Tuesday, November 27, 2007

patriotism

Ummmm, no, not really.


Ummmm, no, not really.
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Thursday, November 8, 2007

Tapping hurts the constitution

Tapping hurts us.
Tapping hurts the constitution.

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Lady Liberty's phones

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Do we get amnesty too?

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4th amendment to the constitution



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Where I usually post

I rarely use this blog anymore unless I am posting via Picasa. Look for my stuff here instead:



---Betsy


Who's looking?

Who is looking over your shoulder? And did they get a warrant first?

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warrant


Shouldn't Congress make them get a warrant first?
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Tapdance


Tapdancing around the law to tap your private communications,
without a warrant.

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Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Saturday, October 6, 2007

My New Blogs

Here's where you can now read the news articles and blog posts I've found interesting:

  1. News Tidbets
  2. My Google Reader shared items
  3. My Feed on YouThinkLeft

Sunday, September 23, 2007

true cost of the war

$500,000:
via Think Progress by Amanda on 9/22/07

Amount the war in Iraq costs per minute, according to a new analysis by Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard's Linda Bilmes, put out by the American Friends Service Committee. The study finds that this $720 million a day could buy homes for 6,500 families or health care for 423,529 children.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Who is the irresponsible one?

Bush: Kids' health care will get vetoed (AP)

President George W. Bush delivers remarks to the Veterans of Foreign Wars National Convention in Kansas City, Missouri, in this file photo dated August 22, 2007. The Bush administration may increase the amount of money it is seeking for the Iraq war for the 2008 fiscal year that begins October 1, the White House said on Friday. (Jim Young/Reuters)AP - President Bush again called Democrats "irresponsible" on Saturday for pushing an expansion he opposes to a children's health insurance program.



The democrats irresponsible? Give me a FFFFFFFFF break! Never mind all this:

A bipartisan group of lawmakers announced a proposal Friday that would add $35 billion over five years to the program, adding 4 million people to the 6.6 million already participating. It would be financed by raising the federal cigarette tax by 61 cents to $1 per pack.

The idea is overwhelmingly supported by Congress' majority Democrats, who scheduled it for a vote Tuesday in the House. It has substantial Republican support as well.

But Bush has promised a veto, saying the measure is too costly, unacceptably raises taxes, extends government-covered insurance to children in families who can afford private coverage, and smacks of a move toward completely federalized health care. He has asked Congress to pass a simple extension of the current program while debate continues, saying it's children who will suffer if they do not.

"Our goal should be to move children who have no health insurance to private coverage — not to move children who already have private health insurance to government coverage," Bush said.

The bill's backers have vigorously rejected Bush's claim it would steer public money to families that can readily afford health insurance, saying their goal is to cover more of the millions of uninsured children. The bill would provide financial incentives for states to cover their lowest-income children first, they said.




Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Stories I missed

I was offline for much of the last three days, and missed quite a few news stories. These are the ones that seem to have gotten the least press in the mainstream:




"Lean" McCain Campaign Cuts Bush Mentions From Stump Speech

Defiant and energetic, Senator John McCain has taken his "No Surrender" tour to V.F.W. halls, parades and barbecues in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina. He talks about his support for a renewed effort to win the Iraq war. He pays tribute to Gen. David H. Petraeus and the report he issued about progress in Iraq.

The one thing that Mr. McCain, Republican of Arizona, does not talk about is President Bush.



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Thousands of protesters march to Capitol (AP)

Anti-war protesters gather across the street from the White House at Lafayette Park for a rally Saturday, Sept. 15, 2007, in Washington. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)AP - Thousands of protesters marched Saturday from the White House to the Capitol to demand an end to the Iraq war.




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Arctic ice melt opens Northwest Passage (AP)

FILE -- An iceberg melts off Ammassalik Island in Eastern Greenland in this July 19, 2007 file photo. Arctic ice has shrunk to the lowest level on record, new satellite images show, raising the possibility that the Northwest Passage that eluded famous explorers will become an open shipping lane. The European Space Agency said nearly 200 satellite photos this month taken together showed an ice-free passage along northern Canada, Alaska and Greenland, and ice retreating to its lowest level since such images were first taken in 1978. (AP Photo/John McConnico)AP - Arctic ice has shrunk to the lowest level on record, new satellite images show, raising the possibility that the Northwest Passage that eluded famous explorers will become an open shipping lane.




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Coalition of the Barely Willing

There was so much crap in the president's speech last night that analyzing requires a fairly aggressive form of crap triage to distinguish the merely bogus from the bogus and hilarious or the bogus and unconscionable. So let me focus in again on the president's reference to the "the 36 nations who have troops on the ground in Iraq."

One way the president comes up with this number is to rope in something called the NATO Training Mission-Iraq (NTM-1).

As Spencer Ackerman notes here, most of the countries involved in this initiative have agreed to let Iraqis come to their countries for training, not the other way around. So for instance, according to a recent Congressional Research Service report, Spain "plans to train groups of 25 Iraqis in mine clearance at a center outside Madrid."

And who has boots on the ground in country? One example from the president's list of 36 is Iceland which has sent a single public information officer to serve in the NATO mission in Baghdad. More robustly, Italy has 8 officers on the NTM-I mission in Baghdad, Portugal is considering sending "up to 10."



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The President's Math

The White House has provided us with the list of 36 nations the President was referring to last night in his speech when he said, "We thank the 36 nations who have troops on the ground in Iraq and the many others who are helping that young democracy. "

The key phrase there is "troops on the ground."

If you take a look at the list we were provided, by a National Security Council official, the first heading is "Countries with troops on ground in Iraq." Only 26 countries appear in that category. The remaining 10 countries are assigned to either United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq or to NATO Training NTM-I.

So by the President's own accounting, the math is wrong. As Spencer Ackerman points out, there are other problems with the numbers. Canada is listed, for example, among the 36, but it pulled out its one and only person in Iraq months ago. The numbers, in short, are a sham.

Now, whether it's 36 countries or 106, shouldn't distract from the larger shams, such as the implication that there remains international support for the U.S. mission in Iraq or the suggestion that anyone other than the U.S. is doing virtually all of the heavy lifting there.

But after the famous 16 words on Niger in his State of the Union speech, after 4 1/2 years of duck and cover on Iraq, after all of the lies, deceptions, and falsehoods, it plumbs news depths of dishonesty to include such a bogus number as "36 nations" in a speech that begins with the following lines: "In the life of all free nations, there come moments that decide the direction of a country and reveal the character of its people. We are now at such a moment."

The President once again revealed his character. Were that it was of the same quality as that of the people he leads.



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Webb Plan To Give Troops Greater Time At Home Close To Passage

Now that President Bush and General David H. Petraeus have charted their course for the Iraq war, Democrats in the Senate say one of their proposals aimed at shifting the president's strategy is finally close to winning enough Republican support for a real chance at being approved.

The proposal, by Senator Jim Webb, Democrat of Virginia, would require that troops spend as much time at home as on their most recent tour overseas before being redeployed. Top Democrats said the practical effect of adding time between deployments would be to force Gen. David H. Petraeus to withdraw troops on a substantially swifter timeline than the one he laid out before Congress earlier this week, and would protect troops from serving protracted and debilitating deployments.



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MoveOn.org Flexes Its Muscle Amid Iraq War Debate

There is no mistaking the influence of MoveOn.org, with its 3.2 million members and powerful fund-raising apparatus, within the Democratic Party.

This liberal activist group has come to occupy a prominent seat at the table among the party elite, so much so that Republicans leaped at a chance to hold Democrats and their presidential candidates responsible for the organization's positions after it ran an advertisement attacking the credibility of Gen.



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NJ's Corzine to Defy New Health Care Rules

Christopher Lee reports for The Washington Post, "Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine informed President Bush this week that New Jersey will not obey federal rules that would make it harder to enroll middle-income kids for a popular government-subsidized health insurance program."


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Washington "Misled" Blair Over Plans for Postwar Iraq

Greg Hurst for The Times Online UK writes that "Britain's outgoing ambassador to Washington has accused the Bush administration of misleading Tony Blair over its much-criticized plans for the reconstruction of Iraq after the invasion of 2003."


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Fox airs no Dem reply to Bush speech

(CBS4) DORAL Miami-Dade police have arrested four people connected to the gunman who opened fire with a high-powered weapon on four Miami-Dade County police officers, killing one of them. Cmdr. Linda O’Brien from the Miami-Dade police department says Alba Bello, 47; her son, Alain Gonzalez, 24; and Bello’s boyfriend, Lazaro Guardiola, 35, have been charged with accessory after the fact for harboring Shawn LaBeet. They are all being held at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center.



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More anonymous Iraqi victims buried now than under Saddam

Every month in Iraq hundreds of victims are struck down by sectarian violence or massive bombing campaigns, and a small band of volunteers has taken it upon themselves to give the unclaimed dead a proper burial. "We've been doing this for 20 years, under Saddam, but the numbers have increased, as have the difficulties," Sheik Jamal al-Sudani, who leads the volunteers, tells CNN correspondent Michael Ware. "Because now it is as if the streets are flowing with...



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Conviction tossed in Jena beating

NEW ORLEANS - A state appeals court on Friday threw out the only remaining conviction against one of the black teenagers accused in the beating of a white schoolmate in the racially tense north Louisiana town of Jena...



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Man accused in pot muffin prank pleads guilty

A former student accused of delivering marijuana-laced muffins to a high school teacher's lounge pleaded guilty Friday.


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