Nice Work If You Can Get It

Donors underwrite life of luxury for DeLay

As Tom DeLay became a

king of campaign fundraising, he lived like one too. He visited cliff-top Caribbean resorts, golf courses designed by PGA champions and

four-star restaurants — all courtesy of donors who bankrolled his political money empire.

Over the past six years, the former

House majority leader and his associates have visited places of luxury most Americans have never seen, often getting there aboard

corporate jets arranged by lobbyists and other special interests.

Public documents reviewed by The Associated Press tell the

story: at least 48 visits to golf clubs and resorts; 100 flights aboard company planes; 200 stays at hotels, many world-class; and 500

meals at restaurants, some averaging nearly $200 for a dinner for two.

DeLay's donors fund jet-setting lifestyle

Since he joined the House leadership as majority whip in 1995, DeLay has raised at least $35 million for his campaign, PACs,

foundation and legal defense fund. He hasn’t faced a serious re-election threat in recent years, giving him more leeway than candidates

in close races to spend campaign money.

AP’s review found DeLay’s various organizations spent at least $1 million over the last

six years on hotels, restaurants, golf resorts and corporate jet flights for their boss and his associates.

While it’s illegal for

a lawmaker to tap political donations for a family vacation, it is perfectly legal to spend it in luxury if the stated purpose is raising

more money or talking politics. …

Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn., a Republican author of legislation that reformed campaign

finance, was just as critical of DeLay’s spending habits.

“It’s excessive, it’s obscene, it distorts someone’s

ability to have good judgment,” said Shays, a longtime critic of DeLay. “It’s an abuse of campaign finance law and of our ethics law.

It’s harmful to Congress in general and the Republican Party in particular. We need a new leader.”

Mela Kalikimaka

Mela

Kalikimaka –R. Alex Anderson

Mele Kalikimaka is the thing to say
On a bright Hawaiian Christmas Day
That’s the island

greeting that we send to you
From the land where palm trees sway
Here we know that Christmas will be green and bright
The sun to

shine by day and all the stars at night
Mele Kalikimaka is Hawaii’s way
To say “Merry Christmas to you.”

Vital Presidential Power

Bush Addresses Uproar Over

Spying
‘This Is a Different Era, a Different War,’ He Says as Some Lawmakers Seek Probe
By Peter Baker and Charles Babington,

Washington Post Staff Writers

“It was a shameful act for someone to disclose this very important program in a time of war,” he

said. “The fact that we’re discussing this program is helping the enemy.”

Text: Bush News Conference

Bush: I want to

make sure the American people understand, however, that we have an obligation to protect you, and we’re doing that and

at the time protecting your civil liberties. Secondly, an open debate about law would say to the enemy, ‘Here’s what

we’re going to do.’ And this is an enemy which adjusts.

QUESTION: You say you have an obligation to protect us. Then why not

monitor those calls between Houston and L.A.? If the threat is so great and you use the same logic, why not monitor those calls?

Americans thought they weren’t being spied on in calls overseas; why not within the country if the threat is so great?

BUSH: We

will, under current law, if we have to. We will monitor those calls.

Vital Presidential Power

This is not an argument for an

unfettered executive prerogative. Under our system of separated powers, Congress has the right and the ability to judge whether President

Bush has in fact used his executive discretion soundly, and to hold him responsible if he hasn’t. But to engage in demagogic rhetoric

about “imperial” presidents and “monarchic” pretensions, with no evidence that the president has abused his discretion, is foolish and

irresponsible.

[William Kristol is editor of the Weekly Standard.]

WEBCommentary(tm) – Bush Goes on

Offense…Finally

During Monday’s presser, Bush could be seen attempting to suppress his anger over the leaking of the NSA

operation. Hopefully he will call for a special prosecutor to investigate this truly damaging leak. He must stay on the

offensive. We spent two years investigating the leak of a bozo’s CIA wife’s name. These were two people using the CIA for

their own politically leftist agenda, yet the Democrats and their lapdogs in the news media displayed feigned concern regarding

national security over the woman’s identity being revealed.

As expected, liberals from the Democrat and Republican parties

called for congressional investigations into President Bush’s decision after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to allow domestic

eavesdropping without court approval. They appeared disinterested in finding out the truth about the leaker in this obvious case

of treachery. …

Now that Bush and his administration are finally taking the offense, they should deal with the liberals

and backstabbers in their own party. And keep up the pressure to investigate the New York Times hack who broke the story and find out the

identities of the treasonous leakers. The media want a special prosecutor leak investigation? Give ’em one they can choke on, Mr.

President. — Jim Kouri, CPP

[mjh: The famously “leftist” New York Times capitulated to a presidential request

to keep silent on this domestic spying for more than a year.]

Bush Addresses Uproar Over

Spying
‘This Is a Different Era, a Different War,’ He Says as Some Lawmakers Seek Probe
By Peter Baker and Charles Babington

Washington Post Staff Writers

Nor did he explain why the current system is not quick enough to meet the needs of the fight

against terrorism. Under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the NSA in urgent situations can already eavesdrop on international

telephone calls for 72 hours without a warrant, as long as it goes to a secret intelligence court by the end of that period for

retroactive permission. Since the law was passed in 1978 after intelligence scandals, the court has rejected just five of

18,748 requests for wiretaps and search warrants, according to the government.

Imperial Assumptions By

Eugene Robinson

It seems that the Imperial Presidency has been restored. The nation’s highest office was cut down to

constitutional size three decades ago, when Richard Nixon helicoptered out of town, but listening to George W. Bush in his latest come-

out-swinging media blitz has been like an audience with an impatient monarch whose ungrateful subjects won’t just shut up and do as he

says.

On Saturday, he was wrathful. How dare someone reveal that for years his administration has been eavesdropping on the phone

calls and e-mails of American citizens? How dare the New York Times publish its story about the illegal surveillance?

Investigations would be convened, he warned, and the leakers could be outed.

Unauthorized Snooping

[Washington Post Editorial]

[I]f Mr. Bush claims the authority to defy acts of Congress, he invites a constitutional clash of the

highest order. In a constitutional democracy, laws are meant to be followed until they can be changed — even laws that, a president

feels, encumber his ability to wage war. …

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales … acknowledged that the administration discussed

introducing legislation explicitly permitting such domestic spying but decided against it because it “would be difficult, if not

impossible” to pass.

Civil liberties

don’t matter much ‘after you’re dead,’ Cornyn says on spy case By Jonathan Allen

“None of your civil liberties matter

much after you’re dead,” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), a former judge and close ally of the president who sits on the

Judiciary Committee.

Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), who has led a bipartisan filibuster against a reauthorization of the Patriot

Act, quoted Patrick Henry, an icon of the American Revolution, in response: “Give me liberty or give me death.”

He called Cornyn’s

comments “a retreat from who we are and who we should be.”

Cornyn, who agreed with the White House analysis

of the president’s powers, called for an investigation into how the Times obtained its information.

FBI Papers Show Terror Inquiries Into PETA; Other Groups Tracked

Are domestic terrorists in legitimate organizations like

PETA. Probably. Probably also in the NRA. Where do we draw the line on spying? I thought the “war on terror” (an indefinite extension of

presidential fiat) was against Islamists, not vegans. mjh

FBI Papers Show Terror

Inquiries Into PETA; Other Groups Tracked By Spencer S. Hsu, Washington Post Staff Writer

FBI counterterrorism

investigators are monitoring domestic U.S. advocacy groups engaged in antiwar, environmental, civil rights and other causes, the

American Civil Liberties Union charged yesterday as it released new FBI records that it said detail the extent of the activity.

The documents, disclosed as part of a lawsuit that challenges FBI treatment of groups that planned demonstrations at last year’s

political conventions, show the bureau has opened a preliminary terrorism investigation into People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals,

the well-known animal rights group based in Norfolk.

The papers offer no proof of PETA’s involvement in illegal activity. But

more than 100 pages of heavily censored FBI files show the agency used secret informants and tracked the group’s events for years,

including an animal rights conference in Washington in July 2000, a community meeting at an Indiana college in spring 2003 and a planned

August 2004 protest of a celebrity fur endorser. …

The FBI also kept information on Greenpeace and the American-Arab Anti-

Discrimination Committee, the papers show. …

PETA general counsel Jeff Kerr called the FBI’s conduct an abuse of power that

punishes activists for speaking out.

“These documents show a disturbing erosion of freedom of association and freedom of speech

that we’ve taken for granted and that set us apart from oppressive countries like the former Iraq,” Kerr said, adding that the documents

show no illegal activity by PETA. “You shouldn’t have to wonder when you go to a speech at a college campus, or when you go to a

meeting, whether you’re being surveilled by the FBI. It goes back to the dark days of Nixon and the enemies list.

mjh’s blog — Let Me See Your ID

Feel Safer Yet?

Let me state the obvious: all humans are fallible; most human activities will

involve mistakes. So, I pick these two incidents not because I feel holier than those who screwed up. What I do feel is frustration that

we live in a country increasingly afraid of its own shadow and, at the same time, incapable of protecting anything. The highest standards

set by Our Beloved Leader, The Great Protector, don’t seem to be trickling down very far. mjh

Physical Safety

ABQjournal: No Guards

at Site of Explosives Theft By T.J. Wilham. Journal Staff Writer

No guards. No lights. No cameras. No alarms.

A

barbed-wire fence, a gate, a few warning signs and some locks are what guarded several hundred pounds of explosives, enough to blow up a

large building.

The security measures, which meet federal regulations, are what a thief faced sometime last week when the

plastic explosives, 2,500 blasting caps and explosive detonator cords were stolen from a Bernalillo County storage depot.

The

explosives belonged to Cherry Engineering. The company is owned by Chris Cherry, one of the nation’s most respected bomb

experts and a Sandia National Laboratories employee. …

The site was broken into in 2003, when

someone stole seven 50-pound bags of ammonium nitrate— the same material used in the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people.

[mjh: Interesting to note that the paper version of this article was more specific as to how much stuff was

stolen and how the detonator cord could be used without explosives. I don’t know if the Journal just left that out because online

articles don’t have to match originals or if they modified the info after someone complained — I hope it was not the latter.]

Virtual Safety

Security Software Firm’s Customer Database Hacked By Brian

Krebs, Special to the Washington Post

Guidance Software Inc. — a leading provider of software used to diagnose hacker break-ins

— has itself been hacked, exposing financial and personal data connected to thousands of law enforcement officials and network-security

professionals. …

Hackers got access to company employees’ names, addresses, telephone numbers, credit card numbers, card

expiration dates and the three-digit verification numbers on the backs of credit cards, according to Guidance. …

Guidance’s

EnCase software is used by hundreds of security researchers and law enforcement agencies worldwide, including the Secret Service, the FBI

and New York City police. John Colbert, the company’s chief executive, said Secret Service and FBI customers were among those whose

information was included in the hacked database, but he declined to say whether credit card information belonging to those agencies was

compromised. …

Guidance had stored customer records in unencrypted databases and indefinitely retained

customers’ three-digit verification codes, according to Colbert and the notification letter sent to customers.

Merchant

guidelines published by both Visa and MasterCard require sellers to encrypt customer credit card databases and to discard verification

numbers after using them in a transaction.