Impeach Scalia, Part 2

Leahy And Lieberman Query High Court On Ethics Of Scalia Vacation With Cheney

Dear Chief Justice Rehnquist:

It is with regret that we write to inquire about published reports that Justice Antonin Scalia recently spent extended time with Vice President Richard Cheney on an out-of-town trip. Coming just three weeks after the Supreme Court voted to grant a petition for certiorari in a case in which the Vice President is a principal party, this trip raises questions. When a sitting judge, poised to hear a case involving a particular litigant, goes on a vacation with that litigant, reasonable people will question whether that judge can be a fair and impartial adjudicator of that man’s case or his opponent’s claims. …

Sincerely,
PATRICK LEAHY
Ranking Member Committee on the Judiciary

JOSEPH I. LIEBERMAN
Ranking Member
Committee on Governmental Affairs

mjh’s Dump Bush weBlog: Impeach Scalia!

But Scalia rejected that concern Friday, telling the Times, “I do not think my impartiality could reasonably be questioned.”

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A Great Society (for the Radical Right)

Times-Herald Online

On other economic matters, the president sounded less credible. He called for Congress to act as ”good stewards of taxpayer dollars.” But this Republican Congress has spent more than any Democratic Congress in recent memory. And this president has not used his veto pen even once to force Congress to be better stewards of the people’s money. An omnibus spending bill that awaits passage is full of enough pork to gag a sow.

As the Wall Street Journal noted in an editorial the morning of the speech, the GOP has been on a spending spree that exceeds by far Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society. During Bill Clinton’s administration, non-defense discretionary spending rose just 2.5 percent. During President Bush’s three years in office, it has jumped 8.2 percent. Having tasted such huge amounts of pork, Congress is not likely to listen to the president’s call for limiting the growth in discretionary spending to less than 4 percent and reducing wasteful spending.

So, Republicans are spending more money than Johnson, who did so well with his two wars against poverty and Vietnam. Is this a Great Society, or what? mjh

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Send Bush to Mars!

Though you didn’t see it on the news and read almost nothing about it in print, there were protesters in Roswell confronting George Bush. We were there.

My friend Jas. proposed the trip to Roswell. He could not stand Bush bringing his fear & lies to New Mexico without any opposition. Bush, in a move taken from Cheney’s agenda, spoke to a stacked audience of military cadets bused into one of the most conservative towns in New Mexico — no worries about dissent or open opposition (isn’t the bully brave).

So, we took to the road in my camper the night before. The drive down was surreal as we passed through dense fog, past trees white with frost. A Trupact container drove by, loaded with radioactive waste (our own Pete Domenici, who introduced the president the next day, supports weaker containers, fewer inspections, more shipments).

We arrived outside of Roswell after midnight and camped off a dirt road. We snuggled in sleeping bags and set the alarm.

The next morning, we drove into town. The main street was barricaded a few blocks either side of the convention center, but the side streets were open. We picked a spot a block east of the convention center, not far from the media vehicles and just below the sightline of a half a dozen snipers. Out of the camper, we pulled Jas’ creation: a Mylar banner suspended from helium balloons painted with the message “Send Bush to Mars.” We had considered stronger messages but we both believe that humor will strip the tyrant of his veneer. It was a timely message fitting Roswell, New Mexico.

banner says 'send Bush to Mars'

As the balloons warmed, the banner lifted slowly and began to drift to the south, paralleling the main drag. We know some people on the street saw it. There can be no doubt the snipers saw it as did the helicopter pilot. We took a couple of pictures and started to leave town.

Ah, but we couldn’t just go, we had to turn back and relish sticking our thumb in Bush’s eye. We watched the banner at about sniper height drift a couple of blocks before catching on a tree. There it hung, the balloons tugging, sparkling in the sunlight.

What happened next was more serendipitous.

As we headed out of town, we stopped at the UFO Museum. All through the museum, Bush’s speech blared, much like small-town Germany 65 years ago. It was ironic to wander through a ‘museum’ that documents people’s gullibility and mistrust of government while listening to Bush. In the gift shop, a patron spoke of ”incredible things spoken of by credible people” — what, ”aliens” or ”the war on terrorism”?

It turns out we were in the museum exactly the right amount of time. As we headed out 380, we stopped at a gas station. While we gassed up, a state trooper blocked the intersection and people began to line up along what proved to be the president’s route to the airport. We never could have planned to be sitting so close. What to do? Too big a gesture, too early, would bring the cops or Bush loyalists down on us. If only we had another banner — though the materials were close at hand (and, ironically, we ended up having more time than we realized). The best I could do was draw a small sign: Patriot Act is UnAmerican.

So, after braying to the young men he will send off to die, after phoning the fanatic anti-choice crowd who powers him, after laughing with the restaurant workers and patrons he is robbing, POTUS drove past hundreds of waving loyalists and probably never saw the man in the yellow shirt holding his sign high with a tear in his eye.

It doesn’t matter. What matters is that you speak out, that you protest the direction this president is dragging the entire world. No one can stop him but all of us. Get active! mjh

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Radical, but just not conservative enough (shudder)

In the middle of an attack piece on Paul O’Neill, Michael Kinsley calmly makes this comment and moves on:

”It’s true that George W. Bush has turned out to be a more radical president than everyone predicted. But O’Neill has no insights about why it turned out this way, or why we should have seen it coming.”

Wow. ”Radical”? ”We should have seen it coming.” Understand, Kinsey is not a liberal commentator.

On the same page of the Albuquerque Journal, troglo-conservative John ‘Meow’ Leo writes, ”Democrats keep saying that President Bush is governing from the right. What they mean by this is uncertain, since the Bush domestic program pretty much tramples most conservative and Republican principles….”

Speaking of Cheney saying ”Reagan proved that deficits don’t matter,” Leo the Lion writes, ”Under what theory of government does a narrow midterm victory create a right to dramatically expand the deficit?” Amen.

”Social conservatives work hard to elect a Republican president, who then tends to behave pretty much like a conventional Democrat on social issues.” Leo then castigates the President for failing to destroy Title IX (maybe next term, when the gloves come off).

These are weird times, when the most radically conservative president in memory controls all three branches of government, gives money to the rich, to corporations, and to conservative Christians (ahem, ‘faith-based groups’) — gives everything to the people who keep him in power, and yet, those more radical than Bush (be very afraid) are disappointed in him.mjh

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‘on the grounds of excellence alone’

I’ll swipe this quotation from Arthur Alpert because it is so stunning as to deserve

echoing. mjh

Alpert’s

Truth: Driving in the Rain

That’s when my mind flew to the book that was waiting for me at my iMac, “Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea

(Why the Greeks Matter)” by Thomas Cahill, and to the page I had book-marked.

It was Pericles’ famous funeral oration over the

Athenians who died in the Pelopponesian War. Specifically, this passage:

“Our constitution is called a democracy, because power

rests in the hands not of the few but of the many. Our laws guarantee equal justice for all in their private disputes; and as for the

election of public officials, we welcome talent to every arena of achievement, nor do we make our choices on the grounds of class but on

the grounds of excellence alone.

Open and tolerant in our private lives, in our public affairs we keep within the law. We

acknowledge the restraint of reverence; we are obedient to those in authority and to the laws, especially to those that give protection

to the oppressed and to those unwritten laws of the heart whose transgression brings admitted shame.”

I have no doubt Pericles was

gilding the lily, but even if his speech represents only what he and other Athenians aspired to, it speaks of a decent society.

Contrast it with ours. What a fall-off. (Yes, they had slaves, but so did we until what, 140 years ago?)

The measure of our

society’s weakness is that we ridicule idealism, sometimes with whole heart and sometimes for fear we will be ridiculed.

This

need not be forever, though. One day, maybe soon, we will muster the courage to be idealistic.

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The Fight Isn’t Over

From Balls 4 Dean, Brains 4 Clark Pika Brittlebush, Quirky Burque Blog

The problem is, Dean’s got the vision of a highschool robotics club dork that just lost the Science Fair to a football star. He’s MAD and he’s RIGHTEOUS. And he and his nerd-herd are totally blind to the BushCo Monster Truck Rally building violently in the highschool parking lot. Football player meat-heads with No Fear stickers on their trucks, eager to pounce.

And pounce they will, with the Heartbeat of America and all its cherry pie Christian wallop on their side. THEY WILL WIN. And the papers will gloat and the cheerleaders will fuck them and Meat-Heads will continue to rule the world.

Wonderful analogy, Pika (no sarcasm).

I’m not a Deaniac (though I like his fire), but, then, I was a nerd 35 years ago. I’m a bit disturbed that Clark has made so much money as a lobbist: over $800K; clients include the major company behind the Fatherland Security database; Clark met with Cheney to lobby for them (see citations below). Of course, doing business with fascists doesn’t necessarily hurt (ask Bush’s granddad) — you can still call yourself a businessman — Americans like that.

I strongly object to Clark’s support for a constitutional amendment to ban flag burning (not a lot of that going on, y’know). Less freedom is NOT more American, no matter what Big Brother says.

More importantly, Clark has had a free ride, which ended last night. Think endorsements from Michael Moore and George McGovern are purely positive? Kerry, in particular, will feel the need to bring Clark down a few pegs (and vice versa — did you catch Clark’s snipe about heroics from “junior” officers). Dean may step over their corpses.

I’m actually glad it isn’t a done deal. I’m such a liberal I’d gladly vote for Dean/Braun (ok, I don’t have the guts to say Kucinch/Sharpton); but I’ll vote for Kerry/Edwards or any combo. Bush gotta go.
mjh


NOW with Bill Moyers. Transcript. January 9, 2004 | PBS

BILL MOYERS: You report that when General Wesley Clark retired from the military, he earned over $800,000 lobbying former pals and peers for airline and homeland security contracts and that he didn’t tell us that when he appeared on CNN as a commentator on the war on terrorism. Why would a man do that, thinking he’s going to run for President? Because that’s bound to be harmful when it is ultimately disclosed?

CHUCK LEWIS: Well, that’s sort of what I thought. It’s the first time I know of a major Presidential candidate running who’s also currently a lobbyist. When he announced, September 17th, he was still registered in Washington as a lobbyist.

[Chuck Lewis is the founder of the The Center for Public Integrity, a non-profit, non-partisan watchdog in Washington. He was speaking to Bill Moyers, host of PBS’ Now.]

NEWSWEEK: Wesley Clark Lobbied Bush Administration for Contract for Arkansas Firm to Get Security Work

As an Arkansas businessman, Wesley Clark lobbied Vice President Dick Cheney, Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, aides to FBI Director Robert Mueller and his former chief deputy commander in Europe on behalf of a company eager to get post-9/11 security work, Newsweek reports in the current issue. The aim: to get a contract for Acxiom, a Little Rock firm whose “data mining” techniques are useful in tracking terrorists.

The lobbying — for which Clark was paid about $400,000 — must have helped: Acxiom got a contract.

Clark picks up McGovern endorsement in N.H.

Clark, at the pancake breakfast, said after Sept. 11 he considered it “his duty” to lobby for Acxiom, a homeland security company, in order to make a contribution since he was no longer wearing a uniform.

NPR : Wesley Clark Interview Transcript, The 2004 Democratic Presidential Candidates

BOB EDWARDS: You’ve accused the Bush administration of not tolerating dissent and yet you’ve said you would support a constitutional amendment outlawing flag burning.

WES CLARK: That’s right.

EDWARDS: Isn’t there a contradiction there?

CLARK: I don’t think so. I think there are many, many ways of disagreeing and expressing your concern with the government. But I’ll support just about anything that protects our flag. I love that flag.

FactCheck.org Was Wesley Clark a Republican?

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DC Primary – FIRST in the Nation

In case you missed it, DC held a primary before Iowa or New Hampshire. In fact, DC deliberately moved ahead of all others in order to draw attention to the fact that DC has no voting representation (we had a revolution over that). Ironically, the Democratic National Committee forced DC to make their primary ‘non-binding’ — don’t want to tick off Iowa and New Hampshire (95% white). mjh

| ABQjournal News | The Associated Press |

Unofficial Returns in D.C. Primary
By The Associated Press

The latest, unofficial returns in the Democratic presidential primary in District of Columbia on Tuesday.

Howard Dean, 17,736 – 43 percent
Al Sharpton, 14,248 – 34 percent
Carol Moseley Braun, 4,824 – 12 percent
Dennis Kucinich, 3,435 – 8 percent

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"It does not require a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority keen to set brush fires in people's minds." — Sam Adams