Screw The Bagman – Listen to the Quakers

10 Reasons Why the U.S. Must Leave Iraq

  1. The human cost of war is unacceptable.
  2. The U.S. occupation is a catalyst for violence.
  3. U.S. actions inflame divisions and the chance of civil war.
  4. Iraqis want the United States to leave now.
  5. Democracy cannot flourish under an occupation.
  6. The United States has failed to rebuild Iraq or provide for Iraqis’ basic needs.
  7. The Iraq war and occupation waste resources needed for U.S. domestic programs.
  8. The U.S. occupation of Iraq destabilizes the Middle East.
  9. Humanitarian aid is crippled by the occupation.
  10. The global community wants the war and occupation to end now.

Source

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And Here’s a Bucket of Sanity

Congresswoman McKinney Files Articles of Impeachment
By Matt Pascarella

On Monday, gathering in a conference room in Washington D.C., Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney and her advisors worked on a draft copy of the articles of impeachment against President Bush.

At the heart of the charges contained in McKinney’s articles of impeachment, is the allegation that President Bush has not upheld the oath of presidential office and is guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors.

Article I states that President Bush has failed to preserve, protect and defend the constitution. Specifically cited in this article is the charge that Bush has manipulated intelligence and lied to justify war: “George Walker Bush … in preparing the invasion of Iraq, did withhold intelligence from the Congress, by refusing to provide Congress with the full intelligence picture that he was being given, by redacting information … and actively manipulating the intelligence on Iraq’s alleged weapons programs by pressuring the Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence agencies.”

This manipulation of intelligence was done, the charge continues, “with the intent to misinform the people and their representatives in Congress in order to gain their support for invading Iraq, denying both the people and their representatives in Congress the right to make an informed choice.”

Read the rest here. The full document (PDF format) of the articles of impeachment is here.

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Rewriting the Dictionary

Impunity and Immunity
The Bush Administration Enters the Confessional

By Karen Greenberg

Confession, the time-honored, soul-soothing last resort for those caught in error, may not survive the Bush administration. It has, after all, long made a mockery of such revelations by manufacturing an entire lexicon of coercive techniques to elicit often non-existent “truths” that would justify its detention policies. And yet, without being coerced in any way, administration officials have been confessing continually these past years — in documents that may someday play a part in their own confrontation with justice.

The Bush administration trail of confessions can be found in the most unlikely of places — the very memos and policy statements in which its officials were redefining reality in their search for the perfect (and perfectly grim) extractive methods that would give them the detainee confessions they so eagerly sought. These were the very documents that led first to Gitmo, then to Abu Ghraib, and finally deep into the hidden universe of pain that was their global network of secret prisons.

Strangely enough, the administration confessional was open for business within weeks of the attacks of September 11th, 2001. It could be found wrapped in persistent assertions of immunity, assertions that none of their acts to come could ever be brought before the bar of justice or the oversight of anyone. The first of these documents was issued on September 25th, 2001. Deputy Assistant Attorney General John Yoo, writing for the Office of Legal Counsel, laid out the reasons for the President of the United States to assume broad executive powers in the war on terror. The last footnote of the memo declared, “In the exercise of his plenary power to use military force, the President’s decisions are for him alone and are unreviewable.”

This notion of unreviewable behavior, then still buried in the land of footnotes, has characterized the administration’s general stance on its war on terror policies. On January 9th, 2002, just as Guantanamo opened for business as a detention facility supposedly beyond the review of American courts, John Yoo and fellow Office of Legal Counsel member Robert Delahunty explained why a breach with international law would not constitute a crime for the Bush administration. In their secret memo, the United States, through the Justice Department, was to exempt itself ahead of time from the laws it was about to break. In essence, it was to give itself the equivalent of a hall pass for future illegal activities in the new policies and practices of detention.

Read this entire, remarkable analysis here.

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In the Chaos of Daily Life …

A Grain of Sanity:

Britain stops talk of ‘war on terror’

Foreign Office has asked ministers to ditch the phrase invented by Bush to avoid stirring up tensions within the Islamic world

Jason Burke
Sunday December 10, 2006
The Observer

Cabinet ministers have been told by the Foreign Office to drop the phrase ‘war on terror’ and other terms seen as liable to anger British Muslims and increase tensions more broadly in the Islamic world.

The shift marks a turning point in British political thinking about the strategy against extremism and underlines the growing gulf between the British and American approaches to the continuing problem of radical Islamic militancy. It comes amid increasingly evident disagreements between President George Bush and Tony Blair over policy in the Middle East.

Read it here. And frankly, the crap about the ‘increasingly evident disagreements’ between W and Tony has a good deal more to do with the Poodle’s personal political fortunes at home.

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On a Useless Sack of Protoplasm

Matt, over at Today in Iraq tells it the way it is:

And now for the infuriating quote of the day:

“Frankly, I think there is a greater recognition and awareness of the necessity for us to exercise checks and balances,” said Sen. Olympia J. Snowe (R-Maine), noting how much the Nov. 7 election changed the climate on Capitol Hill.

Olympia, you useless sack of protoplasm. Have you ever read the Constitution? Do you think your constitutionally mandated RESPONSIBILITY to oversee the executive applies only in years your party loses an election?

God, I despise these punks. And the so-called ‘moderate’ Republicans are the worst of the bunch. At least with a Tom Delay you know right where you stand. -m

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Feingold Wants Disengagement

Editorial: Feingold’s skepticism

The Iraq Study Group report was greeted with a proper measure of skepticism by U.S. Sen. Russ Feingold, the Wisconsin Democrat who has been right from the start about the ill-thought-out invasion and occupation of Iraq.

“I’m not buying the Washington embrace of this thing. … It’s time for us to have a clear plan to disengage in Iraq. This doesn’t do it,” declared Feingold, who notes that the report “leaves the strong possibility of an open-ended commitment.”

While too many other members of Congress – including members of the Wisconsin delegation who should know better – have tried to find something to like in the report, Feingold has been blunt in his dismissal of it.

Appearing on MSNBC’s “Countdown With Keith Olbermann,” Feingold, who in 2002 voted against authorizing Bush to attack Iraq, correctly characterized the report from the group headed by former Secretary of State James Baker and former Congressman Lee Hamilton as “a classic Washington compromise.”

Noting that the study group was made up of political insiders “who did not have the judgment to oppose this Iraq war in the first place, and did not have the judgment to realize it was not a wise move in the fight against terrorism,” Feingold told the national cable television audience that the problem with the report is this: “It does not do the job of extricating us from Iraq in a way that we can deal with the issues in Southeast Asia, in Afghanistan and in Somalia, which are every bit as important as what is happening in Iraq.”

Read the rest here.

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Monday Movie Time

We want to dwell a bit on the effects of legislation recently enacted that eviscerate the Constitution. We believe that people are not taking this matter very seriously, in large part because no one significant/important has yet been affected by these legislative changes. If Michael Moore, Martin Sheen, or the Dixie Chicks are thrown into jail as enemy combatants, without recourse to a lawyer, without any hope of seeing the light of day, perhaps people will understand the seriousness of these change. Or perhaps if YOU are thrown into jail as a terrorist, you’ll finally get it, just about the time that it’s way too fucking late !!!

In the meanwhile, curl up with the popcorn and candy, and enjoy Jessica Peanut’s couple of shorts about W. She says of the first, “Knowledge is power.”

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Crassnerd On Trade with N. Korea

Bush Reiterates Threat of No Ipods for Jong

Segways, plasma TVs for Jong’s people also hang in the balance, says US President

President Bush announced on Thursday his intention to ask formerly maligned bad-guy Kim il Jong, the leader of North Korea, to send troops to support the US effort in
Iraq.

He’ll Reconsider If Jong Sends Troops to Iraq, says Bush

Washington DC (December 11)
by Paul Crassnerd, AP

North Korean leaders will find no Apple Ipods, Segway scooters, or large-screen plasma TVs in their Christmas stockings come December 25, said President Bush again yesterday in Washington.

Bush said he was raising the issue again since he had not heard from the North Korean leader since issuing the same threat a few weeks ago, and the number of shopping days between now and Christmas is “always less now today than it was before earlier.”

“It’s gonna be rough Christmas in Pyongyang,” said the President.

“However, that could change,” said Bush, “if Jongie-boy will fork over some of his toy soldiers to help the cause of freedom in Iraq.”

“See, it’s a you-scratch-my-back-I-scratch-your-back kinda deal,” said Bush.

Earlier in the month, Bush had said NATO countries “need to step up to the plate” by sending more troops to Iraq. Bush reportedly once desired to be US baseball commissioner, said a White House spokesman explaining the sports metaphor. However, Bush increasingly sees the “victory-challenged” US involvement in Iraq as a bit of history that could cloud his pursuit of that goal.

The only NATO nation responding directly and publicly to Bush’s request was Britain, which did so by announcing that most British troops would be out of Iraq by the end of the coming year.

That led Bush to go a bit farther afield in search of new allies, said a White House source, who requested anonymity, which White House sources increasingly do.

“I’d hoped that if I showed smarts in the lesser job, of US top guy, they’d let me be Baseball Commissioner,” said Bush. “Now, I don’t know.”

Pulled back on message by White House Press Secretary Tony Snow, Bush said “What’s important is freedom, see, and if Jong wants to party with an ipod at the office Christmas party, he’s gonna have to dance with the one that brung him.”

Asked by reporters to inform the President that Christmas is not widely celebrated in the largely non-religious nation, and that the US had not brought the North Koreans to any particular place other than a place of enhanced prestige among US opponents, Tony Snow briefly looked puzzled then said, “You tell him, and you might want to tell Karl, as well,” apparently referring to White House strategist Karl Rove.

Rove did not immediately return reporters’ calls, and one staffer said the strategist had been phoning in his advice for over a month, since attending an auction in Woody Creek, Colorado the previous month, in which several footlockers of unspecified personal items belonging to the late journalist Hunter S. Thompson were sold to the highest — or rather highest-bidding — bidder.

“He’s been different since then,” said the staffer, who refused to be identified, but who sounded much like Karl Rove on a combination of helium, bad biker speed, PCP, and Ecstacy, (or “X”) and desalinated horse urine, according to a former colleague listening to this reporter’s tape of the call. The former colleague said Rove is thought to have spent most of the Iraq war on that combination, which came to be known in the Executive Office Building as a “screwball”.

“The horse urine is thought by Indonesians to give a man the sexual power of a young stallion, but tests show it only poisons the decision center in the cerebral cortex,” said the former colleague. “So it leads to really bad decisions. The PCP and X make bad decisions seem okay, and the speed enables users to make decisions quicker. The net result is one can make bad decisions quicker, and everything seems okay.” “It’s nuts,” he added.

It wasn’t a really huge problem, said the former colleague, until Rove talked Bush into trying it, and the President’s addictive personality took over. “That’s when I quit, when they wanted us all to start drinking the Kool-Aid,” he said. “It’s quite a ritual now.”

The former colleague said he didn’t know where Thompson got the screwball idea, but that shortly before his death, the journalist had visited Tehran, and had come back really excited.

Thompson always had wanted to expand his Gonzo Journalism franchise, and the Iranians had made him believe he could set up something extraterrestrial, according to Rove’s former colleague.

“But you know, that stuff he brought back in the footlockers, it was too much for even a strong mind like Hunter’s,” said the colleague, “and it certainly wasn’t meant for lesser minds in lesser men, especially if they happened to be guiding US foreign policy,” he added.

Asked point-blank if he had any hard evidence that President Bush or his advisors actually had ingested the “screwball” drug combination, Thompson’s former colleague thought for a moment and then replied, “No.”

But after a moment, he spoke again. “Unless you count Bush asking Iran and Syria to help him, um, ‘stabilize’ Iraq.” Presumably, said the source, that would be so that Bush could then move on to regime change in those two countries, “…earlier named by Bush as ball bearing in the ‘axis of evil’…”

“I mean…..” said the former Rove colleague, but his voice trailed off.

Paul Crassnerd

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For Augusto Pinochet – M. Wizard

My last post to the rag blog was so sweet — much sweeter than my reputation! — and today’s news of the Chilean dictator’s death prompted me to resurrect this poem from 30 years ago.

As Mr. Dylan said some years ago, “Maybe I’m too sensitive, or else I’m gettin’ soft.” Mariann Wizard

A Poem Written in Blood

(for ché ché)


Pablo Neruda has died a death

of “natural causes”, they claim.

Is it natural to rip a man’s heart from his body,

to satisfy usurers and thieves?

Poor pound of flesh!

Chile was Neruda’s heart.

They have killed Pablo Neruda.

Do they think they have killed poetry?

They have killed Salvador Allende.

Do they think they have killed truth?

They have killed twenty thousand chileños.

Do they think they have killed Chile?

Puppets!

Pinocchio Pinochet & His Stringed Trio” –

you are as clumsy as your masters!

The Watergate floodtide flushes down the Potomac,

splashing its stain on Tricky & Spiro,

on Connally & Kissinger,

on Meany & the magnates,

on bureaucrats & buggers –

Tag, you’re I.T.T.!

Does Nixon think that we don’t see

his sweaty lips moving

when the generals in Santiago

proclaim their martial law?

Dig it:

Nixon spent I.T.T.’s bread to discover

if McGovern

was financed by Cubans

who wanted to overthrow our electoral process, see;

so he hired some gusanos

who want to overthrow Cuba’s government,

to undermine our democratic safeguards,

and find out if they were being overthrown!

Oh yeah, baby, and then,

he spent some more of I.T.T.’s money

to overthrow the elected government of Chile,

because he figured it had been undermined

by some of that Cuban cash!

Hasn’t Nixon heard the news

that Cuba is learning how to live without money?

Let I.T.T. do the same!

Pablo Neruda has died a death –

of heart disease?

Sakharov cannot be bothered;

Chile is, “too far away”;

this is a disease of the heart!

Pablo Neruda has died a death –

of cancer?

Solzhenitsyn, re-read your own

Cancer Ward,

and be ashamed!

Pablo Neruda has died a death –

of murder!

And the people of the world are in mourning

and enraged.

In the stadium, the young people

link arms and sing The Internationale.

Their song is punctuated

by the butchers’ bullets.

Pablo, they have burned your latest poems.

Let these young martyrs’ fiery song

join your poetic legacy.

It is written in Chile’s heartsblood.

Puppets!

You cannot use that heart,

ripped from that body,

to grant yourselves reality, legitimacy, acceptance by

the human race.

Those muscles will not work for you.

Those arteries will not bear your transport.

No rhythm will establish normalcy for your

disgraceful existence.

Chile is Pablo Neruda’s heart.

Chile is Salvador Allende’s heart.

Chile is freedom’s heart:

throbbing, tense, blood-red, red-hot.



September, 1973

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Why We Would Be Best Served By …

… rejecting both majour political parties.

Pander Dragoon

Hillary Clinton and Joe Lieberman made an important statement about violence. Allow me to summarize their position, as of December 6th of this year.

Direct American involvement in the deplorable violence decimating what was once the nation of Iraq is necessary in order to secure a lasting peace. Violence in video games must be closely and carefully monitored at great public expense, as it poisons our youth.

Do I have that correctly?

In a press conference scheduled for 3:00 P.M., Senators Hillary Clinton (D-NY) and Joseph Lieberman (I-CT) will appear with ESA president Doug Lowenstein and ESRB president Patricia Vance to announce the launch of a nationwide television campaign to promote awareness of video game ratings.

Here’s Arianna Huffington’s response to the story:

The violence in Iraq is becoming more savage by the minute — among the dead yesterday were 45 bullet-riddled corpses found in Baghdad, many of whom had been tortured before being executed — and Hillary is worried about video game violence? Are you kidding me?

Could she be any more politically tone deaf?

Now that Arianna brings it up, I would be curious to see the polling that has led Lieberman and Clinton to conclude that propping up pointless video game ratings systems is a politically advantageous course of action.

Read the rest of it here.

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Van Auken Tells It Like It Is

Iraq Study Group: a bipartisan coverup of Washington’s war crimes
By Bill Van Auken
Dec 9, 2006, 13:02

A striking feature of the Iraq Study Group report is that its belated admission of the military-political debacle and catastrophic conditions created by the US intervention in Iraq excludes any assessment of how the “grave and deteriorating” situation in that country came to pass, and who bears political responsibility for it.

Instead, the document includes multiple denunciations of the Iraqi government for failing to provide essential services, create a functioning judiciary or foster economic progress. That the country was laid to waste by a US war and remains under military occupation—making Washington fully responsible for all of these failures—is simply passed over in silence.

As one member of the group, Democratic power broker Vernon Jordan, put it, the bipartisan panel made no effort to determine “how the house got on fire.”

[snip]

The Iraq war was not a mistaken policy that can be set right by adopting the Iraq Study Group’s 79-point plan. It was a premeditated crime for which no one has yet been held accountable.

The patent aim of the panel’s proposals is to continue this crime and, under the mantle of bipartisanship, pursue the original objectives of the war—conquering a country with the world’s second-largest oil reserves as part of a strategy of using US military superiority to establish the global hegemony of American capitalism.

[snip]

It is necessary not only to halt this war, but also to ensure that all those who conspired to carry it out be held politically and criminally responsible. Trying the likes of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and others for war crimes is necessary both to achieve a real accounting for the bloody and tragic debacle in Iraq and to prevent the launching of further and even more catastrophic wars of aggression.

Read all of the article here.

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A Painful Litany of Cold, Hard Facts

The Information Clearing House has compiled a long list of quotes mistakes misleading statements lies leading up to the onset of the war on Iraq. Here is a short clip:

A History Of Lies: WMD, Who Said What and When

Intelligence leaves no doubt that Iraq continues to possess and conceal lethal weapons. George Bush, US President 18 March, 2003

Saddam’s removal is necessary to eradicate the threat from his weapons of mass destruction. Jack Straw, Foreign Secretary 2 April, 2003

Before people crow about the absence of weapons of mass destruction, I suggest they wait a bit. Tony Blair 28 April, 2003

We are asked to accept Saddam decided to destroy those weapons. I say that such a claim is palpably absurd. Tony Blair, Prime Minister 18 March, 2003

Read them all, and listen to press briefing statements from Ari Fleischer, here.

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