Chicken Hawks

Where Is The Shame? By BOB HERBERT, NYTimes

What is incredible is that these attacks on men who served not just honorably, but heroically, are coming from a hawkish party that is controlled by an astonishing number of men who sprinted as far from the front lines as they could when they were of fighting age and their country was at war.

Among them:

Mr. Bush himself, the nation’s commander in chief and the biggest hawk of all. He revels in the accouterments of combat. The story was somewhat different when he was 22 years old and eligible for combat himself. He managed to get into the cushy confines of the Texas Air National Guard at the height of the Vietnam War in 1968 – a year in which more than a half-million American troops were in the war zone and more than 14,000 were killed.

The story gets murky after that. We know the future president breezed off at some point to work on a political campaign in Alabama, skipped a required flight physical in 1972 and was suspended from flying. He supported the war in Vietnam but was never in any danger of being sent there.

Vice President Dick Cheney, another fierce administration hawk. Mr. Cheney asked for and received five deferments when he was eligible for the draft. He told senators at a confirmation hearing in 1989, “I had other priorities in the 60’s than military service.” Many draft-age Americans had similar priorities – getting an education, getting married and starting a family.

Attorney General John Ashcroft. He is reported to have said, “I would have served, if asked.” But with the war raging in Vietnam, he received six student deferments and an “occupational deferment” based on the essential nature of a civilian job at Southwest Missouri State University – teaching business law to undergraduates.

Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy defense secretary and a fanatical hawk on Iraq. He was not fanatical about Vietnam and escaped the draft with student deferments.

There are many others.

Moore At RNC in NYC

Michael Moore adds spice to convention as GOP annoyance By John Nichols, The Capital Times

Michael Moore signs 'loser'When Sen. John McCain took a shot at filmmaker Michael Moore in his speech to the Republican National Convention Monday night, he had no reason to know that the man who made the controversial documentary “Fahrenheit 9/11” was just a few hundred feet away from him. …

Moore is attending the convention on an assignment from USA Today, which has asked him to write a column about the gathering that will re-nominate two of his favorite targets, President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney. …

Diane Francis, a Texas Republican decked out in full jean shirt and cowboy hat regalia, grumbled about Moore’s film and said, “I hope he’s got security. He could get killed in here.”

But Moore insisted he did not feel threatened. “I saw (conservative commentator) Sean Hannity on the floor at the Democratic convention. He was treated well. I’m sure they’ll treat me well here. You don’t think the Republicans are more mean-spirited than the Democrats, do you?” Moore asked, barely concealing a grin.

Besides, he said, “this is a celebration. I’m here to celebrate the fact that the Republicans only have a couple of months left. I’m here to celebrate the end of the Republican era. They’ve had four years. It’s been rough, but it’s almost over.”

A LOT of Protesters

Christian Science Monitor Blog | Notebook: At

the Conventions Archive August, 2004

How many is ‘a lot’?
By Tom Regan

When I turned on the TV this morning to catch the

news, I confess I was a bit stunned when I heard the “official count” of Sunday’s march in New York.

The local CBS station was

quoting police officials and the Associated Press, who said that around 110,000 people were a part of the process that streamed past

Madison Square Gardens for four and one-half hours.

What! I’m sorry, but that figure is way, way, way too small. I’ve seen several

large marches in Washington, where the official count was 250,000 or more and this march was every bit the equal of those earlier

demonstrations.

So I asked a few of the people covering the convention here in New York their thoughts on the size of the rowd. To a

person, they scoffed at the lower figure. Monitor photographer Andy Nelson, who was in the thick of the crowd, said it was easily

200,000. One police officer outside the hall said he has heard as many as 400,000.

Organizers put the total at half a million. Well,

I’m not sure of that figure either. But I will tell you one thing — it was A LOT of people.

‘a politician who cannot be trusted’

Face it: Every politician flip-flops By Daniel Schorr | csmonitor.com

Mr. Bush accuses Senator Kerry of flip-flopping when he voted against the funding bill for the war that he voted to authorize. Sure, but how about Bush’s nation-building in Afghanistan and Iraq, having campaigned against nation-building? Or praising the report of the 9/11 commission, whose formation he opposed? Or negotiating with North Korea, which he promised not to do? [mjh: Or supporting the Department of Homeland Security after he opposed it.]

Let’s face it: Every politician at one time or another will have to change his announced position to meet a changed situation. …

The answer to the flip-flop accusation: Consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds. Show me a politician who has stuck to his position through thick and thin, and I will show you a politician who cannot be trusted to represent our interests in a changing world.

The incomes of most workers are sinking.

It’s Not New Jobs. It’s All the Jobs. By LOUIS UCHITELLE, NYTimes

The incomes of most workers, adjusted for inflation, are sinking.

The evidence for this assertion is piling up. The Census Bureau weighed in last week with the latest update on family and household incomes. Both declined through the first three years of the Bush administration. From the Bureau of Labor Statistics comes a similar story for individual workers. Whether the measure is median weekly pay or average weekly pay, the increases have been too small since last summer to keep up with a measly climb of 1 percentage point in the inflation rate.

"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