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Saturday, November 20, 2004
Leadership 101
Rebellious House Republicans have killed the 9/11 reform bill. Looks like it might be as long a four years for Shrub is it is for the rest of us.
posted by Jerry Bowles
6:06 PM
Jesus saves, Moses invests, Allah pulls out
Forced to conform to the Protocols of the Elders of Bush Tatalech Greenspan is biting the green weenie.
posted by Groom
3:26 PM
Talkin' turkey... pick the mystery guest...
Last year the president surprised the world by doing a Thanksgiving photo op at a Baghdad aircraft hangar eating turkey with the troops. Who do you think will show up this year? 1) George W. Bush 2)Lord Cheney 3) Lord Rummy 4) Rice-a-roni 5) Brylcreem Wolfowitz 6) None of the above. Bonus question: who will the Dems send? (image credit: Brokennewz.com)
posted by Groom
5:31 AM
Friday, November 19, 2004
Christian Right Values
The rotten bastards sat on this report until after the election and then released it late on a Friday night: More than 12 million families last year, about the same as in 2002, either didn't have enough food or worried about being able to feed everyone, the government reported Friday. CNN
posted by Jerry Bowles
10:54 PM
Red State Values Report
In a continuing effort to help our Blue State readers understand the concerns and daily lives of our Red State brothers and sisters and, perhaps, to learn from their moral example, we sometimes publish materials designed to stimulate a dialogue and bridge the gap. Today's report comes to us from Chattanooga.com:
posted November 18, 2004
Chattanooga Police said a girl's hair was set on fire in a county school bus.
In the incident on Marylin Lane, students said it happened when a number of students were exiting. They said it was difficult to see who had set the fire.
It caught the end of her hair on fire, but it was immediately extinguished.
The girl said she "was fine."
At Walgreen's on Broad Street, a bullet was found in a planter out front. It was a Winchester 358 - brass with a silver tip.
Janet Campbell of Alabama Avenue in St. Elmo found her house ransacked and blood drippings in various rooms.
The burglar had apparently cut himself in getting in through a window he broke out on the side of the living room. Jewelery and other items were missing.
Randall Dunn said he was at the back of his store at 2265 Gunbarrel Road when a man came up behind him. The man asked him if he was in charge of the store.
He then told him he had 30 seconds to get to the front. The man, who appeared to have a gun up his right sleeve, then directed him to get the money from the cash register.
The man then left, running toward Hamilton Place Mall. He was caught on the store video, but he was covering his face as he came in and running on the way out.
At Northgate Park, Toi Smith said she was making a deposit to the bank. A man approached her vehicle and threw a car jack through the passenger window. He then snatched the money bag, getting away with $3,000 in cash and $4,000 in checks. The robber had on a hat and a black shirt.
Amber Wyatt, 20, said her husband, Gregory B. Wyatt, 51, came up to Mt. Vernon Avenue where she was with Sidney E. Scott, 46.
She said the enraged husband rammed his 1970 Chevy truck into Scott's parked Ford van. She said he then knifed all four tires on the Scott vehicle. Then he came up on the porch and broke out a large window.
The report says when Scott went out on the porch, Wyatt attacked him, leaving his face scratched.
It says Wyatt, as he left, hit a tree with his pickup. He finally had to abandon the vehicle.
Michael Higginbotham said he was jogging at Greenway Farm. When he returned to his vehicle, someone had knocked out a window and gotten his briefcase that had miscellaneous papers and some payroll checks.
They also took his pants that were in the floorboard of the front passenger side. Memo to Gregory Wyatt: I don't care if Amber is your wife and first cousin, she's too damned young for you. You, too, Sidney.
posted by Jerry Bowles
8:01 PM
Hefley Voted Against DeLay Rule
Joel Hefley’s press secretary says the Colorado Springs congressman voted against the Delay Rule, a Republican measure that eased the party’s ethics standards. Hefley is chairman of the House Ethics Committee. Josh Marshall is right. Let's get everybody on record. David Donnelly has the comprehensive list of who voted how here.
posted by Jerry Bowles
6:28 PM
Maybe They Would Have Preferred "Uncle Ben"
The most e-mailed story at Yahoo News this afternoon--by a three-to-one margin--is "Radio Host Calls Rice 'Aunt Jemima'." The host in question is John "Sly" Sylvester of WTDY here in Madison. (Sly and I attended the University of Wisconsin at Platteville together back in the day, and we both worked at the campus radio station. I always thought I was the first program director ever to suspend him for something he said on the air, until I found out years later he'd been kicked off the air in high school, too.) In the intervening quarter-century [!], Sly's fearless attitude toward, well, everything, has turned him into the top radio personality in Madison, a position he's held for the better part of 10 years.
You can read the story linked above yourself for the details of what he said, and this morning's Wisconsin State Journal story with his comments on the flap. I'm not apologizing for what I said . . . I stand by it. . . I did call her the Aunt Jemima of the administration because I think not only have they used her race as a trophy, but I think her price of admission to the White House has been complete obedience to the white power structure in the White House" . . . [And] I called [Colin Powell] Uncle Tom. Frankly I think they bought his silence. As usual, it seems to be the language used to express the sentiment and not the sentiment itself that's got people upset. Because Sly's pretty much right on the substance--Rice and Powell have been part of an administration that's been an absolute disaster for black America without, as far as we know, raising a peep about it. They have served as a kind of window dressing for an administration whose commitment to diversity and equality is appalling. And people like Senator Russ Feingold and the Madison Urban League, both of whom criticized the remarks, have to know it. You can argue that the non-focus on Rice's and Powell's race is a great step forward for racial equality--but we all know we don't live in that country yet. Race still matters here, even when we try to act like it doesn't, and this flap is Exhibit A.
Here's the weird part: A couple of weeks ago, Milwaukee talk show host (and sometime-Rush Limbaugh fill-in) Mark Belling referred to Mexicans as "wetbacks" and was yanked off the air in response. (As program director of WTDY, Sly says he has no plans to suspend himself.) Latino groups in Milwaukee have attempted to organize advertiser boycotts and get Belling fired, but he returned to the air this week full of sarcastic apologies. Belling's remark was almost exclusively a Wisconsin story. However, if you Google "sylvester jemima" this afternoon, you'll find over 170 links to the story from all across the United States, and from Australia and the UK, too. So Sly, who is generally an unapologetic progressive, takes out after two powerful individuals and it's a worldwide story, but a conservative throws a comparable insult at an entire ethnic group and barely breaks through the torrent. The so-called liberal media strikes again.
My hope is that the management of WTDY will stick by him; I suspect they will, but I can't be entirely sure. This town is far more self-consciously liberal than Milwaukee, and self-consciously liberal outrage is just as capable of inflicting casualties as conservative outrage. I hope WTDY won't go stupid and fire the guy--because by assuaging Madison's white liberal guilt, they'd be contributing to the wingnut crackdown on criticism of the Bush cult.
Late Note: Right after I posted this, I saw that Lean Left had blogged the story also--and a commenter there reported that the Belling story logged over 300 weblinks when it broke the week before the election. So contrary to my statement above, the Belling slur got national attention too--but I stand by my contention that it didn't penetrate the zeitgeist to anywhere near the extent that the Sly story has, if the Yahoo most-emailed designation means anything. (6pm)
posted by jabartlett
5:21 PM
Light at the End of the Tunnel Report
World Vision, one of the few remaining aid agencies in Iraq, is pulling out.
The International Committee of the Red Cross sharply criticized the "utter contempt" for humanity shown by all sides in Iraq amid fierce fighting between US forces and insurgents for control of the city of Fallujah.
posted by Jerry Bowles
2:38 PM
Yeah, That's the Ticket...
Tom Brokaw is a smart guy, a red-stater who's heart is in the right place, but seriously, folks. Is the bar for leadership totally media-driven? Is the real legacy of Ronald Reagan the recasting of the role of president as Spokesman-in-Chief? Maybe so. Lord knows, we have a malignant marionette masquerading as POTUS these days.
I live in the state that booted the aptly named Gray Davis for a guy who apparently never met a glute he didn't fondle. And while Ahnold is great theater, he's failing at the job he was elected to do. He's certainly done no better than the humorless hack he replaced. In some ways things are worse. It's just that Ahnold is more entertaining. We Leftcoasters still have a $6 billion deficit that is projected to grow to more than $11 billion by 2006--bond measures, staffing layoffs, tuition increases notwithstanding. But it doesn't seem to matter so long as the Gropinator stands tall and spouts epithets like, "Girlie Men."
Maybe we're all working too hard trying to do the "right thing"(a liberal democrat failing, for sure). The hell with policy, vision and programs. They don't seem to matter anyway. Perhaps we should make this a battle of celebrity talking heads. We'll win that one hands-down. You want Hollywood, we'll give you Hollywood. Let's run a Brokaw/Springsteen ticket, or Jon Stewart/Wesley Clark, Maria Shriver/Michael Stipe. Yeah, that's it, that's the ticket.
posted by Leftcoast
1:21 PM
Friday's Open Thread
Number of months before Shrub greenlights Israel to take out Iran's "nuclear" program. a) 1-3; b) 3-6 c) pick the exact month and win a visit from the new, improved CIA.
posted by Jerry Bowles
11:26 AM
Who Lost Canada?
Faux News has been granted permission to peddle its trash on cable to our neighbors in the Great White North.
posted by Jerry Bowles
10:05 AM
2008 Prospects - Governor Mike Easley, NC Lead-Off Batter and Center Fielder
 Easley won re-election in North Carolina, Jesse Helms country, a state Bush carried by a margin of 56 to 45 over Kerry, with 62 percent of the women’s vote and after raising taxes during his first term to balance the budget mess he inherited from a Republican. Not even Edwards could win re-election there, so Easley is doing something right.
Easley is 54, pro-choice Catholic, avid hunter (for real) and recently endorsed by the NRA. One of seven children, he grew up on his family's Nash County tobacco farm. He struggled with a reading disorder in high school and college, graduating from UNC Chapel Hill and earning a law degree at a place we never heard of--NC Central--a long way from Yale and Harvard. He has been in elected office for 25 years, starting out as a county prosecutor and then being elected to two terms as State Attorney General, where among other things he helped negotiate the national tobacco settlement.
In 2000, Easley campaigned on three basic promises: He said he would pass a plan to help seniors pay for prescription drugs, lower class sizes in early public school grades and create an academic pre-kindergarten for the state's poorest children. He's done all three, and now NC is among the leading states in public education, a claim Bush exaggerated about Texas to help win that same year.
He's angered liberals by refusing to consider a temporary halt to executions. He's irritated conservatives by raising taxes. He's alienated fellow moderates within his own party by declining to campaign hard for other Democratic candidates, including skipping numerous appearances by vice presidential nominee John Edwards this summer and fall. But he keeps on winning.
Scouting Report: Not the kind of hitter we are used to seeing in a Democratic uniform. Has some of Kerry’s aloofness and Bush’s management style, relying heavily on his inner circle rather than listening to outside opinions. Doesn’t have the God-thing sorted out for primetime yet, since he is all over the morals map as a Catholic, pro-choice, anti-gay marriage and pro-death penalty advocate. Not much of a team player, but it looks like he can handle the political sinkers, sliders and inside curve balls.
posted by Josh
8:55 AM
Kristian anal-retentive eKonomiKs…
Voters didn’t want to hear that “it’s the economy, stupid.” But now that Uncle Karl says it’s time for the Bureau of Labor Statistics to go potty, we’re seeing signs of the impending Bush inflation… gasoline and food prices jumped 8.6% last month, pushing the Consumer Price Index to its highest level of the year. October’s Producer Price Index jumped 1.7%; the biggest blast since January, 1990. Wholesale gasoline and home heating oil in October posted a 17% increase. Mortage monolith Fannie Mae is also having some toilet-training problems; auditors KPMG refused to sign off on third-quarter earnings, blowing-off a legal filing deadline. Derivatives are the crack cocaine of the financial world and investigators suspect Fannie cooked the books on $9 billion between July and September to cover what it blew on its habit. Like it says on in Job:22… “throw thy gold into the sands of the river Ophir.” (stats: AP and BLS)
posted by Groom
7:59 AM
Kill a journalist for Jesus
The body bags are piling up at Reuters. Wonder when we'll read about the next Body by Bush? Will the news be "fit to print?"
posted by Groom
4:29 AM
Thursday, November 18, 2004
SUPREME COURT ADOPTS PAPERLESS E-VOTING; AFFIRMS BUSH SECOND TERM BY VOTE OF 17-4
-- future headline, December 13, 2004
And this time, our incurious, lazy, and thoroughly cowed press won't even wonder how Scalia + Thomas + Rehnquist = 17 votes . . .
posted by Michael
11:46 PM
What do Democrats stand for?
No issue is more on our minds these days than the one that goes to the heart of who, as Democrats, we are—What do we stand for? Our representatives in Congress, led by newly re-elected Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, have taken the lead in providing some answers. Back on September 22, 2004, they announced their "New Partnership for America's Future."
"Democrats will continue the historic unity we had this year. We will continue to highlight the differences between Democrats and Republicans. And our New Partnership of America's Future will be the foundation of our legislative agenda. We will always be true to its core values of security, prosperity, opportunity, community, fairness, and accountability."
The values are sound. Our challenge is to build them into a compelling narrative, a story that will touch the hearts of red as well as blue America.
To learn more about what they had to say, see HouseDemocrats.Gov
Passed on with thanks to Upper Left's Shaun Dale for providing the pointer.
posted by John
10:18 PM
More gubmint by the oil, of the oil, for the oil
Bushy knew about Marky-Mark Thatcher's coup down in oil rich Equitorial Guinea. That means Condi knew too and will anybody at the "hearings" puh-leeze aks her if maybe her old Chevron connections got a little heads up in the name of profiteering? Sir Marky-Mark be in some very deep Texas tea.
posted by Groom
4:16 PM
Matters of National Urgency
Thank goodness this fine Republican is protecting us from Liberalism.
posted by Blackdogred
3:45 PM
We're on the Slippery Slope to Hell. Might as Well Enjoy the Ride.
Just two weeks after the theft of 2004, the Rabid Righteous are wasting no time in asserting their rule. Three unrelated incidents that tie to a greater, chilling theme:
Hugh Hewitt, in his on-air commentary last night about the Target/Salvation Army flap, called Target a "Blue State" retailer. He applied the same seemingly pejorative to Best Buy because both are headquartered in Minnesota and take a secular point of view in their business operations.
The perenially mercurial Bill O'Reilly, in his coverage of the Clinton Library opening this morning, referred ominously to Bill Clinton as the "last secular American president." Can you ever remember a time where such inflamatory language (from either side) was ever used on public airwaves? I can't.
Finally the House voted to give Tom Delay a pass. About that era of responsibility in government...
All this in the face of some really startling developments. The debt ceiling has been raised to more than $8 trillion. The corporate assault on the credibility and value of the FDA took a giant leap forward, and on and on. And this is only in the first two weeks.
As the saying goes, you don't need a weatherman to tell you which way this wind is blowing. There is so much that worries me about this, I don't know where to begin. If this is a coordinated set of deliberate acts, we've had a real coup d'etat in this country. If it's unrelated spontaneous liberal bashing, it's almost worse. Either way it's becoming clear to me that we've walked through a door that only cataclysm or real civil war will close. Any thoughts?
posted by Leftcoast
3:41 PM
Here It Comes: Cue The GOP Fog Machine
A new study out of UC Berkeley indicates that e-voting anomalies in Florida may have given Bush 130K-260K "phantom" votes in Br'er Jeb's briarpatch (i.e., his entire margin of "victory" in that state -- and thus, the Electoral College).
Three guesses which direction the Republicans will spin this:
(a) ad hominem attacks on the source ("This study is from 'Berserkely,' after all -- whatever they're smoking, I want some of it");
(b) misdirection/muddying the issues ("This is just playing with numbers -- 'lies, damnable lies, and statistics' -- not one single actual vote was examined, to come up with this 'what if?' scenario"); or
(c) the shut-up-and-salute, Zell-Miller rant ("Your guy lost. Bush won. Get over it!")
Extra credit if you can work some "forged documents" into the mix. The betting window is open . . .
posted by Michael
1:11 PM
Some Good News: The Democrats’ Bench for 2008
Other than John Kennedy, no Democrat or Republican senator in our lifetime has been elected president. Only governors and vice presidents (Truman, LBJ, and Nixon) have. So the BOB bench for 2008 is open only to governors. But not all governors have what it takes to make it to the Big Show and the World Series of Presidential Politics. Some like Dave Freudenthal (Wyoming), John Baldacci (Maine) and Tom Vilsack (Iowa) come from states that are simply too small; some like Rod Bagojevich from Illinois and Ted Kulongoski from Oregon need a nickname—instead of A-Rod, maybe Rod-B and Ted-K if they want to be contenders. I’m not sure women can play this game, so Janet Napolitano (Arizona), Kathleen Sebelius (Kansas), Ruth Ann Minner (Delaware) and Kathleen Blanco (Louisiana) may need to start a league of their own or settle for a long-shot at Number 2. Jennifer Granholm (Michigan) needs help from a change in the rules--the Arnold Amendment--since she was born in Canada.
It helps to be in a Red State, just to keep RoveCo second-guessing, and to help the Democrats start to reclaim parts of the South. So Brad Henry (Oklahoma) is down there in right field, Mike Easley (North Carolina) is in the bullpen since he was just re-elected to a 4-year term, and Mark Warner (Virginia) who is limited to one term that expires in 2005, may have some time on his hands to get into shape. Most of the bench needs to be re-elected in 2006, thereby enabling each of them to make a stronger case for becoming captain of the team in 2008.
The heavy hitters as of now--notwithstanding some of the above criteria--include Mike Easley (NC), Ed Rendell (PA), Evan Bayh (IN), Bill Richardson (NM). If Jon (good thing it is pronounced, John) Corzine wins next year in New Jersey, the only bearded player in the lineup, he would become an instant designated hitter favorite since he played under the big lights on Wall Street as CEO of Goldman Sachs—a refreshing criteria for a president in 2008 when the economy will be in the toilet and need some new approaches and creative management.
Starting tomorrow we will profile each of the potential 2008 heavyweights. We may even issue playing cards for you to carry around so that when one or your repug friends laughs and says, ""so who are you going to put up in 2008," you get the last laugh because they will be clueless about who you are talking about--and scared, since we are so well-organized this far ahead of the season. By the way, feel free to suggest names that ought to be on our list.
posted by Josh
12:47 PM
Thursday's Open Thread
Speaking of Hot Tuna and Bathing at Baxter's and other Haight-Asbury moments, Rolling Stone has released a list of the top ten rock and roll songs of all time as determined by a distinguished panel that included Barry Gordy, Ozzy Osborne and Art Garfunkel. I think it sucks. What do you think?
THE ROLLING STONE TOP TEN 1. Like a Rolling Stone, Bob Dylan 2. (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction, Rolling Stones 3. Imagine, John Lennon 4. What's Going On, Marvin Gaye 5. Respect, Aretha Franklin 6. Good Vibrations, Beach Boys 7. Johnny B. Goode, Chuck Berry 8. Hey Jude, Beatles 9. Smells Like Teen Spirit, Nirvana 10.What'd I Say, Ray Charles
posted by Jerry Bowles
10:26 AM
Hot tuna
Here's a little something for Navy vet John "I wanna run for president again" Kerry...while the Pentagon continues to stonewall and deny, an “independent inquiry” in Britain by Lord Lloyd has just found that Gulf War syndrome is indeed real, and that it is caused by the inhalation of dust from depleted uranium (DU) ordnance. While Lord Lloyd’s inquiry and David Rose’s excellent investigative piece in the current Vanity Fair examined the use of DU weaponry by US and UK ground forces and aircraft, neither has examined its use on ships at sea and the impact it is having on sailors, their offspring and the environment.
The CIWS “sea-whiz” close-in weapons system, employed on most US Navy ships, fires a cool 4,500 rounds of 20mm DU shells per minute as a last chance defense against anti-ship missiles and drones. Crews manning the “sea whiz” work in close quarters and breathe traces of the gaseous uranium when the Gatling gun-style weapon is fired in training and in actual combat. Never mind the sailors downwind who breathe the stuff. The spent shells contain traces of uranium gas as do the plastic sabots that protect the DU shells when they are loaded into the weapon. Until recently becoming environmentally conscious, the Navy just had the gun crews dump the radioactive shell casings and the sabots overboard. So far nobody in Congress has asked for an accounting of how many DU shells the Navy ordered, or if their stocks have been used up. The DU rounds, when they don’t find a target, wind up in the sea. Just like the rounds fired by the 14 other nations who have bought the “sea whiz” through US foreign military sales (FMS) channels. Gulf-Bosnia-Iraqi Freedom syndrome is one thing. Having to run your Star-Kist through a Geiger counter is something else. Maybe that’s why we’ve got a veterinarian as head of the FDA.
posted by Groom
6:15 AM
What Would Aunt Jemima Do?
Michelle D. Bernard, spokesperson for the Independent Women's Forum, an organization whose sole reason for existence appears to be to promote Michelle D. Bernard, is upset with how editorial cartoonists are drawing our new Secretary of State: The depiction of Dr. Condoleezza Rice by Jeff Danziger, Pat Oliphant and Garry Trudeau as an ebonics speaking, big lipped, black mammy who just loves her 'massa' is a disturbing trend in editorial cartoons. These cartoons take the racism of the liberals who profess respect and adoration for black Americans to a new level. It is revolting. Cruel, yes, but save revolting for those 800 dead civilians rotting in the streets of Falluja.
posted by Jerry Bowles
12:02 AM
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
Dear Reuters
Holy Warriors' Flock to Join Zarqawi in Iraq
Is More Aid Needed to Solve Africa's Woes?
Does anyone have a good reason why these stories were placed in Reuters' Life and Leisure section? Something new in extreme holidays, perhaps?
posted by John
11:29 PM
Who Is Condoleezza Rice?
The most intriguing thing about our new Secretary of State is that after four years of watching her follow Shrub around like a nervous governess who half-expects her brain-addled charge to pee his pants at any moment, we still don't know where she stands on most of the important issues of the day or even where she fits into the administration's power structure. Is she a neo-con or foreign policy realist? Is she a moderating influence like her mentors Brent Scowcroft or Colin Powell or is she a full-fledged uber-hawk like Cheney and Rumsfeld? There was that promising little spat last year when she sent around a memo that seemed to suggest that she was taking over some of Rumsfeld's unchecked authority for Iraq but that got patched up quickly before we could make much of it. Oh, we also know that she doesn't think the 101st Airborne should be taking kids to school. Is she Cheney's bitch--like everyone else in a power position--or does she recognize an unbridled psycotic when she sees one? Has she been quietly building her own power base for the past four years or has she simply been writing "Condoleezza R. Bush...C.R. Bush...Condoleezza Rice Bush" in her notebook over and over? In short, is she a player or a pawn? The answer could make a big difference and it should come fairly quickly. If she names John Bolton her deputy, it means game, set, match for Cheney.
posted by Jerry Bowles
6:26 PM
I Loved Her on Beverly Hills 90210
Bush picks Spellings for education secretary. You can't say the man doesn't reward blind loyalty.
posted by Jerry Bowles
3:50 PM
Hillary’s Hurdle
For the record, I am not a fan. Along with her husband and George Bush, she is and will continue to be one of the most polarizing people in politics. Her political strengths as a national candidate lie in the dark blue corners of the Blue States and her biggest political weaknesses lie in the pink-turning-redder corridors of the Red States. Her greatest asset is name recognition, no small advantage, but there is no way she wins in 2008. None of this will keep her from trying and the Democrats getting another case of Northeastern Liberalitis.
Hillary’s hurdle is her first presidential primary—two years before the first caucus in Iowa where she will be unchallenged in the Democratic primary. However, Hillary needs to surpass 60 percent in her 2006 re-election bid in New York, drawing heavily from up-state moderates and conservatives, and yes, some progressive Republicans, if there are any left in two years, in order to begin to make a case that she might be electable. Anything less than 60 percent will not be enough—Schumer got 70 percent, setting the standard that she needs to reach as a Democrat in New York. The media sideshow will be how she handles the inevitable barrage of national Republican attacks that will field test every trick in the book, ironing out the kinks in case, just in case, she emerges as the candidate in 2008.
Anybody out there think she stands a prayer of a steam-roller re-election in 2006?
posted by Josh
1:38 PM
Wednesday's Open Thread
We're two weeks into the second term. Bodies are piling up in Falluja, the House is changing the rules to protect Tom DeLay, Dick Cheney is consolidating his dictatorship (Condi's "selection" of the psychopathic John Bolton as deputy secretary will pretty much seal his hold on every department of government), both halves of America want the other half dead, and Shrub is as clueless as ever.
My reaction? I've given up televison, except for The Wire on HBO. I haven't heard one word of Shrub's fake prairie gibberish and Wal-Mart piety since the election. I now get all my news from the Internet and newspapers. I feel much better.
What are you doing to cope?
posted by Jerry Bowles
9:45 AM
The War Americans Don't See
Fadhil Badrani, an Iraqi journalist and resident of Falluja reports regularly for Reuters and the BBC World Service in Arabic. This is from his latest report: The city is calmer now - but the fear is still there and some fighting.
I have seen some strange things recently, such as stray dogs snatching bites out of bodies lying on the streets. US forces say that they have overall control of Falluja Meanwhile, people forage in their gardens looking for something to eat.
Those that have survived this far are looking gaunt.
The opposite is happening to the dead - left where they fell, they are now bloated and rotting.
Many of the fighters have escaped or been killed. A few have stayed on to fight. Congratulations, Secretary Rice. Have a nice day.
posted by Jerry Bowles
8:34 AM
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