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Thursday, 9 October 2008
McCain babbling at a time he should be helping out
Now Playing: Reality really bites
Topic: Economic Politics

John Aravosis at Americablog pointed this out 

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 3:40 PM PDT
Updated: Thursday, 9 October 2008 6:56 PM PDT
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NSA and Homeland Security: Perverts First? Defenders maybe ...
Topic: National Shame
Attention NSA and Homeland Security:



If the only way you can protect your country is to play with yourselves, please go get other work and find us someone who can do it right.



Posted SwanDeer Project at 9:55 AM PDT
Updated: Thursday, 9 October 2008 10:06 AM PDT
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Monday, 6 October 2008
McCain: Whatever it takes & Truth Be Damned
Now Playing: Rolling Stone: "A closer look at the life and career of John McCain"
Topic: Politics
This is who John McCain has always been. Especially portrayed by those who came out of the same crucible as did McCain.
 
He is not who he has always pretended himself to be. The only skill he seems to have honed during and after Hanoi. It worked even back then ultimately.
 
From the get go:
 
... say what you need to say
 
... do what you need to do
 
... to get where you need to go
 
... and obtain what you lust for. 
 
 
"McCain says his life changed while he was in Vietnam, and he is now a different man," Dramesi says today. "But he's still the undisciplined, spoiled brat that he was when he went in."  
 
 
Make-Believe Maverick
A closer look at the life and career of John McCain reveals a disturbing record of recklessness and dishonesty 
BY TIM DICKINSON 
 
[Excerpt] 
 
 
At Fort McNair, an army base located along the Potomac River in the nation's capital, a chance reunion takes place one day between two former POWs. It's the spring of 1974, and Navy commander John Sidney McCain III has returned home from the experience in Hanoi that, according to legend, transformed him from a callow and reckless youth into a serious man of patriotism and purpose. Walking along the grounds at Fort McNair, McCain runs into John Dramesi, an Air Force lieutenant colonel who was also imprisoned and tortured in Vietnam.

McCain is studying at the National War College, a prestigious graduate program he had to pull strings with the Secretary of the Navy to get into. Dramesi is enrolled, on his own merit, at the Industrial College of the Armed Forces in the building next door.

There's a distance between the two men that belies their shared experience in North Vietnam — call it an honor gap. Like many American POWs, McCain broke down under torture and offered a "confession" to his North Vietnamese captors. Dramesi, in contrast, attempted two daring escapes. For the second he was brutalized for a month with daily torture sessions that nearly killed him. His partner in the escape, Lt. Col. Ed Atterberry, didn't survive the mistreatment. But Dramesi never said a disloyal word, and for his heroism was awarded two Air Force Crosses, one of the service's highest distinctions. McCain would later hail him as "one of the toughest guys I've ever met."

On the grounds between the two brick colleges, the chitchat between the scion of four-star admirals and the son of a prizefighter turns to their academic travels; both colleges sponsor a trip abroad for young officers to network with military and political leaders in a distant corner of the globe.

"I'm going to the Middle East," Dramesi says. "Turkey, Kuwait, Lebanon, Iran."

"Why are you going to the Middle East?" McCain asks, dismissively.

"It's a place we're probably going to have some problems," Dramesi says.

"Why? Where are you going to, John?"

"Oh, I'm going to Rio."

"What the hell are you going to Rio for?"

McCain, a married father of three, shrugs.

"I got a better chance of getting laid."

Dramesi, who went on to serve as chief war planner for U.S. Air Forces in Europe and commander of a wing of the Strategic Air Command, was not surprised. "McCain says his life changed while he was in Vietnam, and he is now a different man," Dramesi says today. "But he's still the undisciplined, spoiled brat that he was when he went in."

McCAIN FIRST

This is the story of the real John McCain, the one who has been hiding in plain sight. It is the story of a man who has consistently put his own advancement above all else, a man willing to say and do anything to achieve his ultimate ambition: to become commander in chief, ascending to the one position that would finally enable him to outrank his four-star father and grandfather.

In its broad strokes, McCain's life story is oddly similar to that of the current occupant of the White House. John Sidney McCain III and George Walker Bush both represent the third generation of American dynasties. Both were born into positions of privilege against which they rebelled into mediocrity. Both developed an uncanny social intelligence that allowed them to skate by with a minimum of mental exertion. Both struggled with booze and loutish behavior. At each step, with the aid of their fathers' powerful friends, both failed upward. And both shed their skins as Episcopalian members of the Washington elite to build political careers as self-styled, ranch-inhabiting Westerners who pray to Jesus in their wives' evangelical churches.

In one vital respect, however, the comparison is deeply unfair to the current president: George W. Bush was a much better pilot.

Page 1 of 10


Posted SwanDeer Project at 6:45 AM PDT
Updated: Monday, 6 October 2008 6:48 AM PDT
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Sunday, 5 October 2008
Mr. Rossi, Sarah Palin has already demonstrated your proposed style of governance
Now Playing: Failed cultural conservatism, Rossi and State Republicans
Topic: State & Local

Refusing to address issues and his proposals with much specificity - Dino Rossi running state government like a business might very well look like the Huffpo article below.
 
It's the sort of "conservative" logic that fits right n with Rossi's rhetoric about correcting how citizens' taxes might be wasted. It also coincides with Rossi's historical voting patterns on social programs and services in the State Legislature.
 
It's one thing to represent a single legislative district according to a promised political philosophy.
 
It's another to   propose sitting in the governor's chair and pretending the affluence and political preference of Sammamish is typical in the rest of the state.
 
That sort of affluence moves down to WIllapa Bay when it retires and wants cheaper housing and a view.
 
Of course the non-affluent and not-so-gullible Willapa Bay and Pacific County voter just might be smarter than Dino about the proper place of government and economic politics.

From HUFFPO:

Under Sarah Palin's administration, Wasilla cut funds
that had previously paid for the medical exams and began charging victims or their health insurers the $500 to $1200 fees.
 
Although Palin spokeswoman Maria Comella wrote USA Today earlier this week that the GOP vice presidential nominee
 
"does not believe, nor has she ever believed, that rape victims should have to pay for an evidence-gathering test...To suggest otherwise is a deliberate misrepresentation of her commitment to supporting victims and bringing violent criminals to justice,"  
 
Palin, as mayor, fired police chief Irl Stambaugh and replaced him with Charlie Fannon, who with Palin's knowledge, slashed the budget for the exams and began charging the city's victims of sexual assault.
 
The city budget documents demonstrate Palin read and signed off on the new budget.
 
A year later, alarmed Alaska lawmakers passed legislation outlawing the practice.

Posted SwanDeer Project at 8:22 AM PDT
Updated: Sunday, 5 October 2008 8:47 AM PDT
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This from somone already a POW when McCain arrived
Now Playing: POW does not equate to Presidential Material
Topic: Politics

When John McCain arrived  at the Hanoi Hilton one of his former classmates from the U.S. Naval Acadmey was already there 

From Brave New Films

Watch it. It's only 4 minutes long 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 8:19 AM PDT
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image by cartoonist John Sherffius and linked viaHoffmania

Posted SwanDeer Project at 8:06 AM PDT
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Rossi does not appear to speak about health coverage from much personal expeirence
Now Playing: Dino doesn't do coverage
Topic: Opinion
from his own personal experience. What he says and the ways he says it suggests that he personally has never had to cope with the problem of affordable health care.

Moreover, he has the experience of a legislator but again his talk does not suggest any degree of empathy with the problems of health coverage.

As I work in the South Bend DSHS office and as my duties include health care eligibility for individuals and families, I'm certain that I'm not far behind your own knowledge regarding coverage problems at life's most basic and economic level.

... and that what Dino thinks he knows is merely at the political-theory and rhetorical level.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:55 AM PDT
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Thursday, 2 October 2008
McCain does not deserve the support of any Veteran
Now Playing: Brandon Friedman: McCain's Miserable Record of Not Supporting America's Troops and Veterans
Topic: Military Affairs
 
EXCERPTS: click on link above to read the entire powerfully detailed exposing of a candidate's lies. There are multiple videos where you can hear it from the candidate's own lying lips.
 
 
On Friday, September September 26, 2008, John McCain said the following:
 
"I know the veterans, I know them well, and I know that they know that I'll take care of them, and I have been proud of their support and their recognition of my service to the veterans, and I love them, and I'll take care of them, and they know that I'll take care of them."
This statement--made near the end of Friday's debate--immediately infuriated veterans across America and overseas.  In fact, Senator John McCain has a very clear, long, and illustrious history of not supporting troops and veterans one bit.  

Now, I've seen legislative examples, I've watched the YouTubes, and I've lived this lack of support in more ways than one.  But now, for the first time, I've tried to compile as much of this non-support as possible into a single document--from a variety of sources--complete with links, quotes, and video clips.  It's something that readers often ask me about, so I hope this helps.  I'm sure there's a lot missing, so feel free to add more in the comments.  But for now, I think this should give us a good start in exposing John McCain's abysmal of record of supporting troops and veterans.  Here we go: 



Senator John McCain's Record on Troop and Veterans' Issues



Voting Against Veterans
 
Veterans Groups Give McCain Failing Grades.  In its most recent legislative ratings, the non-partisan Disabled American Veterans gave Sen. McCain a 20 percent rating for his voting record on veterans' issues.  
 
Similarly, the non-partisan Iraq & Afghanistan Veterans of America gave McCain a "D" grade for his poor voting record on veterans' issues, including McCain's votes against additional body armor for troops in combat and additional funding for PTSD and TBI screening and treatment.
 
McCain Voted Against Increased Funding for Veterans' Health Care.
 
McCain Voted At Least 28 Times Against Veterans' Benefits, Including Healthcare.   Since arriving in the U.S. Senate in 1987, McCain has voted at least 28 times against ensuring important benefits for America's veterans, including providing adequate healthcare.
 
McCain Voted Against Providing Automatic Cost-of-Living Adjustments to Veterans.  McCain voted against providing automatic annual cost-of-living adjustments for certain veterans' benefits. 
 
McCain voted for an appropriations bill that underfunded the Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development by $8.9 billion.
 
McCain Voted Against a $13 Billion Increase in Funding for Veterans Programs. 
 
McCain was one of five senators to vote against a bill providing $44.3 billion for the Department of Veterans Affairs, plus funding for other federal agencies. 
 
McCain was one of eight senators to vote against a bill that provided $47 billion for the Department of Veterans Affairs.
 
McCain Voted Against $51 Billion in Veterans Funding.  McCain was one of five senators to vote against the bill and seven to vote against the conference report that provided $51.1 billion for the Department of Veterans Affairs,
 
McCain Opposed $500 Million for Counseling Services for Veterans with Mental Disorders.  McCain voted against an amendment to appropriate $500 million annually from 2006-2010 for counseling, mental health and rehabilitation services for veterans diagnosed with mental illness, posttraumatic stress disorder or substance abuse. 
 
McCain was one of 13 Republicans to vote against providing an additional $430 million to the Department of Veterans Affairs for outpatient care and treatment for veterans. 
 
McCain opposed an amendment that would have prevented the Department of Veterans Affairs from outsourcing jobs, many held by blue-collar veterans, without first giving the workers a chance to compete.
 
McCain did not vote on the GI Bill that will provide better educational opportunities to veterans of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, paying full tuition at in-state schools and living expenses for those who have served at least three years since the 9/11 attacks. McCain said he opposes the bill because he thinks the generous benefits would "encourage more people to leave the military." 

McCain voted against a ban on waterboarding--a form of torture--in a move that could eventually endanger American troops.  
 
Cheerleading for War with Iraq--While Afghanistan was Unfinished
McCain suggested that the war in Iraq could be won with a "smaller" force.
 
 "But the fact is I think we could go in with much smaller numbers than we had to do in the past. But I don't believe it's going to be nearly the size and scope that it was in 1991." (CBS News, Face the Nation, 9/15/02)

McCain said winning the war would be "easy."  "I know that as successful as I believe we will be, and I believe that the success will be fairly easy, we will still lose some American young men or women." (CNN, 9/24/02)


McCain echoed Bush and Cheney's rationale for going to war.  McCain:
 
"We're going to win this victory. Tragically, we will lose American lives. But it will be brief.  We're going to find massive evidence of weapons of mass destruction . . . It's going to send the message throughout the Middle East that democracy can take hold in the Middle East." (Fox News, Hannity & Colmes, 2/21/03)


"But I believe, Katie, that the Iraqi people will greet us as liberators." (NBC, 3/20/03)
 
March 2003: "I believe that this conflict is still going to be relatively short." (NBC, Meet the Press, 3/30/03)
 
 "It's clear that the end is very much in sight . . . It won't be long . . . it'll be a fairly short period of time." (ABC, 4/9/03)

Staunch Defense of the Iraq Invasion
McCain maintained that the war was a good idea and that George W. Bush deserved "admiration."  At the 2004 Republican National Convention, McCain, focusing on the war in Iraq, said that while weapons of mass destruction were not found, Saddam once had them and "he would have acquired them again." McCain said the mission in Iraq "gave hope to people long oppressed" and it was "necessary, achievable and noble." McCain: "For his determination to undertake it, and for his unflagging resolve to see it through to a just end, President Bush deserves not only our support, but our admiration." (Speech, Republican National Convention, 8/31/04)
Senator McCain: "The war, the invasion was not a mistake. (Meet the Press, 1/6/08)

McCain said our military could just "muddle through" in Afghanistan. While giving a speech, McCain was asked about Afghanistan and replied,
 
"I am concerned about it, but I'm not as concerned as I am about Iraq today, obviously, or I'd be talking about Afghanistan.  But I believe that if Karzai can make the progress that he is making, that in the long term, we may muddle through in Afghanistan." (Speech to the Council on Foreign Relations, 11/5/03)
 
 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 6:36 AM PDT
Updated: Thursday, 2 October 2008 6:38 AM PDT
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Biden versus the Wink
Now Playing: VP Debate
Topic: Politics

I am glad and appreciate that Biden stayed on topic and objective, and mostly ignored the antics of little snarky Shirley Temple ... and went after McCain.

As I think about the cutesy way Palin behaved all night, it seems that her primary self-awareness is more akin to that of a dazzling celebrity limited to someone else's wisdom rather than a thoughtful politician speaking with depth.

She was in effect doing her version of a Paris Hilton kind of political discourse but in reality was nowhere near being in the same ball park with Biden.

And managing to stay engaged only so long as she could lean very very very much on the talking points someone else had crafted for her.

I prefer that Biden stayed away from getting caught up in her winking "I'm such a pill" kind of snarkiness. I'm glad he seemed content to let her stay in her rah rah cheerleader mode all night ...

... while he - with less celebrity sizzle but much much more demonstrable depth and ability to think on his feet - illustrated very well how the blend of experience and wisdom matters most.

And his repeated appeals to voter's civic responsibility stood out in stark contrast to the lack of civic message in what Palin was told to tell her voting base.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Sunday, 5 October 2008 8:13 AM PDT
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Sunday, 28 September 2008
If you're not a class act, those with class will avoid you.
Now Playing: Roger Ebert on John McCain's lack of class
Topic: Opinion
Guess who's not coming to dinner 
BY ROGER EBERT /suntimes.com
September 28, 2008 


I do not like you, John McCain. My feeling has nothing to do with issues. It has to do with common courtesy. During the debate, you refused to look Barack Obama in the eye. Indeed, you refused to look at him at all. Even when the two of you shook hands at the start, you used your eyes only to locate his hand, and then gazed past him as you shook it.

Obama is my guy. If you are rude to him, you are rude to me.
 
If you came to dinner at my house and refused to look at or speak with one of my guests, that would be bad manners and I would be offended. Same thing if I went to your house.
 
During the debate, you were America's guest.
 
What was your problem? Do you hold this man in such contempt that you cannot bear to gaze upon him?
 
Will you not even speak to him directly? 
 
Do you think he doesn't have the right to be running for President? 
 
Were you angry because after you said you wouldn't attend the debate, he said a President should be able to concern himself with two things at the same time?
 
He was right. The proof is, you were there.
 
Were you angry with him because he called your bluff?
 
During the debate, Jim Lehrer repeatedly called upon both candidates to speak directly to each other. Obama looked at you. He addressed you as "John," which as a fellow senator is his privilege. His body language was open.
 
You stared straight ahead, or at Lehrer, or into space. Your jaw was clinched. You had a tight little smile, or a grimace, or a little shake of your head.
 
I had to do two things at once while watching the debate. I had to listen to what was being said. And I had to process your rigid and contemptuous behavior.
 
If you were at a wedding and the father of the groom refused to look at or speak to the bride, how would that make you feel? Especially if you were the father of the bride?
 
You made a TV commercial showing the moments Obama agreed with you. Everybody knows he did. Did his agreement show honesty, or weakness? 
 
It is significant that you said it proved he was not ready to lead. 
 
What is the better leadership quality:
(1) Willingness to listen to your opponent, and keep an open mind?
(2) Rigidly ignoring him?
 
Which of the two of you better demonstrated the bipartisan spirit you say you represent? Was there anything he said that you agreed with?
 
Could you have brought yourself to say so?
 
I'm not the only one who noticed your odd, hostile behavior. Just about everybody did. I'm sure many of your supporters must have sensed the tension.
 
Before the debate, pundits were wondering if you might explode in a display of your famous temper. I think we saw that happen, all right, but it was an implosion.
 
I have instructed my wife to exclude you from any future dinner parties.

 

 In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Willapa Magazine  has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article.

"Go to Original" links are provided as a convenience to our readers and allow for verification of authenticity. However, as originating pages are often updated by their originating host sites, the versions posted on TO may not match the versions our readers view when clicking the "Go to Original" links. 

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 9:13 PM PDT
Updated: Sunday, 28 September 2008 9:16 PM PDT
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We are a family with a drunk elephant in the living room
Now Playing: the grownup thing to do
Topic: Economic Politics
I strongly agree with this paragraph from beyond our shore: John Gray/Guardian/The Observer
Ever since the end of the Cold War, successive American administrations have lectured other countries on the necessity of sound finance.
Indonesia, Thailand, Argentina and several African states endured severe cuts in spending and deep recessions as the price of aid from the International Monetary Fund, which enforced the American orthodoxy.
China in particular was hectored relentlessly on the weakness of its banking system. But China's success has been based on its consistent contempt for Western advice and it is not Chinese banks that are currently going bust.
How symbolic yesterday that Chinese astronauts take a spacewalk while the US Treasury Secretary is on his knees.
Falsehoods and greedy exploitation of what the American Dream means or precisely what America's core values should be are at fault.

Our own perpetrators have denied for years the crass self-serving baseness of American global imperialism. They've succeeded in that denial by capitalizing on us consumers and our own pseudo-patriotic denial of reality.

We are a family with a drunk elephant in the living room. We do not have to pretend anymore. In fact, the grownup thing to do is shut down the drunk's behavior and restrict him to his playpen and to no sharp objects with which he can hurt himself ... and all of us.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:23 AM PDT
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Saturday, 27 September 2008
Veterans perhaps more than any other American voters, look at what The Man Does more than What The Man Says.
Now Playing: Response to the McCain Campaign Response on the Debat e
Topic: Politics
McCain campaign on McCain:
"There was one man who was presidential tonight, that man was John McCain."

Let's see ... McCain never looked at Obama during the debate.

Not looking at your opponent is "presidential?"

This very much was the "don't talk to your enemies - don't look them in the eye" foreign policy expert practicing his "presidential" craft for a nationwide audience.

McCain campaign continues:

There was another who was political, that was Barack Obama. John McCain won this debate and controlled the dialogue throughout, whether it was the economy, taxes, spending, Iraq or Iran.

The McCainers are right. There was one who was political. That would be the older white-haired fellow who was obviously too afraid of his opponent to look him in the eye.

You know ... that guy who stared anywhere but at Obama while repeating and praising his own 30+ years of politically-expedient decision-making.

... political choices that consistently fell on the wrong side of what's best for America and it's individual citizens.

But perhaps the most annoying, insulting and embarrassing declarations were his blatant patronizing self-praise remarks about his love, concern and loyalty to military veterans.

Talk is cheap. Veterans perhaps more than any other American voters, look at what The Man Does more than What The Man Says.

Were we to hear that kind of talk up close at the Elk Snout Tavern on Willapa Bay, McCain would have been tossed out on his lying ass ... more than likely by the American Legion and VFW patrons drinking with him.

More from old-white-eyes' guys:

There was a leadership gap, a judgment gap, and a boldness gap on display tonight, a fact Barack Obama acknowledged when he said John McCain was right at least five times. Tonight's debate showed John McCain in command of the issues and presenting a clear agenda for America's future." --Jill Hazelbaker, McCain-Palin 2008 Communications Director

I have to hand it to them. The leadership, judgment and boldness gap WAS on display tonight. The gap defined mostly by the political ex-fighter jock who has yet to make a positive and socially redeeming political decision since taking the lead flight position of the republican attack formation.

Unfortunately, all we've gotten since he took the lead position have been foolish and rash decisions. Look at who he put out there as wing man - er - wing woman.

That's keeping faith with veterans? Putting a cadet as next in line for command authority?

Unfortunately the McCain campain's "clear agenda" seems to be an assumption that the majority of the electorate wants Patton for President.

I don't recall that Patton refused to look enemies in the eye. In fact, Patton did look directly into the face of either Marshall Zukov or another general meeting with him immediately after the end of hostilities in Germany at the birth of Cold War hostilities.

Staring into his opponent's eyes, Patton - minus McCain-style repeated blinking - told the interpreter to call that officer a "sookensin" (my transliteration from Russian) - a son of a bitch.

So I guess McCain can't do a Patton either. He just stands there trembling and afraid of being open and honest cause honesty might let loose the real McCoy, er, McCain. Honesty might include releasing and revelaing again his still immature temper.

As a veteran, I don't think I want him to try his way of keeping the faith with me or my family ... especially the ones serving in the military.

And about the "at least five times" Mr. Obama said McCain was right?

Five times in a 90-minute debate?

That would be like Muhammad Ali acknowledging that Joe Frazier connected on five swings out of two-hundred during the Thrilla in Manila.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 9:45 AM PDT
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Friday, 26 September 2008
Why I Endorse Jason Osgood Sec. of State
Topic: Civic Duty

Posted SwanDeer Project at 10:01 PM PDT
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"Using the military for law enforcement goes against one of the founding tenets of our democracy."
Now Playing: Glen Greenwald via Common Dreams.org and Salon.com
Topic: Opinion

 

Why Is a US Army Brigade Being Assigned to the 'Homeland'?

by Glenn Greenwald

Several bloggers today

have pointed to this obviously disturbing article from Army Times, which announce

s that "beginning Oct. 1 for 12 months, the [1st Brigade Combat Team of the 3rd Infantry Division] will be under the day-to-day control of U.S. Army North" -- "the first time an active unit has been given a dedicated assignment to NorthCom, a joint command established in 2002 to provide command and control for federal homeland defense efforts and coordinate defense support of civil authorities." The article details:

They'll learn new skills, use some of the ones they acquired in the war zone and more than likely will not be shot at while doing any of it.

They may be called upon to help with civil unrest and crowd control or to deal with potentially horrific scenarios such as massive poisoning and chaos in response to a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear or high-yield explosive, or CBRNE, attack. . . .

The 1st BCT's soldiers also will learn how to use "the first ever nonlethal package that the Army has fielded," 1st BCT commander Col. Roger Cloutier said, referring to crowd and traffic control equipment and nonlethal weapons designed to subdue unruly or dangerous individuals without killing them.

"It's a new modular package of nonlethal capabilities that they're fielding. They've been using pieces of it in Iraq, but this is the first time that these modules were consolidated and this package fielded, and because of this mission we're undertaking we were the first to get it."

The package includes equipment to stand up a hasty road block; spike strips for slowing, stopping or controlling traffic; shields and batons; and, beanbag bullets.

"I was the first guy in the brigade to get Tasered," said Cloutier, describing the experience as "your worst muscle cramp ever -- times 10 throughout your whole body". . . .

The brigade will not change its name, but the force will be known for the next year as a CBRNE Consequence Management Response Force, or CCMRF (pronounced "sea-smurf").

For more than 100 years -- since the end of the Civil War -- deployment of the U.S. military inside the U.S. has been prohibited under The Posse Comitatus Act (the only exceptions being that the National Guard and Coast Guard are exempted, and use of the military on an emergency ad hoc basis is permitted, such as what happened after Hurricane Katrina). Though there have been some erosions of this prohibition over the last several decades (most perniciously to allow the use of the military to work with law enforcement agencies in the "War on Drugs"), the bright line ban on using the U.S. military as a standing law enforcement force inside the U.S. has been more or less honored -- until now. And as the Army Times notes, once this particular brigade completes its one-year assignment, "expectations are that another, as yet unnamed, active-duty brigade will take over and that the mission will be a permanent one."

After Hurricane Katrina, the Bush administration began openly agitating for what would be, in essence, a complete elimination of the key prohibitions of the Posse Comitatus Act in order to allow the President to deploy U.S. military forces inside the U.S. basically at will -- and, as usual, they were successful as a result of rapid bipartisan compliance with the Leader's demand (the same kind of compliance that is about to foist a bailout package on the nation). This April, 2007 article by James Bovard in The American Conservative detailed the now-familiar mechanics that led to the destruction of this particular long-standing democratic safeguard:

The Defense Authorization Act of 2006, passed on Sept. 30, empowers President George W. Bush to impose martial law in the event of a terrorist "incident," if he or other federal officials perceive a shortfall of "public order," or even in response to antiwar protests that get unruly as a result of government provocations. . . .

It only took a few paragraphs in a $500 billion, 591-page bill to raze one of the most important limits on federal power. Congress passed the Insurrection Act in 1807 to severely restrict the president's ability to deploy the military within the United States. The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 tightened these restrictions, imposing a two-year prison sentence on anyone who used the military within the U.S. without the express permission of Congress. But there is a loophole: Posse Comitatus is waived if the president invokes the Insurrection Act.

Section 1076 of the John Warner National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007 changed the name of the key provision in the statute book from "Insurrection Act" to "Enforcement of the Laws to Restore Public Order Act." The Insurrection Act of 1807 stated that the president could deploy troops within the United States only "to suppress, in a State, any insurrection, domestic violence, unlawful combination, or conspiracy." The new law expands the list to include "natural disaster, epidemic, or other serious public health emergency, terrorist attack or incident, or other condition" -- and such "condition" is not defined or limited. . . .

The story of how Section 1076 became law vivifies how expanding government power is almost always the correct answer in Washington. Some people have claimed the provision was slipped into the bill in the middle of the night. In reality, the administration clearly signaled its intent and almost no one in the media or Congress tried to stop it . . . .

Section 1076 was supported by both conservatives and liberals. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), the ranking Democratic member on the Senate Armed Services Committee, co-wrote the provision along with committee chairman Sen. John Warner (R-Va.). Sen. Ted Kennedy openly endorsed it, and Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.), then-chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, was an avid proponent. . . .

Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, warned on Sept. 19 that "we certainly do not need to make it easier for Presidents to declare martial law," but his alarm got no response. Ten days later, he commented in the Congressional Record: "Using the military for law enforcement goes against one of the founding tenets of our democracy." Leahy further condemned the process, declaring that it "was just slipped in the defense bill as a rider with little study. Other congressional committees with jurisdiction over these matters had no chance to comment, let alone hold hearings on, these proposals."

As is typical, very few members of the media even mentioned any of this, let alone discussed it (and I failed to give this the attention it deserved at the time), but Congressional Quarterly's Jeff Stein wrote an excellent article at the time detailing the process and noted that "despite such a radical turn, the new law garnered little dissent, or even attention, on the Hill." Stein also noted that while "the blogosphere, of course, was all over it . . . a search of The Washington Post and New York Timesarchives, using the terms 'Insurrection Act,' 'martial law' and 'Congress,' came up empty."

Bovard and Stein both noted that every Governor -- including Republicans -- joined in Leahy's objections, as they perceived it as a threat from the Federal Government to what has long been the role of the National Guard. But those concerns were easily brushed aside by the bipartisan majorities in Congress, eager -- as always -- to grant the President this radical new power.

The decision this month to permanently deploy a U.S. Army brigade inside the U.S. for purely domestic law enforcement purposes is the fruit of the Congressional elimination of the long-standing prohibitions in Posse Comitatus (although there arecredible signs that even before Congress acted, the Bush administration secretly decided it possessed the inherent power to violate the Act). It shouldn't take any efforts to explain why the permanent deployment of the U.S. military inside American cities, acting as the President's police force, is so disturbing. Bovard:

"Martial law" is a euphemism for military dictatorship. When foreign democracies are overthrown and a junta establishes martial law, Americans usually recognize that a fundamental change has occurred. . . . Section 1076 is Enabling Act-type legislation-something that purports to preserve law-and-order while formally empowering the president to rule by decree.
The historic importance of the Posse Comitatus prohibition was also well-analyzed here.

As the recent militarization of St. Paul during the GOP Convention made abundantly clear, our actual police forces are already quite militarized. Still, what possible rationale is there for permanently deploying the U.S. Army inside the United States -- under the command of the President -- for any purpose, let alone things such as "crowd control," other traditional law enforcement functions, and a seemingly unlimited array of other uses at the President's sole discretion? And where are all of the stalwart right-wing "small government conservatives" who spent the 1990s so vocally opposing every aspect of the growing federal police force? And would it be possible to get some explanation from the Government about what the rationale is for this unprecedented domestic military deployment (at least unprecedented since the Civil War), and why it is being undertaken now?

UPDATE: As this commenter notes, the 2008 National Defense Authorization Act somewhat limited the scope of the powers granted by the 2007 Act detailed above (mostly to address constitutional concerns by limiting the President's powers to deploy the military to suppress disorder that threatens constitutional rights), but President Bush, when signing that 2008 Act into law, issued a signing statement which, though vague, seems to declare that he does not recognize those new limitations.

UPDATE II: There's no need to start manufacturing all sorts of scare scenarios about Bush canceling elections or the imminent declaration of martial law or anything of that sort. None of that is going to happen with a single brigade and it's unlikely in the extreme that they'd be announcing these deployments if they had activated any such plans. The point is that the deployment is a very dangerous precedent, quite possibly illegal, and a radical abandonment of an important democratic safeguard. As always with first steps of this sort, the danger lies in how the power can be abused in the future.

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Willapa Magazine has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 12:01 AM PDT
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Tuesday, 23 September 2008
Families: Your loved one in Iraq won't be coming home
Now Playing: Crooks and Liars Blog: Maliki: Bush Pushed For Later Withdrawal Date To Help McCain

... until John McCain is into the third year of his presidency. That's the Bush plan and tactic. Read Crooks and Liars Blog

 
Lotsahugs    Think Progress reports that the Bush administration have been playing politics with Iraq withdrawal plans, pressuring Maliki to delay an agreed withdrawal date by a year because the White House was concerned that Maliki’s endorsement of a 2010 time line would damage Sen. John McCain’s (R-AZ) presidential campaign. The revelation came in an al-Iraqiya interview with Maliki last week:

Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:05 PM PDT
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"Off With His Head!" McCain is Wonderland's Queen of Hearts
Now Playing: Geroge Will opinion in the Washington Post
Topic: Opinion

"The queen had only one way of settling all difficulties, great or small. 'Off with his head!' she said without even looking around."

-- "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" 

 

This could not be a more apt description of Candidate McCain. 

And from Mr. Will, a conservative icon.

McCain Loses His Head

George Will

New York Times   09/23/08

[Excerpts] 

 

 Channeling his inner Queen of Hearts, John McCain furiously, and apparently without even looking around at facts, said Chris Cox, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, should be decapitated. This childish reflex provoked the Wall Street Journal to editorialize that "McCain untethered" -- disconnected from knowledge and principle -- had made a "false and deeply unfair" attack on Cox that was "unpresidential" and demonstrated that McCain "doesn't understand what's happening on Wall Street any better than Barack Obama does."
 
... It is arguable that, because of his inexperience, Obama is not ready for the presidency. It is arguable that McCain, because of his boiling moralism and bottomless reservoir of certitudes, is not suited to the presidency. Unreadiness can be corrected, although perhaps at great cost, by experience. Can a dismaying temperament be fixed?
 

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:08 AM PDT
Updated: Tuesday, 23 September 2008 7:13 AM PDT
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Monday, 22 September 2008
Welfare, Public, Corporate, Norquist, Republicans
Topic: Economic Politics
Reference the Wall Street Journal article, Lawmakers Battle Over Rescue Plan

As anti-Iraq Invasion activists in support of military families, Lietta and I always found it difficult to motivate individuals and families who had no warrior close to or connected to them to get involved.

They did not have - as has been described many times - "skin in the game."

Hmmm ... now that we all have skin in the American Economic Politics game, I hope more people are willing to lay down their clickers, toss their bottles, golf clubs, American idols and dancing darlings and get involved. In more of the past 8 years, the Bush Republican Bureaucrats are wanting to address this economic meltdown in their own time-proven-failure, the "Halliburton" formula.

The Wall Street Journal describes bureaucrat Paulson as being ready to insist that there is only one true way the Bushco folks will have it:

Mr. Paulson is resisting efforts to limit the pay of executives whose firms participate in the program and plans to fight it "hard," according to a person familiar with the matter. He fears that provision would render the program moot, since many firms might choose not to participate."


Oh, and just like the sales pros do when they don't want you to have time to think it over, Paulson and Associates insist the the decision be as rapid as possible.

There's more,

"The debate could expose a peculiar irony in the government's rescue planning, because taxpayers are now both creditors and debtors in the housing mess. While some taxpayers would benefit from attempts to aid homeowners by modifying mortgages or easing the bankruptcy process, others could be hurt if those moves increase the overall cost of the bailout."


And of course the ultimate irony for all those of the Grover Norquist school of erroneous assumptions is that this action is essentially socialistic in the extreme.

Corporate Welfare is now Official Government Policy.

More money by far is spent on Public Welfare Programs than ever before in the history of this nation and the recipients are not human beings.

Newt Gingrich and Phil Gramm owe us a new Promise to America. And somebody needs to explain it to John
McCain before his bootlaces get so tangled in his vocal chords that he'll have two permanent tongues.

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Posted SwanDeer Project at 11:37 AM PDT
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A Revolting Development When This Guy's Quote Seems to Fit
Now Playing: A Fine Thing When This Guy's Quote Seems to Fit
Topic: Economic Politics

You better make your opinion known to your elected hirelings and do it in a hurry before Bushco before Paulson and the Republican corporate bureacrats try the Halliburton method of saving the American Economy.

Another reason why the omnipotence of "wealth" is more certain in a democratic republic is that it does not depend on defects in the political machinery or on the faulty political shell of capitalism. A democratic republic is the best possible political shell for capitalism, and, therefore, once capital has gained possession of this very best shell..., it establishes its power so securely, so firmly, that no change of persons, institutions or parties in the bourgeois-democratic republic can shake it. -- Lenin, State and Revolution

Recommend Valtin at Docudharma

Lenin's Chickens Roost in Paulson's Attic


Posted SwanDeer Project at 10:35 AM PDT
Updated: Monday, 22 September 2008 1:27 PM PDT
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Resistance Journal Updates
Topic: Resistance Journal


Veterans Do Not Leave The Service
And Then Stay Out Of The Way

THINKING ABOUT RESISTING?

McCain and the POW Coverup

Last Updated on 09/22/2008


Looking for the rebel alliance that surely has or will form?
I haven't found it but I hope somebody is making preparations ... or already has.
Otherwise how tragic
- a resistance stillborn -
a fool's victory over the foolish among us.


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Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:02 AM PDT
Updated: Monday, 22 September 2008 7:27 AM PDT
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Sunday, 21 September 2008
the least qualified, most out of touch and ideologically misguided candidate to govern in Washington State in this election.
Topic: State & Local

Let me get this straight about Dino Rossi's campaign ads, public declarations, debating and talking points...

Dino wants me to believe that the state's budget shortfall is Christine Gregoire's fault and due to totally inept financial management and governing priorities?

Dino may deny having ever made such a declaration, but the the strongest, most direct and most deliberate implication of his campaign strategy is precisely that notion.

As an independent voter, I find that extremely insulting. I find in his statements the presumption that I and my neighbors are too stupid and gullible to challenge his declarations. It is apparent that Rossi is trying to drive home a message he somehow believes he can totally control.

I remember a long time ago when my brother-in-law drove over to Vancouver from Portland for a barbecue at my place and got pulled over by the police for a traffic violation. When asked by the policeman for my address, not trusting the cop, my brother-in-law (who's native tongue is not English) responded,

"I don't know the address. All I know is that I drive down this road and turn right at the big rock."

Is that not what candidate Rossi is asking of Washington Voters?

Isn't he asking us to move on down this election road but also to turn Right at the big rock of misinformation and deception Rossi considers fair and honest campaigning?

Case in point is the idea that the state is in budget trouble because of Christine Gregoire's failings and not because of economic breakdown on the state and national level driven by 8 years of unwise Republican governance.

Why am I repeatedly assaulted by misleading statements and false promises from Rossi - whose party is indisputably responsible for this most massive economic crash since the Great Depression?

Dino Rossi may not admit it but he - not just his party - is on the wrong side of the change discussion. Rossi confirmed it by hypocritically trying to coat-tail Obama's acceptance speech in Denver immediately afterward because there was no other way for him to encounter a large group of interested voters.

"I - like Barack Obama - represent change," Rossi implied.

Railing against a sitting state governor for whose job he and his party lack justifiable credentials, Rossi tried to snake oil voters with totally transparent hypocrisy.

I am insulted because Rossi thinks that I and my neighbors are completely oblivious to the realities and causes of our own economic plight.

I am insulted because Rossi thinks that I and my neighbors are unaware of where things were 8 years ago when we bought houses, employment was better and small businesses on Willapa Bay were much better off.

I and my neighbors know this is so because of Rossi's desperate attempt to not only try to blame Democrats, but even to go so far as to appear somehow distanced or even disconnected from his own party, it's presidential incumbent and current presidential candidate.

I wonder if candidate Rossi personally knows any specific poor people or unemployed workers in this state. If so, why does he not speak in specifics about the plight of the poor and sprinkle his speaking with annectdotal references?

Certainly his principal unprincipled financial base, the BIAW does not know or care about unemployed workers or poor families.

If Rossi and the BIAW really cared about the poor and the unemployed would their economic policies be so rigidly founded on cheap labor, opposition to higher wages and employer-sponsored health coverage improvements?

This absence of personal connection to individual families, workers, the elderly, the poor, to those without health coverage, as well as those with incomes restricted by disability is both glaring and tragic.

The economic philosophy of Rossi, the BIAW and so-called "conservative" Republican party stands abjectly and nakedly as highly inappropriate in a society based on personal income and consumption.

These people talk about supply and demand; about how "an unfettered and totally capitalistically free market in and of itself will solve a society's social problems." They speak of a political economic viewpoint that has revealed itself in headline news all over the world as totally discredited.

Rossi, the BIAW and his party today ask Americans to agree to total welfare bail out of irresponsible big business ...

- not families
- not individuals
not small business persons,
not states, counties or smaller municipalities

... but corporations who bear totally responsibility and accountability for their own deregulated economic policies and decisions.

Regardless of whether or not this candidate is actually acquainted on an intimate basis with any poor person,
any poor family,
any unemployed individual,
any uninsured,
elderly or low-income voter in this state,
Dino Rossi has already demonstrated and proven that he is the least qualified, most out of touch and ideologically misguided candidate to govern in Washington State in this election.

Cross Posted on my Daily Kos Diary.

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Posted SwanDeer Project at 2:29 PM PDT
Updated: Sunday, 21 September 2008 2:53 PM PDT
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Arthur and Lietta Ruger, Bay Center, Willapa Bay in Pacific County Washington

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