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

Tag Archives | Democrats

Rep. Alan Grayson’s Happy Memorial Day Bill

It’s addressed to everyone.

Okay, it’s not exactly a “Happy Memorial Day Bill,” but it could be, as he’s introducing the Paid Vacation Act, “legislation that would be the first to make paid vacation time a requirement under federal law.”

Because of the 50- and 100-employee thresholds, most small businesses wouldn’t be directly affected by the bill immediately.

[...] Grayson’s bill is part of a larger move by Democrats to improve employee and workplace standards. Earlier this month, Democrats introduced a bill that would make employers give mandatory sick time.

“The committee is looking at a number of proposals to help workers balance family responsibilities and work duties,” said House Education and Labor Committee spokesman Aaron Albright. “The fact is the United States is behind the rest of the world in ensuring that workplaces have paid leave policies. These policies not only benefit workers but also help the employers’ bottom line because of lower turnover and better job satisfaction.”

Needless to say the right is screaming bloody murder over Grayson’s move.

Evidently some don’t understand that burnout is a real issue in the modern era, especially with families working dual jobs and overtime to pay the bills. Overwork can be a health issue as well, just as much as it impacts the family.

Now all I have to do is get myself to pay myself a paid holiday. I usually have to pay someone else for me to take an unpaid break.

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Let the Fearmongering Continue

–updated–

It’s the how low can you go? game, with Michael Steele and the Republicans. Desperation time and it’s not even an election season.

The web ad is a take off on the famous “Daisy” ad taken to new lows. This time it’s not nuclear war to fear, but the closure of Guantanamo. Nuclear war equals closing Gitmo? Mind you, at the time the ad aired it was considered so over the line that as soon as it was aired it was pulled. It also didn’t help the Republicans at the time, and boy do they need help right now.

But it is special that a couple of Senate Democrats, Reid and Webb, provide the sound, with Robert Gibbs offering the exclamation. How Greg Craig allowed the President and Mr. Gibbs to be caught in this position I’ll never understand.

The RNC relishes this stuff, as you can see in Charles Krauthammer’s column today. Trying to make the case that Obama plans a national security strategy akin to what Bush did in his Administration, just with a little different window dressing.

I don’t remember Bush saying anything about Israel getting rid of settlements do you? That’s because he didn’t. Bush also didn’t lift a finger in the Middle East, except to aid Israel in a war with Lebanon that was a disaster for them.

I also don’t remember Bush doing anything concrete in Afghanistan after bombing them to smithereens. Instead, he invaded a country that wasn’t a clear and present danger to this country, tipping the balance of power towards Iran.

As for Pakistan, Bush’s Musharaff policy got us into the mess over there. All Bush did was prop up a man who was actually not helping our aims in Pakistan at all, while completely ignoring the unraveling.

As for our alliances, Bush-Cheney obliterated relations with most of our Arab allies so that President Obama basically has to start from scratch.

On the other hand, you simply cannot contend that you’re going to continue military tribunals, only with a twist, after promising change and think blowback won’t occur.

You cannot say you’re bringing change then reverse decision on releasing torture photos, which was hailed by the right and Dick Cheney as not only a flip flop, but siding with the Bush administration.

You cannot talk about law and order and the Constitution throughout a mostly laudable national security speech then say the people who concocted U.S. torture policy should not be held accountable.

And you cannot talk about ending DADT then think a long winding court route to ending it will bring cheers from die hard supporters who thought change meant reversal.

It’s going to take a lot more than one speech to break away from Bush’s policies. Action in the opposite direction on the things that caused Bush-Cheney to be held in such contempt would be a good start. You know, like this.

UPDATE: McClatchy has an excellent round up of some of the things Cheney didn’t talk about.

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Obama Defeated on Gitmo

President Obama made an ask without a plan and ran straight into a Senate wall. Shorter: the majority Party hasn’t a clue what they’re doing on Gitmo. How in the world does the Democratic president get in a situation where the Democratic Congress hands him a defeat on something as important to national security as closing Guantanomo Bay?

Senator Feinstein said that our prisons are “eminently capable” of handling detainees. But voted no on funding.

Senator James Webb, on Sunday with Stephanopoulos, said: “I do not believe they should be tried in the United States.” This could have more to do with Virginia politics than anything else, as well as the financial burden on places like Alexandria. But it still reeks of the incomprehensible and illogical.

Our prisons can handle the worst of offenders, so certainly we can handle Gitmo detainees.

But as if on cue, F.B.I. Director Mueller has “concerns” as well, no doubt looking out for his agents.

“The concerns we have about individuals who may support terrorism being in the United States run from concerns about providing financing, radicalizing others,” Mueller said, as well as “the potential for individuals undertaking attacks in the United States.” “All of those are relevant concerns,” Mueller said.

But leave it to Senator “majority leader” Harry Reid, the person charged with leading his flock of Senate pigeons, to deliver one of the most incomprehensible moments in recent congressional history:

“If terrorists are released in the United States, part of what we don’t want is for them be put in prisons in the United States. We don’t want them around the United States.” – Senator Harry Reid

Excuse me?

Why doesn’t Mr. Reid just read from Republican Party talking points and be done with it. As if Pres. Obama or anyone else for that matter is suggesting detainees will be running amok “around the United States.”

Senator Durbin was able to find some angle to pursue that didn’t make him sound like a mouse of a man.

“If we can safely hold these individuals, I believe we can safely hold any Guantanamo detainees who need to be held,” said Durbin on the Senate floor. “I should note, no prisoner has ever escaped in the United States, period. Republicans also claim the administration wants to release terrorists in our communities, some kind of work release, walking around situation for terrorists. What an incredible charge, and patently false. President Obama has made clear that Guantanamo will be closed in a manner consistent with our national security.”

But the question remains: How did President Obama find himself in this situation in the first place?

Gibbs yesterday: “We agree with Congress that before resources, that they should receive a more detailed plan.”

Well then, why in the name of the incomprehensively stupid wasn’t a plan in place before handing Pres. Obama this resounding defeat on something as important as his pledge to close Gitmo?

**crickets**

Then finally we hear from Michele Flournoy, Obama’s new Pentagon policy chief (who I think should be a candidate to replace Bob Gates), who spoke bluntly about the Senate’s yellow streak:

…that members of Congress must rethink their opposition to accepting these detainees into the United States. Flournoy said it is unrealistic to think that no detainees will come to the United States, and that the U.S. cannot ask allies to take detainees while refusing to take on the same burden.

Without singling anyone out, Flournoy said lawmakers need to think more “strategically.”

I hope Ms. Flournoy isn’t holding her breath.

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Obama’s Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Shame

“Until Congress passes legislation repealing the law, the administration will continue to defend the statute when it is challenged in the justice system.”Ben LaBolt, Obama spokesperson

It seems clear from Mr. LaBolt’s statement that Pres. Obama is content to play chicken with Democrats in Congress, holding servicemen and women who are gay hostage. Waiting out the court journey so that he won’t be, as the White House evidently sees it, blamed for reversing a dreadful policy that is weak constitutionally, as well as counterproductive.

The interview Rachel Maddow did with Lieutenant Colonel Victor J. Fehrenbach illustrates how alarmingly unfair DADT is. Aubrey Sarvis, Executive Director of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network wrote a post laying it out.

But yesterday, Pentagon spokesperson Geoff Morrell stood arrogantly at the podium talking about a policy that is a disgrace to this country as if it didn’t matter. The aura he exuded while talking about it revealed a cavalier approach to an issue that is insulting to our soldiers who are putting themselves on the line, sometimes heroically. Morrell:

“I do not believe there are any plans under way in this building for some expected, but not articulated, anticipation that don’t ask-don’t tell will be repealed,” Morrell told reporters at the Pentagon.

More practically, the Obama administration decided not to appeal the recent ruling on Maj. Margaret Witt.

The Obama administration has decided to accept an appeals-court ruling that could undermine the military’s ban on service members found to be gay.

In the appeals court case last year, the Bush administration argued that Air Force Maj. Margaret Witt, who was discharged after authorities discovered she had a relationship with a woman, had no grounds to challenge her expulsion in light of congressional findings that gays and lesbians in uniform “create an unacceptable risk” to military morale and “unit cohesion.”

But the court ordered the government to show why military discipline would be imperiled by the specific presence of Maj. Witt.

President Obama faced an early March deadline to file an appeal to the Supreme Court. Obama aides twice filed requests asking for a one-month extension, which the court granted. The administration let the most recent deadline pass without seeking another extension.

… A federal appeals court in San Francisco last year ruled that the government must justify the expulsion of a decorated officer solely because she is a lesbian. The court rejected government arguments that the law banning gays in the military should have a blanket application, and that officials shouldn’t be required to argue the merits in her individual case.

The administration let pass a May 3 deadline to appeal to the Supreme Court. That means the case will be returned to the district court, and administration officials said they will continue to defend the law there.

Through no courage from Democrats, the issue of DADT could eventually wind its way through the courts with a positive outcome. But it sure won’t be because Pres. Obama, his Administration or the Democrats in Congress showed leadership or any courage on the issue.

ABC’s This Week, George Stephanopoulos asked the president’s National Security Advisor retired Marine General James L. Jones if he thought DADT will be overturned. Jones replied, “I don’t know,” and then what is clearly one of the main talking points, “We have a lot on our plate right now.”

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Virginians, Don’t Vote for Brian Moran

–debate update–

Tacky. Tacky. Tacky.

That’s Brian Moran.

And this is the last post I thought I’d be writing today, because I rarely weigh in on state races, which aren’t my thing (Webb and Sestak were my two exceptions in the last years).

For those of you who don’t know, Moran is running in the Virginia gubernatorial primary against Terry McAuliffe and state Sen. Creigh Deeds. Moran is trailing McAuliffe, who is leading, according to the latest PPP polling, done on May 5. So now Moran’s desperate and it’s showing.

I hope McAuliffe trounces him. Hey, but if you don’t like Terry McAuliffe, give your vote to Creigh Deeds. Call it a vote for the underdog. Just don’t vote for Brian Moran.

That wasn’t my feeling until today. But when reading in the Washington Post a report that Moran took his campaign for governor to a new low, basically saying that Terry McAuliffe shouldn’t be elected because he supported Hillary Clinton in the primaries, that was it. But if that isn’t bad enough, Moran’s running targeted ads in African American communities that are really low considering Hillary Clinton has one of the top spots in President Obama’s cabinet. But that’s not good enough for Mr. Moran, who would rather dredge up primary battles.

In a fundraising appeal to supporters yesterday, McAuliffe’s campaign called Moran’s ads “a new low,” and said they were “deliberately designed to deceive voters into believing Terry opposed Barack Obama’s candidacy last November.” It released a video of McAuliffe campaigning for Obama before the general election and a radio ad with McAuliffe saying he worked as hard for Obama in the general election as he had for Clinton during the primaries. … “He is rewriting history,” Moran said yesterday. “There’s some audacity with him taking credit for helping elect Barack Obama when there were so many volunteers who worked diligently over many, many months to get him elected.”

No one and I mean no one wants to rehash the primaries. Something that Scott Surovell, chairman of the Fairfax County Democratic Committee, reminded Mr. Moran today. But with his latest campaigning, Moran also proved he doesn’t have the gray matter to be governor. Because he’s an idiot if he believes McAuliffe and all the other Hillary Clinton supporters, including Clinton herself, didn’t help elect Barack Obama president, with no Clinton supporter believing he or she played a bigger role than the die hard Obama fans who took him across the finish line. But a short memory and primary desperation has led Moran to a tacky, stupid campaign mistake that deserve to cost him with Virginians.

You likely know a lot about Terry McAuliffe. For the record, I’ve met McAuliffe, who’s got more energy than any ten people, and who has finally turned from supporting the Clintons to his own campaign. But it’s unlikely you know much about Creigh Deeds. So here’s a bit about him, someone I do not know, nor have ever met, but who has a solid record in fighting for Virginia.

Senator Deeds has spent the last two decades serving constituents from all walks of life–from his start as Bath County prosecutor to his current position as a State Senator representing the City of Charlottesville and a district that stretches to the West Virginia border. Whether he was working to clean up one of Virginia’s largest Superfund sites, fighting for economic development, or writing some of the toughest legislation to keep our families safe and secure, Deeds has built his career as a consensus builder who delivers results.

He wrote Megan’s Law, which allows public access to the state sex offender registry, and sponsored the Amber Alert Program to keep our children safe. Using his relationships with law enforcement officers and his experience as a prosecutor, Deeds wrote the state law that has turned the tide against homegrown illegal methamphetamine drug labs.

In addition to his work to cleanup the Kim-Stan landfill Superfund site, Senator Deeds also wrote one of the most progressive laws to preserve open space and protect the environment. For his leadership and advocacy, he received the Leadership in Public Policy Award from The Nature Conservancy and the Preservation Alliance of Virginia named him Delegate of the Year.

Tom Daschle, Obama’s presidential campaign co-chairmen, just endorsed McAuliffe yesterday. Of course, that doesn’t surprise anyone, because insiders stick together, especially ones in the Democratic elite. However, will.i.am has also endorsed McAuliffe.

Moran’s moves to make Hillary Clinton the scapegoat for his inability to catch McAuliffe are despicable. Note to Brian Moran: Mrs. Clinton is now Secretary of State, doing a good job by anyone’s objective standard, serving President Obama well, no looking back.

Let’s hope Moran’s cheap shot doesn’t influence Virginia Democratic primary voters. He’s proven he doesn’t have the class to represent such a great state.

So if you’re a Virginia Democrat, vote for Terry McAuliffe or Creigh Deeds. They at least have their eyes on what’s important. Brian Moran does not.

UPDATE: VA. governor debate was streamed online today, so it was easy to see the candidates in action. Brian Moran opened his mouth once too often removing all doubt that he’s a jerk; sniping at McAuliffe without landing a blow; saying he didn’t have time to teach McAuliffe about how VA works. McAuliffe didn’t flinch, just smiled, while the audience audibly grimaced. Moran only hurt himself with his negativity. Deeds was good and on message, detailed, obviously qualified. As for McAuliffe, he showed a fuller grasp of business and the need to wheel and deal with companies to bring them into Virginia. His claim that he’s created jobs clearly ticked Moran off, but McAuliffe just kept repeating his talking point that zeroed in on job creation, job creation, job creation. Quote of the debate goes to McAuliffe: “I apologize for being optimistic.” Ask anyone. That’s his trademark characteristic. Compared to Moran’s sour puss it was a tonic.

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Bush-Cheney, Torture and Iraq

The Republicans want to make sure that they don’t go down on Bush-Cheney torture, so they’ve decided to try to drag Speaker Pelosi down into it. They may have miscalculated because Pelosi is fighting back. The most extraordinary take on the fight that just boiled over comes from Dan Baltz.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s extraordinary accusation that the Bush administration lied to Congress about the use of harsh interrogation techniques dramatically raised the stakes in the growing debate over the Bush administration’s anti-terrorism policies even as it raised some questions about the speaker’s credibility.

… But in attempting to defend herself, Pelosi took the remarkable step of trying to shift the focus of blame to the CIA and the Bush administration, claiming that the CIA accounts represented a diversionary tactic in the real debate over the interrogation policies. That amounted to a virtual declaration of war against the CIA at a time when the Obama administration already has rattled morale at the agency with the release of Justice Department memos authorizing the harsh interrogation techniques.

Someone needs to tell me why it’s an “extraordinary accusation” that the Bush administration lied to Congress.

This is our problem and has been since the run up to the Iraq war. Many in the traditional media were, and evidently still are, willing to ignore what was done by the Bush White House on the run up to the war, which now includes the bombshell that Dick Cheney wanted people waterboarded hoping their flushed out confessions would lead to the WMDs that went missing.

As for Obama’s problems with the “rattles morale at the agency,” well, tough. We’ve got bigger problems than an unwilling President to do the job he promised, or turning the page from the cherry-picking, stove piping CIA of the Bush-Cheney years. Let them sweat.

Yesterday the Bush-Cheney torture plot thickened, advancing a horrific possibility that could change this debate forever. Did Dick Cheney push torture to try to get evidence on WMD in Iraq? After the invasion failed to lead to Saddam’s alleged stockpiles, did Dick Cheney push torture to prove they were right?

Robert Windrem has evidence that leads to the answer:

In his new book, Hide and Seek: The Search for Truth in Iraq, and in an interview with The Daily Beast, Duelfer says he heard from “some in Washington at very senior levels (not in the CIA),” who thought Khudayr’s interrogation had been “too gentle” and suggested another route, one that they believed has proven effective elsewhere. “They asked if enhanced measures, such as waterboarding, should be used,” Duelfer writes. “The executive authorities addressing those measures made clear that such techniques could legally be applied only to terrorism cases, and our debriefings were not as yet terrorism-related. The debriefings were just debriefings, even for this creature.”

Duelfer will not disclose who in Washington had proposed the use of waterboarding, saying only: “The language I can use is what has been cleared.” In fact, two senior U.S. intelligence officials at the time tell The Daily Beast that the suggestion to waterboard came from the Office of Vice President Cheney.

But what people are missing is that if we don’t follow the threads we’ll never be able to turn this page. That what Vice President Dick Cheney did or wanted done or pushed to have done will be on all of us. If President Obama doesn’t do anything about it, however, we will never be rid of it.

Peter Daou nails it:

But as always, the progressive community, a far more efficient thinking machine than a handful of strategists and advisers, is looking ahead and raising a unified alarm. The message is this: anything less than absolute moral clarity from Democrats, who now control the levers of power, will enshrine Bush’s abuses and undermine the rule of law for generations to come.

However, as I’ve been saying for a while now, the results of Obama ignoring the gravity of this situation go way beyond the immediate. While the Republicans target Pelosi, Dick Cheney’s side bet continue to rides, which I wrote about days ago. That he can develop a narrative and put it into the political bloodstream that America allegedly became “less safe” the moment Obama began dismantling the Bush-Cheney torture policies. He’s betting that when the day comes that we’re hit again, whenever that is, he can point to that day, when he was warning that Bush-Cheney policies kept us safe. With Cheney believing all the blame will then fall on Democrats, because people have short memories, with the Rep. having another chapter in the “Dems are soft on national security” book they can exploit. Cynical, but that’s Cheney. He’s seeing down the field. Dems are not. This needs to change and fast.

We need to find out if the allegations against Cheney on torture and the Iraq war are real, because this goes beyond simply keeping America safe. It goes to the tactics used by the Bush administration and the lengths they would go to in order to save themselves. Remember back to when no WMDs were found? The Republican argument for preemptive war and their foreign policy collapsed on this revelation. That we went to war on a lie. If torture is wrapped up in proving the Iraq war was worth it, the lies that took us into Iraq will be compounded, Bush-Cheney’s role in torture fully revealed. They tortured to save themselves.

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Pelosi Accuses CIA of ‘Misleading the Congress’

Speaker Pelosi’s press conference was a stunner (transcript here).

“… Like all members of Congress who are briefed on classified information, I have assigned oaths pledges not to disclose any of that information. This is an oath I have taken very seriously, and I’ve always abided by it. The CIA briefed me only once on enhanced interrogation techniques in September 2002 in my capacity as ranking member of the Intelligence Committee. I was informed then that the Department of Justice opinions had concluded that the use of enhanced interrogation techniques were legal. The only mention of waterboarding at that briefing was that it was not being employed. Those conducting the briefing promised to inform the appropriate members of Congress if that technique were to be used in the future. …”

Now the trouble for Republicans is that she’s not playing along. Not only has she upped the ante, but she’s driven the narrative back to Iraq, Bush’s lies right before that election, and what Bush and Cheney were doing to drive this country to war. That the foundation of Bush-Cheney foreign policy was lies and distraction. It’s what is at the center of all the dust currently being kicked up.

“This is a diversionary tactic, to take the spotlight off of those who conceived, developed, and implemented these policies, which all of us [Democratic leaders] opposed,” (Pelosi) said. “Understand — this is their policy, all of them.”

The story began with Bush-Cheney getting a lot of heat on EIT, fresh off the release of the OLC memos. So much heat that Dick Cheney blasted on to a media torture tour, with his daughter batting clean-up. The job was to make sure everyone understood how important torture was to the Bush administration, but also that what they did was legal; and to mark the moment Obama dismantled the program to make us “less safe.” Oh, and because it was legal it wasn’t torture. In the sense that Bush and Cheney had lawyers distort the law through creatively written legalistic memos, which were intended as cover for the Administration.

In the midst of the Cheney torture tour, someone decides they need another target, a Democrat, someone who they believe is a good focus to shift the blame, if not totally, then to say top Democrats knew about the torture policies and approved. They choose Pelosi, because she was briefed in 2002.

Then the Republican machine gears into the action of distraction.

We don’t know how this will end, but one thing is clear. Republicans might have made a fatal error in stirring Pelosi’s ire. If they’re trying to keep a Truth Commission from gearing up they just screwed up. They went after Speaker Pelosi without the goods to get her. Now she’s mad as hell and isn’t in the mood to suffer fools.

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Mrs. Edwards and the Press

When I read this article this morning in the paper, all I could say was good for the Washington Post:

No newspaper has agreed to the restriction so far, according to David Drake, Edwards’s publicist. The Washington Post, among other newspapers, declined to interview Edwards after learning of the stipulation. Although The Post permits sources to speak anonymously under certain conditions, it doesn’t permit subjects of stories to dictate the manner in which a story will be written.

… In his interview Tuesday night, King said, “You do not name the woman who John had the affair with in your book. And you’ve asked us out of consideration for you not to do so, and we will respect that.”

Her name is Reille Hunter. But if Mrs. Edwards is refusing to name the guilty then John Edwards should take the front seat, because all he had to do was walk away.

The more air this story gets the more embarrassing it becomes for Mrs. Edwards. Oh, that it weren’t so.

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Round the Pelosi Merry-go-Round

How many times are we going to get traditional media stories about Pelosi and EIT, which say the same thing over again while trying to posture that something new has been added. Today it’s CNN:

A source close to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi now confirms that Pelosi was told in February 2003 by her intelligence aide, Michael Sheehy, that waterboarding was actually used on CIA detainee Abu Zubaydah.

Source says Nancy Pelosi didn’t object about waterboard usage because she wasn’t personally briefed about it.

Source says Nancy Pelosi didn’t object about waterboard usage because she wasn’t personally briefed about it.

This appears to contradict Pelosi’s account that she was never told waterboarding actually happened, only that the administration was considering using it.

Holy obtuseness, people. Notice the date in the report above?

Mrs. Pelosi was briefed once, something that has not been contested, and that briefing happened in 2002.

As seems obvious to me, once Michael Sheehy, her intel aide, found out about the EIT in 2003, including possible waterboarding, does anyone believe Pelosi wasn’t told? But that’s not the issue of the one briefing Pelosi had, so there is no contradiction, because hearing something through an aide, assuming she did, is quite different from an intel briefing from the Administration directly.

Now, whether this is a distinction that doesn’t matter in the larger scheme is another point. But it doesn’t change the fact that we have no proof Pelosi was briefed personally on waterboarding.

Anyone knowing of torture and doing nothing about it, including putting their questions and skepticism, even disapproval in writing in some form, are partially responsible. However, the facts learned in classified briefings are not allowed to be made public, including what lawmakers are told about techniques. That is illegal. That Pelosi felt compelled to say explicitly what she wasn’t told does present a problem, which we’re seeing play out now.

Does any of this excuse Democrats for standing by, for not making a record of their disapproval? Absolutely not, but that’s a different topic altogether.

But let’s get something clear. Pelosi has become the target to take the spotlight off of Bush-Cheney and the people who not only concocted their torture policy, but the people at the top who signed off on it.

Look over here!, they cry. Ignore the masterminds behind the curtain.

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Pelosi Plotline Thickens

But the fact remains that there remains no evidence that Speaker Pelosi was personally briefed on waterboarding in her single briefing in September 2002, one month after the CIA waterboarded Abu Zubaydah was waterboarded over six dozen times. In 2003, a top Pelosi aide was. Briefings that none of the participants were allowed to talk about, which compounds the problem when things go wrong. And, according to Greg Sargent, Pete Hoekstra is promising details on Pelosi.

However, in 2003 the information about EIT briefings was shared more broadly, if still in a manner that left questions about what exactly was being done. This is in keeping with Bush-Cheney secrecy that we all know pervaded the previous Administration. More, with Michael Sheehy the aide spoken of below:

A top aide to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi attended a CIA briefing in early 2003 in which it was made clear that waterboarding and other harsh techniques were being used in the interrogation of an alleged al-Qaeda operative, according to documents the CIA released to Congress on Thursday.

Pelosi has insisted that she was not directly briefed by Bush administration officials that the practice was being actively employed. …

[...]Harman was surprised at what she learned, particularly that intelligence officials had video of the waterboarding of Abu Zubaida and were planning on destroying it. Captured in early 2002, Abu Zubaida, whose real name is Zayn al-Abidin Muhammed Hussein, faced months of standard interrogations before being sent to a CIA-run facility where the harsher techniques were used.

Harman wrote to the CIA’s general counsel on Feb. 10, 2003, to question whether the methods “are consistent with the principles and policies of the United States. Have enhanced techniques been authorized and approved by the president?”

But any reading of the contagion of stories on the issue of waterboarding reveals that Democrats eventually did know about the procedure, even if they weren’t personally briefed, some as early as 2003. Pelosi not being personally briefed, when her aide was, but also Harman who wrote a letter to which Pelosi openly admits she agrees, reveals some sort of guilty knowledge about what was going on. As does the information that Rockefeller, someone who has never been a profile in courage on anything (that I remember), was also aware of what was going on.

Pelosi’s denial of being briefed on waterboarding continues to stand. But will the distinctions she’s making make a difference as we learn the wide circle of Democrats who eventually had inklings of what was going on inside the interrogations? It seems clear that knowledge flowed to Pelosi from others, even if she wasn’t personally briefed.

Neither Pelosi nor her staff would comment on how she learned of the techniques she now considers torture, and Harman said in an interview that she “did not recall” discussing the issue with Pelosi. Sheehy was Pelosi’s top aide on the intelligence committee when she served as the ranking Democrat on that panel, and he remained her top national security aide until he left the speaker’s office this year.

Pelosi never filed any official letter of protest, but some lawmakers said such objections to the Bush administration at that time were pointless.

“I felt that it was minimally responsive,” Harman said of the CIA’s response to her February 2003 letter. “It didn’t address the issue I asked.”

Let’s put the truth, the whole truth, on the table. No matter where it leads.

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Pelosi, EIT and the Briefing

As I said on Twitter last night, ABC doesn’t have the story they think they do. Greg Sargent offers some proof that this analysis is correct. The following graphic is from Greg:

Photobucket

It clearly reveals that Pelosi was briefed on EITs (enhanced interrogation techniques), but the specifics are left out.

Nevertheless, breathless with a breaking fever, people have decided to report that Pelosi was briefed on EITs, assuming waterboarding was part of the package. There is absolutely no proof or actual conclusive evidence that Speaker Pelosi was specifically told that waterboarding would be used in the torture of prisoners. As of today there simply isn’t, though this is still unfolding, so we don’t know where it will lead.

Reports do prove that although Pelosi was indeed briefed on EIT, the specifics were missing in the single briefing she had.

…The CIA declined to comment on why the chart does not make it clear whether waterboarding was covered in the Pelosi briefing. But a federal official familiar with the list indicated that the agency’s records may not have been that specific.

[...] Although the records describe early briefings on the CIA program, they also indicate that the operation was shielded from the vast majority of lawmakers for years. It wasn’t until September 2006, four years after Goss and Pelosi initially were briefed, that the agency’s interrogation program was described to the full House and Senate intelligence committees.

Porter Goss pontificating on what should have been deduced means nothing if the specifics weren’t delineated. People are now assuming that a briefing on EITs automatically means that Pelosi knew that waterboarding was being used on prisoners.

There’s another wrinkle to the Pelosi story from Sargent as well. The CIA doesn’t even know if the notes of the briefings are accurate.

(U//FOUO) This letter presents the most thorough information we have on dates, locations, and names of all Members of Congress who were briefed by the CIA on enhanced interrogation techniques. This information, however, is drawn from the past files of the CIA and represents MFRs completed at the time and notes that summarized the best recollections of those individuals. In the end, you and the Committee will have to determine whether this information is an accurate summary of what actually happened.

Pelosi was briefed in September 2002. Abu Zubayda, as we now know, was waterboarded the previous month over six dozen times. You’d think if the Pelosi briefing included waterboarding numbers like this would certainly have stuck in the Speaker’s mind. It’s not something you’re likely to forget.

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Outrage and Political Betrayal

There is an article on the new film “Outrage” tucked in the Style section of the Washington Post today with a final line that is fitting today: If our leaders aren’t true to themselves, how can they possibly be true to us. The answer is easy, they cannot.

The film “Outrage” arrives on a week that stirs up so much political baggage, helped along by willing political participants, that it’s hard to imagine a more timely opening. Sure “Outrage” talks about “allegedly gay politicians who actively campaign and vote against gay rights,” but it washes over events of this week that had Elizabeth Edwards dredging up her husband’s infidelity and her reaction, all of which reaches back into the past plucking uncomfortable past personal disasters of leaders who have let us down.

Sometimes it’s not just about infidelity or voting against your own civil rights while being gay yourself. It’s about betrayal of political trust. Lying to people who have sometimes given up their lives, worked untold hours and put everything in your hands. We can have a conversation about the lunacy of any person doing that with a politician, when people put more trust in the person than the policies they represent, but that’s another discussion.

Getting a comments from die hard Edwards supporters, I now understand how ridiculous WJC supporters sound when they excuse the Lewinsky affair. The loyalty built from politician to advocate, especially on such a high level, unfounded when the person you’re advocating cannot be true to himself, making a mockery of all the long hours, cajoling and banner waving you’ve done.

Going back, Robert Reich wasn’t half as mad about the stupid infidelity of William Jefferson Clinton as he was about the lies told blatantly, the half truths and “word games,” as Reich judged it, from a man that many who served him felt had betrayed them all, but also the charge they were trusted to keep.

Re-enter John and Elizabeth Edwards and the Oprah interview. Like Clinton, but also the subject of “Outrage,” the whole thing may have started with an indiscretion, but once it was decided that the Edwardses would join together in a lie to the public, their supporters, and the nation, on the wings of what amounted to award winning political performances, it became about something else.

The Elizabeth Edwards and Oprah full hour on the affair John Edwards, minus any mention of Reille Hunter’s name, was a horrendously painful thing to watch, an event that remains remarkably wrenching for Mrs. Edwards, that much was clear. She’s certainly earned the right to have her side heard. What was revealed in the hour, however, one expects was not what she intended. Oprah didn’t even seem to understand what had been said at one point early in her interview. It hit me immediately.

So, as Mrs. Edwards set the scene with Oprah, two days after John Edwards announced his presidential campaign he tells his wife about his cheating, which supposedly happened once. Her response was that he needed “to get out of the campaign… for her family, for my children, for John and for me it would be best if he got out of the campaign..” Good advice, right instinct. But John Edwards thought differently. She continues:

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“He said, and, truthfully, he was right. It was hard to argue with this. That if you want to raise a lot of questions what you do is get out of a campaign you got into two days before. We just set up offices and got people on board. It would have been a very… would have raised a lot of questions in people’s minds. …” – Elizabeth Edwards (Oprah interview)

Trying to keep people from raising questions was what was important? At that moment it’s all so clear, as everything the Edwardses stood for falls in on itself.

They aren’t the first.

No matter what’s in the book, what Mrs. Edwards revealed in the Oprah interview, is that keeping the affair hidden was her husband’s primary concern. Was it also to protect his wife and his family? One would hope, but that’s not what Mrs. Edwards said to Oprah.

That Mrs. Edwards says her husband was “right” and that it “was hard to argue with this” is stunning. As whip smart as she is she had to know this would eventually unravel in the glare of a hot presidential campaign. What was Mrs. Edwards thinking?

Then there is the bigger problem for them both: Presenting yourselves on the campaign trail as one thing, when behind the scenes a completely unimaginable scenario has played out that you’ve chosen to lie about by hiding so you can benefit.

The worst of it is that Mr. Edwards had a completely organic rationale he could have used to keep going. It’s so obvious it screams, but it never occurs to either of them, not even in preparation for the Oprah interview. Mr. Edwards could have simply said to his wife that the mission they started so long ago, the fight they were waging for America was too important to be hijacked by one stupid mistake he’d made. That’s something that would have been, to use Mrs. Edwards’ words, “hard to to argue with.”

But that’s not what John Edwards said to his wife. By her own admission, that’s not why Mrs. Edwards agreed to be complicit in the charade, and it’s not what she said on Oprah, regardless of what’s said in her book.

It’s the cowardice to face up to what’s happened, instead choosing to betray supporters by producing political theater that at its heart was about hiding the truth that, whether it’s Gary Hart, Jim McGreevy, Bill Clinton, John Edwards, or the complicity of Mrs. Edwards, opens out on a political charade that goes on for months and months and includes further denials all for the purpose of saving yourself. That Edwards dragged his vulnerable, terminally ill wife along is unforgivable. That she willingly went along is yet a new chapter in the stand by your man book of political embarrassments.

I’m not sure how all this opens out on our politics. The honesty of our politicians and their lack of courage to make hard choices once they are handed power from the voters, but something tells me it’s related. Many say that our politics suffers because there’s too much scrutiny on candidates, and maybe that’s the case. But there’s also the possibility that we’ve come to expect less from them because we’re too fragile to look at them unmasked, preferring to make excuses where none suffice, keeping them on pedestals they haven’t earned and cannot live up to.

Supporters have to expect more, excuse less and be willing to be brutally honest when their politician fails the ultimate test of leadership, being true to himself at all costs. But especially when that politician is a fraud. Being blinded by misplaced faith doesn’t mean you haven’t been made a fool.

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Prayer is Better When Private

Or at least it should be, was meant to be.

In 1779, Jefferson proposed a bill that would guarantee complete legal equality for citizens of all religions, and of no religion, in his home state of Virginia. Jefferson’s was the first plan in any of the thirteen states to call for complete separation of civil and religious authority, and seven years of fierce debate and political bargaining would pass before a version of his bill was enacted into law. Virginia stood alone in marshaling a legislative majority that, as Jefferson observed, “meant to comprehend, within the mantle of its protection, the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and Mahometan, the Hindoo, and infidel of every denomination.” – Freethinkers, by Susan Jacoby (pg. 19)

…notwithstanding Massachusetts and Connecticut:

Jefferson’s and Adam’s hope for greater liberalization in the New England states would not be realized in their lifetimes. Massachusetts would not strike all religious restrictions from its law until 1833—seven years after Adams’s death—and Connecticut would withhold equal right from Jews for another ten years. (ibid, pg. 32)

It was certainly never intended to be institutionalized by the office of the presidency.

Evidently, conservatives missed Jefferson’s memo.

Today, in case you didn’t know it, is National Prayer Day.

President Obama is signing a proclamation, but he’s decided not to wear his religion on his sleeve by parading it in a public forum represented by the presidency. Needless to say he’s receiving incoming.

But guess what? Nobody cares. The marginalization continues, represented by the usual suspects.

Shirley Dobson, chairwoman of the National Day of Prayer Committee, said the group was “disappointed in the lack of participation by the Obama administration.”

“At this time in our country’s history, we would hope our president would recognize more fully the importance of prayer,” said Mrs. Dobson, who occupied a prominent seat in the front row for the ceremonies during the Bush administration.

It’s obviously difficult for people who make a show of religion to understand that some people prefer to celebrate and utilize their faith privately.

Considering we are talking about the president of a nation that was founded because we were fleeing religious rules that obliterated personal freedoms to choose, it’s ironic the theatrical prayer club is dismayed that God hears prayers even if they’re not televised and marketed.

As an Episcopalian who does practice, but who finds daily meditation a much more powerful force in my life than organized religion these days, which has refused to move into the 21st century, I’ve always found the ostentatious preening of political public prayer unseemly.

Of course, candidate Obama had to make a great show of his religion, because the dog and pony parade for politicians hoping to seek the highest office in the land is not only expected, but the ultimate litmus test.

Concerned Women for America used today’s opportunity to reveal their ignorance of our Founders:

“For those of us who have our doubts about Obama’s faith, no, we did not expect him to have the service,” said Wendy Wright, president of Concerned Women for America. “But as president, he should put his own lack of faith aside and live up to the office.”

Referencing a remark the president made at a recent press conference in Turkey that Americans “do not consider ourselves a Christian nation,” she added: “That was projecting his own beliefs, but not reflecting what the majority of Americans feel. It’s almost like Obama is trying to remake America into his own image. This is not a rejection of Shirley Dobson; it’s a rejection of the concept that America is a spiritual nation and its foundation is Judeo-Christian.”

Aha!

It seems Mrs. Dobson at least admits that we are a spiritual nature first, which seems to be a confession in itself, with the cover of the second half of her statement crafted very carefully. “Foundation is Judeo-Christian,” appears to be a nod to the common religion of the day, but absolutely departs from the “we are a Christian nation” proclamation the religious right has always used.

I don’t need to tell you that weaving religion into politics and issues of state haven’t gotten the world anywhere. It’s cursed our best intentions and been anything but an aid to any plan, godly or mortal, meant to bring peace. If we’ve learned anything from the crusades of the religious right of the world, whatever the country of origin, that much should be clear.

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Where Blue Dogs Hide

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When in power, centrism and moderation are bookend names for the terminal political disease known as leadership phobia. An unwillingness to grapple with political purpose. In good political times for a particular party, it’s an aversion to accepting what being in a majority means, taking action to put your priorities into policy; delivering on what voters were promised. Centrists and moderates are primarily guided by fears and insecurity about being too forward leaning, in other words, getting caught being bold. Guided by their willingness to bet what can’t pass, can’t work, and can’t further their own personal agenda. Forgetting entirely that they are not the island on which Democratic policy lives, breathes and is manifested, let alone what has built the foundation that is the Democratic Party. History isn’t cut on caution.

You can, however, have a big tent where centrists and moderates, even conservatives, are invited to join the debate, but they aren’t given the keys, because they have no clue where they’re going, what drives them. They also shouldn’t be confused with consensus, which is an end result, not a place where you begin.

Blue Dogs choose to hide behind mantels of “centrist” and “moderate” labels, which is just a springboard to failure when you’re the party with the numbers, the passion and a president willing to spend his capital to get what he promised done.

Voters can label themselves whatever they want: blue dog, centrist, moderate. Leaders cannot.

To her credit, Speaker Pelosi is listening to the Blue Dogs, but she has a job to lead, but also as Obama’s Speaker, to make sure his agenda is being forwarded. That means Obama’s priorities are more important than the Blue Dog Dems. While their self interest and self preservation never stops them from caving to supposed “centrism,” which is about as worthwhile to Democrats as your nearest obstructionist Republican.

From The Hill:

[...] Pelosi held a meeting on cap-and-trade last week with Blue Dog leaders, who told her that consensus was possible on cap-and-trade, but only if she takes a cautious approach that takes centrist views into account.

… But the idea of putting healthcare before climate change contravenes the wishes of President Obama, who met Tuesday with Energy and Commerce Democrats and reinforced that he wants the House to tackle cap-and-trade before healthcare.

Obama called the meeting after cap-and-trade appeared to bog down in committee, without the votes to pass. That is likely to be tested next week, when Waxman is expected to leapfrog the subcommittee to hold a full-committee vote. That plan got more complicated Wednesday when Rep. G.K. Butterfield (D-N.C.), vice chairman of the subcommittee, objected to the plan. …

Another trait of centrists and so-called moderates is that their incremental minds are guided by caution and fear moored in panic that something might go terribly wrong, which usually has a way of manifesting when that’s your focus, but really is about themselves and their own extinction.

In the end the Blue Dogs have a choice that will always keep them safe. They can vote no with the Republicans.

Choosing between when issues are equal is a favorite centrist/moderate straw man.

Those close to Pelosi say she figures healthcare has just as much chance to bog down.

“Reports of the death of cap-and-trade are premature,” said a Democratic aide. “The timing, momentum and dollars haven’t come together yet. The Speaker’s not in a panic about it.”

There is thinking within leadership that it’s better to have two complex issues going at one time, the aide said. When there’s only one, it draws all the fire. So Pelosi might keep cap-and-trade going, waiting for healthcare to become stalled, then return the emphasis to cap-and-trade.

When in power, either or choices have a way of delivering zip. Vision manifested is votes honored.

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Taking Care of Arlen

We’re back…

Cue the codding:

Durbin spokesman Joe Shoemaker confirmed that Durbin is set to relinquish the gavel of the Subcommittee on Crime and Drugs to Specter.

However, Durbin expects the full committee to re-establish the now-defunct Subcommittee on Human Rights and the Law so that Durbin will still chair a subpanel on Judiciary.

Otherwise known as Democratic guilt. After the Senate voted to demote Specter, I guess Durbin, who is Obama’s main man in the Senate, in my judgment, felt compelled. Either that or the Reid-Durbin-Obama trilateral give Arlen power he doesn’t deserve team got the shakes over the fall out from Reid making promises he couldn’t keep.

I’m telling you, Senator Harry Reid hasn’t a clue what majority means.

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Biden Meets with Franken

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From the veep’s office:

Vice President Biden Issues Statement Following Meeting with Al Franken

“The election process and recount in Minnesota have lived up to the state’s reputation for organization, transparency, and bipartisanship. The officials have been meticulous and every ruling has been unanimous.

“While Senator Amy Klobuchar is one of the hardest working members of the United States Senate, Minnesotans deserve their full representation.

“Once the Minnesota Supreme Court has issued its final ruling in this case, the President and I look forward to working with Mr. Franken on building an economy for the 21st century.”

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The Junior Member Misspoke

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Arlen Specter has new problems, which were handed to him by the Senate last night.

In announcing his move across the aisle last week, Specter asserted that Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) had assured him he would retain his seniority in the Senate and on the five committees on which he serves. Specter’s tenure ranked him ahead of all but seven Democrats.

Instead, though, on a voice vote last night, the Senate approved a resolution that made Specter the most junior Democrat on four committees for the remainder of this Congress. (He will rank second from last on the fifth, the Special Committee on Aging.) Reid himself read the resolution on the Senate floor, underscoring the reversal.

It’s not turning out like Specter planned or how Reid promised. To add and to clarify, that is both of these Democrats may not get the deal they made in the next Congress because there are other things afoot.

Reading the New York Times piece, it was hard not to start a countdown. You know, until something was said that proved Arlen Specter realized he’d temporarily lost his grip and needed to find it quickly. CQ’s got it:

“In the swirl of moving from one caucus to another, I have to get used to my new teammates,” he said. “I’m ordinarily pretty correct in what I say. I’ve made a career of being precise. I conclusively misspoke.”

Ah, yes, the old “conclusively misspoke” story.

Not only did Specter misspeak, but it looks like he misjudged things as well, but he’s certainly not alone. Though he moved over calculating his win-loss probabilities, it was also pretty clear that he wanted revenge, always satisfying but usually blinding. In this case it’s clear that Mr. Specter, the new junior member of the Democratic caucus, didn’t think beyond getting even.

With Joe Sestak and some Democrats (myself included) gnashing for a primary fight, it’s not going to get any easier for Mr. Specter from here.

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Specter Hearts Coleman

Hey, Harry. Nice deal you made with Mr. Specter. We obviously need a vaccine for the Lieberman virus. Since Pres. Obama has stated he’ll campaign for Specter, it’s reach is alarming.

From a short interview with Specter to appear on Sunday:

NY TIMES: With your departure from the Republican Party, there are no more Jewish Republicans in the Senate. Do you care about that?

SPECTER: I sure do. There’s still time for the Minnesota courts to do justice and declare Norm Coleman the winner.

Two words: Joe Sestak.

From TPMDC:

“I can’t figure out…why the deal was done,” Sestak told me, saying he’s concerned that the party was so quick to embrace Specter for reasons of “expediency,” and without regard to the needs of Pennsylvania voters. “It isn’t Washington’s prerogative to tell us what to do,” Sestak insisted.

That goes double for me, because it will be all out war on this one. I campaigned hard for Sestak, as some of you might remember, when he was running against Weldon. That’s nothing compared to what’s likely to unfold this time around.

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Elizabeth Edwards Opens It Up Again

read the follow up

“I’ve seen a picture of the baby. I have no idea. It doesn’t look like my children but I don’t have any idea,” Edwards told Winfrey. – New York Daily News

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The federal probe of John Edwards campaign funds all leads back to the affair. It’s the latest chapter in the politician’s clumsy fall from grace, which has dragged his wife through a heart wrenching ordeal at a moment in her life where this kind of stress could be her undoing. In an interview with Oprah airing Thursday, one of the conditions was that the name of “the other woman” (known in the real world as Rielle Hunter), with whom Mr. Edwards became involved, would never be mentioned. That gives you an idea of how far away Mrs. Edwards has to keep the details.

Mrs. Elizabeth Edwards, reprising the heroine in her life’s journey, has a book coming out. There is an adapted excerpt in Time magazine that gives everyone a look through the barely cracked door of her experience, at least that’s the obscured view you get from this article. I hope Mrs. Edwards’ book is a bit more honest, candid, real, understanding it’s a broader book that just this tragedy. After all, Mrs. Edwards is more than her husband, even as she’s weighed down by him.

It didn’t occur to me that at a fancy hotel in New York, where he sat with a potential donor to his antipoverty work, he would be targeted by a woman who would confirm that the man at the table was John Edwards and then would wait for him outside the hotel hours later when he returned from a dinner, wait with the come-on line “You are so hot” and an idea that she should travel with him and make videos.

[...] There were other opportunities, he admitted, but on only one night had he violated his vows to me. So much has happened that it is sometimes hard for me to gather my feelings from that moment. I felt that the ground underneath me had been pulled away. I wanted him to drop out of the race, protect our family from this woman, from his act. It would only raise questions, he said, he had just gotten in the race; the most pointed questions would come if he dropped out days after he had gotten in the race. And I knew that was right, but I was afraid of her.

Over fifteen years ago I was immersed in the world of relationships, dating and marriage, but also the seedier side of sexuality and its traps. I’ve written about it many times, including in a book, having interviewed hundreds and hundreds of people on every aspect of the mating and marriage game, including infidelity, cheating and sexual seduction, listening to people, including several thousand men. Having stopped this investigative romp through the human side of life almost 10 years ago, I still believe I am an expert on these matters, because matters of the heart, mind and flesh just don’t change that much. The Edwardses prove that, as did the Clintons before them, and the Harts before them, though there are many more in this club, including J.F.K., F.D.R. and even George H.W. Bush. The list is no doubt endless, famous or not.

“Targeted by a woman,” writes Mrs. Edwards. This is the saddest statement of all in this Time piece. There is nothing left to cover the embarrassment of what John Edwards brought into their world. But women always seem to choose the target of the woman who made the advances instead of the man who could have simply said no and walked away.

As for the fear Mrs. Edwards felt, there hasn’t been any reporting or charges from the Edwardses about his paramour being dangerous. So the fear Mrs. Edwards feels comes from a different quadrant. A place where you fear your entire world could come crashing down at a time when, because of her terminal illness, that’s already manifested in part. So the fear Mrs. Edwards has of the other woman not only seems misplaced, but a tragic attempt to plead for protection from a man who has already illustrated he’s not up to the job.

Is there anything worse than abandoning your spouse during her fight for life so that you can get your ego off?

Marriage is meant to be forever. In Mrs. Edwards you see what this means and how desperately dependent couples get on one another so that admitting truth is very often couched in what can be salvaged, then gained by the man’s (or woman’s) shame. Something that makes him want to do anything to erase his weak, ego driven behavior that really has nothing to do with the person with whom he risked everything, but is more about his own insecurity, vanity and appalling weakness.

Of course, on these issues Bill Clinton comes to mind, as well as Hillary Clinton, who dared to face it all to hold her husband’s presidency together, while pleading with Democrats in Congress to help her do it. What’s at stake in a presidency, however, is a bit more consequential than keeping a man’s presidential campaign hopes alive at a time when his much admired wife is dying. Though the words as I write them make me want to gag on any comparisons at all.

The most revealing section in this short Time’s piece is also the most incredibly insulting to the people who put their trust in this fraud of a man:

I wanted him to drop out of the race, protect our family from this woman, from his act. It would only raise questions, he said, he had just gotten in the race; the most pointed questions would come if he dropped out days after he had gotten in the race.

It’s stunning when you analyze these sentences, especially given the fact that the John Edwards presidential campaign couldn’t have happened without Elizabeth, because they ran together in a “shared mission.” All I see is the John Edwards brushing his hair to that YouTube clip for all those minutes trying to get every hair on his head exactly perfect. A video which is now deemed “private.” Interesting after all those years of public exposure.

Narcissistic villain and two bit charlatan are the words that come to mind.

Winfrey asked Edwards directly whether she’s still in love with her husband.

“You know, that’s a complicated question,” she said.

Reading between those lines is not.

I’ve interviewed guys like Edwards before. He’s no different, except he was put on a pedestal by some people. Mrs. Edwards deserved better. As she fights for her life she still does. But that’s her choice. Opening all this up for people to see and review again is as well. It looks even worse in redux.

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Just In Time for the AIPAC Conference

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The espionage case against Steven J. Rosen and Keith Weissman is being dropped. Nice timing, since the AIPAC Policy Conference is meeting May 3-5. So it looks like the nightmare is over for the Chas Freeman swiftboating contingent. Via JTA:

Prosecutors asked a judge to drop charges against two ex-AIPAC staffers accused of passing along classified information.

In a statement Friday, the acting U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia said restrictions on the government’s case imposed by Judge T.S. Ellis III made conviction unlikely.

“Given the diminished likelihood the government will prevail at trial under the additional intent requirements imposed by the court and the inevitable disclosure of classified information that would occur at any trial in this matter, we have asked the court to dismiss the indictment,” Dana Boente said.

The motion all but guarantees a dismissal. …

I expect the Jane Harman brouhaha will now go puff!. WP has more.

UPDATE: …and right on cue, Jeffrey Goldberg takes a shot:

It’s a sad day for the Walts and Mearsheimers of the world, who believe that AIPAC is a treasonous organization, and it’s a sad day for AIPAC too, because it abandoned the two men to the fates when it should have stood by them. More to come.

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