Saturday, July 30, 2005

Prague architecture



One of the more pleasant aspects of my trip to Prague was simply wandering around the city and looking at the fantastic architecture - medieval and modern. Near to where I was staying, by the Jirasek Bridge across the Vltava River, is a building called "Tancici Dom" in Czech - "Dancing House." It was built in the 1990s, and one of the architects was Frank Gehry. When I first saw the house I was astonished, and after that the building always made me smile.

Another building was my favorite in Prague - the Obecni Dom (Municipal House), built in the early 20th century with much art nouveau decoration. This first photograph is of a mural just above the entrance to the building.

The second photo is of the balcony over the entrance. Notice the symbol of Prague in the center of the balcony.




The third photo is a detail in the stained glass of the entrance.

Thursday, July 28, 2005

Pulsa Denura

Having just arrived back from Prague, I checked my blog and discovered to my astonishment how many people have been reading it - apparently to learn about the pulsa denura that the latest group of extremists has pronounced against Israel Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.



According to Haaretz, "Twenty people took part in the ceremony, which was held last Thursday in the small northern town of Rosh Pina. The participants believe that Sharon will die in the coming 30 days, or else all those who took part in the ceremony would die." Rabbi Yosef Dayan was one of the organizers of this curse ceremony, as he was of the original curse against the late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who was killed in 1995.



I originally wrote about this when Dayan threatened to curse Sharon, in September of 2004.

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Terezin

Yesterday I visited Terezin, the Czech town that was turned by the Nazis into a ghetto for the Jews of the Czech lands (Bohemia and Moravia), as well as Jews from other parts of Europe (in particular, elderly German Jews). The town was originally built in the late 18th century as a fortress, and had become an ordinary town where people live before being taken over by the Nazis. It is about 40 miles from Prague, and the tour was led by a survivor of Terezin and Auschwitz. We visited museums that have been constructed only since the fall of Communism in 1989 (apparently the Communist regime only memorialized the Communists who had been held prisoner there by the Gestapo, but not the Jews), as well as surviving parts of the ghetto - for example, the morgue and the crematorium, which was built by the prisoners. There were no gas chambers there - Terezin was not an extermination camp, but rather a transit ghetto. Most of the Jews who passed through there (about 150, 000) were eventually transported to death camps, especially Auschwitz. The horrible, crowded conditions (about 60,000 people living in a town fit for about 5,000), starvation, and epidemic illness killed about 35,000 in Terezin.



We saw, among other places, one of the barracks where the Jews lived - part of it has been turned into a museum about cultural life in the ghetto (visual arts, theatre, and music paradoxically thrived in the ghetto, due in part to the large number of artists and musicians imprisoned there). There was also one room that has been reconstructed to look like a barracks room - with three-level bunks, clothes hanging up, people's suitcases, pots and pans and other belongings (they were allowed to bring a suitcase of about 100 lbs. per person with everything they needed). One could see from this how crowded the living conditions must have been. The museum showed many drawings made by prisoners about life in the ghetto, including pictures of people being taken to transports to the extermination camps in Poland.



In addition to the ghetto, we also saw the Small Fortress, which was the Gestapo prison. Political prisoners were held there in terrible conditions - the Jewish prisoners in particular were crammed together into a small cell, and very few survived. It was a grim place. One entered through an archway with the typical Nazi slogan at the entrance to the concentration camps - "Arbeit macht frei" - "Work makes you free," which was, of course, completely not true in the camps.



One of the feelings I ended up with was just blank incomprehension. I felt like I came away with some sense of the what - what happened - and of the how - how the Nazis treated the Jews and other prisoners there, how the prisoners tried to organize themselves and survive - but with no better sense of the why. I can study Nazi anti-semitism and try to understand Nazi ideology, but even that doesn't give me the answer I'm seeking, which is how people are capable of such acts of cruelty. I feel kind of like one of my students, just not understanding.

Redefining the war on terrorism


The Framing Needs To Change

The closest I have heard anyone come to Cromwell's idea is Juan Cole a while back. It was more or less the same theme I have been dwelling on since before the war... We do not understand the enemy. I have also supported the concept that change must come from within. Your idea of "Re-Framing" the ideology, motives and actions of the extremists is a valid approach to attacking the problem from within as well as from the western world's aspect. Combined, this redefinition would make a difference where little has been made up to now.   - fc






Redefining the war on terrorism


Posted by Cromwell on July 26, 2005, 9:42 am



I've thought for some time that the West has been approaching terrorism - and fighting terrorism - from the wrong 'angle'; we've been attempting to fight terrorism in conventional military/police terms. Thus the use of terms like 'criminal' in reference to terrorists. Conventional warfare does not work against an enemy that has no physical location except among the population you're trying to protect.



I've also noted that while many Muslim organizations have issued various types of statements condemning the terrorists and their actions, these statements do not get much publicity or even encouragement. This is to the point that discussions I have had with some people reveal that they are honestly not aware that any Muslim organization had issued any condemnation until provided with examples. Mainstream media must be enlisted in this goal; care must be taken, however, not to 'know more Islam' than Muslims.
It's time to change our approach. First, Muslim organizations and individuals must be encouraged to condemn al Qaeda and similar terrorist organizations, at the very least to define them as counterproductive - but more appropriate (and likely more effective) would be to use religious terms - define them as apostates.



The terrorists must be characterized as mufsidoon as opposed to mujahiddin (evildoers vs. holy warriors) practicing Hirabah vs. Jihad (war against society vs. holy war). The following, according to informed sources, are desecrations of the Quran:



  • Killing of innocents and noncombatants, including many peaceful Muslims

  • Decapitating the live and desecrating the dead bodies of perceived enemies

  • Promoting hatred among communities, nations, religions and civilizations

  • Committing to battle against nations where Islam is freely practiced

  • Issuing and inspiring unauthorized and un-Islamic fatwas (religious edicts)

  • Committing and enticing others to commit suicide (bombings)

  • Using some mosques as weapons depots and battle stations, while destroying others

  • Forcing extremist and absolutist versions (and distortions) of Islam on Muslims, when the Quran clearly states "no compulsion in religion"

  • Distorting the word "infidels" to include Christians, Jews and many Muslims -- when the Quran calls them all "Children of the Book" - the Old Testament - and "Sons of Abraham" AND refers to Jesus one of Islam's five main Prophets

  • Deliberate misreading, ignoring and perverting of passages of the Quran, the Hadith and the Islamic Jurisprudence (the Fiqh)




These things should be played upon - not the 'criminal' nature of the terrorists; they may indeed be criminals, but their appeal in the middle east is religious - and on driving out the West.





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TreasonGate - 12 hours of Gonzales


Who did Card Tell...?


NeoConAlert
When did they know it?   Who is "They"?   Is Card the key?     - fc



Think Progress ::
Gonzales Raises Questions For Andy Card To Answer


Writing in the New York Times, Frank Rich highlights a troubling issue that arose from early on in the leak investigation:

As White House counsel, [Alberto Gonzales] was the one first notified that the Justice Department, at the request of the C.I.A., had opened an investigation into the outing of Joseph Wilson's wife. That notification came at 8:30 p.m. on Sept. 29, 2003, but it took Mr. Gonzales 12 more hours to inform the White House staff that it must "preserve all materials" relevant to the investigation.





On CBS's Face the Nation, host Bob Schieffer noted that this time gap would have "give[n] people time to shred documents and do any number of things." Gonzales argued that he asked for and received permission from the Justice Department to wait until the next morning to order White House staff to preserve all documents regarding their contacts with journalists about Valerie Plame. But he did tell one person the night before

SCHIEFFER: Let me just ask you the obvious question, Mr. Attorney General. Did you tell anybody at the White House, get ready for this, here it comes?


GONZALES: I, I told one person, ah, in, in the White House of, of the notification, and, and —


SCHIEFFER: Who?


GONZALES: and immediately - ah, I told the chief of staff. And immediately the next morning, I told the President and, shortly thereafter, there was a notification sent out to all the members of the White House staff.



Check out the video of this at Crooks and Liars.



So the one person who knew that an investigation was underway was Chief of Staff Andrew Card, who also happened to be aboard Air Force One in July 2003 with Ari Fleischer, Colin Powell, and the top secret State Department document that contained the identity of Valerie Wilson. So, did Card tell Rove or Libby or anyone for that matter the night before Alberto Gonzales sent out the email to staff that they would soon be asked to preserve all documents?



From the Comments to this post:


It's fascinating when you locate the exact 12 hours where you can be almost certain that a crime occurred... it's a grand detective game. - -   Comment by Miles - July 24, 2005



Gonzales said that it was late - after 8:00 pm when he called the White House, and that most of the staff had left for the day. By checking WH logs Fitzgerald would know who was there at the time of Gonzales' call - AND if anyone returned that night after the calls were made. I think it would be very interesting to know who was in the WH at the time, and who returned shortly afterword. - -   Comment by dano347 - July 24, 2005






Related Links ::


Think Progress :: Rove Continuing to Cause Problems for White House

AP Story :: Gonzales Says He Told Card About CIA Probe

The Agonist :: Rove Round-Up

The Next Hurrah :: Is This Judy Miller's missing article ... ?

WaPo :: Bush Aide Learned Early of Leaks Probe

AMERICAblog :: Rove-Gate : The 12 Hour Gap

Huffington Post :: The Gonzales - Card Leak

NY Times :: Senate Panel to Examine Use of Cover by U.S. Spies

TPM :: What a sad state we've come to. - - Josh Marshall

DC Media Girl :: Another insane country heard from

Stygius :: The double bind

The Left Coaster :: Uranium from Africa and the Senate (SSCI) Report - Part 1

Think Progress :: McCain Mistake



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Sunday, July 24, 2005

TreasonGate - The Implosion of a Political Dynasty

From The All Spin Zone...


NeoConAlert
I like the way this is presented.   And Richard is right, the Frank Rich article is well worth the read...   - fc



TreasonGate - The Implosion of a Political Dynasty


Right after Matt Cooper agreed to testify to the TreasonGate grand jury, and Judy Miller was cuffed and perp walked to a federal agent's car, there were a lot of progressives scratching their heads and saying: "Well, what's next? This sure drives the Downing Street Memo off the front page."



At the time, a few of us were screaming into the void that TreasonGate and the Downing Street Memo were all part of the same ponzi scheme. TreasonGate wasn't about Karl Rove or Scooter Libby, per se. It was a smaller subset of a much grander scandal - the completely bogus selling of an illegal war; the unilateral (for all intents and purposes) invasion of a sovereign country based on prepackaged lies and deciet. And more importantly: the cover up after things went terribly wrong.



Frank Rich has written an absolutely stunning column for Sunday's New York Times. He takes the concept that many of us were promoting in the aftermath of Judy Miller's ride to the lockup, strips it down and crafts it into a fine piece that should - in an ideal world - set the wheels in motion for introduction of Articles of Impeachment first thing Monday morning. Here's a brief excerpt; you simply must read the entire column:

...When a conspiracy is unraveling, and it's every liar and his lawyer for themselves, the story takes on a momentum of its own. When the conspiracy is, at its heart, about the White House's twisting of the intelligence used to sell the American people a war - and its desperate efforts to cover up that flimflam once the W.M.D. cupboard proved bare and the war went south - the story will not end until the war really is in its "last throes."



...The second narrative to be unearthed in the scandal's early timeline is the motive for this reckless vindictiveness against anyone questioning the war...





I plucked out the last sentence in the above excerpt on purpose. One word - "timeline" - is the reason that Rich and every other reporter worth a damn has started paying very close attention to TreasonGate. They're finally doing what the blogosphere has done so well over the past 18 or 24 months. They're "timelining" the scandal, which is a fundamental exercise in any crime investigation or (gasp) investigative journalism. And each rock they turn over inside of the boundaries of the timeline reveals a whole new bunch of worms for the Bush cabal.



After the election last year, a lot of depressed progressives were wailing lamentations about another four years of the Bush regime. The more pragmatic among us counseled that the Bush Crime Family, even though they snuck through the election in whatever manner they did, were juggling too many running chainsaws. It just seemed so analogous with Nixon. Watergate was blossoming prior to Tricky Dick's reelection in 1972, but it wasn't until later that the entire house of cards came crashing in on him.



So, I'm finally convinced that we're now watching, in real time, the implosion of a political dynasty that will ultimately rival the downfall of Richard Nixon both in actual scope, and the ultimate fate of the protagonists.





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Saturday, July 23, 2005

Roberts' Nomination Petitions

Activism and Caution...


NeoConAlert
These petitions from DU Activist Corps seek caution and even opposition to Roberts' Nomination.   You decide...     Cross-posted at NeoAlertz   - fc






















Alliance for Justice

"Urge Your Senator to Thoroughly Examine Roberts' Record"
American Association of University Women

"Urge a Thorough Review of Supreme Court Nominee"

Democracy For America

"No Rubber Stamps"

MoveOn

"Oppose John Roberts' Supreme Court Nomination"
People for the American Way

"Send your senators a message right now encouraging them to withhold judgment on Judge John Roberts until his record has been thoroughly reviewed."
Planned Parenthood

"Contact your senator NOW and urge him or her to require answers about Roberts' views on a woman’s right to privacy, health, and safety."
NARAL

"Tell Your Senators to oppose anti-choice John Roberts!"

True Majority

"Reject Bush's Supreme Court Nominee"




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Visiting Prague

Just a quick posting, because I'm paying by the minute.... I arrived in Prague last Monday, and will be visiting here until next Thursday. I spent the first few days visiting an academic study abroad program that we have sent students to - it seems very well-organized and intellectually rooted, and I will be happily recommending it to more students. Along with that I've been a tourist in Prague, and as I'm sure almost everyone says who visits here, it's a beautiful city - lots of art nouveau buildings from the early 20th century mixed in with medieval architecture. I visited Josefov, the Jewish quarter, my first full day here - I saw the synagogues, including the Old-New synagogue, which dates from the 13th century. Yesterday and today I went to the Prague Castle complex and have still seen only a part of it - lots of beautiful buildings and art still to be seen in the days ahead. Tomorrow I'm going on a tour to Terezin - the town the Nazis turned into a concentration camp, which became the way-station to Auschwitz. I'll post more about my trip probably when I return to the states and have more time (and I'm not writing in an internet cafe!).



It was shocking to hear about the attempted bombings in London yesterday and the horrible bombings in Sharm el Sheik today. It still feels distant from Prague, which seems like a very safe city (at least in the touristy sections), but it puts me a bit on edge.

Thursday, July 21, 2005

I am not a Liar! - I am not a Crook!

Bush - Nixon - deja vu...
Things have escalated in the Rove/Plame investigation that merits looking at.     - fc



BREAKING: Bloomberg Reporting That Rove, Libby May Be Subject To Perjury Charges


Below is a Bloomberg article which is reporting that Karl Rove, senior adviser to the President and deputy chief of staff, and Lewis Libby, chief of staff to Vice President Cheney, are being investigated for having lied to a federal grand jury about how they learned the identity of a covert CIA agent, Valerie Plame (Murray Waas at the American Prospect wrote a similar story yesterday).




Rove, Libby Accounts in CIA Case Differ With Those of Reporters



By Richard Keil



July 22 (Bloomberg) — Two top White House aides have given accounts to the special prosecutor about how reporters told them the identity of a CIA agent that are at odds with what the reporters have said, according to persons familiar with the case.



Lewis “Scooter'’ Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff, told special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald that he first learned from NBC News reporter Tim Russert of the identity of CIA agent Valerie Plame, the wife of former ambassador and Bush administration critic Joseph Wilson. Russert has testified before a federal grand jury that he didn’t tell Libby of Plame’s identity.



White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove told Fitzgerald that he first learned the identity of the CIA agent from syndicated columnist Robert Novak, who was first to report Plame’s name and connection to Wilson. Novak, according to a source familiar with the matter, has given a somewhat different version to the special prosecutor.





Think Progress     •    
Murray Waas



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Wednesday, July 20, 2005

Mercury Pollution

U.S. Public Interest Research Group
Their is growing concern over the Bush Administration's Energy Bill and what it means for our environment and the safety of our children.   The lax standards that apply to pollution are a major effort to allow many to avoid the responsiblilty they should shoulder as efforts are made to protect our environment.   Pollution had been forced into decline by previous administrations.   Power and greed and corporate profits should take a back seat to the need to seek safe alternative energy and reduce pollution from existing technology.   - fc



US PIRGAmerica's Environment at Risk


Toxic mercury pollution is so pervasive that many Americans cannot safely eat fish caught in local waters. But rather than crack down on mercury pollution, the Bush administration recently gave polluters a pass, delaying reductions in mercury emissions from power plants for years to come.



Senators Patrick Leahy (VT) and Susan Collins (ME) have introduced a bipartisan joint resolution to overturn the Bush administration's mercury plan and send them back to the drawing board to write a rule that complies with the law and protects public health.



Please ask your senators to support the Leahy-Collins resolution.




Environmentat Risk.org :: Petition



US PIRG
  •  
Ohio PIRG



Mercury Contamination in Fish :: US PIRG



US PIRG :: Congressional Scorecard



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Monday, July 18, 2005

Why the Great Experiment is failing

A DailyKOS Diary by Sean Robertson
This article ties together several sentiments I have had since the rise of the grassroots movement created by Howard Dean.   Robertson refers to it as the second american revolution and I agree.   Much has changed in the last two years and most of that change has come in the moderate, progressive, liberal elements of our society.   As many have said, organizing liberals is like herding cats.   We all consider ourselves free thinkers, not bound by the norms of conservative restraint.   Many like myself have been apolitical since the days of Nixon and his corrupt cronies.   Turned off by the same feeling Sean reflects in his article, stating, our vote does not count.   It took the corruption and lies of bush and rove to awaken in me the sense that I needed to do my share.   I have admonished several times in the last few months that we must do more than vote every four years.   This is a radical turnaround for me and the same for many people who found hope in the words and deeds of Howard Dean in 2004.   Since that time even more have taken responsiblilty for activism and participation in the process of trying to correct and stop the NeoCon Revolution.   As Sean mentions, the republicans did not invent the partisan divide and conquer tactics, they just perfected them under Karl Rove and his 21st Century NeoCon Cronies.   It will take a continued persistant grassroots effort to counter the effect they have had on our country.   The people's media, the blogs will make this effort possible and we must make sure that it succeeds.   - fc



DailyKOSWhy the Great Experiment is failing


I just finished reading a book yesterday by David Gerrold called Leaping to the Stars. It's mostly just a great action-adventure story, but like nearly all science fiction, it does hit upon some rather weighty issues including the relationship betwen man and technology and the nature of good and evil. In the context of a political science class, he described how the United States had collapsed after three hundred years. It was almost as if he was channeling both Howard Dean and Barack Obama when this book was written in 2001/2002 (first edition was printed in 2002, well before Dean exploded onto the national scene).



When asked why the US had failed, the students responded with a litany of complaints, all of which we're familiar with in some form or another (illegal aliens, liberals, fundies, greed, special interests, etc.). After the students ran our of people to blame, the professor explained the truth in a way that I think will prove to be prophetic.

[... snip]



We are not cogs in this machine, we are it's engineers. We control it with every lever in the voting booth. We guide it with every query to our representatives. We make the machine work for us every time we demonstrate or write letters or work the polls. Only we have the power to make it work more efficiently for all of us. When we forget that we allow others to manipulate it.



That is perhaps the biggest, most important part of Dean's campaign, both for the whitehouse and now as chair of the DNC: he is trying to teach us how to use the machine again. By first reminding us that we do have that power, he is helping to wrest control back away from the greedy manipulators. By reminding us that we're all in it together and exposing the far right's attempts to divide and conquer, he is helping to ensure that the machine is used for good, not evil.



That is what the grass roots movement is fundamentally about. I dare say it is nothing short of a second American revolution, one which, if it is to succeed will result not in the ousting of the Republicans from power by replacing them with someone else, but will result in the reawakening of the citizenry to their true potential. It must result in a renewed understanding of and faith in the amazing machine that is our government and it must culminate in reeducating the people in how to use that machine.



We must begin teaching people how to be active, creative particpants in the experiment, not merely loyal or usable subjects. We must inspire people to see that the well being of each is determined by the well being of the community, that we are only as free and as successful as the least among us and that our government is a tool to designed acheive that. We must rekindle people's faith in the social contract. If we do not succeed in any part of that, the Great Experiment will fail.




Read the rest of this article at : Sean Richardson's dkos diary



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Sunday, July 17, 2005

Conyers' TownHall

Rovian Conspiracy and DSM
I wish this type thing was afforded the tri-state area of Southern Ohio, NorthEast Kentucky and Western West Virginia.   I am sure this event will be well worth the time.   We owe many thanks to John Conyers Jr. for providing the leadership and activism that this country so desperately needs in this time of NeoCon Revolution and Corruption.   - fc



Conyers TownHall
Downing Street

Rovegate

The Ongoing Deception in Iraq




July 23rd is the 3-year anniversary of the drafting of the Downing Street Minutes. I am organizing a series of house parties on this date throughout the country in order to broaden public understanding of how Karl Rove and the Bush Administration have manipulated intelligence, deceived the American people, and misled our nation into war.




Related Links ::


afterdowningstreet.org :: Congressman Conyers Plans Event for Detroit Next Saturday

house.gov/conyers :: Questions to ask at the Conyers' London meeting about the DSM.



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Saturday, July 16, 2005

Blair speech on terror

Tony Blair made a very strong speech today denouncing terrorism which says "What we are confronting here is an evil ideology." It is very refreshing to see such an articulate explanation of what the "war on terror" is fighting - something which President Bush has never been able to explain sufficiently carefully to the American people.

They demand the elimination of Israel; the withdrawal of all Westerners from Muslim countries, irrespective of the wishes of people and government; the establishment of effectively Taleban states and Sharia law in the Arab world en route to one caliphate of all Muslim nations.



From the mid 1990s onwards, statements from Al-Qaeda, gave very clear expression to this ideology: "Every Muslim, the minute he can start differentiating, carries hatred towards the Americans, Jews and Christians. This is part of our ideology. The creation of Israel is a crime and it has to be erased.



"You should know that targeting Americans and Jews and killing them anywhere you find them on the earth is one of the greatest duties and one of the best acts of piety you can offer to God Almighty." Just as great is their hatred for so-called apostate governments in Muslim countries. This is why mainstream Muslims are also regarded as legitimate targets.



This is what we are up against. It cannot be beaten except by confronting it, symptoms and causes, head-on. Without compromise and without delusion.



The extremist propaganda is cleverly aimed at their target audience. It plays on our tolerance and good nature.



It exploits the tendency to guilt of the developed world, as if it is our behaviour that should change, that if we only tried to work out and act on their grievances, we could lift this evil, that if we changed our behaviour, they would change theirs. This is a misunderstanding of a catastrophic order.



Their cause is not founded on an injustice. It is founded on a belief, one whose fanaticism is such it can't be moderated. It can't be remedied. It has to be stood up to.



If it is the plight of the Palestinians that drives them, why, every time it looks as if Israel and Palestine are making progress, does the same ideology perpetrate an outrage that turns hope back into despair?



If it is Afghanistan that motivates them, why blow up innocent Afghans on their way to their first ever election? If it is Iraq that motivates them, why is the same ideology killing Iraqis by terror in defiance of an elected Iraqi government?



What was September 11, 2001 the reprisal for? Why even after the first Madrid bomb (in March 2004) and the election of a new Spanish government, were they planning another atrocity when caught?

Friday, July 15, 2005

Rove-gate

Who Leaked to the Leakers?
This article confirms the feeling I had in my post on tuesday that this has the potential to go much higher and be of more consequence than it seems right now.   Working with so few "Facts" leads one to conclude that the smoking gun has yet to be introduced.   The smell of the two year old powder burns have resurfaced and the stinch is being spread to the public by the M$M as it should have been in 2003.   This is a must read...   - fc



Anti-War.comRove-gate: Who Leaked to the Leakers?
This isn't about Karl Rove

by Justin Raimondo
July 15,2005


What if Karl Rove isn't guilty of knowingly leaking Valerie Plame's name as a covert CIA agent involved in nuclear proliferation issues? What if Rove's lawyer, Robert Luskin, is correct when he says that he's been assured by prosecutors that his client is not a target of the ongoing investigation into Plame-gate? I'm going to swim against the tide, here, and against the expectations of my readers, by suggesting that this investigation isn't about Rove – and, furthermore, that Rove is a victim, in an important sense, someone who was used and abused by the real culprits. And who are these mysterious culprits?



[... snip]



The fast developing scandal seemingly centered around Rove and a few journalists has only begun to unfold. By the time it is over, we'll have the War Party – or, at the very least, a few high profile representatives – in the dock, and then the fun will really begin. So forget "Rove-gate" and get ready for "Cheney-gate." I'll gladly forgo the pleasure of seeing the president's chief political advisor frog-marched out of the White House for the prospect of seeing our vice president, along with his top staffers, led out of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in handcuffs.


External Links in this article :



WikiPedia
:: Valerie Plame

NewsMax
:: Karl Rove Spoke With Time Reporter by Carl Limbacher

AntiWar.com
:: Plame-gate by Justin Raimondo

CalPundit
:: Valerie Plame or Valerie Wilson? - 10.12.03

Needlenose
:: Why "Valerie Plame"? - 10.12.03

TownHall.com
:: Mission to Niger by Robert Novak - 7.14.03

WaPo
:: Leak of Agent's Name Causes Exposure of CIA Front Firm - 10.04.03

The Freedom of Information Center
:: Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1982

reason online
:: Agee's Revenge by Jesse Walker - 7.14.05

DU:: Who were the six journalists who were given the leak ? - 7.10.05

CSMonitor
:: Rove leak is just part of larger scandal by Daniel Schorr - 7.15.05

New Yorker
:: Selective Intelligence by Seymour M. Hersh - 5.5.03

Village Voice
:: Going to School on Doug Feith - 7.30.04

WaPo
::Some Iraq Analysts Felt Pressure From Cheney Visits - 6.5.03

Common Dreams
:: The New Pentagon Papers by Karen Kwiatkowski - 10.4.04

howardlabs
:: What Dick Cheney Really Believes. The Radical by Franklin Foer & Spencer Ackerman - 11.20.03

Common Dreams
:: What I Didn't Find in Africa by Joseph C. Wilson 4th - 6.6.03

guardian.co.uk
:: A state of chaos by Sidney Blumenthal - 12.30.04

telegraph.co.uk
:: Chalabi stands by faulty intelligence that toppled Saddam's regime - 2.19.04

AntiWar.com
:: Uncle Sap Suckered Again by Justin Raimondo - 2.23.04

WikiPedia
:: Yellowcake forgery

Sooner Thought
:: Neocon Revenge War - 11.16.04

Salon
:: The worst of Times by Andrew O'Hehir - 12.28.04

Talk Left
:: Joe Wilson on Leakers: Elliot Abrams, Libby & Rove - 7.5.05

AntiWar.com
:: Handmaiden of the State by Justin Raimondo - 3.16.05

Raw Story
:: Transcript: White House Grilled On Rove...

Talking Points Memo
:: Josh Micah Marshall 10.10.03

super hanc petram
:: Karl Rove, Scooter Libby and Dick Cheney - 7.11.05

daveweigel.dailykos
:: Horrifying, personal John Bolton story by 4.15.05

buzzle.com
:: US Claims Proof of Cuba's Germ War Project - 6.5.02

AntiWar.com
:: Bolton, the Unlawful by Gordon Prather 6.11.05

AntiWar.com
:: John Bolton's Yellowcake by Ray McGovern - 5.13.05

rightweb
:: David Wurmser - profile - 11.22.03

NewsWeek
:: Exclusive: Cheney and the ‘Raw’ Intelligence

On Lisa Rein's Radar
:: Feds Ready To Nail Cheney Staff Members Hannah and Libby - 2.7.04

calpundit
:: Who is John Hannah? - 2.7.04

Activists Reader
:: Washington Institute for Near East Policy - 2005

Juan Cole
:: John Hannah Allegedly Focus of Plame Probe - 2.7.04

Google:: AIPAC

AntiWar.com
:: Indictment Shows Washington Is 'Israeli-Occupied Territory' by Justin Raimondo

DOJ - pdf:: franklin - June 2005

Forward:: FBI Affair Costs Lobby Dynamic Director Rosen - 4.29.05

Forward:: UPDATED: Aipac Officials Being Pushed Out - 4.22.05

Juan Cole
:: Franklin Met with Naor Gilon - 8.31.04

National Security Strategy:: 2002

war and piece
:: February 07, 2004

Digby
:: June 2, 2005

USA Today
:: CIA 'outing' might fall short of crime by Mark Memmott - 7.14.05

Mother Jones
:: The Lie Factory by Robert Dreyfuss and Jason Vest - Feb 2004

Center fro Media & Democracy
:: Counter Terrorism Evaluation Group

Seattle Times
:: Iran used Chalabi to dupe U.S., report says - 5.22.04

Fox News
:: FBI Probing Purported Chalabi-Iran Intel Leak 7.3.04

chalabigate.blogspot
:: Leo Strauss Philosophy of Deception

AntiWar.com
:: The Franklin Affair: A Spreading Treason by Justin Raimondo

AntiWar.com
:: War-gate The scandal that could bring down a President by Justin Raimondo

tom paine
:: All The Plame-Gate You Can Handle

cryptome
:: Forged Nigerien documents - 7.27.03

cryptome
:: Nigerien documents - PDF

Common Dreams
:: How Powerful Can 16 Words Be? by Christopher Marquis 7.20.03

CBS News
:: New Fight Over Iraq Nuke Claim - 7.19.04

White House.gov:: Vice President's Ceremonial Office



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Thursday, July 14, 2005

Apologists among us

This thought-provoking posting at Norman Geras' blog, Apologists among us, made me think about something that has often occurred to me after one terrorist outrage or another. My reaction, when I hear of a terrorist attack, in Israel, the United States, Britain, Russia, Iraq, etc., is usually first of all shock and sadness, and then anger and often a desire for revenge against the terrorists (not that I'm advocating revenge, but it is one of my first feelings - I would advocate cool analysis, investigation, and measures to find the attackers and defend the vulnerable, instead). I feel helpless. I can't understand why people would do such a thing, especially to innocent civilians (the attack in Baghdad yesterday that killed many children was particularly appalling). I am interested in having a political understanding of how such things occur, but I don't view this as an explanation or excuse for why people commit such atrocities.



A month or so after September 11, I went to NYC to visit friends, and made a trip to the World Trade Center site. I couldn't see much, because of the fence around the whole site, but between the slats I could see the pile and the skeleton left of part of the buildings, a couple of stories high. I also saw another building that wasn't destroyed but had obviously been hit by falling debris and a huge gash in it (I think this was the Deutsche Bank building). It wasn't as horrible a sight as it would have been earlier, but it was still stunning. As I looked at it I was trying to figure out why people would do this - how they could possibly bring themselves to do this - and I had no answer. I took the train back uptown still baffled and shaken.



It didn't occur to me right after the attacks, or at any point thereafter, what the U.S. had done to "deserve this." I thought it was completely undeserved, as I think is true for every terrorist attack. It made me angry that people had attacked our country this way.



For this reason, I'm baffled why people react to terrorist attacks by searching for "root causes," as Norman says. It seems to be part of the whole ethos of blaming the victim, even if the victims include oneself. I think it's important to understand the political framework for these attacks, but that framework includes a lot more than the usual suspects - all the purportedly evil things the U.S. (or Britain) has done in the Middle East.



And I'm even more baffled when people's reaction is that since the attack was caused, for example, by Britain's participation in the Iraq War, that this means that Britain should pull out of Iraq. Isn't that simply giving in to the enemy, declaring defeat? Is the correct answer to an attack surrender, or preparing better defenses and going after the attackers? Even if one opposed Britain's participation in the Iraq war, isn't it simply giving in to terrorists to do what (you think) they want? And why would someone who opposed the war want to give in to terrorists, whom I hope he or she also opposes?

Global Attitudes

Andrew Sullivan sees positive trends in the Pew Global Attitudes Project, which reports lowered support for terrorism (specifically, suicide bombings) in six selected Muslim countries. The six countries surveyed were Jordan, Lebanon, Pakistan, Indonesia, Turkey, and Morocco. If we break it down to individual countries, however, I am not as sanguine as Andrew. Those surveyed were asked if violence against civilian targets is justified. In Jordan, 57% said it was often/sometimes justified, which is an increase from the last Pew survey, in summer 2002, when it was 43%. Perhaps this has something to do with the Palestinian intifada, since a majority of the Jordanian population is Palestinian in ethnic origin. This summer, 11% in Jordan said it was never justified, as opposed to 26% in summer 2002 - so the attitudes have worsened there. There has been a decrease in support for terrorism in the other countries, specifically Lebanon (from a height of 73% to a low now of 39%) - presumably affected by disapproval at the assassination of former Prime Minister Hariri. Support in Morocco went down from 40% to 13%. Majorities in Morocco, Pakistan, and Turkey saw Islamic extremism as a threat to their countries.

The most depressing statistics were from the questions about how people viewed those of other religious groups, specifically Jews. See the table below.



You'll notice that in all non-Muslim countries a majority has a favorable view of Jews - ranging from a low of 54% in Russia to a high of 85% in the Netherlands. If we look at the Muslim countries, opinions are uniformly negative, ranging from a high of 18% in Turkey having a favorable view of Jews to a low of 0% in Lebanon and Jordan. Even Turkey and Morocco, which have pretty good diplomatic relations with Israel, have a preponderance of negative views of Jews. I would guess that these negative opinions have been formed both by the Arab-Israeli conflict and by the spread of vile anti-semitic slanders in Muslim countries. Opinions about Christians in Muslim countries are mixed - 91% in Lebanon have a favorable view of Christians, and views are positive in Indonesia and Jordan (58% favorable). In Turkey, Pakistan, and Morocco lopsided majorities disapprove of Christians.

Views of Muslims in non-Muslim countries are much more positive, in contrast - the lowest favorable percentages are 40% in Germany, 45% in the Netherlands, 46% in Spain and Poland. In the U.S., 57% have a favorable view, 22% an unfavorable one. Thus, even after September 11, 2001, most Americans do not harbor anti-Muslim attitudes, showing that there is a reservoir of goodwill in this country.

NeoAlertz : Rove Petitions

Four New Petitions
Four new petitions have been initiated by Democratic leadership.   Louise Slaughter, John Kerry, the DSCC and the Democratic Party have made their petitions available online.   Please visit NeoAlertz and sign the petitions...   - fc


Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Al Qaeda since 1998

At Winds of Change they have a produced a flash movie of the Al Qaeda attacks since 1998.

As the author says, “The purpose of the presentation is to graphically demonstrate al Qaeda’s ability to conduct mass casualty assaults on a global scale. This presentation by no means documents every single al Qaeda attack. For example, the murders of journalist Daniel Pearl in Pakistan and USAID executive Lawrence Foley in Jordan were excluded, as have smaller impact suicide attacks and beheadings by al Qaeda in Iraq and elsewhere. Al Qaeda's butchery in Iraq can fill a presentation of its own. Also, planned or foiled chemical attacks against Jordan, France and England, the assassination attempts on President Musharraf of Pakistan and numerous other incidents throughout the world have not been documented.

The facts presented speak for themselves.

There have been 30 major mass casualty attacks directed against the United States, Britain, France, Spain, Pakistan, Kenya, Tanzania, India, Iraq, Morocco, Yemen, Tunisia, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and North Osetia. 14 of the 30 attacks were conducted prior to the invasion of Iraq, making claims of the occupation of Iraq as a casus belli for al Qaeda’s terrorism to be disingenuous at best. 4,895 people have been killed in these attacks, and 12,345 plus have been wounded. The majority of the countries attacked are Muslim countries. And although not stated, the vast majority of the victims of al Qaeda's violence are Muslims.

The ideologues, leaders and foot soldiers of al Qaeda have no reservations about slaughtering the innocent. The majority of their attacks have been directed against civilian infrastructure such as embassies, consulates, shipping, transportation, hotels, resorts, nightclubs, bars, synagogues, churches, temples, mosques, markets, housing complexes, office buildings and schools. Each of al Qaeda's targets were purposefully selected and carefully timed to inflict mass casualties as well as to provide the maximum media exposure. The radical Islamists embrace Muslim casualties, as many are considered infidel for embracing Western culture and rejecting the “pure” Islam espoused by al Qaeda. This is an enemy that deserves no quarter.

Tuesday, July 12, 2005

Rove Conspiracy

Who Told Rove!
    A question in the post Blue Color Politics :: The All You Can Eat Scott McClellan Buffet! is of extreme importance in actually getting to the bottom of all this business.   As John Dean mentioned to Tweety on HardBall, the 'conspiracy to defraud the government' issue may be the reason the investigation has gone after the sources so steadily.   Even more interesting would be if the outing of an agent during war time would lead to charges of treason and the investigation is heading instead towards charges based on Conspiracy To Commit Treason, a much more serious crime and one still punishable by death, I believe...   - fc



Blue Color Politics



So, what if Karl really didn't "know" that Plame was undercover?



Well, in the CIA only someone with a need to know would have been aware that Plame even worked for the Agency. Hence, only a person who had high level clearance AND had a need to know about Plame's job could have leaked Plame's identity.
Rove didn't just dream up Plame's status. Someone had to tell him.
And THAT is the person Prosecutor Fitzgerald needs to go after. Rove should be forced to finger whomever it was that told him of Plame's real job.


That person needs to tell why she/he revealed Plame's job, what restrictions he told Rove he was under and whether others in the admin were also told about her undercover status.


Then the fun will begin!



Read the reast of the article... at  
Blue Collar Politics



External Links in this article :

Smelling like a Rove : Salon : Farhad Manjoo

The Real Rove Scandal : LA Times : Robert Scheer

White House shunts Rove queries : Boston Globe : Rick Klein

Bush Aide Deflects Questions On Rove : WaPo : Mike Allen - Dan Balz

White House Still Silent on Rove Evidence : NewsDay : Pete Yost

Dems call for action against Rove after leak report : USA Today : Mark Memmott

At White House, a Day of Silence on Rove's Role in C.I.A. Leak : NY Times : Richard W. Stevenson



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Monday, July 11, 2005

Ohio Progresive Blogs

MyDD  Dairy   ::   fc
Progressive OhioChris Bowers at MyDD asked that we contribute links to local blogs in our area.   I took the initiative to look into the blogosphere in Ohio.   I had previously joined The Ohio Progressive Alliance and link to it on all my pages.   From several comments to this thread, I have run down quite a few links.   I decided to create this post and mirror it on my MyDD Dairy and eventually at my DailyKOS Diary.   - fc



MyDD :: Local Progressive Blog Rings











Ohio Progressive Blogs

common cause : ohio

blogpac : ohio

ohio progressive alliance
progressive blog alliance

grassroots democrats

personal democracy

case ohio

ohio watch   ·  
- 2 -

ohio governor 2006

grow ohio

bring ohio home

ohio citizen's action

protect ohio's future

Ohio's Got the Blues

ohio fair schools

licking county pro active

ohio countdown 2004

ohio 2nd

the blue ohioan

ohio liberal

cincinnati blog

cincinnati group

cincinnati black blog

grass roots cincinnati

an age like this

toledo bloggers

the agora

szollosi toledo

sardonic views

dispassionate liberalism

brewed fresh daily

democracy guy

democratic veteran

let the lady speak

nosey online

covington

just well mixed

shameless agitator

the tomb of horrors

pandagon

make it blue

coins for change

people have the power

axinar's

brian patton

elenamary

porkopolis

seven cent nickel

a straight shot of politics

the nati

who-dey hotel

walk in brain

law dork

de magno opere

the modern esquire

it's in there

bluegrass roots

the religious left








my web pages :: fc
this pageNeoAlertzBBA BlogRollIndy 500 BlogRoll




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