Don’t Forget This Crime

CNN.com – A shifting probe? – Jan. 6, 2004 By JOHN F. DICKERSON; VIVECA NOVAK

If there are culprits in the White House who leaked the identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame, they may now be dependent on reporters to protect their identities. …

It’s still likely that no charges will be filed when the investigation winds down. Whatever the outcome, it will test the adage that, in politics, the cover-up is more damaging than the crime.

Interest in one thing: reelection

Greenback slides on lack of Fed worries by Peter Morton, Washington Bureau Chief, Financial Post
Governor’s remarks back speculation rates will not rise

Although the administration officially supports its strong U.S. dollar policy, there is widespread speculation in currency markets that Mr. Bush wants to see a weaker dollar to make it easier for U.S. exporters to sell abroad.

“It reaffirms the view the market has that U.S. policymakers are happy with the decline,” said Simon Flint, a market strategist with the Bank of American Corp. in Singapore. “They’re not going to stand in the way of further depreciation.”

Low interest rates help the market and don’t hurt billionaires (1% of $1bn is still $10m). Low interest rates only hurt everyone with a savings account. mjh

Oh, How I HATE Rich Lowry

Rich Lowry (”Dick” to his friends, if only he had any) is such a silly child. Lowry was one of the original ”angry white men” (conservative) back before those same angry white men decided Dean’s (and most Democrats’) anger would be his downfall. He’s Lush Limbaugh’s half-witted bastard son; does he, too, dope himself to get through the day? mjh

Rich Lowry on Howard Dean on National Review Online

Inquiring Minds Want to Know
16 questions for Howard Dean.

The other Democratic candidates for president are beginning to challenge front-runner Howard Dean daily, asking questions about his positions and fitness for office. Here are the questions that they’re not asking Dean, but should: …

#16 — If you had to choose your percentage of the popular vote in a general election right now, would you pick George McGovern’s 37.5 percent, Walter Mondale’s 40.5 percent, or Michael Dukakis’s 44.8 percent. Please round to the nearest single digit.

Rich: Here’s a single digit for you! How about the 48.38% Gore got (vs Bush’s 47.87%)?

See, Lowry gets rich writing drivel that ridicules Dukakis’ 44.8%, while hiding Bush’s loss to Gore with only 3% more than Dukakis.

Lowry should go back to writing for Young Republican’s Weekly. mjh

mjh’s Weblog Entry – 03/10/2003: “Rich Lowry and the Left”

Deep thinkers like Lowry can’t imagine one can love America and criticize it. To his ilk, “you’re with us or you’re against us.” His narrow mind cannot accommodate the notion that America might have a touch of evil amid all that’s good. Oh, wait, sure he can — the touch of evil is in all us “leftists.”

mjh’s Weblog Entry – 05/27/2003: “Merde to Frankenfoods”

I would call Lowry ignorant but, of course, it is his arrogance that is insufferable. “The United States is seizing the moral high ground.” Indeed, every day, in every way. However, US corporate food interests have quite a bit to do with this. In the style of the Radical Right, Lowry can’t simply make his point, he must ridicule those he disagrees with. How moral is that?

Conservative Rag Endorses Lieberman

Byron York on Democratic Debate on National Review Online

Joe Lieberman surely wouldn’t want the endorsement of National Review, but it’s hard to deny that he makes a lot of sense for a member of the current field of Democratic presidential contenders. …

What Lieberman is doing — aside from trying to win the nomination for himself — is attempting to prevent his party from driving itself over a cliff. In other debates, he has reminded his fellow candidates that they face disaster if they abandon the type of Democratic Leadership Council-style positions that were so successful for Bill Clinton.

Obviously, George W. Bush is soft on terrorism

Alpert’s Truth: President Bush is Soft on Terrorism by Arthur Alpert

Obviously, George W. Bush is soft on terrorism.
It is true that, immediately following the outrage of 9/11/01, he properly counter- attacked the criminals – alQaeda – and those who harbored them, the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.

And then he took his eye off the (terrorist) ball to pursue a geo-political strategy.

See also: Alpert’s Truth: Bush is Soft on Terrorism II

Conservatives Against Bush

Republicans and conservatives need to recognize Bush is NOT one of them. He is either the leader of the Radical Right or their dim-witted tool — it doesn’t matter which is true. He is changing everything as fast as he can. mjh

Bush’s Budget for 2005 Seeks to Rein In Domestic Costs

As he completes work on his budget, Mr. Bush faces criticism from conservatives, who say he has presided over a big increase in federal spending, and liberals, who say his tax cuts have converted a large budget surplus to a deficit.

Total federal revenues have declined for three consecutive years, apparently the first time that has happened since the early 1920’s. But in those years, from 2000 to 2003, total federal spending has increased slightly more than 20 percent, to $2.16 trillion last year.

Brian M. Riedl, an economist at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said: “President Bush is not focusing on his fiscal conservative base right now. He’s trying to position himself in between conservatives in Congress and the Democratic Party. It may be good politics, but it’s bad policy, a lost opportunity to get runaway government spending under control.”

Strong and Wrong vs Weak and Right

This is a small piece of a very long article that attempts to analyze historical and current differences between Democrats and the neo-cons running the Bush administration. A lot of attention is paid to Dean and Clark. mjh

The Things They Carry By JAMES TRAUB, NYTimes

A poll conducted in November by the nonpartisan PIPA-Knowledge Networks found that 42 percent of Americans said that the president’s handling of Iraq decreased the likelihood of voting for him, versus 35 percent who said it had increased the likelihood. Another poll taken around the same time found that a majority of respondents believed that President Bush is ”too quick to use our military abroad” and that he practices a ”go-it-alone foreign policy that hurts our relations with allies.” Earlier, Democracy Corps, a Democratic polling and policy organization headed by the consultants James Carville and Robert Shrum and the pollster Stanley B. Greenberg, published a study with the following conclusion: ”When Democrats put out a clear message on national security, it now plays Bush’s post-9/11, post-Iraq message to a draw.”

It’s not just the war in Iraq that prompted these hopes of realignment; it’s the Bush administration’s penchant for bellicosity, its barely concealed contempt for the United Nations and for many of America’s traditional allies, its apparent confusion about how to deal with North Korea. Even some traditional internationalist Republicans believed that the Bush administration had abandoned many of the central tenets of the last several generations of national security policy while squandering much of the global good will that came in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.