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Taylor Marsh has been writing on line since 1996, with the archives provided here a representation of that work.

Archive | October, 2006

GOP Weapons of Mass Distraction

JAMES CARVILLE: “Kerry botched a joke, they botched a war.”


Kerry was trashing the incompetent commander in chief. Nothing new.

This is for the whole election. Even Chris Matthews gets it. He knows who Kerry
was talking about. No one should be surprised Kerry is attacking Bush and the
Republicans. As for why Kerry's attacking Bush, it's obvious. As if we haven't heard enough verbal gaffes from Bush.


“I will not withdraw, even if Laura and Barney are the only
ones supporting me.”
–George W. Bush, talking to key Republicans
about Iraq, as quoted by Bob Woodward

He will not withdraw from Iraq, no matter how many soldiers are dying.


“I like to tell people when the final history is written on
Iraq, it will look like just a comma
because there is — my point
is, there's a strong will for democracy.” –George W. Bush, interview
with CNN's Wolf Blitzer, Sept. 24, 2006

Since when are our troops a “comma”?


“You know, one of the hardest parts of my job is to connect
Iraq to the war on terror.”
–George W. Bush, interview with
CBS News' Katie Couric, Sept. 6, 2006

That says it all. Bush needs to connect Iraq and the war on terror, because
nobody thinks it's connected. In fact, there weren't any terrorists in Iraq
until Bush preemptively invaded that country.


“The United States of America is engaged in a war against an extremist
group of folks.” –George W. Bush, McLean, Va., Aug. 15, 2006

“I was not pleased that Hamas has refused to announce its desire to
destroy Israel.” –George W. Bush, Washington, D.C., May 4, 2006

“I'm the decider, and I decide what is best. And what's best is for
Don Rumsfeld to remain as the Secretary of Defense.” –George W. Bush,
Washington, D.C. April 18, 2006

Republicans don't want to talk about Iraq, so they're using Kerry's statement
for cover.

They don't want to talk about reality.


With the election just eight days away, there are no signs that this wave
is abating. Barring a dramatic event, we are looking at the prospect of GOP
losses in the House of at least 20 to 35 seats, possibly more, and at least
four in the Senate, with five or six most likely.

If independents vote in fairly low numbers, as is customary in midterm elections,
losses in the House will be on the lower end of that range. But if they turn
out at a higher than normal level, their strong preference for Democrats in
most races would likely push the GOP House losses to or above the upper levels.

The dynamics we are seeing this year are eerily similar to those in 1994.
The President and party are different, so are the issues, but the dynamics
are comparable.

The Cook Political
Report

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Allen Camp Attacks Virginian

Americablog has more.

All hell is breaking loose. But why in the hell is the Allen campaign attacking civilians?

Good thing they didn't have a noose hanging around!

UPDATE (6:05 p.m.): Here's the latest from Greg Sargent. By
the way, Mike Stark is a former Marine and a veteran, a blogger, as well as
a first year law student.


Today the Allen campaign sent out a press release slamming Stark for “screaming”
at Allen, and charging that “Stark has a history of violent outbursts.”
The Allen release also noted that Stark's blog, “Calling all Wingnuts,”
is subtitled “Kickin' ass on the lyin' side: A never-ending battle against
stupid, ugly, deceitful and corrupt right-wing water carriers.” The Allen
release charged that Stark “pushed” an Allen staffer.

But Stark claimed that the altercation was initiated entirely by the Allen
staffers. He says the first physical behavior came after he approached Allen,
and, standing a few feet away, asked Allen a question about the court records.
At this point, he claims, Allen's staffers started pushing and shoving him.

Stark says that at this point, all he did was “stand my ground,”
without retaliating. “I didn't obey their physical coersion” is
how he describes what he did. “I never raised my hands…They were actually
physically pushing me away when I shouted to him, `is it true that you spat
on your wife'? That's when they said, `now you're getting personal' and tackled
me.”

Stark described what he did as a legit effort to engage his elected representative.
“I got involved in the civic process,” Stark said. “This Senator,
true to form, had his people bully me. And this time it got physical.”

So did Stark heckle Allen? That's what the Washington Post reported in its
news coverage of the scuffle. The paper called Stark a “heckler.”

“Not once have I heckled him,” Stark said. “Hecklers interrupt
speeches. I waited till he was done. I wait respectfully until the end of
his speeches.”

Mike
Stark Details Allen Attack

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Mangled Statement Caught on Tape

Mangled Statement Caught on Tape… Kerry Pushes Back
–updated below–
cross-posted on Huffington Post

Not pretty and caught on tape.

Below is what Kerry actually meant to say.



“I can’t overstress the importance of a great education. Do you know where you end up if you don’t study, if you aren’t smart, if you’re intellectually lazy? You end up getting us stuck in a war in Iraq.”
– Senator John Kerry (via Kerry spokesperson)

He screwed it up. Period. Hey, but the wingnuts don't care. And now it's on tape!

Mis-statement or not, you've just seen footage of the first negative ad
in the '08 campaign, if Kerry runs.

Below is Kerry's statement responding to all the wingnuts going wild, which can be found
here, here,
here,
here … … He's
right about one thing. While U.S. soldiers are dying in Iraq, the wingnut brigade
prefers distractions.


Statement of John Kerry Responding to Republican Distortions,
Pathetic Tony Snow Diversions and Distractions

Washington – Senator John Kerry issued the following statement in response
to White House Press Secretary Tony Snow, assorted right wing nut-jobs, and
right wing talk show hosts desperately distorting Kerry’s comments about
President Bush to divert attention from their disastrous record:

“If anyone thinks a veteran would criticize the more than 140,000
heroes serving in Iraq and not the president who got us stuck there, they're
crazy. This is the classic G.O.P. playbook. I’m sick and tired of these
despicable Republican attacks that always seem to come from those who never
can be found to serve in war, but love to attack those who did.

I’m not going to be lectured by a stuffed suit White House
mouthpiece standing behind a podium, or doughy Rush Limbaugh, who no doubt
today will take a break from belittling Michael J. Fox’s Parkinson’s
disease to start lying about me just as they have lied about Iraq. It disgusts
me that these Republican hacks, who have never worn the uniform of our country
lie and distort so blatantly and carelessly about those who have.

The people who owe our troops an apology are George W. Bush and Dick
Cheney who misled America into war and have given us a Katrina foreign policy
that has betrayed our ideals, killed and maimed our soldiers, and widened
the terrorist threat instead of defeating it. These Republicans are afraid
to debate veterans who live and breathe the concerns of our troops, not the
empty slogans of an Administration that sent our brave troops to war without
body armor.

Bottom line, these Republicans want to debate straw men because they’re
afraid to debate real men. And this time it won’t work because we’re
going to stay in their face with the truth and deny them even a sliver of
light for their distortions. No Democrat will be bullied by an administration
that has a cut and run policy in Afghanistan and a stand still and lose strategy
in Iraq.”

Okay. But it still doesn't unwind the tape.

Kerry should just admit he screwed up his statement. It may be ugly, but it's the truth.

UPDATE (10:10 a.m.): St. McCain chimes in.


Senator Kerry owes an apology to the many thousands of Americans serving in Iraq, who answered their country's call because they are patriots and not because of any deficiencies in their education. Americans from all backgrounds, well off and less fortunate, with high school diplomas and graduate degrees, take seriously their duty to our country, and risk their lives today to defend the rest of us in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere.

They all deserve our respect and deepest gratitude for their service. The suggestion that only the least educated Americans would agree to serve in the military and fight in Iraq, is an insult to every soldier serving in combat, and should deeply offend any American with an ounce of appreciation for what they suffer and risk so that the rest of us can sleep more comfortably at night. Without them, we wouldn't live in a country where people securely possess all their God-given rights, including the right to express insensitive, ill-considered and uninformed remarks.

UPDATE II (12:55 p.m.): Round two. Kerry pushes back.

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Meet Marilyn ‘Photo Op’ Musgrave

Meet Marilyn Photo Op Musgrave

Considering all the times Marilyn Musgrave has used the troops in photo ops,
you'd think she'd appreciate being exposed to a photo opportunity herself.

There was the time Musgrave
used troops for a photo op

…which eventually got traction

… that finally created an uproar.

The video above puts it all into perspective. These are the Republicans who
have been in power all this time, rubber stamped every damn thing Bush has done,
while leaving our troops hung out to dry in Iraq, all the while they tout they
"support the troops" and are "strong on national security."

Caught on tape doesn't begin to describe it. Caught in history's stark gaze should be their undoing.

DO MORE THAN VOTE

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Bush Blames and Blasts

By on 30 October 2006

Droppin' gs and twangin' talk, Bush is on parade.

Read Brownstein,
if you haven't already and consider this.


Bush now routinely labels Democrats “the party of cut-and-run.”
At a recent Republican fundraiser, Bush went much further. “The Democrat
Party … has evolved from one that was confident in its capacity to help
deal with the problems of the world to one that … has an approach of
doubt and defeat,” he declared.

Bush has absorbed his share of body blows from Democrats criticizing his
management of the war. But tagging his rivals as the party of “defeat”
is nonetheless extraordinary language for a commander in chief to use in a
political campaign.

Other wartime presidents have been much more reluctant to argue that only
their party was committed to success. … …

Partisan
rhetoric even in wartime sets Bush apart

Excuse me, but did Brownstein just fall of the political truck? If he did he
fell smack dab on his pointy little pundit head.

I'm with Billmon.


As Brownstein notes, this isn'st exactly the normal rhetoric of a wartime
leader trying to unify his people. From this, the pundit glumly concludes:

Even if Bush succeeds, such a result still will measure how much he has retreated
from his hopes of building a broad majority coalition.

This is Broderism (i.e. the willful denial of reality) reduced to the point
of absurdity. There is nothing in the record of the past six years that suggests
building a broad majority coalition has ever been the objective of the Rovian
political project. Just the opposite, in fact. The goal has always been to
create a narrow, but solid, majority — a dependable 51% or 52% — that would
leave the GOP machine in firm control but reduce the need for the kind of
moderate compromises required to hold a broad coalition together. Thus the
overwhelming emphasis on keeping the conservative base energized and motivated,
no matter what. As long as the base is on board, the extra 12 or 15 percentage
points needed to reach a majority can always be picked up one way or another
— without having to cut too many non-conservatives a slice of the pie. Or
so the theory holds.

It's really just a redneck variation on the old Leninist strategy for a party
dictatorship — if the GOP machine can control a majority of conservatives,
and conservatives can control a majority of Republicans, then Republicans
should be able to control (barely) a majority of the voters, and thus the
country.

In a true one-party state, like the old Soviet Union, this process can be
taken to its ultimate conclusion, i.e. totalitarian rule. But in even a nominally
democratic society, there are risks in trying to broaden the pyramid's base
too widely. At some point, the chain of control — a majority of a majority
of a majority — can break down. … …

The 51% Solution

This whole “51 solution” is why we saw the hilarious spectacle of
none other than Duncan Hunter announcing an exploratory campaign to run for
president. Faster than you can say Speaker Pelosi, the Republicans are running
back to Ronald Reagan. Good luck with that, because they'll need it. Reagan
took on the Evil Empire and never fired a shot, raised taxes and blew out the
economy. Oh, but at least he was right on gays: he killed them in droves through
ignoring the AIDS epidemic, and this is coming from a former Reagan Democrat.

If one more pundit acts shocked, SHOCKED that Bush is playing politics with
the war and calling Dems cowards I'm going to sick Lynn Cheney on them. They
won't like that at all. That is, unless she straps them in and reads them some
of her Republican porn. Even Republicans like lesbian sex scenes, don't they?

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60 House Races in Range

By on 30 October 2006

60 House Races in Range

Join me today on Taylor Marsh LIVE!
6-7 p.m. eastern – 3-4 p.m. pacific

X-rated Republican broadcast alert – I'll be talking about Lynn Cheney!

CHENEY: It's the insurgents!

That's straight from Chris
Bowers
.

So what does The New York Times share today? Some drivel from Rep.
Tauscher
and a story that Dems are running right. I mean, seriously, as
hard as I've been working for Ford and Webb, do I need this broad telling me
about the far left and right? Jesus.

Let's get something straight. There are places in this country that are ultra-conservative.
In addition, Democrats have been abdicating the south, but not this year. We are competing head to head in Tennessee and Virginia, with Missouri a serious possible get, too. We're also now discovering our power out in the west. The west, where I've lived half of my life now, is a mixture of libertarianism,
with some ultra-conservative areas mixed in, with seriously liberal areas too. There are also a lot of hunters and outdoor enthusiasts who hate, absolutely hate, what the Bush administration and Republicans have done to the land and the environment. What you're seeing this year is Democrats competing everywhere, including conservative
cities and regions and even the south. That's a first; something we haven't done in a long time. News flash for the dense: To compete in conservative areas we need
conservative Democrats. Ya follow? Seems simple, but Tauscher and the New York Times
doesn't get it or doesn't want to think about it. It's all about running right. No. It's about competing everywhere.

Beyond that, get a clue and get on message, people. Democrats need to quit
being so obtuse about messaging and pound home the real issue: IRAQ-IRAQ-IRAQ.
Just because Dick Cheney is talking to Larry Kudlow doesn't mean we
have to talk about tax policy. Why in hell do our people get so easily distracted
by their stories, jumping to comment on everything they're saying.

IRAQ-IRAQ-IRAQ.

It also wouldn't hurt if we spent a little time talking about Foley, Cunningham,
Tom Delay and Co., if only to remind voters why they hate the Republicans so
much. With Lynn Cheney teeing it up last week, their culture war collapse should
be easy to mock.

Arianna took aim at Democratic leaders today and with good reason.


And it's not about what Howard Dean said yesterday on Face the Nation.

\”Here's why we're running,\” he told Bob Schieffer. \”We want
middle-class tax fairness for the American people. We want middle-class Americans
to benefit from this economy, not just the folks that have contributed to
the president.\”

Nooooo! Dr. Dean, please, please tell me that you don't really believe this
election is about \”middle-class tax fairness.\”

(snip)

Are you out of your freaking mind?

And it's not just you, Howard. Last week, Rahm Emanuel told the AP, \”Democrats
are talking about middle-class tax cuts and Republicans are talking about
staying the course.\”

Memo
to Dems: Stop Muddying the Messaging Waters

Get busy.

Google
Bomb the Elections

Do More Than Vote
Call for
change

VOTER
TURNOUT MYTHS

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Fun Shredding with Dick

By on 30 October 2006


Is that a document shredder or are you just scared of Nancy Pelosi? Or maybe he's afraid of John Conyers?

But seriously, is Dick waterboarding is a no brainer by me Cheney shredding
documents? Getting ready for a Democratic takeover of the House?

I guess Dick isn't as confident as Karl.

Wonkette
has the intrigue.

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James Webb Giving Allen Hell

By on 30 October 2006

James Webb Giving Allen Hell

Still no word on George
Allen's arrest warrants
, or his sealed divorce records. Why not? Where's
the corporate media? In the bag for Allen, or just too lazy to do their jobs?

If I had their budget I'd be all over it. Greg Sargent agrees.


Okay, so today both the New York Times and the Washington Post devoted substantial
ink to GOP Senator George Allen's attack on Dem Jim Webb's treatment of women
in his novels. So now the question is: When are the major dailies going to
do stand-alone stories on Allen's refusal to unseal his divorce file and account
for his unexplained 1970s appearance in court records? Allen and the NRSC
(see ad below) are making a central issue of Webb's (literary and verbal)
treatment of women. So Allen has opened the door for news orgs to press hard
for his divorce record — which could tell us something of Allen's attitudes
towards women, specifically his ex-wife. As both Josh over at TPM and Political
Wire noted yesterday, reporters are working on the story but the Allen camp
is tight-lipped. Will we see stories on this? Relatedly, the DSCC today sent
out a release demanding that Allen account for his appearances in court records
and insisting he release his Bar application. Will we see stories on this
tomorrow?

Will
Major Dailies Do Stories On Allen's Divorce And Warrants?

Allen has gotten a pass on his racism for decades. It looks like that pattern
continues.

This one is close, with the DSCC posting new
numbers
. They also are pressing
the state bar
to release Allen's arrest records. Want to take bets on what
happens?

Oh, and by the way, Colonel Hunt endorses James Webb, much to Sean Hannity's shock.

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Swiftboater to Run for President

By on 30 October 2006


Extra! Extra! Read all about it. Swiftboater running for president.

Duncan Hunter is simply the
most delusional man in America
, bar none.

Beating Bush on that score is tough, but today
he pulls that one off. Running for president? Hilarious and we haven't even
discussed the timing on this one, which couldn't be worse. What, a swiftboater as the anti-McCain? That really is funny… ho-boy… I mean really funny.

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IRAQ: Just Another Bloody Monday

By on 30 October 2006

IRAQ: Just Another Bloody Monday –updated below–


Oh. My. God. They're finally covering the funerals.

This is dedicated to Joe.

Every single Republican who is tap dancing around the Iraq war should be fired.
That applies double for Lieberman.

The other obvious issue, especially at this point after all the books that have laid it out, which I've covered before, is that containment worked; not in a vacuum, because there were many components to it,
but it worked. By 2000, after Desert Fox, sanctions and the inspections, Saddam
was not only contained but a shadow of the dictator that invaded Kuwait. David
Kay was shocked to find this out, but being a better man than Lieberman or McCain,
he admitted the truth. Ret. Gen. Anthony Zinni, who commanded American troops in the Middle East during Desert Fox, had the same reaction.

Two passages from Thomas Ricks's book are a reminder of just how wrong Bush,
Lieberman, McCain and many others got it.


Zinni was amazed when Western intelligence assets in Baghdad reported that
Desert Fox nearly knocked off Saddam Hussein's regime. His conclusion: Containment
is clearly working, and Saddam Hussein was on the ropes. A U.S. military intelligence
official, looking back at Desert Fox years later, confirmed that account.
“There are a lot of good reports coming out afterward on how he changed
his command and control, very quickly. It was especially clear in areas involving
internal controls.” Interception of communications among Iraqi generals
indicated “palpable fear that he was going to lose control.” (FIASCO,
p. 19)

In a series of in-depth postwar interrogations, a score of veterans of Iraqi
weapons programs told Kay's group that the Desert Fox raids had left Iraqi
weaponeers demoralized and despairing. … … More than the physical damage,
it was the devastating psychological effect that had really counted, and that
was what U.S intelligene assessments had missed in examining Iraq during the
run-up to the war, he decided. (FIASCO, p. 21)

But at least many Democrats who got it wrong admitted it and have tried to
correct the blunder.

Not stay the course Joe, who's content to stand by his man; that would be George
W. Bush.

That's why I dedicate just another bloody Monday to Joe “stay the course”
Lieberman. The man who is trying to split every last hair left on his head on
Iraq.

But know this, if Joe Lieberman is re-elected he will vote with the Republicans
on Iraq, and we will stay in Iraq through George W. Bush's reign, handing off this bloody mess to the next president in 2008. It's Bush's plan, because he thinks if he can hand it off he won't get the blame. Joe's helping him accomplish his most important mission. This is what their plans have wrought.


A bomb targeting poor Iraqi Shiites lining up for day jobs in Baghdad's
Sadr City slum killed at least 31 people and wounded more than 50 others,
police said.

The bomb tore through a collection of food stalls and kiosks at about 6:15
a.m., cutting down men who gather there daily hoping to be hired as laborers.
Police Maj. Hashim al-Yasiri put the casualty figure at 31 killed and 51 injured.

Bomb at
Baghdad market kills 31 people

A vote for Ned Lamont is a vote for change. It is a vote to redirect our efforts, energies and foreign policy in a direction that will help this country and not waste the lives of our troops who long ago accomplished their mission. It will also get us out of the way of the Iraqis who have scores to settle that we cannot begin to stop. Americans cannot end grudges nursed in the deep desert sand of Mesopotamia. To ever think we could was madness.

UPDATE (9:05 a.m.): About Joe “supporting the troops,” well, he's just another Republican on that one.


Yet, most disturbing for someone so ready to send other people's children into bogus wars, is his lack of commitment to those troops once they come home. While Lieberman was once quoted by the New Yorker saying “some of my best friends are neocons,” the same can't be said about veterans.

In 1997, Republican Sen. Strom Thurmond offered a motion to kill an amendment authored by Minnesota legend Paul Wellstone that would have required the secretary of defense to put $400 million into veteran's benefits the following year. Lieberman joined the Thurmond assault on veterans. He also opposed efforts to increase health care spending for veterans by $13 billion over five years in 1996 and an amendment offered by Sen. Tom Harkin to transfer $329 million from defense accounts to the Veterans Affairs Department for health care programs.

He has, however, continued to find billions of dollars to support missile defense programs that have shown as much promise as Tucker Carlson on “Dancing with the Stars.”

Joe Lieberman's Endless Hypocrisy, by Cliff Schecter

DO MORE THAN VOTE

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Liddy Dole Lies About Harold Ford, Jr.

By on 29 October 2006

Liddy Dole was on crack this morning on Fox “News.” C&L has more.

The Republicans are shameless, besides being racist.

They're also desperate. Between Rick Santorum and Dole you could smell the flop sweat coming through the television. Thank the gods we don't have smell-o-rama.

Harold Ford, Jr. is pro-life, pro embryonic stem cell research, against gay marriage, and as conservative as they come. I don't agree with him about many things, but he's a conservative Democrat from a very conservative state that could win. If you think the Republican is a better choice, then you're smoking the same bad crack Dole was this morning.

The Republicans need to quit lying about Ford. But if they did they'd lose by a mile, so they won't.

Oh, and I almost forgot… It's interesting that the RNC and Ken Mehlman are running smut ads against Ford, while the RNC is taking money from a gay porn king. What'sup with that, Ken?



It turns out that the Republican National Committee is a regular recipient of political contributions from Nicholas T. Boyias, the owner and CEO of Marina Pacific Distributors, one of the largest producers and distributors of gay porn in the United States. This recent article on Marina Pacific's new marketing campaign form XBiz, a porn industry trade sheet, notes that, in addition to producing its own material, the “company acts as a distribution house to hundreds of lines, mostly gay, 40 of which can be purchased only through MPD.”

The company actually seems to be a trendsetter in the industry. As Boyias recently noted, “We have always modeled ourselves after a Fortune-style company. They are the models of exceptional customer service. We have formed strategic alliances with our vendors and customers alike, offering them tools and marketing to assist them in succeeding with their business models. Our one-on-one interpersonal relationships have never been duplicated in the distribution industry.”

Some recent releases include “Fire in the Hole”, “Flesh and Boners”, even a “Velvet Mafia” series. …

Josh Marshall

Give $5 Bucks

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James Webb for U.S. Senate

By on 29 October 2006

James Webb for U.S. Senate
guest post by Mash

 

This is the mean season. One week before the mid-term elections, the kitchen sink has been unbolted and tossed around. George Allen has exposed himself for what he is – a cowardly shifty-eyed politician who would rather troll for sex in the pages of fiction than address the very serious issues facing our state and our nation. While George Allen has his aides read him passages from novels that arouse his political drawers, brave men and women of this country continue to lose their lives in Iraq as a result of the \”stay the course\” mantra of the senator and his president. That is unacceptable.

It is time for serious leadership in the halls of the United States Senate. It is time to elect James Webb as United States Senator.

I do not agree with James Webb on everything, nor do I need to. However, I respect Mr. Webb immensely. He is a serious and thoughtful man with strong values. He is a strategic thinker with broad foreign policy experience. He has served our country with honor and distinction both as a United States Marine and as a Secretary of the Navy. He is an author, thinker, citizen and hero.

Let me introduce you, mainly in his own words, to the man who Virginians have an opportunity to elect as their Senator on November 7, 2006.

During the Vietnam War, 363 brave Marines earned the Navy Cross for bravery. The Navy Cross is the second highest medal that can be awarded by the US Navy. James Webb earned his Navy Cross on July 10, 1969. Mr. Webb has refused to use his Navy Cross award in his campaign, but I am under no such obligation. Below is the full text of the citation:



The Navy Cross is presented to James H. Webb, Jr., First Lieutenant, U.S. Marine Corps, for extraordinary heroism while serving as a Platoon Commander with Company D, First Battalion, Fifth Marines, First Marine Division (Reinforced), Fleet Marine Force, in connection with combat operations against the enemy in the Republic of Vietnam.

On 10 July 1969, while participating in a company-sized search and destroy operation deep in hostile territory, First Lieutenant Webb\’s platoon discovered a well-camouflaged bunker complex which appeared to be unoccupied. Deploying his men into defensive positions, First Lieutenant Webb was advancing to the first bunker when three enemy soldiers armed with hand grenades jumped out.

Reacting instantly, he grabbed the closest man and, brandishing his .45 caliber pistol at the others, apprehended all three of the soldiers.

Accompanied by one of his men, he then approached the second bunker and called for the enemy to surrender. When the hostile soldiers failed to answer him and threw a grenade which detonated dangerously close to him, First Lieutenant Webb detonated a claymore mine in the bunker aperture, accounting for two enemy casualties and disclosing the entrance to a tunnel.

Despite the smoke and debris from the explosion and the possibility of enemy soldiers hiding in the tunnel, he then conducted a thorough search which yielded several items of equipment and numerous documents containing valuable intelligence data. Continuing the assault, he approached a third bunker and was preparing to fire into it when the enemy threw another grenade.

Observing the grenade land dangerously close to his companion, First Lieutenant Webb simultaneously fired his weapon at the enemy, pushed the Marine away from the grenade, and shielded him from the explosion with his own body.

Although sustaining painful fragmentation wounds from the explosion, he managed to throw a grenade into the aperture and completely destroy the remaining bunker.

By his courage, aggressive leadership, and selfless devotion to duty, First Lieutenant Webb upheld the highest traditions of the Marine Corps and of the United States Naval Service.

Ask yourself who you would rather have in a foxhole with you: James Webb or George Allen. I would not only want Mr. Webb in the same foxhole, but I would feel much safer knowing that a man of his character was in the United States Senate fighting to protect us.

In addition to the Navy Cross, James Webb earned the Silver Star, two Bronze Stars, and two Purple Hearts in Vietnam. After Vietnam, Mr. Webb continued to serve his country with distinction. James Webb was this nation\’s first Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs from 1984 to 1987. He then became the Secretary of the Navy until his resignation in 1988. Mr. Webb resigned as Navy Secretary after refusing to accept reductions to the size of the Navy. Mr. Webb explained his reasons in his letter of resignation to President Reagan:



Like many others, I have serious concerns regarding the entire budget reduction process. First, the Department of Defense has been required to absorb cuts at a ratio almost twice as great as non-defense programs. Second, many Defense reductions themselves have been made in the wrong areas, and without clear strategic thought. I am particularly upset with the nature of the cuts as they affect the Department under my authority.

On three separate occasions, the uniformed and civilian leadership of the Navy Department provided the Secretary of Defense with proposed cuts totaling the amount required to meet the budget reduction, but which also would preserve the cherished goal of your administration to rebuild our Navy to a minimum level of 600 ships. In each case the advice of this senior leadership, concurred in by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was ignored. I can only conclude that the decision to reduce the level of our fleet to a point that it may never reach the 600 ship goal was motivated by other than military and strategic reasoning.

During the four years I have served in your Administration, I have repeatedly expressed my gratitude at your decision to rebuild the greatest Navy in the world. Since I became Secretary of the Navy last year, I have stated just as frequently my belief that the force levels of our sea services remain minimal and must not be reduced. Even in the current budget environment such force levels could have been maintained. Since recommendations to that effect were rejected by your Secretary of Defense, I am unable to support him personally, or to defend this amended budget during budget deliberations. Consequently, I find it necessary to resign from my position as Secretary of the Navy.

James Webb has always been a defender and supporter of the soldier in uniform. He is driven by his love for this country and his support for its soldiers. Recently he defended Jack Murtha in a New York Times op-ed against the cowardly attacks on his service from desperate Republicans:



IT should come as no surprise that an arch-conservative Web site is questioning whether Representative John Murtha, the Pennsylvania Democrat who has been critical of the war in Iraq, deserved the combat awards he received in Vietnam.

After all, in recent years extremist Republican operatives have inverted a longstanding principle: that our combat veterans be accorded a place of honor in political circles. This trend began with the ugly insinuations leveled at Senator John McCain during the 2000 Republican primaries and continued with the slurs against Senators Max Cleland and John Kerry, and now Mr. Murtha.

Military people past and present have good reason to wonder if the current administration truly values their service beyond its immediate effect on its battlefield of choice. The casting of suspicion and doubt about the actions of veterans who have run against President Bush or opposed his policies has been a constant theme of his career. This pattern of denigrating the service of those with whom they disagree risks cheapening the public\’s appreciation of what it means to serve, and in the long term may hurt the Republicans themselves.

The political tactic of playing up the soldiers on the battlefield while tearing down the reputations of veterans who oppose them could eventually cost the Republicans dearly. It may be one reason that a preponderance of the Iraq war veterans who thus far have decided to run for office are doing so as Democrats.

A young American now serving in Iraq might rightly wonder whether his or her service will be deliberately misconstrued 20 years from now, in the next rendition of politically motivated spinmeisters who never had the courage to step forward and put their own lives on the line.

James Webb\’s own son serves in Iraq. He has a personal connection to the men and women of the armed forces. He understands the stakes.

After the attacks of September 11, 2001 James Webb understood the stakes better than most, and certainly better than the current Administration and its dude ranch senator George Allen. In a remarkably prescient article in the United States Naval Institute Proceedings written on October 17, 2001, James Webb laid out the fight before us and warned against misadventures to come:



What we need is a clear articulation of the national strategy to the American people. When we commit to something like this, which involves many unknowns, people need to know what the endgame really is. In my view, there are two endgames.

The first is homeland defense. We must create an environment here in the United States in which our intelligence apparatus has been reinvigorated. So we can feel secure inside our borders, we must find terrorist cells, penetrate them, and eliminate them. And we must develop a capability to prevent similar groups from entering and operating in this country. It’s sort of like rule number one in any operational military environment: you cannot go on patrol if your perimeter isn’t secure. This is our highest priority, in my view.

Step number two is to convince every country in the world to accept responsibility for policing and eliminating terrorist training and other activities inside their own borders. In a way, this is my reading of what this administration began when it told several countries that have very bad records in this area, You have the chance to demonstrate to us that you will do this.

In those countries that do not agree with us, I think we need to do the policing for them for a while. And we need to start with a basic premise: if fundamentalist Muslim terrorists want to die for a cause, you are not going to stop them. The most important thing you can do, if you are their adversary, is to kill them on your terms, not on theirs. That makes some Americans—particularly American media—squeamish. But that is the reality of the situation we are in.

My final admonition—and I got into some trouble with this during the Gulf War—is that we are not in a position as a nation, and particularly as a military, to occupy large pieces of territory. The Wall Street Journal editorialized repeatedly during the Gulf War that we should set up a MacArthurian regency in Baghdad. There has been a lot of discussion about why we did not take Baghdad during the Gulf War. I think as much as anyone in this country, I would like to see Saddam Hussein go. To my knowledge, I was the only guy in the Reagan administration who opposed the tilt toward Iraq, in writing, in 1987. I do not think we had nor have the resources to occupy Iraq.

If you think we have problems in Israel, try putting a Judeo-Christian military system in the cradle of Muslim culture. And when you think about a military of 1.4 million people, with other responsibilities around the world, that is not a winnable situation. I tried to say ten years ago, over and over again, that we must be involved only to the extent that it directly involves our national interests. These arguments have been going on for 3,000 years. And when they do relate to our national interests, as this international terrorist movement does, we must act with a great deal of specific lethality. We must go after the people who are doing this and eliminate them.

Before the invasion of Iraq, James Webb provided a clear strategic direction for the United States, that if followed, may have saved us and the world from the mess the Bush Administration has driven us into. I have quoted from only part of the article. Read the entire article to get a sense of his grasp of geo-political forces, especially the roles of Pakistan, India and China.

On November 30, 2001 James Webb wrote an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal entitled \”A New Doctrine for New Wars\”. In the op-ed he argued for a focused and flexible approach in the fight against the terrorists that attacked us, while at the same time warning against the temptation of widening the conflict:



The recent focus on international terrorism raises the prospect that traditional deterrence, both nuclear and conventional, could be minimized in the public\’s eye. In order to ensure that this does not happen, our leadership needs to articulate a clear national strategy that addresses all our responsibilities.

The key elements of a new doctrine seem obvious. We must retain our position as the dominant guarantor of world-wide stability through strategic and conventional forces that deter potentially aggressive nations. We must be willing to retaliate fiercely against nations that participate in or condone aggressive acts, as well as non-national purveyors of asymmetric warfare. But we should take great care when it comes to committing large numbers of ground forces to open-ended combat, and we should especially avoid using them as long-term occupation troops.

The approach to our commitment in Afghanistan fits the above criteria, and should serve as a clear warning to other states that have condoned or supported terrorism. The Taliban were warned, and were offered the chance to rid their country of Osama bin Laden\’s forces. Our military campaign has been conducted with lethality, relying on mobile naval and air assets and special forces units. The ground campaign has been carried out principally through local forces. Marine Corps infantry units were inserted at a time when the campaign\’s objectives had been clearly focused, in order to perform specific tasks. And around the world, the U.S. military is still carrying out its functions of maintaining global stability.

This formula works, and as the campaign stretches, we should not be tempted by its very successes to change it. If we remain focused on the twin goals of deterring cross-border aggression and eliminating international terrorism we will prevail. If we move beyond these clear objectives, we risk running out of people, equipment, and the kind of clarity that maintains the national spirit. [Emphasis added by me.]

On September 4, 2002, on the eve of the attack on Iraq, in an op-ed in the Washington Post James Webb asked the question on all thinking persons\’ minds: \”Do we really want to occupy Iraq for the next 30 years?\”:



Other than the flippant criticisms of our \”failure\” to take Baghdad during the Persian Gulf War, one sees little discussion of an occupation of Iraq, but it is the key element of the current debate. The issue before us is not simply whether the United States should end the regime of Saddam Hussein, but whether we as a nation are prepared to physically occupy territory in the Middle East for the next 30 to 50 years. Those who are pushing for a unilateral war in Iraq know full well that there is no exit strategy if we invade and stay. This reality was the genesis of a rift that goes back to the Gulf War itself, when neoconservatives were vocal in their calls for \”a MacArthurian regency in Baghdad.\” Their expectation is that the United States would not only change Iraq\’s regime but also remain as a long-term occupation force in an attempt to reconstruct Iraqi society itself.

The connotations of \”a MacArthurian regency in Baghdad\” show how inapt the comparison is. Our occupation forces never set foot inside Japan until the emperor had formally surrendered and prepared Japanese citizens for our arrival. Nor did MacArthur destroy the Japanese government when he took over as proconsul after World War II. Instead, he was careful to work his changes through it, and took pains to preserve the integrity of Japan\’s imperial family. Nor is Japanese culture in any way similar to Iraq\’s. The Japanese are a homogeneous people who place a high premium on respect, and they fully cooperated with MacArthur\’s forces after having been ordered to do so by the emperor. The Iraqis are a multiethnic people filled with competing factions who in many cases would view a U.S. occupation as infidels invading the cradle of Islam. Indeed, this very bitterness provided Osama bin Laden the grist for his recruitment efforts in Saudi Arabia when the United States kept bases on Saudi soil after the Gulf War.

In Japan, American occupation forces quickly became 50,000 friends. In Iraq, they would quickly become 50,000 terrorist targets.

Nations such as China can only view the prospect of an American military consumed for the next generation by the turmoil of the Middle East as a glorious windfall. Indeed, if one gives the Chinese credit for having a long-term strategy — and those who love to quote Sun Tzu might consider his nationality — it lends credence to their insistent cultivation of the Muslim world. One should not take lightly the fact that China previously supported Libya, that Pakistan developed its nuclear capability with China\’s unrelenting assistance and that the Chinese sponsored a coup attempt in Indonesia in 1965. An \”American war\” with the Muslims, occupying the very seat of their civilization, would allow the Chinese to isolate the United States diplomatically as they furthered their own ambitions in South and Southeast Asia.

These concerns, and others like them, are the reasons that many with long experience in U.S. national security issues remain unconvinced by the arguments for a unilateral invasion of Iraq. Unilateral wars designed to bring about regime change and a long-term occupation should be undertaken only when a nation\’s existence is clearly at stake. It is true that Saddam Hussein might try to assist international terrorist organizations in their desire to attack America. It is also true that if we invade and occupy Iraq without broad-based international support, others in the Muslim world might be encouraged to intensify the same sort of efforts. And it is crucial that our national leaders consider the impact of this proposed action on our long-term ability to deter aggression elsewhere.

However, warnings from James Webb and other thoughtful observers went unheeded as the neo-cons pursued their fanciful agenda.

As was expected, the Iraq War started to show early signs of the protracted guerilla conflict it would become. James Webb wrote an article in the New York Times entitled \”The War in Iraq Turns Ugly. That\’s What Wars Do.\”:



This campaign was begun, like so many others throughout history, with lofty exhortations from battlefield commanders to their troops, urging courage, patience, compassion for the Iraqi people and even chivalry. Within a week it had degenerated into an unexpected ugliness in virtually every populated area where American and British forces have come under fire. Those who believed from intelligence reports and Pentagon war planners that the Iraqi people, and particularly those from the Shiite sections of the southeast, would rise up to greet them as liberators were instead faced with persistent resistance.

If American forces are successful in these engagements, the war may be over sooner rather than later. But if these battles stagnate, guerrilla warfare could well become pandemic, not only in Baghdad but also across Iraq. And even considering the strong likelihood of an allied victory, it is hard to imagine an end point without an extremely difficult period of occupation.

In fact, what will be called an occupation may well end up looking like the images we have seen in places like Nasiriya. Do Iraqis hate Saddam Hussein\’s regime more deeply than they dislike the Americans who are invading their country? That question will still be with this administration, and the military forces inside Iraq, when the occupation begins, whether the war lasts a few more days or several more months.

Or worse, the early stages of an occupation could see acts of retribution against members of Saddam Hussein\’s regime, then quickly turn into yet another round of guerrilla warfare against American forces. This point was made chillingly clear a few days ago by the leader of Iraq\’s major Shiite opposition group, who, according to Reuters, promised armed resistance if the United States remains in Iraq after Saddam Hussein is overthrown.

Welcome to hell. Many of us lived it in another era. And don\’t expect it to get any better for a while.

While George W Bush, Dick Cheney and George Allen were screaming \”stay the course\” at the top of their lungs, James Webb understood earlier than most that the course that the Bush Administration had embarked upon would likely lead to disaster.

Unlike the ideologues in the Administration and their lackeys in congress, James Webb has been consistent and correct about the Bush Administration\’s misguided Iraq policy. He has been strong on defense, a defender of our men and women in uniform, and a tireless voice of reason on foreign policy matters. In his writings and in his actions, James Webb has proven to be a serious thinker for our serious times. We need leaders like James Webb to steer us out of the quagmire Mr. Bush and his rubber stamp, George Allen, have waded into.

James Webb is not a career politician, he is simply a patriot. Virginia, the home of patriots, deserves and needs one now. On November 7th, Virginians can send James Webb, a true American hero and patriot, to the United States Senate. 

 

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Lieberman’s Right-Wing Scaife Money

By on 29 October 2006

Lieberman's Right-Wing Scaife Money
cross-posted on Huffington Post


Do you remember this guy?

How could anyone forget? He's known as the “Funding
Father of the Right.”

Richard Mellon Scaife was behind the failed hit job on President Bill Clinton,
though he did get an impeachment vote for his money and for history.

Well, now Joe Lieberman is taking money from the VRWC kingpin. I kid you not. Is he that desperate, or that duplicitous, or both?

This is the type of person who is funding Lieberman's campaign:


Scaife did get involved in numerous anti-Clinton activities. He gave $2.3
million to the American Spectator magazine to dig up dirt on Clinton and supported
other conservative groups that harassed the president and his administration.
The White House and its allies responded by fingering Scaife as the central
figure in “a vast right-wing conspiracy that has been conspiring against
my husband since the day he announced for president,” as Hillary Rodham
Clinton described it. James Carville, Clinton's former campaign aide and rabid
defender, called Scaife “the archconservative godfather in [a] heavily
funded war against the president.”

(snip)

The Heritage Foundation became an important part of the right's community-building
efforts. Scaife first contributed to Heritage in 1974. Soon afterward, using
money from Scaife, Heritage established its resource bank, a compilation of
conservative organizations, which from 1982 was published in the Directory
of Public Policy Organizations, a guide to the new right-wing establishment.
The current edition lists 300 groups; 111 have received grants from Scaife,
76 of them in 1998.

Scaife:
Funding Father of the Right

How any Democrat could take money from Scaife is beyond me. This
one smells
, even for Lieberman. It's an insult to every Democrat, certainly
those primary voters in Connecticut who voted for Ned Lamont.

It was David Brock who revealed Scaife's involvement in the anti-Clinton plot,
which finally shed light on the tentacles this man has got throughout the
right-wing that has now reached inside the Connecticut race and right into
Joe Lieberman's political back pocket. Brock knows all about Mr. Scaife.


Conservative writer David Brock received nearly $40,000 from the American
Spectator's Arkansas Project, project records show, despite claims by Spectator
editors that Brock had nothing to do with the controversial Clinton-bashing
project.

Brock moved to the center of the drama over President Bush's solicitor general
nominee, Ted Olson, when he told a Judiciary Committee staffer and the Washington
Post that Olson was integral to the Arkansas Project — the American Spectator's
aggressive investigations into the private life of President Clinton, funded
with roughly $2 million from conservative billionaire Richard Mellon Scaife
— despite Olson's claims to the contrary. Olson's supporters struck back,
insisting Brock had nothing to do with the project.

Smearing
David Brock

It was bad enough when Joe Lieberman stood up on the Senate floor and smeared
Bill Clinton
during his impeachment, when it should have been all Democratic
hands on deck. But it's beyond the pale that Lieberman would accept money from
the man who helped fund the all out assault on the first two-term Democratic
president since F.D.R.

Joe Lieberman has no shame. He'll do anything, take anyone's money in order
to win. But money from Richard
Mellon Scaife
? No Democrat would do that, because Scaife simply doesn't
give money to Democrats. What does that say about Joe?

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IRAQ: Democracy At Last

By on 29 October 2006

IRAQ: Democracy At Last

That's a joke.

This, however, is not.


\”I'm a friend to the United States, but not America's man in
Iraq,\”
Maliki told Khalilzad, according to Hassan Senaid, one
of the prime minister's closest advisors. –

'Not
America's man in Iraq,' Premier says

Aides say Maliki warns U.S. to respect nation's sovereignty.

Jim Webb's got the right talking points on Iraq. He said it plainly today.
It helps that he's running against a racist and was Reagan's Navy secretary.
He's also got special passion for the issue because he's got a son serving in
Iraq. The bottom line: Democrats are the remedy for Iraq.


The only remedy to a series of Iraq policy failures by President Bush is
a Democratic takeover of Congress in the Nov. 7 election, Virginia Senate
candidate Jim Webb said Saturday.

The former Republican, who was President Reagan's Navy secretary, said in
the Democrats' weekly radio address that Bush's \”incompetence\” in
Iraq had undercut the fight against terrorism.

Webb is locked in a close race in Virginia against Republican Sen. George
Allen that could determine whether the Senate remains in GOP control.

\”Since 2003, President Bush has laid out nine different plans
for victory in Iraq, none of them serious and none of them workable. And most
seriously, this incompetence has hindered our ability to fight international
terror,\” Webb said.

It marked the second time since July 1 that Webb, a decorated Vietnam combat
veteran, has given the Democrats' address. Both times, his focus has been
Iraq.

Webb warned in a newspaper column in 2002, the year before Bush ordered the
Iraq invasion, that a war there would destabilize the oil-rich Middle East
and mire U.S. forces in a bloody and protracted conflict. As of Friday, 2,810
American troops had died in Iraq.

\”It gives me no great pleasure today to be saying `I told you so,'\”
said Webb, whose son, Jimmy, is a Marine on active duty in Iraq. \”It
pains me as an American that our casualties are again escalating while this
president and his followers are still incapable of bringing forward an intelligent,
commonsense approach to ending our involvement there.\” …

Webb:
Democrats will provide Iraq remedy

As for Bush and the Republicans, it's too little too late. Just ask the guys who are supposed to be on their side. With friends like these…

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The New York Times Endorses Ned Lamont

By on 28 October 2006

On the scale of 1 to 10, this is an 11.


The fatal problem with Mr. Lieberman’s candidacy is not that he was
wrong about the invasion, but that he has not shown any capacity to grow and
change. Suggesting that getting rid of Donald Rumsfeld might be a good idea
is hardly a breakthrough at a time when the secretary of defense’s supporters
are pretty much limited to the president and members of the Rumsfeld family.

Mr. Lieberman has changed his tone but not his underlying conviction
that he has been right all along.
He and Mr. Bush are still
on the very same page, encouraging the American people to believe that there
is a happy ending for American involvement in Iraq, and that all it takes
is the perseverance to keep marching toward the end of the rainbow.

Ned Lamont has run a far less polished campaign than Mr. Lieberman, but the
more we see of him, the more impressed we are by his intelligence and his
growing sophistication about the issues facing the nation. He is very much
in the Connecticut mold of basically moderate, principled politicians, and
his willingness to take on Mr. Lieberman when no one else dared to do it showed
real courage and conviction. He would make a good senator. More important,
he has the capacity to continually become a better one. We endorse Ned Lamont
for Senate.

The Senate
Race in Connecticut

Will it tip the race?

We won't know until November 8th, but one thing is for sure. This endorsement
lays it out flat and Joe Lieberman with it. It makes the case for why Connecticut
voters should vote for Ned Lamont. I hope they listen.

Iraq-Iraq-Iraq. If you don't get matters of war and peace right; plus don't have the spine and courage to admit when you're wrong. You don't deserve to lead.

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Ken ‘Cesspool’ Mehlman Running Scared

By on 28 October 2006

Ken “Cesspool” Mehlman Running Scared

UPDATE (5:00 p.m.): Thank you, Howie!

This graphic is hilarious. Evidently Ken Mehlman got nervous about Kerry, Kennedy
and Chris Bowers shaking the Democratic money tree and sent out a 911 email.

So let's show a little push back. It's the very last week. Let's see if we can raise even more money.


Here's what Bill Frist and Ken Mehlman sent out yesterday in a desperation
email fundraiser. They're scared to death that John Kerry and Ted Kennedy
ponied up to elect Democrats.

Let's see their $2 million, and raise them.

HOW
DO YOU SPELL DESPERATION? G.O.P.

Kerry's blog is linking here,
here and here
to raise money through ActBlue.

But they're doing something else on November 1st.


… So here’s the deal; vote for your favorite House and Senate netroots
candidates on Wednesday, November 1 from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. EST. The Senate
candidate and the 2 House candidates with the most votes will get the last
JohnKerry.com fundraising email of the cycle. We’ll challenge our 3
million person online community to get these fighters over the top in the
last few days.

Like we say in Boston: vote early and vote often…good luck to everyone
in the days to come.

John Kerry

Give one last time to Act
Blue
. We're down to the wire.

Give
$5 Bucks

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George Allen’s Arrest Records

By on 28 October 2006

George Allen's Arrest Records
cross-posted on Huffington Post

If Webb's fiction
is fair game, George Allen's secret arrest record should be too. Seriously,
writing fiction is hardly a criminal offense. The same cannot be said for George
Allen's antics. There are warrants to prove it.

For decades, Allen has gotten away with being a closet racist, voting
against women
in the Senate, as well as a man who hangs a noose in his office
while genuflecting to the Confederacy. Then there's that little incident about
the deer head in an African American's mailbox, not to mention the contagion
of tales from years and years of \”n\” word slandering. All these things
have just been sloughed off and ignored, because Virginia was willing to give
Coach Allen's son a pass. What's one more good old boy racist if he's our good
old boy, right? But the cumulative affect is finally catching up with Allen,
because when it's added up it makes most Americans sick.

The kicker was finding out that it was George
Allen's ad man who is responsible for the racist ads against Harold Ford, Jr.

Why am I not surprised?

But Karma is a bitch and the bill is finally coming due.


Democrats are demanding that George Allen stop stonewalling and immediately
release records addressing why multiple warrants were issued for his arrest
in 1974 while he was a student at the University of Virginia. The court records
of his arrests are missing but one of the few official documents detailing
the circumstances surrounding his arrests is Allen's application to the Virginia
Bar Association. Allen has so far refused to release that information.
\”Allen's adamant refusal to release documents about his arrest record
suggests that there's more to this story and that he's hiding something. Allen's
got a character problem and this stonewalling isn't helping him any,\”
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee spokesman Phil Singer said.

When news of the arrest warrants resurfaced this month, one of Allen's aides
said that one was issued for unpaid parking tickets and another for fishing
without a license. The warrants are posted on an index (click here for a photo
of the ledger), but Allen has failed to produce any written documentation
verifying his explanation for why the warrants were issued and has not personally
addressed the matter.

Shortly after the warrants were issued, Allen applied for membership in the
Virginia Bar Association and had to detail his arrest record. Allen could
clear up the controversy over his arrest records by simply making the Bar
Association documents public. \”Considering all the concerns that have
been raised about Allen's character, one would think he'd rush to make official
documents detailing his arrest public so that people believe his explanations
for why he was arrested,\” Singer said.

ALLEN ARREST
RECORDS CONTROVERSY
: ALLEN REFUSES TO RELEASE DOCUMENTS DETAILING HIS
ARREST RECORD

Why is Allen refusing to release his arrest records?

After all that's come to light in this campaign and all we've learned about
the racist Republican senator from Virginia, I'd say \”trust me\” just
isn't enough anymore, especially where George
\”macaca\” Allen
is concerned.

Our troops learned that the hard way.

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Republicans Cover Up Assault

By on 28 October 2006

Republicans Cover Up Assault –updated–

Nevada sleaze Jim Gibbons.

Enter a big Nevada Republican boss.

More sex stuff from the “family values” party. Jim Gibbons is still trying
to convince people he wasn't hiding in the bushes before he ambushed some broad. TPM Muckraker is on it, too.

If Dina Titus can't take advantage of this one this state will never go Democratic. She's getting some powerful help on Monday from former general Wes Clark. You're invited if you're around. The story below ought to help Titus, too. Frankly, Gibbons is a sleazebag. Titus would be a breath of fresh air, but just about anyone would compared to Gibbons.



The police acknowledge receiving three 911 calls from Mazzeo on the night
of Oct. 13. But the record shows there are several inconsistencies and contradictions
about her whereabouts and her occupation.

Mazzeo now explains that by saying, “At the time, I was so hysterical.
I said a lot of stuff.”

She also repeated her original claim to police that she and Puhek lingered
for about 20 minutes in the bar after Gibbons and his adviser left.

“He [Gibbons] was waiting by the bushes,” she said. “Why
else would he be waiting in the rain?”

Mazzeo's attorney, Richard Wright, said Puhek told his client, “There's
money in this. You will get money from signing this,” a reference to
a statement recanting her claims.

Wright also claimed there's evidence that will corroborate Mazzeo's account
of what transpired. Hotel security systems, photos a police technician took
of Mazzeo's purported injuries, phone records and interviews with witnesses
all exist, he said.

The Las Vegas Review-Journal now reports that Wright, Mazzeo's attorney,
has criticized the police. The paper said Wright claims that police “never
bothered to interview Gibbons' campaign aide or the two other women at the
table in the restaurant, where a witness described the atmosphere as 'flirty
and dirty.' “

Nevada
Governor's Race Gets 'Flirty and Dirty'

MEET DINA and GENERAL WES CLARK

UPDATE (10:55 a.m.): Jon Porter feels guiltynot, but he should.

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GO CARDINALS!

By on 27 October 2006
WORLD CHAMPIONS!!!


Well, this is the big one. Weaver better have everything tonight, because he's going to need it.

Let's close it out, boys. (I'm just glad I don't have to watch that ass Suppan tonight.)

But I've got to be honest. I wouldn't mind if the Tigers took it back to Detroit. I like a wild World Series.

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Lynn Cheney Loses It

By on 27 October 2006

Lynn Cheney Loses It –updated below–


A little defensive about your lesbian lover book, Lynne? This was classic. She came on defensive and left looking like she'd been hit by a stripper's tossels.

Lynne evidently didn't like that James Webb is fighting back. Get used to it, lady. Besides, Cheney's book sure didn't get http://www.webbforsenate.com/images/lost_soldiers.jpg\">reviews like these.

Huffington Post has the video and the transcript. It's delicious.

The part in bold below is my emphasis, but get a load of the hedging. \”Not
necessarily\”?
But she doesn't stop there. Read the snippet for yourself. A bit cryptic, I'd say. Defensive, for sure.


BLITZER: \”In 1988, Lynn Cheney wrote about a Republican vice president
who dies of a heart attack while having sex with his mistress.\” Is that
true?

CHENEY: Nothing explicit. And actually, that was full of lies. It's not —
it's just — it's absolutely not a…

BLITZER: Did you write a book entitled \”Sisters\”?

CHENEY: I did write a book entitled \”Sisters\”.

BLITZER: It did have lesbian characters.

CHENEY: This — no, not necessarily. This description is a lie. I'll
stand on that.

BLITZER: There's nothing in there about rape and brothels?

CHENEY: Well, Wolf, could we talk about a children's book for a minute?

BLITZER: We can talk about the children's book. I just wanted to…

CHENEY: I think my segment is, like, 15 minutes long and we've had about
10 minutes of…

BLITZER: I just wanted to — I just wanted to clarify what's in the news
today, given — this is…

CHENEY: That's lies and distortion. That's what it is.

UPDATE: Okay, Lynne, you want to play is this porn? You got it. C&L
has more audio, but the following was just emailed to me. It's something else.


\”I have never written anything that is sexually explicit.\” [CNN,
10/27/06]

Lynne Cheney's Writing: In Lynne Cheney's \”Sisters\”, The Main
Character Sophie Learns Her Sister Was Lesbian. In Lynne Cheney's book, the
main character Sophie learns that her sister Helen – married to a man named
James – was a lesbian who had a long-term affair with a woman named Amy.

\”Helena, My Dearest Lover.\” Sophie learns her sister is a lesbian
in a passage where she reads the pairs' love letters. \”'To my Helena,
my dearest lover. You are the joy of my life. If ever you fail me through
my fault or your own, I will forswear thenceforth all human friendship. Thine
always, A.T.' Helen and… Amy Travers? No, it couldn't be, simply couldn't.
But '…my dearest lover'?\” In a later passage, Sophie remembers \”The
letters. Sophie recalled the love words: 'And then we shall go to bed, our
bed, my dearest girl.'\” [Sisters, page 106]

Sophie Sleeps With Dead Lesbian Sister Helen's Husband James. Cheney describes
the first time her protagonist Sophie sleeps with her dead sister's husband,
writing, \”When he had pulled into the carriage house, they both remained
unmoving for a moment. In the darkness she became acutely aware of his nearness,
and even before she looked at him, she knew he was watching her. She glanced
up, their eyes met, and he gave a short exhalation, more than a sigh, for
she could hear his voice in it. 'Sophie,' he said hoarsely, 'Sophie…' He
reached for her and she moved toward him, unthinking for the minute, knowing
only that she wanted to me in his arms.\” [Sisters, page 63]

But is Careful to Use Condoms, Even Though Sometimes Men Don't Like Them.
In a lacquered box given to Sophie, there \”were several small sponges,
each in a silken net with a string attached. There were packets marked \”Preventive
Powders,\” and lined up in neat rows were several dozen condoms. \”There
are all these things, you know,\” Adah was saying. \”But the sheaths
are really the best. Sometimes men don't like them.\” Even though Sophie
wasn't sure about her decision to bring the condoms out west with her, as
she prepared to meet James, she though that it was \”well she had, she
thought, lifting the box off the shelf.\” [Sisters, Pages 37 and 70]

Then Sophie Sleeps With Him Again. Cheney describes the second time her protagonist
Sophie sleeps with her dead sister's husband, writing, \”'And you should
fasten your robe before you let anyone see you.' He reached down as if to
tie it shut, but slipped his hand inside instead, inside her unbuttoned nightgown
too.She was smiling, but she found it difficult to speak. Once more she felt
all her blood and breath being pulled downward.They moved into the bedroom.
'Mmmmmm,' he agreed as they fell toward the bed. [Sisters, Page 71]

Sophie Learns That Her New Lover (and Sister's Ex Husband) James Raped Her
Sister. Cheney writes about Sophie learning of her new lover's rape of her
sister. \”'A little over two years ago. He forced himself upon her. He
was drunk, and he forced her to submit.' Sophie shut her eyes, and Miss Travers'
words faded into the distance, driven back by a tangled, violent image of
James and Helen.\” [Sisters, page 82]

Sophie Learns That Her New Lover James Married Her Sister Because He Thought
Native American Women Were \”Passionate.\” In an argument with her
new lover, Sophie realizes why James married her sister. \”'Why did you
think Helen…?' She stopped in mid-question, because she suddenly thought
she understood. \”It was the Indian blood, wasn't it? It was Indian women
you had an idea of. They'd be passionate, they'd be eager lovers. And there
was Helen, well enough dressed and educated to be acceptable to your fine
friends, but with the Indian blood too–just a hint of things dark and passionate.'\”
[Sisters, page 85]

But It Doesn't Matter: Despite Rape and Racism, Sophie Forgives James and
Marries Him. \”She [Sophie] could think of no other cause to refuse him
[his proposal], but she wasn't sure she had sufficient reason to accept, either.
And yet… and yet, she wanted to.\” [Sisters, page 177]

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