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The White House Lawyers Up May 31, 2010

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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And Krauthammer comments:
I found the statement from the White House just unbelievably lawyerly and, I must say, deceptive. Look at the things that it hides inside.
It says that options were raised— look how they use the passive [verb construction] – “for Executive Branch service.” Now, that could be a paid or unpaid job.
The next sentence then speaks about unpaid [appointment] to give the impression that the only offer was unpaid. But it doesn’t say [that explicitly]. They need to be asked, was he ever offered a paid job? That is not denied explicitly in here.
Number two, the only offer that we’ve heard about — [which] Sestak has talked about – [is] a phone call from President Clinton. But this is what the White House statement says: Efforts were made in June and July of 2009 to determine whether Sestak would be interested in appointed service.
I’ve never heard of a phone call that lasts two months. Obviously there were either other efforts [either] by Clinton — according to the White House, not me — or by others if this was a two-month effort. Who were the others who made the offers, what were the offers and were any of them non-paid?
The other questions are: Why did the White House contact the brother of Sestak yesterday? Did they say [it was] a heads up? It could also be obstruction, working out stories. And what was the conversation like between Obama and Clinton yesterday morning? — just by accident, perhaps, a day before the Clintonian [Sestak] story.

Those Terrible Israelis May 31, 2010

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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Did you hear about how they shot those people on the peace boat?
Here’s some video

They were peaceful protestors

The World Gets A Little More Dangerous May 31, 2010

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in Politics.
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It’s not enough that the batshit crazy North Koreans are just itching for a reason to pull the nuclear trigger, and it’s not enough that the longest war in American history just claimed its 1000th soldier, and it’s not enough that our national love affair with oil has not only led that fellow to his grave but is now destroying the Gulf of Mexico and every living thing within it and around it.  Nope.  A really successful Memorial Day Weekend just wouldn’t be complete without a random act of inexplicable insanity (over and above driving in circles at 250mph until someone goes airborne and disintigrates against the retaining wall.)

Today’s really really stupid move: Israel Attacks Palestinian Aid Flotilla  Nine dead, more wounded, all because Israel under Benjamin Netanyahu is determined to play hardball, no matter who is watching and no matter how many valid objections to the contrary they may hear.  I’m fully prepared to hear that these aid worker actually had a cache of deadly weapons stashed among the bins of food and medicines.  Count on it.  Because the only full-fledged democracy in the Middle East would never just start shooting up innocent aid workers, would they?  No more than our military would machine-gun unarmed civilians or blow up a convoy of SUVs carrying women and children.  The good guys just don’t do stuff like that…except that sometimes they do.

Obama has taken a lot of criticism on a lot of fronts, and with the oil still spilling onto the beaches of Louisiana and Mississippi, his long-term political survival isn’t much more promising than that of a petroleum-soaked bayou heron, but the criticism he’s taken on his Israel policy is probably misplaced.  The Obama administration has rightfully encouraged the Israelis to back off on new settlements and to resort to negotiation over intimidation and confrontation.  With Israeli actions like today’s, one can begin to see what Obama was talking about.

So now, instead of the Israeli Prime Minister visiting Obama at the White House to patch up the dying love affair, the meeting has been cancelled, and Netanyahu is at home left to answer troubling questions about why his military forces felt compelled to open fire on an aid convoy.  The answers should be interesting.

Just one more tinder-keg filled with way too much dynamite and way too short fuses.

BW

I Really Hate It When This Happens May 31, 2010

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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Here

Biden Idiocy May 31, 2010

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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Here

the man says dumber things than Sarah Palin ever dreamed of.

Dennis Hopper II May 31, 2010

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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Times of London:

Dennis Hopper: the rebel without a cause
He had more integrity in his little finger than today’s bland, bloodless stars can muster in their entire surgically enhanced bodies
Wendy Ide
He was the cowboy outlaw who blew smoke in the faces of the studio stuffed-shirts with his counter-cultural crossover hit, Easy Rider. He was the 18-year-old actor who idolised his co-star, James Dean, and counted him as his mentor. He was the hot property who cared so little about Hollywood that he managed to get himself banned from the MGM lot for taking on the might of Louis B. Mayer in an argument about Shakespeare.
He was the rabble-rousing wild man with such a legendary consumption of narcotics and alcohol that, by his own admission, he should have been “dead ten times over”. Dennis Hopper was the original rebel without a cause.
Hopper’s death at the age of 74 from prostate cancer on Saturday is tragic not just for his family and legions of fans. He represented one of the last links to a time when Hollywood was more of a lawless, gun-slinging frontier town than the stage-managed production line for sanitised sparkle and pre-approved quotes that it is today.
It’s impossible to imagine a studio publicist attempting to muzzle the man who allegedly won his comeback role in David Lynch’s Blue Velvet by screaming the words “I am Frank Booth!” down the phone to the director. The result of that unconventional audition was arguably one of the most genuinely terrifying characters in movie history.
Hopper was famously outspoken in interviews, although as a defamation lawsuit from the actor Rip Torn demonstrated, he didn’t always let the truth get in the way of a good story. Hopper claimed in an interview that Torn was fired from Easy Rider after he brandished a knife at Hopper. Torn successfully sued, claiming that it was Hopper, in fact, who was the knife-wielder. Given the extent of Hopper’s hell-raising at the time of filming, it’s not hard to imagine him spending most of the time on the set of his directorial debut clutching either a weapon, a bong or a quart of whiskey; nor is it surprising that his recall of the period was somewhat elastic.
But for all the self-destruction, unfortunate marriages (five of them, including one to Michelle Phillips that lasted just eight days) and career- immolating craziness, Hopper maintained more integrity in his little finger than many of the bland, bloodless stars of today can muster in their entire surgically enhanced bodies.
Even his failures — and his chaotic second directorial outing, The Last Movie, must count as one despite its subsequent cult status — were achieved on his own terms. And his career highs, in Blue Velvet, River’s Edge, Easy Rider, True Romance and in the acclaimed first series of 24 — are the stuff of legend. It’s Hollywood that’s dead. Dennis Hopper will live on.

Dennis Hopper May 31, 2010

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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Hidden in all that hippie stuff was a pretty good actor.
If you watch some of his early movie and TV appearances, he was really good. Of course all those drugs during the Easy Rider period didn’t do much for his brain or career.
A prize to anyone who can say how many times he said “man” in Easy Rider (I don’t know the answer but it was a lot).

My favorite Dennis Hopper fact – he was married to Michelle Phillips of the Mamas and Papas -for eight days.

Lowry on Sestak and Bribes May 30, 2010

Posted by Cory Franklin in Uncategorized.
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NY Post:

Psst, buddy, want a (legally murky, not at all a bribe, oh so innocent) job?
Rich Lowry
Is there a political errand that requires skirting the law and resorting to lawyerly evasion should it come to light? William Jefferson Clinton, reporting for duty, sir!
With the addition of Bill Clinton to a mix that included a Friday news dump and an exquisitely crafted exculpatory document from the White House counsel’s office, the Joe Sestak job-offer scandal acquired a retro feel. Who knew “hope and change” would feel so 1998?
The Sestak affair boiled over during the last week. The Democratic congressman said months ago that the White House had attempted to keep him out of the Senate primary in Pennsylvania against party-switcher Arlen Specter by dangling a job offer. No one paid much attention until Sestak won, and when pressed on the Sunday shows, refused to say anything more about the matter in a Tony-worthy impression of “A Man with Something to Hide.”
The White House kept insisting “trust us, nothing untoward happened,” until even Democrats began to say they should be more forthcoming. That produced Friday’s revelation of Clinton’s involvement as an emissary to Sestak, and a 11/4-page long White House counsel “report” that sought to put the matter to rest in a matter of a mere seven paragraphs.
The document suggests that, at the behest of the White House, Clinton offered Sestak an unpaid position on a presidential advisory board to get him to stand down.
He might have had better luck if he’d offered him a choice Capitol Hill parking space. For a sitting congressman and former three-star admiral like Sestak, a spot on an advisory commission would a nuisance to be avoided rather than a plum to be coveted, let alone at the price of his senatorial ambitions.
It’s almost inconceivable that practiced political hands like Clinton and Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff behind the gambit, would have considered such a trifle sufficient enticement to sway Sestak. Besides, the advisory role doesn’t jibe with Sestak’s words or body language over the last three months, all of which suggested he’d been offered a real, honest-to-goodness job – you know, one with a salary and maybe even health benefits and an office.
Larry Kane, the host of a Philadelphia public affairs show, first asked Sestak about the rumored White House approach back in February: “Were you ever offered a federal job to get out of this race?” “Yes,” Sestak said. “Was it secretary of the Navy?” “No comment,” Sestak replied. “Was it high-ranking?” Sestak said it was, which implies something more than glorified volunteer work.
If Sestak exaggerated the offer to inflate his own importance and his establishment-bucking credentials, he deserves a special place in the annals of Washington arrogance and pose. Who knows? This is the guy who did his entire press conference outside the Capitol on Friday with his coat thrown over his shoulder in a deliberate gesture of nonchalance.
Between the lines, the White House memo leaves open the possibility that Sestak’s original hints were accurate. Mark Twain said that a writer should “say what he is proposing to say, not merely come near it.” Obviously, the great humorist never worked in the White House counsel’s office, or he wouldn’t have been so simplistic and literal-minded.
White House counsel Robert Bauer’s memo is a classic in the use of the passive voice: Options were raised, and efforts were made. The memo carefully avoids a categorical statement that Sestak was never offered a paying job. And although it refers to efforts “in June and July of 2009″ to feel Sestak out, it leads the reader to believe without explicitly saying so that only Clinton contacted Sestak – in a conversation the congressman says lasted about 30 seconds.
Even if this version is as incomplete as the circumstantial evidence suggests, everyone has had ample opportunity to coordinate their stories. Perhaps something would shake loose if the Justice department began asking questions under oath about what appears to be a technical violation of federal law against promising jobs in exchange for political activity. But the White House hopes a united Democratic party, a tame press corps and – ahem – the good judgment of Attorney General Eric Holder will keep it from ever coming to that.
Regardless, the Sestak affair is clarifying. This is an administration that showcases the poetry of Barack Obama, while it runs on the prose of Rahm Emanuel. The president provides the rhetorical uplift; the chief of staff provides the politics as usual, with a vengeance. All of Obama’s promises of more transparency and a better, cleaner politics were boob bait for the young and the impressionable.
If you still believe it, well, then, former president of the United States Bill Clinton has a wonderful, once-in-a-lifetime, career-enhancing offer for you. Provided, of course, you don’t want any pay or responsibility.

Oil Spills, North Koreans With Nukes, Earthquakes, Volcanos, And The Next Avian/Swine/Yet-To-Be-Named Flu May 30, 2010

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in News Of The Weird.
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The Prepper Movement — a Growing Network Preparing for the World’s End – Asyl

Not that there’s anything to be worried about…

BW

In Response To “Messing Up” May 30, 2010

Posted by Benjamin Wendell in Environment, Politics.
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Peggy Noonan and the rest of the right may be correct that Deepwater Horizon may turn out to be Obama’s Katrina.  It’s a matter of style over substance.  The reality may be that there’s not a lot that Obama could have done that would have changed the outcome, but there’s plenty he could have tried to change the perception.  Seeing a dozen Navy destroyers and cruisers off the coast of New Orleans wouldn’t do much beyond getting their hulls dirty with oil, but it would make it look as if the federal government was in charge and doing what we do best…making war on something, whether the something is terrorism, drugs, or a black stinking hole in the ocean.  Meanwhile, this may turn out to be another, if not the final, nail in the coffin of the last great progressive hope of the twenty-first century, the Obama administration.  In 2012, when we’re faced with the nightmare scenario of a President Palin or something like it, we’ll have BP to thank for swinging the pendulum all the way to the right.  Here’s Frank Rich on the “Oil Effect”:

May 28, 2010

Obama’s Katrina? Maybe Worse

By FRANK RICH

FOR Barack Obama’s knee-jerk foes, of course it was his Katrina. But for the rest of us, there’s the nagging fear that the largest oil spill in our history could yet prove worse if it drags on much longer. It might not only wreck the ecology of a region but capsize the principal mission of the Obama presidency.

Before we look at why, it would be helpful to briefly revisit that increasingly airbrushed late summer of 2005. Whatever Obama’s failings, he is infinitely more competent at coping with catastrophe than his predecessor. President Bush’s top disaster managers — the Homeland Security secretary, Michael Chertoff, as well as the notorious “Brownie” — professed ignorance of New Orleans’s humanitarian crisis a full day after the nation had started watching it live in real time on television. When Bush finally appeared, he shunned the city entirely and instead made a jocular show of vowing to rebuild the coastal home of his party’s former Senate leader, Trent Lott. He never did take charge.

The Obama administration has been engaged with the oil spill from the start — however haltingly and inarticulately at times. It was way too trusting of BP but was never AWOL. For all the second-guessing, it’s still not clear what else the president might have done to make a definitive, as opposed to cosmetic, difference in plugging the hole: yell louder at BP, send in troops and tankers, or, as James Carville would have it, assume the role of Big Daddy? The spill is not a Tennessee Williams play, its setting notwithstanding, and it’s hard to see what more drama would add, particularly since No Drama Obama’s considerable talents do not include credible play-acting.

But life isn’t fair, and this president is in a far tougher spot in 2010 than his predecessor was in 2005.

When Katrina hit, Bush was in his second term and his bumbling was not a shock to a country that had witnessed two-plus years of his grievous mismanagement of the Iraq war. His laissez-faire response to the hurricane was also consistent with his political DNA as a small-government conservative in thrall to big business. His administration’s posture toward the gulf region had been telegraphed at its inception, when Dick Cheney convened oil and gas cronies, including Enron’s Ken Lay, to set environmental and energy policy. The Interior Department devolved into a cesspool of corruption, even by its historically low standards, turning the Bush-Cheney antigovernment animus into a self-fulfilling prophecy and bequeathing Obama a Minerals Management Service as broken as the Bush-Cheney FEMA exposed by Katrina.

Obama was elected as a progressive antidote to this discredited brand of governance. Of all the president’s stated goals, none may be more sweeping than his desire to prove that government is not always a hapless and intrusive bureaucratic assault on taxpayers’ patience and pocketbooks, but a potential force for good.

He returned to this theme with particular eloquence in his University of Michigan commencement speech 10 days after the Deepwater Horizon blowout. He reminded his audience that under both parties the federal government helped build public high schools, the transcontinental railroad and the interstate highway system, engineered the New Deal and Medicare — and imposed safety and environmental standards on the oil industry. Quoting Lincoln, Obama said that “the role of government is to do for the people what they cannot do better for themselves.”

We expect him to deliver on this core conviction. But the impact on “the people” of his signature governmental project so far, health care reform, remains provisional and abstract. Like it or not, a pipe gushing poison into an ocean is a visceral crisis demanding visible, immediate action.

Obama’s news conference on Thursday — explaining in detail the government’s response, its mistakes and its precise relationship to BP — was at least three weeks overdue. It was also his first full news conference in 10 months. Obama’s recurrent tardiness in defining exactly what he wants done on a given issue — a lapse also evident in the protracted rollout of the White House’s specific health care priorities — remains baffling, as does his recent avoidance of news conferences. Such diffidence does not convey a J.F.K.-redux in charge of a neo-New Frontier activist government.

Long before Obama took office, the public was plenty skeptical that government could do anything right. Eight years of epic Bush ineptitude and waste only added to Washington’s odor. Now Obama is stuck between a rock and a Tea Party. His credibility as a champion of reformed, competent government is held hostage by video from the gulf. And this in an election year when the very idea of a viable federal government is under angrier assault than at any time since the Gingrich revolution and militia mobilization of 1994-5 and arguably since the birth of the modern conservative movement in the 1960s.

This is why the more revealing strand of Rand Paul’s post-primary victory romp may have been his musings about BP, not civil rights law — although they are two sides of the same ideological coin. He called out Obama and his administration for sounding “really un-American” in their “criticism of business.” He asked that we stop the “blame game” over the disaster and instead just accept the fact that “accidents happen.” Much as Paul questioned the federal government’s role in ordering lunch counters to desegregate, so he belittled its intrusion into BP’s toxic private enterprise. But unlike the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the role of government in corporate regulation is a continuing battle, not settled law.

Hardly were those words out of Paul’s mouth than the G.O.P. gave him the hook. He dropped his scheduled appearance on last Sunday’s “Meet the Press.” Mitch McConnell, the Republican majority leader and Paul’s newly self-appointed minder, declared that his fellow Kentuckian had said “quite enough for the time being in terms of national press coverage.” Establishment conservatives have scrambled to portray Paul as either an innocent victim of a liberal media game of “gotcha” or an inexperienced citizen-politician who made the rookie mistake of conducting campaign interviews as if they were classroom seminars in Libertarian theory. We were told he really didn’t mean what he was saying, and that he certainly didn’t represent the G.O.P. or the Tea Party movement.

Whom are they kidding? Paul rightly described his victory as “a message from the Tea Party” that it was on the march “to take our government back.” And if he doesn’t represent the G.O.P., who does if not his most powerful supporters and ideological fellow travelers, Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin? Aside from saying no to Obama, the Republican Party has no ideas except Tea Party ideas, Rand Paul ideas. And as The Economist, hardly a liberal observer, put it, Paul’s views are those of “a genuine radical who believes in paring government down to the bone.”

The president of the American Enterprise Institute, the conservative think tank, codified the mission in apocalyptic terms last weekend. The new American “culture war,” Arthur C. Brooks wrote in The Washington Post, is not “over guns, gays or abortion” but pits “the principles of free enterprise” against the “European-style statism” he accuses Obama of fomenting. It’s a war that takes no prisoners: the A.E.I. purged the former Bush speechwriter David Frum after he broke with the strict party line.

The stakes are high. To win this culture war, the right must rewrite history — and not just that of the Bush response to Katrina. In his jeremiad, Brooks held only “government housing policy” responsible for the 2008 economic meltdown and gave a pass to what he regards as an already overregulated Wall Street. Palin has brazenly accused Obama of being in financial hock to Big Oil when it’s her own “drill, baby, drill” party that has collected three-quarters of Big Oil’s campaign cash for decades.

The Tea Party is meanwhile busy rewriting America’s early history under Beck’s tutelage by enforcing a vision of the Constitution tantamount to the Creationists’ view of Genesis. We must obey the words of the founding fathers literally — or what the Tea Partiers think those words to be. (Many Tea Partiers seem unaware that Medicare is a government entitlement postdating Tom Paine.) There can be no evolution or amendments. Any Obama initiatives are sacrilegious. All previous add-ons are un-American and must be pared away, from the Department of Education to the Americans with Disabilities Act. Michael Steele, the party chairman, attacked Elena Kagan for joining Thurgood Marshall in finding the original text of the Constitution “defective” because, among other defects, it countenanced slavery.

The only good news from the oil spill is that when catastrophe strikes, even some hard-line conservatives, like Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana, start begging for the federal government to act, and act big. It’s the crunch moment for government to make its case — as Obama belatedly started to do on Thursday. But words are no match for results. As long as the stain washes up on shore, the hole in BP’s pipe will serve the right as a gaping hole in the president’s argument for expanded government supervision of, for starters, Big Oil and big banks. It’s not just the gulf that could suffer for decades to come.

BW

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