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lubablog

Because wherever you go, there you are
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Saturday, June 30, 2007

State of the Nation



A recent CBS News poll shows that
Americans are increasingly dissatisfied with the Iraq war, President Bush and the Congress, as well as the overall direction of the country.

More Americans than ever before, 77 percent, say the war is going badly, up from 66 percent just two months ago. Nearly half, 47 percent, say it's going very badly.


While the springtime surge in U.S. troops to Iraq is now complete, more Americans than ever are calling for U.S. forces to withdraw. Sixty-six percent say the number of U.S. troops in Iraq should be decreased, including 40 percent who want all U.S. troops removed. That's a 7-point increase since April.


The poll has bad news for President Bush, too. His job approval rating slipped to 27 percent, his lowest number ever in a CBS news poll – 3 points less than last month,and 1 point below his previous low of 28 percent in January. His disapproval rating is also at an all-time high of 65 percent.

Vice President Dick Cheney received a similarly low rating, with 28 percent approval and 59 percent disapproval.


The poll found a record number of Americans, 75 percent, believe the country is headed in the wrong direction. Only 19 percent think the U.S. is on the right track — the lowest number since CBS News first asked the question in 1983.
And so it goes. Americans have finally opened their eyes; htey must now take back the power and set this country back on the right track.

Thomas Jefferson said it best...
And what country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not warned from time to time that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to the facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.
Especially tyrants.


Boston Liberty tree

Friday, June 29, 2007

King George

Click on cartoon to enlarge

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Waterloo

...is not just a town in Belgium or Ontario. For Nixon, it was in Viet Nam. For George and his merry band of Neocons, it seems to be located a bit north of there.

Monday, June 25, 2007

Volunteers

When the President Talks to God

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

The General's Report

Sy Hersch strikes again in this week's New Yorker, with his profile of General Antonio Taguba, yet another member of our military who has had his career cut short by the Bush administration. Why? For reporting the truth about Abu Ghraib.

Taguba was sent to Iraq to do a job–investigate the abuses at Abu Ghraib. His mistake was believing that this administration wanted the truth; others (Lee Hamilton?) would have known that a whitewash was in order.

You can read his story here.

Sick Children


"Who in their right mind would send 363 TONS of cash into a war zone? But that's exactly what our government did."- Henry Waxman (D-CA)

Over 4 billion dollars were shipped to Iraq on pallets, and then, well, disappeared. No receipts were asked for, none given. Altogether, more than 8 billions dollars have just gone missing in Iraq. And that does not even begin toinclude the billions of dollars in overcharges, graft corruption and no-bid Halliburton rip-offs.

We have spent close to a trillion dollars in Iraq so far, with no end in sight. (Mind you, this is the war that the Neocons swore would pay for itself through oil revenue. I wonder what happened to all that oil money?) The last reauthorization bill was for 80 billion dollars.

Why is this salient? Bob Herbert writes in today's NYT:

You won’t see these stories on television, but Marian Wright Edelman and Dr. Irwin Redlener could talk to you all day and all night about children whose lives have been lost or ruined because they didn’t have health insurance.

This is not a situation one associates with a so-called advanced country. That you can have sick children wasting away in the United States, the wealthiest nation on the planet, because medical treatment that could relieve their suffering is withheld by men and women with dollar signs instead of compassion in their eyes is beyond unconscionable.

Ms. Edelman is the president of the Children’s Defense Fund, and Dr. Redlener is president of the Children’s Health Fund.

Both are appalled at the embarrassing fact that nine million American children have no health coverage at all. Among them are children with diabetes, chronic asthma, heart conditions, life-threatening allergies and so on. In many instances they are left untreated until it is too late.

Leaving children uninsured is a form of Russian roulette, Dr. Redlener said.

“All children should be covered,” said Ms. Edelman.

Congress and the president could do something about this right now. Of the nine million children without coverage, six million are already eligible for either Medicaid or the popular State Children’s Health Insurance Program, or S-chip, which covers children whose parents earn too much to qualify for Medicaid but too little to afford private health insurance. The bulk of the funding for S-chip comes from the federal government.

S-chip, which had strong bipartisan support when it was established 10 years ago, is currently up for reauthorization in Congress. The program should be expanded as part of a broader effort to cover as many of the six million eligible-but-uninsured kids as possible.

Eligible children remain outside of S-chip and Medicaid for a variety of reasons, including the following: because there is insufficient funding to cover them; because families do not realize their children qualify for coverage; because red tape and complicated regulations discourage families from signing up.

A number of S-chip re-authorization proposals are being developed. The best-case scenario would be legislation — costing as much as $50 billion in additional funding over the next five years — that would cover millions of additional youngsters from poor and working-poor families. This would put the U.S. on the road toward universal coverage for children.

Ten billion dollars a year is considered a pittance when it comes to funding wars and tax cuts for the very wealthy. But it’s suddenly a lot of money when the subject is the health of American children.

One of the worst scenarios has been offered by President Bush in his White House budget proposal. That calls for just $4.8 billion in new funding for S-chip over the next five years. The result, according to the Congressional Budget Office, would be a net loss of coverage for 1.4 million children.

The old expression was “taking candy from a baby.” The White House is ready to take away vitally needed medicine.

Negotiations over the reauthorization of S-chip are under way. It will be interesting to see whether the Democrats who crowed so much about their newfound power when they took control of Congress will stand tall for the kids of the poor and working poor, and whether there are enough caring Republicans to resurrect the spirit of bipartisanship from a decade ago.

As the heat gets turned up on this issue, the White House appears to be falling into its old habit of creating its own reality.

The Congressional Budget Office and most researchers have agreed on the six million figure for the number of youngsters who are eligible for government-sponsored health coverage but remain unenrolled — roughly four million for Medicaid and two million for S-chip. This has not been controversial.

Yesterday, the Department of Health and Human Services began circulating a study that tries to make the case that the total number of eligible but uninsured youngsters is a mere 794,000, an absurdly low figure.

If you can wave a magic wand and make five million poor kids disappear, you no longer have to think about caring for them.

Advocates like Dr. Redlener and Ms. Edelman don’t have that luxury.

“Kids who grow up with poor access to health care carry a high risk of having underdiagnosed and undertreated chronic illness, both physical and emotional,” said Dr. Redlener. “We know what to do. We should fully fund this effort at the $50 billion level and make coverage mandatory for all children.”

But Bush and the Neocons had to have their war and their tax cuts cuts for the rich, and now the children of America must pay the price.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Fathers' Day

Monday, June 11, 2007

Happy Birthday, Beth!

Memory Loss

The Washington Post reported that Alberto Gonzales used the phrase “I don’t recall” and its variants 64 times during a five-hour hearing in April, “treat[ing] the committee to a mixture of arrogance, combativeness and amnesia. Even his would-be defenders on the Republican side were appalled.”

Recent hearings with his aides have shown that such memory loss seems to be rampant in the Justice Department. Perhaps it's something in the water there?

Monday, June 04, 2007

Yet Another Terrorist Plot Foiled!


Another plot foiled, the headlines read. A group of home-grown Muslim terrorists had planned to put a bomb in the fuel lines at JFK airport and cause a huge explosion and massive loss of life.

Except they hadn't really planned it so much as talked about it.

And none of them had the necessary access.

And it wasn't even technically feasible.

But arrests were made, the media was notified, and the American public has been appropriately scared and lie quivering in their beds. Our brave Homeland Security team has saved us again!

And nothing will come of it, because there was no there there. The plot was as real as fantasy football, dreamed up by a governmetn informer, who then urged on a group of losers and malcontents to go along with him. And the FBI helped out with money and wires, and took credit for a save. As before, and will over and over agian. It's easier to create criminals than to actualy infiltrate al Qaeda and stop real ones.

Nora Ephron has a take on this, explaining "How to Foil a Terrorist Plot in Seven Simple Steps":


1. In order to foil a terrorist plot, you must first find a terrorist plot. This is not easy.

2. Not just anyone can find and then foil a terrorist plot. You must have an incentive. The best incentive is to be an accused felon, looking at a long prison term. Under such circumstances, your lawyer will explain to you, you may be able to reduce your sentence by acting as an informant in a criminal case, preferably one involving terrorists.

3. The fact that you do not know any actual terrorists should not in any way deter you. Necessity is the mother of invention: if you can find the right raw material -- a sad, sick, lonely, drunk, deranged, disgruntled or just plain anti-American Muslim somewhere in the United States -- you can make your very own terrorist.

4. Now the good part begins. Money! The FBI will give you lots of money to take your very own terrorist out to lots of dinners where you, wearing a wire, can record yourself making recommendations to him about possible targets and weapons that might be used in the impending terrorist attack that your very own terrorist is going to mastermind, with your help. It will even buy you a computer so you can go to Google Earth in order to show your very own terrorist a "top secret" aerial image of the target you have suggested.

5. More money!! The FBI will give you even more money to travel to foreign countries with your very own terrorist, and it will make suggestions about terrorist groups you can meet while in said foreign countries.

6. Months and even years will pass in this fashion, while you essentially get the FBI to pay for everything you do. (Incidentally, be sure your lawyer negotiates your expense account well in advance, or you may be forced -- as the informant was in the Buffalo terrorist case -- to protest your inadequate remuneration by setting yourself on fire in front of the White House.)

7. At a certain point, something will go wrong. You may have trouble recruiting other people to collaborate with your very own terrorist, who is, as you yourself know, just an ordinary guy in a really bad mood. Or, alternatively, the terrorist cell you have carefully cobbled together may malfunction and fail to move forward -- probably as a result of sheer incompetence or of simply not having been genuinely serious about the acts of terrorism you were urging it to commit. At this point, you may worry that the FBI is going to realize that there isn't much of a terrorist plot going on here at all, just a case of entrapment. Do not despair: the FBI is way ahead of you. The FBI knows perfectly well what's going on. The FBI has as much at stake as you do. So before it can be obvious to the world that there's no case, the FBI will arrest your very own terrorist, hold a press conference and announce that a huge terrorist plot has been foiled. It will of course be forced to admit that this plot did not proceed beyond the pre-planning stage, that no actual weapons or money were involved, and that the plot itself was "not technically feasible," but that will not stop the story from becoming a front-page episode all over America and, within hours, boilerplate for all the Republican politicians who believe that you need to arrest a "homegrown" terrorist now and then to justify the continuing war in Iraq. Everyone will be happy, except for the schmuck you shmikeled into becoming a terrorist, and no one really cares about him anyway.

So congratulations. You have foiled a terrorist plot. Way to go.