More Bush Flip-flops

If we are going to

compile a top ten list of Bush’s flip-flopping, the ‘nation-building’ example noted by Nicholas Brown (see UNM Lobo) belongs on the list. Also on the

list is his opposition to a Department of Homeland Security and a 9-11 Commission. And his insistance that, as President, he would push

the Saudis to lower oil prices. At the top of the list is Bush’s statement, “I’m a uniter, not a divider.” No, wait, that’s not a

change, that’s just a delusion or a lie — take your pick. mjh

Bush’s flip-flops

Remember the Dixie Chicks?

Las Vegas casino boots Ronstadt for lauding Moore’s

‘Fahrenheit 9/11’

“It was a very ugly scene,” Aladdin President Bill Timmins said.

Timmins, who was watching the show, said

he didn’t allow Ronstadt back in her luxury suite and she was escorted off the property.

Hotel spokeswoman Tyri Squyres said it

wasn’t Ronstadt’s message per se that management objected to, but, “She wanted to incite the audience, and she incited them to the

point where they were very upset. . . . She was hired to entertain, not to preach.”

Ronstadt Will Continue Praising Moore Rapid

City Journal:

“This is an election year,” she told the Los Angeles Times Tuesday. “I want people to get their head up out of their

mashed potatoes and learn something about the issues and go and vote. … I’m not telling them how to vote. I’m saying, get information

about the issues.” …

Ronstadt, 58, told the Times her remarks were “modest,” adding: “They didn’t throw me out.”

“I

didn’t even know there was trouble,” she said. “Those places operate like little city-states. They are all-powerful. And I had already

said I never want to come back.”

Our Opinion: Real desperado Tucson Citizen

The hotel-casino is a private entity; its managers

can hire or remove whomever they choose.

The booting of Ronstadt did not violate her right to free speech. But it did constitute

one of the worst public relations moves imaginable. People love or hate Moore, but almost everyone savors Ronstadt’s music. A

more circumspect reaction would have been wise.

”Circumspect” sounds suspiciously French to the Radical Right.

mjh

The Corner on National Review Online

My wife & I were at the Linda Ronstadt performance in question, at

the Aladdin in Las Vegas, and quite frankly, Aladdin President Bill Timmins’ account of what happened is complete crap. There was mixed

booing and cheering at Ronstadt’s pro-Michael Moore comment, and that was about the extent of the “bedlam” that supposedly broke out.

… Frankly, my suspicion is that Timmins is way overdramatizing what happened, in order to justify giving Ronstadt the boot. It simply

wasn’t that big a deal. [mjh: Thanks, NewMexiKen]

Of course, we should trust the

corporate stooges. After all, Lush Limbaugh calls Ronstadt ”the 50-year-old hippie relic” (she’s 58 — Lush doesn’t care about

accuracy) and a kook.

It is interesting to note that this casino is in bankruptcy. If you’re looking for a buyer, it makes sense to

appeal to the people with money. Probably a lot of government regulators involved in such things, as well. mjh

mjh’s Weblog Entry – 03/19/2003: Dixie Chicks – who is being disloyal?

Dissent is NOT disloyalty.

Bush promised to fix what ails the national parks — another broken promise

Remember this when Bush accuses Kerry of not understanding the West. mjh

National parks need help DenverPost.com – EDITORIAL

America’s national parks groan from decades of neglect and deferred maintenance. On that point, the Bush administration and environmental groups agree. What they don’t agree on is whether the situation is worsening or improving.

Interior Secretary Gale Norton says the parks will get $4.9 billion by 2006 to help reduce the maintenance backlog.

The National Parks Conservation Association, a leading interest group on the issue, says the increase is smoke and mirrors. Most of the money isn’t new but was diverted from other projects, NPCA says. The real increase will be about $662 million and help just a handful of the country’s 388 parks, monuments, recreation areas and historic sites.

The NPCA’s analysis has become campaign fodder not only because of President Bush’s overall environmental record. When he ran for office and in his 2001 State of the Union address, Bush promised to fix what ails the national parks. Four years ago, the backlog was a little over $1 billion; today estimates range up to $6 billion. …

The Interior Department is trapped by the same fiscal vise gripping most federal domestic programs. Huge tax cuts and military operations in Iraq added billions to the deficit, and many programs took big hits – including adequate funding for national parks, forests, wildlife refuges and other public lands.

Things you have to believe to believe the Radical Right

I didn’t write these; they came by email. However, I rearranged them more to my liking. mjh

Global warming and tobacco’s link to cancer are junk science, but creationism should be taught in schools.

If condoms are kept out of schools, adolescents won’t have sex.

Providing health care to all Iraqis is sound policy. Providing health care to all Americans is socialism.

Being a drug addict is a moral failing and a crime, unless you’re a conservative radio host. Then it’s an illness, and you need our prayers for your recovery.

Saddam was a good guy when Reagan armed him, a bad guy when Bush’s daddy made war on him, a good guy when Cheney did business with him and a bad guy when Bush needed a “we can’t find Bin Laden” diversion.

Trade with Cuba is wrong because the country is communist, but trade with China and Vietnam is vital to a spirit of international harmony.

Government should limit itself to the powers named in the Constitution, which include banning gay marriages and censoring the Internet.
Continue reading Things you have to believe to believe the Radical Right

A Republican Soldier Against Bush

Stop Bush SignSupport Our Troops, Dump Bush alibi . july 8 – 14, 2004

An Albuquerque Lieutenant Colonel returns from Iraq with a bitter message for the Bush administration
By Steven Robert Allen

From June 2003 through June 2004, he also served as part of the occupation force in Iraq.

For security purposes and due to the nature of his work, Garcia can’t use his real name in this article. Yet given the current mess in Iraq, this Albuquerque soldier’s thoughts on the Bush administration’s faulty justifications for the war and his own dramatic experiences in the country are of utmost interest. Garcia, of course, can’t claim to speak for the entire military. As a registered Republican, however, who voted for Bush in 2000, his take on the Iraq debacle is an eye-opener, to say the least.

“The bottom line is we didn’t need to do this,” Garcia says. “The war in Iraq diverted attention from al Qaeda, and it also handed Osama bin Laden a strategic victory. In other words, the Bush administration did exactly what al Qaeda wanted us to do. It’s created a huge recruiting opportunity for our enemies, and we’ve alienated the whole world in the process.”

I asked Garcia what he’d say to George W. Bush if he had the chance. “With respect, sir,” says Garcia, “you’ve lost my vote.”

“There just wasn’t enough evidence that Iraq presented an imminent threat to our national interests,” he says.

To make matters worse, Garcia says, the war wasn’t conducted the way the military wanted it to be conducted. “The civilian leadership disregarded the advice of military planners. They have manuals about how to do this sort of occupation. The Department of Defense ignored them. Look what happened to Shinseki.”

Gen. Eric Shinseki, you might recall, was the Army Chief of Staff. Right before the invasion, he testified to a congressional committee that, due to Iraq’s size and cultural complexity, he believed the military required a force of several hundred thousand troops to adequately occupy the country. Shinseki was much more worried about the subsequent occupation of Iraq than the war itself.

A couple days later, Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz publicly rebuked the general before another congressional committee, calling Shinseki’s estimate “wildly off the mark.” Wolfowitz also said, “It’s hard to conceive that it would take more forces to provide stability in post-Saddam Iraq than it would take to conduct the war itself and to secure the surrender of Saddam’s security forces and his army. Hard to imagine.”

Hard to imagine for Wolfowitz, maybe, but not for the military experts who had spent years researching the intricacies inherent in attempting to overthrow Saddam’s regime. As it turns out, it was Wolfowitz’ statements that were wildly off the mark. Garcia believes that the occupation of Iraq has become a catastrophic disaster not because the military didn’t plan appropriately, but because the Bush administration ignored the military’s plans from the beginning. The result, he said, has been a much greater loss of life, both American and Iraqi, than would otherwise have been the case.

According to Garcia, the current administration has combined extreme arrogance with a capacity for deluding itself that makes such disasters almost inevitable. “I don’t think the big shots in the Bush administration are malicious or conspiratorial or conscious liars,” he says. “Actually, I think they really believe the things they say, which to me is even scarier. These people don’t listen to other viewpoints, and they don’t seem to have the ability to use basic critical thinking skills to reach logical solutions to the problems we face in the war on terrorism. The neo-conservatives really scare the crap out of me. Their messianic view of global democracy is pure fantasy.”

Like many experts, Garcia believes the Bush administration made a terrible mistake when it opted to disband Saddam’s army. “They should’ve just lopped off all the top generals and done some spot removals of the hardcore Baathists, but kept the military together. Iraq under Saddam was a highly militant society. Being in the army brought with it a huge amount of prestige. These young guys lost that prestige, and on top of that they brought all their guns home with them. It created a very bad situation.”

That’s just one example of what Garcia views as the Bush administration’s gross incompetence in conducting this war. “I’d love to be at West Point in 10 years for the class ’How Not to Conduct a War,'” he says, “I’m sure they’re talking about it right now, how badly the civilian leadership screwed up.” …

”[T]here still wasn’t a close enough connection between Iraq and al Qaeda to justify the war.

“I mean, we could invade Venezuela tomorrow and do the same sort of net good for the Venezuelan people that we’ve done in Iraq, but it would be strategically detrimental to us. If we really wanted to help the Iraqi people, if that was our goal, then we should’ve used NATO or the U.N. from the beginning. Going it alone has hurt us in a big way.”

Garcia considers himself to be a moderate, old-style Rockefeller Republican, but these days he feels like a minority in his party. Although he won’t change his party affiliation, he’s finished with the Bush administration.

‘A Vote for Nader is a Vote for Our President’

”It’s a given among Republicans that a vote for Nader is a vote for our President. There have been stirrings by Republicans in other states to make sure Nader gets on their ballots, but so far there seems to be a devil-may-care attitude toward him here. I think that’s a mistake and I hope the Party gets more aggressive because that is what it’s going to take to keep this state out of Kerry’s hands,” explained one top GOP stalwart.

In Nevada this week it was disclosed that a Republican political consultant came up with cash to help Nader’s successful petition effort. And from Michigan comes word that the R’s there are also lending a helping hand to the consumer advocate’s Prez effort.

from Joe Monahan’s blog.

Here are your exclusive numbers from the Zogby Interactive Poll tracking the NM Prez race every two weeks. The poll was released yesterday (July 14). Kerry leads Bush 49% to 42%, with Nader at 3 and undecided just 6%. In the last Zogby poll released June 20, Kerry was at 50%, Bush 43 and Nader 1% and 3% undecided. Very little change. But in all four NM polls conducted by Zogby, Kerry has either led or tied Bush. The survey’s margin of error is plus or minus 4.3%. A poll of NM from American Research Group (see my July 12 report) also has Kerry leading by seven points [in New Mexico].

"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