increasing the likelihood that voters, not politicians or party elders, will determine who faces Sen. John McCain in the fall.

...

We believe there should be a revote in Florida and Michigan.

Granholm and Crist have expressed support for this compromise as well. As fellow governors, we can fully appreciate why, their states having voted once already, they would not want to burden their taxpayers with the costs of a second vote. We agree with them. But the stakes are simply too high to let the discussion end there.

Like New Jersey and Pennsylvania, Florida and Michigan are large states whose voters will have a significant impact on the outcome of the 2008 presidential election. Alienating voters in these states by disenfranchising them during our nomination process will surely undermine our party's prospects in the fall.

Obama's campaign is in danger of being tarnished as vote-suppressing, and needs to quickly reiterate its support for Florida and Michigan voters, whether or not a revote benefits them politically. Not doing so only reinforces the Clinton campaign's cynical theme that Obama is afraid of large state contests.

[Note: Frankly, I think they got it wrong by stating that a revote is necessary in states "that were not honestly contested," as there is little evidence that was the case in Florida.]

Transitions :: Howard Metzenbaum

A close observer of US electoral politics living in Geneva asked me yesterday over sandwiches if the endorsement by John Kerry of a candidate other than his former running mate, John Edwards, caused any rancor in the left wing of the party.

I explained that we learned in Nevada that JRE's efforts in 2003 and 2004 and 2005 and 2006 and 2007 to increase the federal minimum wage and to advance the organizing of workers, or rather, to advance the interests of labor organizations, did not pay off. The endorsement, the canvas labor, the GOTV labor, the longer-term staff loaners, the money, the earned media, the whole ball of wax, went to the likely winner, that is, to the candidates "more incumbent" in the management-labor confluence of interests than to the candidate "more challenger" to the same confluence of interests.

I can't say that this means that older programmatic, policy-centered pro-worker politicians like Howard Metzenbaum are less likely to be replaced by younger programmatic, policy-centered pro-worker candidates, but I'm sure that when I interview in early '11 for some progressive campaign's Nevada staff, I'll explain that Clark County (Las Vegas) isn't a progressive delegate jackpot, that in the caucus format, where preference is public, and organized labor leadership at the point of caucus will be as friendly to my candidate as organized crime leadership (and they may share enforcers), we'll have to be creative, possibly even run against corrupted and compromised and worse unions.

I'll explain that Yucca Mountain really is an important issue, and that "progressive" means we talk to the people in the towns outside of Vegas, outside of Clark County about water and self-sufficiency, why Nevada dems aren't that tolerant of corruption, by "union bosses" or "casino sharks" or compromised politicians, and they're not too fond of Clark County trying to run the rest of Nevada as a colonial sand box and why we should look at the Carter campaign in '06, not the Edwards campaign in '08, for basic clue.

But if I'm right, regardless of what comes of my '11 interview, or the '12 cycle, triangulating centerists will garner the majority of the support of organized labor leadership, and triangulating centerists are what will over time replace all "unreconstructed liberal Democrat", as the Cleveland Plain Dealer described Howard, in government.

And perhaps that is what is best for the labor movement. They are going somewhere else than in a generally progressive direction, towards some other sunset or sunrise, than the rest of us who also work, when we can.

The Florida revote plan is out...

Via TalkLeft, here it is.

Think Florida Democrats...

will just "get over it" come November? Think again. From the Tampa Tribune:

State party leaders, meanwhile, released a poll Wednesday that showed 59 percent of state Democrats favoring a revote.

Another finding, which pollster Jim Kitchens called "stunning," was that a quarter of the respondents - all Democrats who voted in the Jan. 29 primary - said they were upset enough over the issue to consider not voting or voting Republican in November's presidential race.

Kitchens said that could spell trouble for a Democratic candidate in Florida.

Democratic state Senate Leader Steve Geller said the poll provided the "moral authority" for the party to move ahead with its plans.

Update: Miami Herald has more specifics:

Sen. Steve Geller took it upon himself to commission a poll this week of 600 registered Democrats who voted on Jan. 29 to assess their thoughts on the debate over the primary re-vote. The poll concluded: 59 percent support a re-do; 35 percent don't, and 7 percent don't know.

Conducted March 10 and 11 by the Kitchens Group from Maitland, Fla., voters were asked if 1.) they thought state leaders should maintain their position of insisting that the votes cast should count or 2.) hold a new Democratic primary election at no cost to taxpayers through the use of pre-paid mail in ballots sent to all registered Democrats.

...

The poll also asked what impact the failure to count votes would have on the November elections, and Gelber warned that the results should send a message to national political leaders, and Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Voters said that if the controversy is not resolved and Florida Democratic voters do not have a voice in choosing the Democratic nominee, only 63 percent will still vote with Democrats.

"We need that in the 80s or 90s,'' Geller said. Among the other voters: 14 percent said they would send a protest vote and consider voting for a Republican, 12 percent said they were unsure, 6 percent said they wouldn't vote for the Democrat for president but would for state and local races and 5 percent said they wouldn't vote at all.

Florida voters have a clue...

A this letter's author to Tampa Bay Online proves:

Published: March 13, 2008

It is interesting that with all the brouhaha about Florida delegates counting in the Democratic primary, hardly anything is noted how this crisis was created. To hear Gov. Charlie Crist state on TV that the Democrats voted for the early date, that they even sponsored the bill is disingenuous.

Sen. Gelber sponsored the voter machine reform bill. The Republicans added the early vote amendment to the bill. The Democrats wanted the election reform bill so that the ballots could be counted and verified, which was not the case for eight years. They did not want another Supreme Court decision.

The fact that the Republican legislature added that amendment, knowing that the Democrats would go along to ensure passage of the voter reform bill, apparently has been "overlooked," that they violated the national party's rules appear to be dismissed, with no penalty for them. Yet, the Democratic voters are being penalized because of that early vote amendment. Now, a new vote could cost $20 million; but "that's not Gov. Crist's problem."

Gabriel Read
Avon Park

Yes, Crist and the Republican legislature caused the problem; however Democrats, particularly the DNC, can fix it. It appears that Senator Clinton is amenable to a revote -- time for Senator Obama to step up as well, or this fall series of letters could point out his part in the disenfranchisement.

March 12, 2008

Al is in Geneva too

I opened the papers today to find that Al Gore is in town, doing the "responsible, durable" at Banque Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch (LODH).

In Le Temps, in Radio Suisse Romande.

My co-workers, in from Norway, Germany, Catalonia, France, and Switzerland for Monday and Tuesday ask if Al Gore can still be nominated.

I answer "Yes, but there are some complications ..."

I will try and make the car show, it is wierd writing using a Swiss-German keyboard.

Buzz...

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Majority of Florida voters support revote

The issue is getting big press in Florida:

Earlier Wednesday, Florida State Senate minority leader Steve Geller revealed the results of a poll showing that most Democrat voters wanted a revote. The poll showed that 59 percent of Florida Democrats are in favor of a revote to replace the results of January's primary election. Thirty-five percent opposed a revote, with 6 percent still undecided.

Democratic party leaders have said for several days they are drafting the basic language calling for a "mail-in" ballot. A mail-in revote so far appears to be the most workable method of revoting, given the tight constraints of time and money.

...

"In my view, what we need to do is be sure that the Florida voters' choices are heeded," Geller said. "It really doesn't matter to me that much if the Obama and Clinton camps make a deal, if it's a deal that does not involve the will of the voters of Florida being counted."

Any candidate who rejects this is going to have to answer to those majority of voters.

This is wrong on so many levels...

Roland Martin put out this commentary on CNN this morning:

Florida, Michigan don't deserve revote

(CNN) -- For two weeks we have watched nearly every political hack from Michigan and Florida hit the airwaves to tell us that voters in those states deserve to have their votes counted, and new elections should be called for and paid by­ the Democratic National Committee.

One word they all keep tossing around is disenfranchisement. Because of this nation's sordid history on the issue of denying African-Americans the right to vote, those calling for a revote know the true power of the word, and just uttering it sort of backs the opposition up.

But folks, I'm sorry. Knowing full well how the two political hacks --­ also called governors of Michigan and Florida -- deliberately chose to ignore the Democratic Party rules and try to leapfrog the other states, I just don't have any compassion for them.

Martin, who apparently is pursuing a degree in "Christian Communications", clearly hasn't gotten to the forgiveness and compassion lessons.

He finally concludes:

Enough. Let's end this madness and tell Florida and Michigan that they had their shot. They blew it. It's time to move on and let the people who know how to play by the rules get on with this process. They made their bed. Now sleep in it.

And the people in Michigan and Florida should throw out the bums who stiffed them. Somebody must pay for the sins of these two states, and they should look to the politicians who keep running their mouths on TV demanding a revote.

Voter enfranchisement is about counting every vote, not punishing the few who didn't play by the rules. What's most disconcerting is Martin is an open Obama supporter: Hopefully he speaks for that campaign as much as Ferraro speaks for Clinton's, that is, not at all.

Are the campaigns moving toward enfranchisement?

According to a Clinton press release I pulled off Google News this morning (no, neither campaign emails me anything or invites me to the conference calls,) the following letter was sent to the Obama campaign by Hillary Clinton's campaign manager.

David Plouffe
P.O. Box 8102
Obama for America
Chicago, Illinois 60680

Dear David:

The 2008 primary campaign has been a spirited contest that has resulted in record voter turnout. Both of our candidates can proudly boast of bringing new people into the process and energizing our Democratic Party.

With the campaign now entering the final phase of the nominating contest, it is vital that both of our campaigns come together to ensure that the delegations from Florida and Michigan be seated to reflect the will of the voters.

In Florida and Michigan, nearly 2.5 million Americans made their voices heard and participated in primary elections. We think the results of those primaries were fair and should be honored.

Over the last few weeks, there has been much discussion about how to ensure that the Florida and Michigan delegations are seated. We think there are two options: Either honor the results or hold new primary elections.

To that end, we are in active consultation with all of our supporters in Florida, including Members of Congress. In Michigan, we are in active consultation with the committee appointed by Governor Granholm.

We hope that your campaign will join us in our efforts to ensure that these votes are counted.

Sincerely,
Maggie Williams
Campaign Manager

Hopefully we'll see a positive response from Mr. Plouffe soon.

March 11, 2008

Electoral college math...

Let's forget about primary delegate math, and look at Electoral College math instead; in particular, what the map looks like without Michigan and Florida painted blue.

A great place to play with all this is 270toWin.com.

First, let's take those states which are pretty solid blue: CA, MA, NY, IL, CT, RI, MD, NJ, DC, VT, HI, ME and DE = 193

Add in the leans blue: PA, WI, WA, OR, MN, and OH = 251

Florida (27) gets us past 270, Michigan (17) alone does not. With both, OH is not a "must have", which we probably agree would be a good thing.

Without either of them, Democrats need to dig deeper for those 19 electoral votes:

Of NM (5), CO (9), IA (7), MO (11) and NH (4), you might get lucky with only two, but possibly need four. Where else can Democrats turn?

Do we really believe that Florida and Michigan Democrats won't hold disenfranchisement against our nominee? Or that potential or real third party candidates won't campaign on such?

McClatchy reports Florida Dems are close to mail-in revote plan...

Link, via BTD at TalkLeft:


Fla. Dems settle on new plan for vote-by-mail primary
By Lesley Clark | McClatchy Newspapers

WASHINGTON -- Facing tight deadlines for a do-over election, Florida Democrats are rushing to deliver to the national party as soon as Thursday a plan to vote again in the presidential primary -- this time, by mail.

If approved, ballots could start going out to voters in April.

Though the election-by-mail plan has its detractors, state Democrats say they're under a time crunch to complete voting by June 10 -- the Democratic National Committee's deadline for allocating delegates. Submitting the plan now will start a 30-day public-comment clock that would end in time for ballots to be sent out mid April.

Do More in Florida?

Craig Crawford suggests a "Do-More Instead of a Do-Over".


The Trail Mix Do-More Solution

Here's a solution: Only send ballots to registered Democrats who did NOT vote in the Jan. 29 primary (voting records show who voted and who didn't). That would cut almost in half the number of votes to process by mail. For choosing delegates to the national convention count both the new mail-in results and the original primary. Call it a Do-More instead of a Do-Over.

Barack Obama should have the advantage in the new mail-in balloting if his supporters are correct in arguing that many of his voters did not show up on Jan. 29 because they thought it would not count. Hillary Rodham Clinton obviously benefits from any solution that counts the primary she's already won by 17 percentage points.

Interesting.

Fallon's fallen

Here's what you could read ... Thomas Barnett's piece in Esquire. Look for little to nothing from the Hero Twins or Saint John.

Something else worth reading is Bill Polk's The Iraq War and the Presidential Election. It has some rough bits at the paragraph jumps, and some sections are overly long, and the final point too short, almost an afterthought in my reading, but its worth reading.

A majority of Democrats support FL and MI delegations

According to the latest Gallup Poll on the subject, 55% favor either seating the delegations as is, or holding revotes.

gallup_fl_mi.JPG

Sadly, a third of Obama supporters favor disenfranchisement of the two state's primary voters:

gallup_fl_mi1.JPG

This isn't a game, people. You cannot pick and chose whose votes you want to protect, just because they might have voted for your candidate. We need to protect the voting rights of ALL Americans.

Sharpton supports disenfranchising Florida voters...

There's no other way to put it. From the AP (as reported by a local Florida affiliate):

Sharpton: DNC Should Not Count Florida's Primary

DAYTONA BEACH, FL (AP) -- Mark the Reverend Al Sharpton in the column of people opposed to the idea of using the results of Florida's primary election.

The civil rights leader told an audience in Daytona Beach yesterday that because the presidential candidates pledged not to campaign in the Sunshine State, many would-be voters decided not to go to the polls.

The Democratic National Committee stripped Florida of its delegates because it moved its primary earlier than the rules allowed.

Some Democrats are now proposing that the Florida contest count, because the race between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama is so close.

But Sharpton believes it's unfair to do that.

The Florida primary was not "just a beauty contest", as, according to the Florida Democratic Party, Florida Amendment One, also known as the "Portability of Save Our Homes", was an issue on January 29th:

The ballot will also feature a referendum on a right-wing property tax constitutional amendment and important municipal elections in many areas around the state. Our friends in labor, including firefighters, teachers, hospital workers and police, will face potentially devastating cuts across the state if the amendment passes.

The state claimed record turnout for the January 29th primary, so Sharpton's arguments ring hollow. How is it that a civil rights leader, who in December, 2000,

...filed a federal lawsuit in Miami against Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris, Florida's board of elections and Bush, saying the state certification before Miami-Dade County could complete a manual recount of ballots disenfranchised minority voters.

could arrive at this point?

Update: According to the Daily News, Sharpton wants to sue for revotes. Which is it?

From the Florida Dems FAQ...

on the primary move:

Who sets the date for Florida's Primary?
The state-run Presidential Preference Primary date is set by the Florida Legislature. In the 2007 legislative session, the Republican Speaker of the House made it a priority to move up the Primary to January, in violation of both Democratic and Republican National Committee Rules. The Legislature passed the bill, which also included the new requirement that all Florida elections have a paper trail starting in 2008. Governor Charlie Crist signed the bill into law in May.

So what's all the fuss about?

Florida, like every other state, is required to submit a "Delegate Selection Plan for the 2008 Democratic National Convention" to the Democratic National Committee (DNC) explaining how and when the state will pick and apportion its delegates for the presidential nominating process. Florida has 210 delegates. We submitted our Plan earlier this year, and the DNC found it to be in non-compliance with DNC Rules because our state-run Primary date does not comply with the schedule ordered by the DNC's rules. Therefore, they have issued a 100% reduction of our delegates to the national convention.

Why didn't the Florida Democratic Party follow the Rules?

Florida's Primary date, as determined by state law, violates one part of the Rules because it comes before February 5, 2008. The DNC only allows Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire and South Carolina to go before February 5, but Florida law set ours for January 29. The DNC Rules and Bylaws Committee (RBC) is the only body that can grant final approval of the Delegate Selection Plan, but the Credentials Committee of the Democratic National Convention, which will be formed next year, decides who actually attends the Convention.

The DNC says that Florida could have applied to hold an early primary when it was developing the calendar, but didn't. Why not?

In Florida, the Legislature is controlled by Republicans. Democrats must prioritize what they work on to achieve the best they can for Floridians. An early primary was never a priority for Democrats, who remain far more concerned with issues such as insurance reform, increased healthcare for children, and improving our schools.

The Rules say you had to try to stop the primary move, but Democrats voted for the law. What gives?

Initially, before a specific date had been decided upon by the Republicans, some Democrats did actively support the idea of moving earlier in the calendar year. That changed when Speaker Rubio announced he wanted to break the Rules of the Democratic and Republican National Committees. Following this announcement, DNC and Florida Democratic Party staff talked about the possibility that our primary date would move up in violation of Rule 11.A.

Party leaders, Chairwoman Thurman and members of Congress then lobbied Democratic members of the Legislature through a variety of means to prevent the primary from moving earlier than February 5th. Party leadership and staff spent countless hours discussing our opposition to and the ramifications of a pre-February 5th primary with legislators, former and current Congressional members, DNC members, DNC staff, donors, activists, county leaders, media, legislative staff, Congressional staff, municipal elected officials, constituency leaders, labor leaders and counterparts in other state parties. In response to the Party's efforts, Senate Democratic Leaders Geller and Wilson and House Democratic Leaders Gelber and Cusack introduced amendments to CS/HB 537 to hold the Presidential Preference Primary on the first Tuesday in February, instead of January 29th. These were both defeated by the overwhelming Republican majority in each house.

The primary bill, which at this point had been rolled into a larger legislation train, went to a vote in both houses. It passed almost unanimously. The final bill contained a whole host of elections legislation, much of which Democrats did not support. However, in legislative bodies, the majority party can shove bad omnibus legislation down the minority's throats by attaching a couple of things that made the whole bill very difficult, if not impossible, to vote against. This is what the Republicans did in Florida, including a vital provision to require a paper trail for Florida elections. There was no way that any Florida Democratic Party official or Democratic legislative leader could ask our Democratic members, especially those in the Florida Legislative Black Caucus, to vote against a paper trail for our elections. It would have been embarrassing, futile, and, moreover, against Democratic principles.

It was about paper trails, people. The Republican legislature attached a "poison pill", the requirement of paper trails for electronic voting machines, and dared the minority Dems to vote against it.

Democrats should be leading the Florida delegation to Denver with a parade; they risked the ire of the Howard Dean in order to protect the integrity of the ballot. At this point, I don't care if they voted for Mickey Mouse in the primary, just so their vote counts.

Here's an article from May, 2007, describing Gov. Crist signing the bill with both provisions, primary move and paper trail:

Florida Embraces Paper Ballots, Changes Presidential Primary Date
Posted on Friday, 4 of May , 2007 at 11:48 am

TALLAHASSEE, FLA -- In a 118-0 vote in the Florida House of Representatives, a bill was passed requiring all Florida counties to have paper ballot voting technology in place before the 2008 Florida primaries and general election. The House vote comes shortly after the Florida Senate approved a similar measure.

The ACLU of Florida applauded the Legislature for acting on Gov. Charlie Crist's commitment to change the State's voting system to a paper ballot-based technology. "The battle for fair elections in Florida now focuses on the 15 formerly DRE counties, which must act independently to ensure that disabled and language-minority voters will not be second-class citizens," said Howard Simon, executive director of the ACLU of Florida.

Crist congratulated the Florida Legislature for passing legislation that will replace touch-screen voting machines with optical scan machines statewide for Election Day voting and early voting sites. He also praised the Legislature for changing the date of Florida's presidential primary to an earlier date - the last Tuesday in January -- Jan. 29.

New banner...

Yeah, it's amateur graphics, but my new motto. You can't pretend you care about protecting the vote in November if you willingly disenfranchise voters in August.

March 10, 2008

The Days of Wine and Roses...

...meets Network? This is the press corps we expect to hold John McCain's feet to the fire?

Maybe if they're covered with barbecue sauce.

GOP to flog immigration...again...

From the AP (h/t SmokeSignalz.com):

GOP Moves to Force Immigration Vote
By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS -- 2 hours ago

WASHINGTON (AP) -- House Republicans are trying to force action on a Democratic-written immigration enforcement measure, the latest GOP attempt to elevate the volatile issue into an election-year wedge.

Republican leaders hope that by pushing the bill -- endorsed by 48 centrist Democrats and 94 Republicans -- they can drive Democrats into a politically painful choice: Backing a tough immigration measure that could alienate their base, including Hispanic voters, or being painted as soft on border security in conservative-leaning districts.

The plan is fraught with political risks for both parties. A full-blown immigration debate could call attention to Republicans' divisions at a time when their expected presidential nominee, Sen. John McCain, is fighting to gain the trust of the GOP base.

McCain, R-Ariz., played a prominent role in failed legislative efforts to grant some of the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants already here a path to legal status, which conservatives deride as "amnesty." He now says he would consider such a plan only after the borders have been fortified.

House Republicans are eyeing a bill by Rep. Heath Shuler, D-N.C., that would do just that, as well as mandate that employers verify that their workers are in the U.S. legally.

For details, head to Migra Matters. In the meantime, I'll try to hunt down a list of the 48 "centrist" Democrats supporting this kind of hate mongering.

More fever-induced delerious thinking...

Can anyone explain the real difference here?

1) Clinton argues that McCain has enough experience to be CiC, but perhaps another Democrat, her opponent, Obama, does not; and

2) Obama argues that there are too few Democrats experienced enough on foreign policy and defense issues that he'll choose to appoint Republicans such as Lugar and Hagel as heads of Def and State.

Because, I really don't see it. If 1) provides fodder for the GOP werlitzer in the Fall, how doesn't 2), and down-ticket as well? Frankly, they're both stupid, but typical - but clearly politics as usual. And while surfing the web over the past 24 hours, I know I saw someone analyze the use of charges leveled in primary by opponents in the general election. I'll try and retrace my steps and find it.

Update: Commenter Stentor reminds me that it was Kevin Drum. Thanks.

New article from Ezra Rosser

Between being lost in the desert for a week, our fuel pump, satellite tripod and trailer hitch all committing sepuku, rampant influenza and abandonment by spouse for chocolate and fondue, I missed my friend Stacy pointing out that American University law professor Ezra Rosser has a new law review article out on The Nature of Representation: The Cherokee Right to a Congressional Delegate.

I've been really impressed by Rosser's work, so much so that I decided to put American on my list of law school applications. Granted, with my luck, I'd matriculate, only to find him transferring to the likes of Harvard or Yale (and beyond the reach of my LSAT/GPA combo.)

Vitter takes on IGRA

Now that it's clear that Louisiana Senator David Vitter has nothing further to fear from blackmailer-in-chief John McCain over Vitter's Abramoff connections, Vitter is free to focus his attention on the defeating the real enemy of the America people - casino-operating Indian tribes. From Indianz.com:

Senate bill seeks to amend Indian gaming act Monday, March 10, 2008 Filed Under: Politics

A Republican Senator last month introduced a bill to amend the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act despite facing long odds in changing the law.

Since it was passed in 1988, IGRA hasn't been amended in any significant way. Meanwhile, the tribal casino industry has grown into a $25 billion business.

Sen. David Vitter (R-Louisiana) hopes to stem that growth by making it harder for tribes to open casinos without the input of local communities. His bill, called the Common Sense Indian Gambling Reform Act, seeks to limit off-reservation gaming.

"Indian casino gambling has expanded significantly in the last decade, with many tribes locating casinos in communities to which they hold no historical ties," Vitter said in a February 28 statement. "This forum shopping is done strictly to enable tribes to obtain an economic advantage, and my bill includes provisions to protect local communities from being exploited by these activities."

For background on Vitter's Abramoff problems, see CREW.

New category on the sidebar?

Ever since I began Wampum five and a half years ago, the blog has had the same color scheme and layout; call me traditional...or lazy. We've added some stuff on the sidebar, but never a new category of "Want more...?" Now, however, I think I'm finally ready to do so, though not with a "Want more...?" title, but a "Want less...?", along the lines of, "Want less Kool-Aid?"

Such a list would be for blogs which have not become full-fledged campaign-owned properties, of one flavor or another. Places where praise or criticism for one or the other is permitted, and healthy and respectful dissent of those opinions accepted, even encouraged. Places where you can go to still read about Democratic politics and not be alienated by purported Democratic behavior.

So I'm starting a list below and will add to it as I surf through the blogosphere. Please feel free in comments to add your favorite overtly non-partisan (as in the Democratic nomination, not politics in general) blog.

Suburban Guerrilla
The Sideshow
Seeing the Forest
Echidne of the Snakes
Corrente
The Left Coaster
Whiskeyfire
Shakesville
Upyernoz
Skippy
Field Negro

And the center of the non-partisan world, Kicking Ass

Of course, we could always get the DraftGore2008 site up and running again. [/only half-kidding...I think...]

Think if we restarted the Koufax Awards, where the only criterion was dearth of Kool-Aid, we could reshift the sanity threshhold?

Update: Think we can come up with some stamp/logo to stick on a blog, something along the lines of "Non-partisan Partisan" or "I don't drink the Kool-Aid"?

March 09, 2008

Forget the red phone...

How about picking up a clue, at 3am or any other time.

I love Chairman Howard Dean's 50 state strategy, as I believe the only way to grow the Democratic Party out of its current confines is through the grassroots. And I'm not one to believe that campaign miracles cannot happen. In September, 1992, I was a firsthand witness to one such miracle. The campaign office of the Connecticut Clinton-Gore coordinated campaign was more than humble - in fact, we were 8 offices and a "lobby", upstairs from the 30 or so rooms of the Dodd for Senate campaign. Connecticut was Bush (Sr.) territory, and no one ever expected we would take the state. But sometime between a midnight Clinton visit on Labor Day and Hartford's Columbus Day parade, the tide turned, and on Election Day, our paltry band of underpaid, overworked staff and volunteers claimed victory.

It was a miracle and an emotional victory as well. However, in the grand electoral scheme of things, the turning of the tide in Connecticut didn't even warrant extra staff or resources; every spare cent went to states rich in electoral votes. Clinton's landslide victory (370-168) was made possible by the third-party candidacy of Ross Perot, who pulled 18.9% of the national vote, but over 30% in states as divergent as Maine and Colorado.

However, as both Eric and I have discussed in previous posts, while the map may look different in 2012 or 2016, in 2008, it doesn't look all that much different from 2000 or 2004, despite SurveyUSA's very premature forecasts. That's why I was surprised to see the very savvy KidOakland (who I respect to no end) disregard Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell's comments on Meet the Press this morning (link):

GOV. RENDELL: We decide the presidency not by a popular vote, we decide it by the electoral vote. And the traditional role of the superdelegates is to determine who's going to be our strongest candidate. Tim, you and I have been doing this for a long time, as Tom has, and we know the big four in any presidential election recently are Pennsylvania, Ohio, Florida and Michigan. And in all four of those states--Pennsylvania hasn't voted yet, but I assume we're going to do real well--Hillary Clinton will have taken those states, if it--she takes Pennsylvania, and will have taken them by significant majorities. She's clearly the strongest candidate in the states that Democrats must win to have a chance. Look, it's great that Barack Obama is doing wonderfully well in Wyoming and Utah and, and places like that, but there's no chance we're going to carry those states. Whether he gets 44 percent as opposed to 39 percent doesn't matter, but we're not going to carry those states. We do have a chance to carry the big four.

I might not completely buy Rendell's argument that Clinton is better set up to take those four states, but I do take issue with the tossing the "shrinking battleground" baby out with the bathwater. In fact, more than ever, with the growing economic crisis in the Rustbelt and snowbird states, Democrats have a real chance to nail down an electoral victory the "old fashioned-way". I truly begin to worry when I see seasoned operatives and activists move to snatch defeat from the hands of victory. I think partisans on both sides of the Obama/Clinton divide need to take a few steps back from the Kool-Aid dispenser and refocus on victory in November.

Where is my Aloysius?

In my fever-inspired stupor, I found this para from Wolcott delicious, if only for its Brideshead reference:

If only returning to the womb were a viable escape option from Hillary's taloned deathgrip! Probably such posts are indicative of the low morale pervading Sullivan's side pocket of the universe, his readers mirroring and amplifying his own downcast, defeated mood in a dispersed pity party. Hillary Clinton's bounce-back on March 4th had Sullivan drowning his sorrows ("I just had a Jager shot, and hope to get drunk very soon"), and staggering like a ghost through the stricken ruins of his dashed hopes, lashing out at Hillary like Sebastian blaming everything on "mummy" in Brideshead Revisited. Or perhaps Sullivan is closer in the depth of his despair to Sebastian's lover Kurt, sadly, bitterly contemplating his wounded, pus-ridden foot. For Sullivan, Hillary is the psychic pus that torments him so (she's not just any old "monster,"she's a "fratricidal maniac"), Obama the healing, uplifting ointment.

My first, and second, male cats were named Sebastian.

Actually, the whole piece is great: I barely ever visit the Orange KoolAid Drinkin' site these days, but happened to on the day the first quoted diary was posted - my reaction mirrors Wolcott's exactly.

A Debate! A Debate! (part 2)

I've no idea why {Abu Aardvark | Juan Cole | Josh Landis} haven't posted on this.

Aujourd'hui, l'Oumma est agressée de toutes parts, écrit Zawahiri, en s'adressant directement à Imam Al-Chérif. Tu sais, toi, qu'aucune armée ne la protège et que seuls les moudjahidin la défendent. Pensez-vous vraiment, toi et (ceux) qui t'approuvent, que Hosni Moubarak (le président égyptien) ou Abdallah Ben Abdel Aziz (le roi d'Arabie saoudite) défendront les droits de l'Oumma islamique ? (...) Les moudjahidin ne seront jamais influencés par cette mise en scène."

Today, the Ummah is under attack from all sides, writes Zawahiri, directly from Imam Al-Sharif. You know, you, not the army that protects and that only Mujahideen defend. Do you really believe, you and (those) who t'approuvent that Hosni Mubarak (Egyptian President) or Abdallah Ben Abdel Aziz (the King of Saudi Arabia) will defend the rights of the Islamic Ummah? (...) The mujahideen will never be influenced by the staging. "

"Avant toi, combien de dirigeants du djihad se sont détournés, produisant des fatwas et des déclarations afin d'étrangler l'esprit du djihad ?" écrit Zawahiri. Et il ajoute : "Nous savons tous que ces révisionnistes sont tombés dans l'oubli, tandis que le djihad a persévéré, et l'islam triomphé. En raison de quoi, je déclare que si, un jour, je suis capturé, moi ou un frère du djihad, et que nous prononçons des discours en contradiction avec nos écrits actuels, ne les acceptez pas !"

"Before you, how many leaders of Jihad were diverted, producing fatwas and statements in order to strangle the spirit of Jihad?" Zawahiri writes. And he adds: "We all know that these revisionists have fallen into oblivion, while Jihad persevered, and Islam triumphed. Because of this, I said that if one day I am caught, or I a brother Jihad, and that we speak speeches in contradiction with our current writings, do not agree! "

Les "révisionnistes" du djihad n'avaient jamais suscité une réaction aussi forte du numéro deux d'Al-Qaida, même si les querelles sont fréquentes. La guerre d'Irak a notamment mené à de vifs débats entre djihadistes, lorsqu'Al-Qaida en Irak avait, sous le commandement d'Abou Moussab Al-Zarqaoui, décrété la guerre aux chiites.

The "revisionist" Jihad had never prompted a reaction as strong number two of Al-Qaeda, even though feuds are common. The war in Iraq has led to a particularly sharp debate among jihadists, lorsqu'Al Qaeda in Iraq was under the command of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, declared war against the Shiites.

Dans son livre, Ayman Al-Zawahiri conteste l'abandon des opérations "martyres" prôné par Imam Al-Chérif, qui citait l'exemple des attentats en Egypte et du 11-Septembre aux Etats-Unis pour dénoncer la mort "de musulmans et d'innocents non musulmans". "Si tu prétends que ces opérations ne sont pas légales, alors il devrait en être de même pour les opérations menées en Palestine", répond Zawahiri, en notant que jamais Al-Chérif n'a remis en cause les actions du Hamas et du Djihad islamique palestiniens. La notoriété de l'auteur et son influence au sein des milieux islamistes ont fait prendre au sérieux le revirement idéologique d'Al-Chérif. "Dr Fadl" est le plus ancien compagnon d'armes de Zawahiri, "émir" avant lui à la tête du Djihad égyptien, groupe armé qui prônait la destruction du gouvernement "apostat" d'Egypte et dont les membres ont constitué les premières recrues d'Al-Qaida en Afghanistan. Actif jusqu'en mars 2004, date de son arrestation au Yémen lors d'une opération conjointe des forces yéménites et américaines, il a ensuite été transféré en Egypte où il purge une peine de prison à perpétuité. Son "revirement" intervient à un moment délicat pour le mouvement djihadiste. L'armée américaine multiplie en effet les rapports affirmant qu'Al-Qaida en Irak a été mise en échec à Bagdad et se trouve en difficulté dans plusieurs provinces du pays.

In his book, Ayman al-Zawahiri denies abandonment of operations "martyrs" advocated by Imam Al-Sharif, who cited the example of the terrorist attacks in Egypt and the 11-September in the United States to denounce the death "of Muslims and innocent non-Muslims. " "If you pretend that these operations are not legal, then it should be the same for operations in Palestine," Zawahiri responded, noting that Al-Cherif never has questioned the actions of Hamas and Jihad Islamic Palestinians. The reputation of the author and his influence in Islamist circles have taken seriously the ideological shift of Al-Sharif. "Dr. Fadl" is the oldest comrade-in-arms of Zawahiri, "emir" before him at the head of the Egyptian Jihad, an armed group which advocated the destruction of government "apostate" from Egypt and whose members were the first recruits Al-Qaida in Afghanistan. Active until March 2004, the date of his arrest in Yemen during a joint operation by the Yemeni and American forces, he was then transferred to Egypt where he is serving a prison sentence for life. His "departure" comes at a delicate time for the jihadist movement. The American army indeed multiplies the reports saying that Al Qaeda in Iraq was defeated in Baghdad and is in trouble in several provinces of the country.

Ce revers, évoqué en filigrane par Al-Chérif, est réfuté par Zawahiri : "Alors que les moudjahidin appellent l'Oumma à se soulever, à mener le djihad et les opérations martyres, les révisionnistes l'appellent à la soumission et à la capitulation. Les moudjahidin ont fait échouer la stratégie américaine, et pourtant, ce sont eux qui sont visés par ces Révisions." "L'Amérique sait le danger que représentent le mouvement djihadiste et Al-Qaida pour son avenir et sa position dans le monde, conclut le compagnon d'Oussama Ben Laden. Al-Qaida ne demande pas seulement le départ des croisés et des juifs des pays musulmans (...) (Nous demandons) aussi que le pétrole des pays islamiques soit vendu à son prix vèritable. Le seul péché d'Al-Qaida est d'être devenu l'obstacle sur le chemin des Américains."

This setback, filigree mentioned by Al-Cherif, was refuted by Zawahiri: "While the Umma Mujahideen call to rise up, to wage Jihad and martyrdom operations, the revisionists call for the submission and capitulation . Mujahideen have foiled the American strategy, and yet they are the ones who are affected by these revisions. " "America knows the danger of the jihadist movement and Al Qaeda for its future and its position in the world, concludes the companion of Osama bin Laden. Al Qaeda calls not only for the departure of the Crusaders and the Jews Muslim countries (...) (We ask) that the Islamic countries oil to be sold at its real price. The only sin Al Qaeda is becoming an obstacle on the path of the Americans. "

March 08, 2008

Rates of Exchange

The writer for the San Diego Union Trib wasn't where I was yesterday morning. He wrote that the dollar was trading at 1.54. If he'd been selling dollars and buying euros at the San Diego airport, he'd have found that the going rate is 1.7 and change. That's $17 to buy €10.

Traditional Dress

ID1092803_08_maniffemmes_afp_144521_00F63Z_0.JPG.jpg

MB asked how the women were dressed in the parts of New Delhi I visited. Pretty much like the photo above, minus the signs and the effigy.

Today being International Women's Day, these women are out beating up the government of a democracy over the increases in the prices of necessities and services.

Light posting...

Eric's in Geneva and I have the flu.

A Debate! A Debate! (part 1)

No. Not between the Hero Twins or Saint John and ... Holy Joe.

Original from Le Monde, translation from Google's free translation service.

Un débat majeur agite Al-Qaida et le monde très clandestin du djihad international. Deux des principaux idéologues du mouvement djihadiste, Ayman Al-Zawahiri, principal lieutenant d'Oussama Ben Laden, et Sayed Imam Al-Chérif, alias "Dr Fadl", son ancien mentor emprisonné en Egypte, débattent de la notion même de "guerre sainte", des attentats-suicides, des actions menées en terres musulmanes, en Afghanistan, en Irak et ailleurs.

A major debate stirs Al Qaeda and the World very clandestine Jihad. Two of the main ideologists of Jihad movement, Ayman al-Zawahiri, the principal lieutenant of Osama bin Laden, and Sayed Imam Al-Sharif, alias "Dr. Fadl, his former mentor imprisoned in Egypt, discussing the very notion of" holy war "suicide bombings, actions in Muslim lands, in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere.

La polémique a débuté en 2007 par un appel d'Imam Al-Chérif à renoncer à toute lutte armée, jugée "improductive" et "en violation des lois du Coran", en terre d'islam comme en Occident. Ayman Al-Zawahiri a apparemment estimé le message suffisamment perturbateur pour r&eaucte;diger une réponse sous forme d'un livre de 358 pages, téléchargeable sur Internet. Son titre peut être traduit par "Acquittement" ou "Absolution".

The controversy began in 2007 with a call Imam Al-Sharif to desist from armed struggle, as "unproductive" and "in violation of the laws of the Koran", in the land of Islam in the West. Ayman al-Zawahiri apparently felt the message sufficiently disruptive to write a response in the form of a book of 358 pages, downloadable from the Internet. Its title can be translated as "Acquittal" or "Absolution."

Imam Al-Chérif, dans son texte d'une centaine de pages, titré Révisions : document sur les activités du djihad dans le monde et publié en novembre et décembre 2007 dans les quotidiens égyptien Masri Al-Yaoum et koweïtien Al-Jerida, attaquait vivement les chefs d'Al-Qaida. Oussama Ben Laden était qualifié de "traître" envers le mollah Omar, le chef suprême des talibans, et Ayman Al-Zawahiri de "fourbe". Tous deux étaient jugés responsables de la "perte" de l'Afghanistan après le 11-Septembre. Cet appel à mettre fin au djihad tel qu'il est mené par le tandem Ben Laden-Zawahiri a été considéré comme un "événement" par la presse arabe.

Imam Al-Sharif, in his text a hundred pages, titled Revisions: document on the activities of Jihad in the world and published in November and December 2007 in the Egyptian daily Al-Masri Yaoum and Kuwaiti Al-Jerida, strongly attacked Heads of Al Qaeda. Osama bin Laden was described as a "traitor" to Mullah Omar, the Taliban supreme leader, and Ayman Al-Zawahiri "fourbe. Both were deemed responsible for the "loss" of Afghanistan after 11-Sept. That call to end the jihad as it is led by the tandem bin Laden-Zawahiri was seen as an "event" by the Arab press.

La contre-attaque n'a pas tardé. Ayman Al-Zawahiri estime que les Révisions, écrites du fond d'une geôle égyptienne, reflètent "la volonté des services secrets des pays arabes, mais aussi de la CIA, qui travaillent jour et nuit à humilier les moudjahidin et à tromper l'Oumma (communauté des musulmans)". Dénonçant une propagande orchestrée par les services de renseignement égyptiens, il souligne que les attaques d'Al-Chérif "n'ont pas seulement été écrites sous la torture et la peur qui règnent dans les prisons, mais sous la direction et le financement des croisés et des juifs."

The counter-attack came quickly. Ayman Al-Zawahiri believes that the revisions, written from the bottom of an Egyptian jail, reflect "the will of the secret service of the Arab countries, but also from the CIA, working day and night to humiliate the Mujahideen and to deceive the Umma (Muslim community) ". Denouncing propaganda orchestrated by the intelligence services of Egypt, he stressed that the attacks by Al-Sheriff, "not only been written by torture and fear prevailing in the prisons, but under the direction and funding of the Crusaders and Jews. "

Over a sea of tears

In route to Geneva I was thinking about Samantha Power calling Senator Clinton a "monster" when the phrase jumped right out of the pages of the Guardian -- Simon Jenkins' Bigotry and violence made Paisley and Adams the Taliban of Europe. Here's the quote:

I first encountered Paisley as a young reporter covering a bible-bashing rally in the grounds of Stormont Castle. It was a miserable, freezing afternoon and raining hard. The faces of the drummer boys were mauve with cold, as were the bare legs of the majorettes. The men round Paisley wore bowler hats. It was not an appetising event, yet thousands of Ulster Protestants were there.

Then the big man began. Like a revivalist preacher from the deep south, Paisley ranted over the sodden slopes of Stormont. It was electrifying and archaic. The curses of God were called down on "old red socks", the Pope, the "anti-Christ", whom Paisley was later to heckle with primitive discourtesy in the European parliament. Catholics were damned - "they breed like rabbits and multiply like vermin" - and King Billy glorified. The crowd sang hymns and roared. It was like watching a mad Celtic druid blessing the Brythonic hordes before confronting the Roman army.

The man was a monster, a fanatic, a hangover from the middle ages.

Professor Power is no longer a "senior foreign policy adviser" to Senator Obama. Fine. There's no shortage of intelligent people Senator Obama can go to for foreign policy advice who don't call the people they disagree with anything worse than people they disagree with.

March 06, 2008

The Anti-Phishing Consumer Protection Act of 2008

Reading S.2661 is depressing. Here's the worst crud from the "Findings". I put a call into Olympia Snowe's Porland office this morning.

(2) Phishing e-mails are becoming more sophisticated by having malicious spyware attachments that once opened covertly record the keystrokes and passwords of computer users, or install malware software.

Keystroke logging software developed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation is pervasively deployed, and is "not detected" by commercial anti-virus software. As we mentioned in RFC 2048, building wiretap into the network, at the physical forwarding elements or application layer filtering, which is what anti-virus software is, creates an exploitable mechanism for uniformed, and non-uniformed criminals.

(6) The United States is consistently 1 of the top 3 countries that host the most phishing websites. In November 2007, the United States hosted approximately 24 percent of phishing websites.

This is a baffling factoid. There are 150m second-level entries in the global namespace, 70m are in .com, 10m are in .net, so half the global namespace is published by VGRS and easily half of the A records published by VGRS' resolve to ipv4 addresses in blocks allocated by ARIN, so one could just as well have written "Verisign" as "United States", and then relied upon existing contract, rather than ignoring existing contract, involving the DoC, the NTIA, ICANN and VGRS.

(7) A form of phishing known as `Spear Phishing' targets companies and government agencies to gain unauthorized access to their computer systems in order to steal financial information, trade secrets, or even top secret military information.

The final example of masquerading as a trustworthy entity, using socially engineered payloads against specific targets, to acquire valuable information, usually usernames, passwords and credit card details, but here "top secret military information" is reasonable, if you believe that DISNET is connected to MILNET and MILNET to "the Internet", and that each connection is a policy-free (non-filtering) gateway.

When I ran SRI's largest internal (and external) network, I'd one of the seven MILNET to ARPANET mail gateways in my shop. Neither MILNET nor ARPANET (modernly "the Internet") were classified networks. In the basement was a SCIF, on DISNET. I once "broke" the ARPANET by adding subnets for a Usenix meeting. That got me a same-day call from the ARPANET NOC at BBN. If I'd connected my DISNET node to either my MILNET IMP (modernly, router) or my ARPANET IMPs (ditto), I'd probably still be inside Leavenworth.

Whoever wrote the final cherry on that slice of pie was either plain ignorant or interestingly dishonest.

I've probably tossed them by now, but back when I hosted Barry's Amptoons his URL earned several multi-hundred node DDOS attacks, and I was always amused to find military assets, pwned of course, in the logfile of each attack. Calling their owners was always good for a laugh.

(9) Phishing operators utilize deceptive domain names for their schemes. They routinely register domain names that mimic the addresses of well-known online merchants, and then set up websites that can fool consumers into releasing personal and financial information.

This mixes two issues, to the loss of sense of both. The appearance of a domain name in the payload of some phish isn't the same thing as the actual domain name. This is why, when you look at a phish payload you often find that Sears or Bank of America appear to be operating out of Russia, the Ukraine, and China. The problem is "HTML-enabled" email. It makes pretty, and it makes hiding all kinds of neat toys, from web beacons that disclose every reading of a payload by an "HTML-enabled mail reader", to the bones of every phish.

The other issue is what is really at play in S2661. Trademark. This is more overtly discovered in the 12th Finding:

(12) Deceptive domain names, and the abuses for which they are used, threaten the integrity of domain name system. Businesses, small and large, rely upon the integrity of the domain name registration to ensure that their brands aren't misrepresented. The World Intellectual Property Organization reported in April 2007, that the number of Internet domain name cybersquatting disputes increased 25 percent in 2006.

Remember, you got here because the Peoples Liberation Army or someone is spear fishing in the third deck of E-ring, the SCIF that houses the secure-side of the office of the SecDef, the senior staffers of the OSD, and all the happy campers awaiting the return of Donald Rumsfeld. Where you're about to go to prevent this critical disclosure of "top secret military information" is ... a bunch of Intellectual Property lawyers in Geneva (I'm actually going there next week, not just to Geneva, but to the World Intellectual Property Organization) and a more accurate WHOIS database.

That's sure to foil the PLA, the KGB, and reverse Global Warming too.

I'll cover other parts of this gem in the near future. I operate an ICANN Accredited Registrar, one with its operational facilities in Portland and Bangor. The pointy end of S.2661 is aimed at Registrars, apparently because we either control the PLA, the KGB, and the melting point of ice, or because Markmonitor is using Olympia Snowe's office for marketing.

Markmonitor is big on phish. They're the registrar of record for verizon.com. Some of us registrars would like them to take down that domain as we know there is criminal conduct going on there. Phishing on a continental scale.

Zaka transports ...

The Likudnics issued over a company strength of toe tags in the past week, picking up the customary numbers of women and children, as well as the obviously and probably non-combatant men, and in news-utterly-expected, a determined shooter just issued a squad strength of toe tags to the dearest of the Likudnics (who probably don't mind a bit because it means they can go back to the well and draw another company strength of issuable toe tags, not to mention juicy chits from all of the AIPAC properties on the Hill and in the occupied White House), hitting the Merkaz Harav yeshiva somewhere near the divided, and occupied, city of Jerusalem.

As long as "shoot back harder" is the policy of choice, this is what happens.

The current numbers are at least 6 KIA and 35 wounded, produced by an attack force of one or two persons armed with only light infantry weapons. Compare the 120+ KIA produced by Tsahal over the past week, with stand-off munitions delivered by air, artillery, and armor, in northern Gaza,

Note to the Obama campaign...

Most Americans dislike paying taxes. They understand taxes are necessary, but they themselves don't really like paying them. Many, if not most, find ways to "nibble around the edges", to decrease the taxes they pay, so I suspect most Americans would not be happy with having their own tax returns gone over with a fine-toothed comb.

It is now tax season, so these feelings increase exponentially, especially for middle-aged and older taxpayers, most of whom don't file the 1040EZ form, but itemize. I suspect that by hammering on the Clinton's tax returns, you might in fact be alienating those very people you need to attract to win in Pennsylvania.

Just an FYI.

Techno bits

I'm upgrading the wampumpeag servers to the RELGENG_7 tag, which is the fancy I-build-it-myself way of saying "Yippee! Freebsd 7 went GA last week!

Here's the FreeBSD 7.0 RELEASE Announcement.

The remaining new disks are going into the remaining servers next week, more joy and handsprings.

Tithes Concealed

In Europe its Lichtenstein. Germany claims it looses €30 billion in tax revenue, every year. That's from Day Zero to the day Saddam was "found" in a spider hole. That's the "value" of Yahoo!, according to MicroSoft.

And that's just Lichtenstein. There's Luxembourg, Belgium and Austria, which oppose any EU legislation that would cause their private banks to provide information to other tax authorities on the savings of nonresident investors.

Add to that the "off-shore" banking entities in Switzerland, Andorra, and the Cayman Islands. They account for one third of the wealth of the world's "high net-worth individuals" -- nearly $6 trillion out of $17.5 trillion -- that's the Iraq War, from Day Zero to today. Repeated twice, for a total of three Iraq Wars, every year.

So if the Obama campaign staff throws the "mildly complicated personal tax return issue" onto the political and policy fires of the next month, don't be surprised if the Clinton campaign staff don't find a way to re-write their offering from a zero-sum morality play to a policy issue with legs. Legs that reach past Obama and well into the RNC's diseased November electoral heart and into policy in the first 100 days.

March 05, 2008

A sensible solution...

While Mark Green is purported to be a Clinton supporter, I don't believe that is reason enough to discredit this sensible solution to the Michigan/Florida DNC convention delegation "problem":

...I have a suggestion that could help launch one into a commanding position as we approach the Denver Convention: your two states should legislate a new primary day and it should be April 22, the day of the scheduled Pennsylvania primary.

Then we would have a final Super Tuesday involving some 5 million voters and 518 delegates. And the Democrat who wins a majority of the votes and delegates in these three states -- all of which would be in play in a competitive general election -- would have real and important momentum with undecided superdelegates. Not quite winner-take-all but close to winning the fifth set in the Wimbledon final.

Could either Obama or Clinton object? Clinton can't seriously argue that the delegates in your states should be seated based on earlier contests that the candidates agreed shouldn't count.

The Obama campaign can't seriously argue that your states shouldn't be seated at the Convention and shouldn't count in the closest nomination battle in a century. Nor can it seriously contend that existing rules should be in effect altered to disallow a superdelegate -- who's not a Martian but a governor, senator, or congressman -- from voting for that Democrat who s/he thinks would be the strongest nominee and best president.

As Eric and I have hammered time and again, Florida, and to a lesser extent, Michigan, are critical battleground states in November - you just don't dis 2.5 million voters without repercussions. You have to seat delegations for both these states in Colorado this summer, and you either revote or take the votes as they are.

Ethan goes Away

At the New Delhi ICANN meeting I worked with someone from the .ir (Iran) DNS registry on a technical issue, the variations, in Farsi and Arabic, for strings composed of characters associated with glyph tables published by the Unicode Consortium, on the form of the glyphs of terminal characters.

If I bught a domain name from him, say for the purposes of manifesting the actual terminal character variations in the lash-up we in ICANN call "Internationalized Domain Names", I'd run a non-trivial risk of an unfriendly visit from some federal prosecutor working for George Bush and Dick Cheney.

Even if buying a domain name, like i-like-15th-century-persian-art.ir (in English/ASCII, or Farsi/IDN, or Arabic/IDN) didn't trigger the prosecute-and-destroy response from the Bush/Cheney political operatives in the DOJ, if Maine had invested in my start-up at any point in the past decade, or if my bit of Maine High Tech was publicaly traded, and some state fund had invested in shares of my technology company, then Ethan Strimling's L.D. 1934, An Act to Require the State to Divest Itself of Funds from Companies Doing Business in Iran, would hit my share price.


At the Rome ICANN meeting I had lunch with the head of the .ps (Palestine) DNS registry. I'm not even going to guess what Ethan's views on the necessity, or utility, of technical cooperation, with actual contractual obligations, are for network infrastructure operators in North America and the bits of West Asia that are targets for "sanctions".

Ethan's claim to fame, outside of the West End, where all the Steven's showcases still have two Volvos, is the "network neutrality" mantra of the Daily Kos faction of the blogosphere. For someone so invested in net clue, Ethan makes bags of hammers look more useful.

It's 3pm. This is not a drill.

Evo Morales is convening a special meeting of the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) to discuss the Colombia-Ecuador crisis, which has resulted in movement orders affecting the armed forces of Ecador and Venezuela, and the armed forces of Columbia.

Bush doesn't like Morales, and he really doesn't like Chavez, to the point of toying with Venezuela as an alternate last-playground for his adventures with cordite.

Before the end of the week all three camps are likely to be on record, either supporting Uribe against those rebels in the jungle, and foreign safe-havens for narco-terrorists, or ... with some other message, perhaps about social justice as a principle of government more present in the Venezuela and Ecuador of Chavez and Morales than in the Columbia of Uribe, and narcotics being something other than terrorism, and negotiation generally a better choice than midnight massacres of rebels, in another country.

The phone is ringing. Will all three let it ring, unheard, or will some take the call, and go on record? This is not a drill.

About that 3am ad...

I've been thinking a lot about Clinton's 3am ad, particularly after reading the analysis in the lefty blogosphere and mainstream press. Much of the talk focuses on how it was a Pyrrhic victory for Clinton, as McCain and the GOP can just as easily use the argument against Clinton, should she win the Democratic nomination in August. On that point, I disagree.

The ad doesn't succeed solely based on the "experience" meme, and as such, since McCain clearly has more experience than Clinton, of course you will want HIM to be the one picking up the phone at 3am. The fact is, the intended audience is women, particularly mothers and grandmothers. Who do we want to pick up the phone in the middle of a crisis at 3am? A level-headed woman, who will always have in the back of her mind the interests of those sleeping children, or an old man with a reputation of being a hot-headed maverick?

March 04, 2008

Between waking and walking

A few nights ago my sleeping mind came up with the following dream narrative -- I was sitting in some hall after a political event, in the chairs, front row, working up from notes. Senator Clinton emerged from one of the hall's off-stage rooms and walked over to me. "You haven't written anything negative about me," she said. "True," I replied, "but I haven't written anything positive about you either." Senator Clinton thought about that for a measure, and said "That's sufficient." Necessarily I replied "Yes, it is".

Necessity and sufficiency. Constructs of a private mind sleeping in a time of waking public fever.

March 03, 2008

Political Humor

Hegal for Defense and Lugar for State. Now that is funny.

David Rose piece in Vanity Fair

I thought the basic contours of the Hamas counter-strike (or preemptive strike) on a US and/or Israeli re-armed Fatah in Gaza had already been published.

Its nice that the Rose piece is getting the attention that the issue deserves.

Compare the approach of -- a faction -- in Washington, to that of -- a faction -- in Tehran.

Update: I knew I'd seen it somewhere. I wrote about on June 17th, 2007, so I must have either read it, or made it up.


Subprime a concern? Sort of....

Headline and lede from AP this morning:

Credit Crunch Worries Economists By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The cascading fallout from the subprime loan crisis, barely a cloud on the horizon a year ago, is now viewed by experts as the economy's gravest threat.

In a survey being released Monday, 34 percent of the members of the National Association for Business Economics ranked the financial market turmoil from those loan defaults as the No. 1 threat to the economy over the next two years

ONLY 34%? Just what do the other 66% think is the #1 threat?

Our best measure

Janet Rankin was alone, and preserved the principle that in a Republic, the right to dissent, and the responsibility to dissent, was not a casualty of war. Barbara Lee was also alone, and also preserved that principle. Cynthia McKinney was also alone in 2006 filing articles of impeachment against George Walker Bush.

Those which are at ease, or things easily attained, are not our best measure.

Dennis isn't the progressive movement, the progressive agenda, the ... but he is a progressive, and whatever happens tomorrow in Texas and Ohio outside of the 10th district, it doensn't involve a single progressive, a single progressive issue, or progressives in the Democratic Party, but it will involve every eyeball that can be sucked into the process story and the politics of personality, and what has become a cult of personality.

A sad reality...

Kezzie is five and a half. A very precocious five and a half. Eric and I have agreed since her first few months that Kezzie was destined for political greatness - she just has that personality.

Yesterday, she and I were walking through the campground, talking about her reluctance to learn to read (this from a child who can add and subtract two digit columns in math.) Me: "Kez, if you want to be President, you'll have to learn to read." Kezzie: "But Mom, I can't be President." Me: "Why not?" Kezzie: "Only boys can be President." Me: Heart breaks into a million pieces.

March 02, 2008

A comment

Sometimes the comments on blogs are just precious.

Don't be surprised if Bush suddenly announces that Iran plans to increase the world-wide cockroach population by 100 trillion-billion.

From Juan Cole's blog.

Wildflowers...

wildflowers1.JPG

This is where we spent our yesterday.

Candle light and Cholla

Just before dusk yesterday evening Jonah climbed down out of the junipers he's been spending time in (a lot of time) and ran and hopped a few happy steps back towards the trailer, then stopped and started screaming. He'd stepped on a cholla fragment. Barefoot.

Last year at this site he embedded an inch of yucca spine into his lower calf, and it was a trip to the local clinic and full-pay for the uninsured for the local anesthetic, the excision and extraction, the sutures, the topical antibiotic, and the follow-up for suture removal.

We spent several minutes pulling cholla hairs out of the sole of his foot, and a half-inch long spine fully embedded into his big toe.

It was just a moment of joy turned to bleeding and tears, not particularly difficult, a day in the life of many kids, and for an autistic kid who kicks off his shoes on every occasion, and jumps and hops erratically in the joy of life, not too common -- we watch out for hazards.

But Jonah had MaineCare, which is to say, Jonah had MediCare, as did Sam, and their siblings, and their parents, a year ago, as I still had no long-term work, just some about to end consulting work. The only reason we paid was the hassle of dealing with paperwork when we have to have everything forwarded to us, sometimes several times.

Jonah and Sam may have lost their right to MaineCare, which is to say, MediCare, even though they are still residents of Maine (away on educational travel), because I am now eligible for employer-provided health insurance (provided I move them to Switzerland), and of course every private insurance provider is only too happy to insure people with pre-existing conditions, like a complete disability determination by the Social Security Administration, for Autism ... in something other than real life.

So I'm relieved that health care is now off-the-table for Dems, according to the leading organs of the "netroots", and that Single Payer is no longer an issue for that demographic.

Brother, can you spare a job...

After the tech bubble burst, Eric, like a zillion other techies, particularly those over a certain age, had a tough time finding steady work, so we empathize with the informants in this NYTimes piece:

Across the nation, the labor market has been deteriorating. Many companies, long reluctant to add workers, are hunkered down and waiting for improved prospects, engaged in what Ed McKelvey, a senior economist at Goldman Sachs, calls "a hiring strike." Americans with jobs are taking cuts to their work hours; those without jobs are staying out of work longer, or accepting positions that pay far less than they earned previously.

Teenagers are struggling to land minimum-wage jobs at fast-food restaurants, because those positions are increasingly being filled by adults. And those with poor credit are finding that this can disqualify them from getting a job.

IN many communities, dreams of upward mobility are yielding to despair and the grim realization that the economy -- not strong for less-educated workers even when it was growing -- may now be shrinking, making it tougher than ever to find a job.

Indeed, the increasingly anemic job market comes on the heels of six years of economic expansion that delivered robust corporate profits but scant job growth. The last recession, in 2001, was followed by a so-called jobless recovery. As the economy resumed growing, payrolls continued to shrink.

Thing is, many people knew that it's been bad, and getting worse, for years, but the media continued to tout the Bush Administration's "the economy is great!" talking points. I think the only ones in for a rude awakening are DC pols and their media bootlickers.

Update: I forgot to include what I consider the most outrageous part of the article:

For more than a decade, Dorothy Thomas, 49, an African-American and a mother of two, worked as an administrative assistant at various health care centers in Northern California. In her last job, she earned $16 an hour, as well as benefits, she said.

It was never enough to pay all the bills, she said, so she made choices, paying this one, not paying that one, all the while focused on one mission: getting her two daughters through school. She lived in apartments in better neighborhoods, paying more rent than she could afford to ensure that her girls attended better schools.

"I truly bought into the idea that education is the way out of poverty," Ms. Thomas says. One daughter received a master's degree in education and is a teacher in Hawaii, she says, and the other is still in college.

But the bills for Ms. Thomas are still coming due. She lost her car in November 2005 after she fell behind on the payments. Unable to drive to work, she lost her job. Since then, she has been unable to find a job.

Several times, she has landed interviews that seemed likely to bring offers, but the jobs required a credit check -- a test she cannot pass.

"My credit is just so in shambles," she told a classroom full of people gathered for a credit counseling session at the Private Industry Council. "More and more jobs are checking your credit. They're saying that credit is a reflection of your character."

Credit scores are determined by three private companies, Experian, TransUnion and Equifax. While there are a few feeble laws in regards to credit reporting, there is truly no serious federal oversight of these agencies. The fact that they have the means to control the work options of so many people is truly frightening. Last year, Eric had an offer in hand from one of the top two router companies; the only catch - agree to a consumer credit check. While we have a few dings on our credit in the past, the last couple of years have been blemish-free, so he wasn't particularly worried about not "passing" muster. However, after my ranting over how any company asking for a consumer credit check was tantamount to racial and gender profiling (women of color are most vulnerable to credit problems, for many reasons outside of their own control) he refused, on principle, to agree to the check. He made his case to the hiring manager, who, it appeared, truly understood Eric's position. However, the higher ups wouldn't budge, so Eric turned down the job. Fortunately, his new employer, a European entity, would never consider ceding such power to an unregulated third-party.

8th Majlis Slates

As a proxy for the whole of Iran, the 30 candidate slates for Tehran are what I'll use this cycle. Why Tehran? Because that's where the leadership generally hails from.

In our last episode, the municipal elections of 2006, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's slate, The Pleasant Scent of Service, got pasted, and the other conservatives, the moderates, and the reform slates did better than expected.

This cycle, for the 290 seats of the 8th Majlis (national assembly), there are slates of candidates filling out as the Guardian Council confirms the "competency" of each candidate. A slate aligned with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a slate of other conservative/fundamentalist candidates not aligned with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and the slates aligned with / coordinated by / advised by Medhi Karrubi and Mohammad Khatami are contesting the 30 Tehran seats.

There is some overlap between the National Confidence Party's candidate list for Tehran and the Reform Coalition's candidate list for Tehran.

There is also some overlap between the United Fundamentalist Front's candidate list for Tehran, and an umbrella coalition of fundamentalist groups, though the UFF appears to be requiring candidates to be listed exclusively on the UCC list.

Medhi Karrubi is the General Secretary of the National Confidence Party, Abdolvahed Musavi Lari chairs the Reform Coalition. Ali-Asghar Zareii (Fragrance of Service) heads the United Fundamentalist Front, and Ali Dorani chairs the umbrella coalition of fundamentalist groups.


And looking ahead to the June 2009 presidentials, Mohammad Qalibaf is in Baghdad this week, doing Mayor-to-Mayor with Sabir al-Isawi, and meeting with Nouri al-Maliki, not just Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

March 01, 2008

Can't keep on truckin'...

Susie provided the link and an excerpt, but everyone should read the entire article. But I'll provide a different excerpt:

About nine% of the nation's 3.4 million truck drivers are independent owner-operators, according to the Department of Labor. Without the independents, trucking will turn into a group of "regional and national oligopolies" that would send shipping prices higher when the economy improves, said John Saldanha, who teaches logistics at Ohio State University.

A Baird & Co. research report said the one positive note is the likelihood of more bankruptcies could eventually push freight rates up for the survivors.

Truckers, who felt unappreciated in the best of times, say they feel even more marginalized now.

Rumors of a nationwide truck strike are a nearly annual occurrence -- but this year an effort in January generated more talk than usual on MySpace and the Sirius Satellite Radio show "Freewheelin.'"

"If you eat it, drink it, wear it ... sit on it, if it is anything other than the air you breathe, an American truck driver made it possible!" wrote trucker Joe Misilewich of Norwich, New York in an e-mail. "Don't forget it! Without truckers, America is nothing!"

Nanette Jenkins Rudd, 40, a third-generation trucker based in Mapleton, Ill., kept her five trucks off the road the week of the strike.

"I pray that this strike is successful, so that we only have to stop rolling for a week -- and not forever," she said.

McCain's numbers

When I started writing about the parallel universe --first the Green Party, then the Socialist Party (France) primary, were locked in campaigns in which the candidates with policy history were likely to be beaten by a fetching new faces -- Yves Cochet lost to Dominique Voynet -- "work" lost to "hope" by one vote, and Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Laurent Fabius were clobbeed by Ségolène Royal when 60% of the PS voted for a break with the left and for triangulating toward the program of the right -- I was thinking of Senator Clinton, paying as much attention to Senator Obama as I did to Senators Bayh or Biden.

Gallup shows a tired old man, who was driving the Crash-and-Burn Express into oblivion as recently as the day before New Hampshire, who is most closely associated with an administration that has only a 19% favorable, who invented "the surge", tied with both Senators Clinton and Obama.

McCain's been written off by most (never us, we just can't let go of a presidential candidate who's been so interesting on the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, but don't tell anyone, not even other 'skins) of the Democratic Party's political strategists as dead for the last two-thirds of 2007, and with eight months left before the general election, and without having picked a running mate who can deliver Florida, is neck and neck with the winners of the Democratic Party's early contests. Eight months, not to get even from 10 points down, but to to get ahead, even if it is just a MoE in two of three battleground states -- Florida, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, and win.

Human error

Florida Power & Light said that a preliminary investigation has found that human error was responsible for the massive power outage on Tuesday that affected more than 584,000 customers.

A field engineer was diagnosing a switch that had malfunctioned at FPL's Flagami substation in west Miami. Without authorization, the engineer disabled two levels of relay protection — something contrary to the Juno Beach-based company's procedures.

During the diagnostic process, a fault occurred. With both levels of relay protection removed, the outage affected 26 transmission lines and 38 substations.

One of the substations served three of the generation units at the company's Turkey Point nuclear plant, which was designed to automatically shut down if there is a lack of enough power. Also affected were two other generation plants in FPL's system. The system lost 3,400 megawatts of generating capacity.

Via link.

Une trentaine de Palestiniens tués par Tsahal

GAZA (Reuters) - Trente-cinq Palestiniens ont été tués samedi par l'armée israélienne dans la bande de Gaza, a-t-on appris de sources médicales et auprès du Hamas.

Selon la population, les deux dernières victimes en date ont été touchées par un missile israélien qui s'est abattu sur leur véhicule dans le nord du territoire côtier.

The total of Tsahal killis since mid-week is now in excess of 70 persons.

Updates: Ten of the dead were members of Hamas, two of Islamic Jihad. Twenty one of the dead were civilians. Four were women, six were children. It is unknown to Le Monde's reporters whether the rest of the dead were members of the resistance organizations, or civilians.

Al Jazera reports to Tsahal KIA in Gaza. Tsahal reports only five "lightly wounded".

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