October 31, 2004

Pumpkin-flation

Pumpkin-flationI was shocked, shocked I tell when I got to the front of the line of at the local pumpkin patch to find out that the mishapen pumpkin that we plucked from the ever dwindling stock was going to cost us $18. EIGHTEEN BUCKS!!?!!

Anyway, we plunked down the money in the spirit of the season and carved the mutha up with a happy design to entice people into our apartment block, but alas, we had only one trick or treater, and we almost missed him because he knocked when we in the middle of making dinner.

Carving up the pumpkin was fun and we made two batches of roasted seeds onw with olive oil, salt and rosemary and one with butter, cinnamon and sugar. Delicious.

October 29, 2004

Republicans for Kerry

Yet another GOP man has come out in support for Kerry. This time it is Bob Smith former senator from New Hampshire who lived at the far right of the GOP and even once left the Republican Party at one point because he considered it too moderate.

Here's what he has to say about John Kerry:

As someone who worked with you daily for 12 years as a United States Senator, I am acutely conscious of the fact that we disagree on many important issues. Despite our differences, you have always been willing to engage in constructive debate in an effort to forge sound public policy.

I deeply respect your commitment to our nation and your patriotism which, I believe, was forged when you-like I-proudly wore the uniform of the United States Navy in Viet Nam...

Because of the courage and character you demonstrated in Vietnam, I believe you when you say that you'll do a better job than President Bush to win the peace in Iraq, as well as to win the war against terrorism.

And that coming from a hard-card prolifer pretty much says it all, doesn't it?

Here are more porminent Republicans endorsing John Kerry:

  • Elmer L. Andersen, former Republican Governor of Minnesota (1961-63) -- Oct. 13
  • Tim Ashby, director, Office of Mexico and the Caribbean, U.S. Commerce Department under Reagan and Bush I -- Oct. 14
  • Jack Bogle Founder of the Vanguard Mutual Fund.
  • David Catania, Republican (now Independent) Councilman from Washington, D.C. -- Sept. 29
  • Steve Chapman, conservative syndicated columnist, Chicago Tribune -- Oct. 24
  • Mike Cobb, former Republican Mayor of Palo Alto, California -- Sept. 8
  • George Comstock, Mayor of Portola Valley, California -- Sept. 1
  • Marlow Cook, former Republican Senator from Kentucky (1968-74) -- Oct. 20
  • David Durenberger, former Senator from Minnesota (1978-95) -- Oct. 27 (endorsing Kerry health plan over Bush's)
  • John Eisenhower, son of former Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower -- Sept. 9
  • John A. Galbraith, former Republican Ohio General Assemblyman -- Sept. 28
  • Peter Gillette, former Republican Commissioner of Trade for Minnesota (1991-95) -- Oct. 20
  • Lee Iacocca, former Chrysler Chairman -- June 25
  • Anne Morton Kimberly, widow of Rogers C.B. Morton, former Republican Representative from Maryland -- Oct. 14
  • Steve May, former Republican state legislator from Arizona -- Sept. 10
  • Pete McCloskey (editorial here), former Republican Representative from California -- Sept. 8
  • Ballard Morton, son of Thruston Morton, former Republican Senator from Kentucky -- Oct. 14
  • Clay Myers, Republican Secretary of State (1967-77) and State Treasurer (1977-84) for Oregon -- Sept. 1
  • Clyde Prestowitz, counselor to Ronald Reagan's Secretary of Commerce -- Oct. 6
  • Rick Russman, former Republican State Senator from New Hampshire -- Oct. 7
  • William Milliken, former Republican Governor of Michigan (1969-82) -- Oct. 18
  • Charley Reese, conservative columnist/journalist, Orlando Sentinel (1) -- May 17
  • Bill Rutherford, former Treasurer of Oregon and Chair of the Oregon Investment Council -- Sept. 1
  • Richard Schmalensee, former Council of Economic Advisers member for President George H. W. Bush -- Oct. 12
  • Jon Silver, former Republican Mayor of Portola Valley, California -- Sept. 24
  • Gail Slocum, former Republican Mayor of Menlo Park, California -- Sept. '04
  • Bob Smith, retired Republican Senator from New Hampshire -- Oct 28
  • Andrew Sullivan, conservative columnist, former editor of The New Republic -- Oct. 26 (on Jul. 25 he announced he wouldn't vote for Bush)
  • Russell E. Train, (interview) EPA chief under Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford -- Jul. '04
  • Jude Wanniski, former associate editor of The Wall Street Journal, coined term "supply side economics" -- Oct. 27
  • Marshall Wittmann, former communications director to Arizona Republican Senator John McCain -- Oct. 7
  • Various Republican Business Leaders -- Aug. 5

And some Republicans who stop short of endorsing Kerry, but will not vote for George W. Bush


  • Basil Akers, 1992 RNC NM delegate for George H. W. Bush and U.S. Army intelligence analyst in Vietnam, Oct. 25
  • Bob Barr, former Republican Representative from Georgia (1) -- Oct. 14

  • Robert L. Black, retired Republican judge of the Ohio First District Court of Appeals -- Oct. 13
  • John H. Buchanan, former Republican Congressman from Alabama -- Oct. 4
  • Lincoln Chafee, Republican Senator from Rhode Island -- Oct. 4
  • John Dean, former White House Counsel to former Republican President Nixon -- Apr. '04
  • Paul Findley, former Republican Representative from Illinois -- Apr. '04
  • A. Linwood Holton, former Republican Governor of Virginia (1970-74) -- Aug. 29
  • Log Cabin Republicans -- Sept. 8
  • Paul O'Neill, former Treasury Secretary to Republican President George W. Bush -- Jan. '04
  • Richie Robb, mayor of South Charleston, WV (and 2004 Electoral College WV Republican elector) -- Sep. '04
  • William Saletan, "liberal Republican" columnist for Slate -- Sept. 1
  • Karl W. B. Schwarz, very conservative Republican from Arkansas -- Oct. 20 (see also [1])
  • Walter Olson, Bush 2000 campaign advisor -- Oct. 26

Kerry will win.

October 28, 2004

He Said What?!?

"The President needs to get all the facts before jumping to politically motivated conclusions."

-GWB at a rally today

Does he think no one was paying to attention when he took us to war with mistaken intelligence based on politically motivated conclusions? That bubble must be cutting off oxygen circulation to his brain.

Eyewitness to a Failure in Iraq



Eyewitness to a failure in Iraq

by Peter W. Galbraith | October 27, 2004

from the Boston Globe

IN 2003 I went to tell Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz what I had seen in Baghdad in the days following Saddam Hussein's overthrow. For nearly an hour, I described the catastrophic aftermath of the invasion -- the unchecked looting of every public institution in Baghdad, the devastation of Iraq's cultural heritage, the anger of ordinary Iraqis who couldn't understand why the world's only superpower was letting this happen.

I also described two particularly disturbing incidents -- one I had witnessed and the other I had heard about. On April 16, 2003, a mob attacked and looted the Iraqi equivalent of the Centers for Disease Control, taking live HIV and black fever virus among other potentially lethal materials. US troops were stationed across the street but did not intervene because they didn't know the building was important.

When he found out, the young American lieutenant was devastated. He shook his head and said, "I hope I am not responsible for Armageddon." About the same time, looters entered the warehouses at Iraq's sprawling nuclear facilities at Tuwaitha on Baghdad's outskirts. They took barrels of yellowcake (raw uranium), apparently dumping the uranium and using the barrels to hold water. US troops were at Tuwaitha but did not interfere.

There was nothing secret about the Disease Center or the Tuwaitha warehouses. Inspectors had repeatedly visited the center looking for evidence of a biological weapons program. The Tuwaitha warehouses included materials from Iraq's nuclear program, which had been dismantled after the 1991 Gulf War. The United Nations had sealed the materials, and they remained untouched until the US troops arrived.

The looting that I observed was spontaneous. Quite likely the looters had no idea they were stealing deadly biological agents or radioactive materials or that they were putting themselves in danger. As I pointed out to Wolfowitz, as long as these sites remained unprotected, their deadly materials could end up not with ill-educated slum dwellers but with those who knew exactly what they were doing.

This is apparently what happened. According to an International Atomic Energy Agency report issued earlier this month, there was "widespread and apparently systematic dismantlement that has taken place at sites previously relevant to Iraq's nuclear program." This includes nearly 380 tons of high explosives suitable for detonating nuclear weapons or killing American troops. Some of the looting continued for many months -- possibly into 2004. Using heavy machinery, organized gangs took apart, according to the IAEA, "entire buildings that housed high-precision equipment."

This equipment could be anywhere. But one good bet is Iran, which has had allies and agents in Iraq since shortly after the US-led forces arrived.

This was a preventable disaster. Iraq's nuclear weapons-related materials were stored in only a few locations, and these were known before the war began. As even L. Paul Bremer III, the US administrator in Iraq, now admits, the United States had far too few troops to secure the country following the fall of Saddam Hussein. But even with the troops we had, the United States could have protected the known nuclear sites. It appears that troops did not receive relevant intelligence about Iraq's WMD facilities, nor was there any plan to secure them. Even after my briefing, the Pentagon leaders did nothing to safeguard Iraq's nuclear sites.

I supported President Bush's decision to overthrow Saddam Hussein. At Wolfowitz's request, I helped advance the case for war, drawing on my work in previous years in documenting Saddam's atrocities, including the use of chemical weapons on the Kurds. In spite of the chaos that followed the war, I am sure that Iraq is better off without Saddam Hussein.

It is my own country that is worse off -- 1,100 dead soldiers, billions added to the deficit, and the enmity of much of the world. Someone out there has nuclear bomb-making equipment, and they may not be well disposed toward the United States. Much of this could have been avoided with a competent postwar strategy. But without having planned or provided enough troops, we would be a lot safer if we hadn't gone to war.

Peter W. Galbraith, a former US ambassador to Croatia, is a fellow at the Center For Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. In the 1980s, he documented Iraqi atrocities against the Kurds for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

October 27, 2004

It's the Minorites...

"It is clear that minority turnout is a wildcard in this race and represents a huge upside for Sen. Kerry and a considerable challenge for the President's campaign. If one assumes minority turnout exceeds their 2000 election levels, then it appears a number of these states would tip to Sen. Kerry."

This comes directly from a report entitled, It Can't Get Any Closer in the Battleground States Minority Turnout is Kerry Key, from Republican polling firm Fabrizio, McLaughlin & Associates, Inc. The report concludes that when the data is weighted to reflect minority turnout based on the 2000 exit polls, Sen. Kerry leads by 3.5% and if minority turnout is weighted to census levels Sen. Kerry's lead expands to 5.2%.

So there should be no doubt as to why the GOP is engaged in a concerted effort to challenge minority voters in battleground states. It's the only way they can win.

You see, it would be this mat that you would put on the floor and it would have different CONCLUSIONS written on it that you could…jump to.

Wes Clark on George Bush's recent remarks about Kerry's lack of competence to be Commander in Chief:

Today George W. Bush made a very compelling and thoughtful argument for why he should not be reelected. In his own words, he told the American people that "... a political candidate who jumps to conclusions without knowing the facts is not a person you want as your Commander in Chief".

President Bush couldn't be more right. He jumped to conclusions about any connection between Saddam Hussein and 911. He jumped to conclusions about weapons of mass destruction. He jumped to conclusions about the mission being accomplished. He jumped to conclusions about how we had enough troops on the ground to win the peace. And because he jumped to conclusions, terrorists and insurgents in Iraq may very well have their hands on powerful explosives to attack our troops, we are stuck in Iraq without a plan to win the peace, and Americans are less safe both at home and abroad.

By doing all these things, he broke faith with our men and women in uniform. He has let them down. George W. Bush is unfit to be our Commander in Chief.

Mr. President, I couldn't agree with you more.

Finally, A Democrat With a Backbone

Lawrence O'Donnell, the moderate Democratic commentator, was on Scarborough Country with Swift Boat front man and long time Kerry adversary John O'Neill and just comlpetely slammed him.

You can see the video on the Daily Recycler, but what's more interesting is to read through the 200+ comments from the readers, most of whom are conservative. There's some quality stuff in there. The vitriol is heavy on both sides.

It doesn't matter what the story is or what the facts are, partisans on either side are quick to back whatever version of whatever story is being pumped that day that supports their view. I'm definitely guilty of this myself sometimes, but at least I make an effort to absorb as much media from all sides as possible in order to make an informed decision.

Letter to a Republican

from The Atlantic (subscription)

Letter to a Republican
The case against a vote for Bush
by Jack Beatty

A vote for George W. Bush will make you an accomplice after the fact in the death of thousands and the maiming of thousands more—an infliction of suffering unexcused by justice or necessity. As theologians argued before the invasion of Iraq, preventive war is justified only on grounds of self-defense. But we know now, through the President's own inspector, Charles Duelfer, that Iraq posed no threat to the United States, or to its neighbors. In saying he would launch the war knowing everything he knows now, President Bush has endorsed a principle that most Americans would denounce if other countries espoused it: Might makes right.

Bush could (but doesn't) claim he was misled by bad intelligence into believing that Saddam possessed WMD. But you know better. In voting for Bush now, you would be taking a position you would not have taken before the war—that even if Iraq had no WMD and no connection to 9/11, the U.S. should invade and occupy it; that even without justification, we should kill from ten- to twenty-thousand Iraqis; that even though self-defense does not require it, we should will the death of over 1,000 U.S. servicemen and women and the wounding of 7,000 more. Bush is stuck with that position. He is a politician; you are not. He is asking you to endorse all that has happened knowing that none of it was necessary. Won't that be worse than endorsing what the Pope called the war before it began—"a defeat for humanity"? Won't it be more like endorsing a crime against humanity?

But, you say, Saddam is in jail. His regime is gone. The Iraqis are free. Toppling his regime, however, was not an end in itself but a means to the end of securing Iraq's WMD. Which did not exist. Such threat—faint, almost notional—as Iraq posed was contained before the war. And now? Osama Bin Laden wanted to provoke Western intervention in an Arab country and Bush played into his hands. How much will Iraq help Bin Ladenism? We can't know. But, from the point of view of U.S. security, the cost of removing Saddam exceeds the short-term benefit, and weights the odds against realizing any long-term gain by way of "democracy" in Iraq.

As for the Iraqis, they are free of Saddam, but at what cost? Put it this way. The U.S. population is roughly twelve times Iraq's. How would you feel if, in liberating us from an oppressive government, a foreign invader killed 120,000 Americans? If your son or daughter was among those killed, your loss would be absolute; beyond balance by any future gain for the country. That is how it is for many of the Iraqis we have "liberated." Life was hard under Saddam, but it was life nonetheless. Saddam was not perpetrating genocide, which would have given the intervention a humanitarian justification, allowing us to claim we killed thousands to save hundreds of thousands. But you know better.

A vote for Bush promises the absolution of denial—and that, I think, explains his otherwise inexplicable hold on the electorate. The President cannot face the truth, but his moral blindness won't excuse yours. Our soldiers have done their duty. No dishonor attaches to them. It attaches to Bush; and it will attach to you if you vote for him.

50-48 Kerry

Not that I put much stock in this, but Kerry has hit the 50% mark in the latest WaPo tracking poll.

To me, this means that Kerry will garner something like 52-53% based on what I think will be huge voter turnout including a large chunk on newly registered voters who hate George Bush.

A four point spread in the national polls should translate to something around 300 Electoral Votes for Kerry. I think he will win Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Florida (unless Gov. Bush can pull a rabbit out of the hat). Kerry should also take Michigan and Minnesota. New Mexico, Iowa and Wisconsin, which Gore took in 2000 by small margins are in jeopardy, but it won't matter if Kerry wins OH, PA, FL, MN and MI.

There's still a week to go and a terror alert at the last minute can swing the balance of the electorate in the wrong direction, but it seems to me at least, the good guys are finally headed in the right direction, so to speak.

Go Team!

October 26, 2004

What's This About?



Powell's China Comments Anger Taiwanese

TAIPEI, Taiwan - Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites) has angered Taiwanese officials and lawmakers by making unusually strong comments denying that the island is an independent nation and suggesting Taiwan should unify with China.

Washington usually avoids weighing in on the touchy split, which arose when Mao Zedong's communist army won control of the Chinese mainland in 1949 and anti-communist forces took refuge on Taiwan.

But Powell waded into the unification question Monday in interviews with CNN and Hong Kong-based Phoenix Television during a one-day visit to China.

According to a State Department transcript, Powell told Phoenix: "There is only one China. Taiwan is not independent. It does not enjoy sovereignty as a nation, and that remains our policy, our firm policy."

That was a departure from the U.S. government's longtime "one China policy," a purposely fuzzy approach that merely "acknowledges" people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait agree there is one China. Washington also insists differences should be settled peacefully and in recent years has emphasized that the Taiwanese people should have a say in the matter. []

I suppose Powell is out there in the continued attempt to repair Sino-American relations after W appeared on Good Morning America back his first 100 days in office and gave away the diplomatic store on Taiwan:

GIBSON : I'm curious, if you, in your own mind, feel that if Taiwan were attacked by China, do we have an obligation to defend the Taiwanese?

BUSH : Yes, we do, and the Chinese must understand that. Yes, I would.

GIBSON : With the full force of American military?

BUSH : Whatever it took to help Taiwan defend herself.

Bush's comments marked a clear reversal of 30 years of American policy in relation to China and Taiwan based on a doctrine known as "strategic ambiguity" and the first (i think) major gaff in a long line of foreign policy mistakes from this administration.

The Election: Only a Week To Go

And thank the good lord for that. This constant barrage is draining. I suppose I could turn off the TV, unplug the radio at work and stop surfing the web, but I can't stop. To me this campaign is like a car wreck on the side of the road. I don't want to look, but I have to.

The rightwing nuts and the leftwing nuts all think their guy is going to win in a landslide. Me. I'm cautiously optimistic. I think Kerry is edging away slightly in important swing states, most notably Ohio and Pennsylvania (both states where Nader is off the ballot, incidentally) and will win if everyone who plans on voting is able to vote and their votes are counted.

Bush is not polling over 50% in any swing state or nationally which is great news for the Kerry camp as undecideds trend towards the challenger at the end of an election cycle. The Democrats have also registered far more voters than the Republicans and I don't think that is being accurately reflected in the polls.

That said, there's a week left and so much could happen. I just hope that whatever the result is, that we know it on November 3rd. I don't think anyone wants to have to go through another 2000 experience again.

The Right to Vote

As a citizen of this crumbling republic, I consider the right to vote as precious as any right that I have. It bothers me that people don't take this seriously. I don't understand why more people don't vote. I understand the reasons, but I don't really understand the mentality.

It should be the case that regardless of what party you support (I'm an Independent supporting John Kerry), we as a country should be doing everything in our power to make sure as many people as possible vote. Registration should be an easy simple process. Voting should uniform across the country. Every effort should be made to make sure that everyone who wants to votes and all votes are counted accurately.

This is why it's so disturbing to see anyone or any party do anything to try to stop, intimidate or deny people from voting. I had a problem with the Gore campaign not wanting to count some military absentee ballots and not asking for a complete recount in Florida instead of just in a few key counties. I had a problem with Kathryn Harris dereliction of duty as an election official. And I have a real problem with what the NYT reported over the weekend about the GOP's plan to challenge voters at the polls in Ohio:

Republican Party officials in Ohio took formal steps yesterday to place thousands of recruits inside polling places on Election Day to challenge the qualifications of voters they suspect are not eligible to cast ballots.

and the BBC report of voter intimidation plans in Florida:

A secret document obtained from inside Bush campaign headquarters in Florida suggests a plan - possibly in violation of US law - to disrupt voting in the state's African-American voting districts

When it's obvious that one party is doing everything they can to register new voters and the other party is doing everything they can to deny people the right to vote, you have wonder why anyone of conscious would stand up for the party of subversion. If the Republicans can only win by minimizing turnout and keeping people away from the polls, then what is the point of being a citizen in this so-called democracy?

Standing Up For Massachusetts

Paul Waldman at the Gadflyer has an article about Bush's continuous slamming of Massachusetts that I've been talking about offline for a long time, albeit much less eloquently. This overblown charge goes unanswered by both the media and the Kerry campaign.

My questions about this are many:

a) how does the media let Bush get away with this?
b) why doesn't the Kerry campaign say something?
c) can you imagine the firestorm if Kerry said the same thing about Texas?
d) why don't people in MA stand up and say something?

Seriously, where is the backbone of the people from Massachusetts? If California was getting slammed by the president the same way, people here would be up in arms. My personal feeling is that the country would be a hell of a lot better off if the more states were like MA (I'm talking to you, Kentucky), but that's besides the point.

The real point is not why the good people of the Bay State are not speaking up, but why Kerry and his campaign isn't saying anything. Waldman puts it succinctly.

John Kerry knows that if he criticized one state or one region of the country, the press and the Republicans would come down on him like a ton of bricks, charging him with being a Northeastern elitist who doesn't want to be the president of all Americans.

But the rules are different on the other side of the aisle. In today's politics, it is acceptable for Republicans to traffic in ugly stereotypes and assert outright that people who come from some areas of America are not really American. Some might remember the ad to which I referred, aired by the conservative Club for Growth, which said, "Howard Dean should take his tax-hiking, government-expanding, latte-drinking, sushi-eating, Volvo-driving, New York Times-reading, body-piercing, Hollywood-loving, left-wing freak show back to Vermont, where it belongs."

Is This Really Happening In Our Country?

from the Des Moines Register:

One of the latest incidents came when John Sachs, 18, a Johnston High School senior and Democrat, went to see Bush in Clive last week. Sachs got a ticket to the event from school and wanted to ask the president about whether there would be a draft, about the war in Iraq, Social Security and Medicare.

But when he got there, a campaign staffer pulled him aside and made him remove his button that said, "Bush-Cheney '04: Leave No Billionaire Behind." The staffer quizzed him about whether he was a Bush supporter, asked him why he was there and what questions he would be asking the president.

"Then he came back and said, 'If you protest, it won't be me taking you out. It will be a sniper,' " Sachs said. "He said it in such a serious tone it scared the crap out of me."

Sachs stayed at the event, but he was escorted to a section of the 7 Flags Events Center where he was surrounded by Secret Service and told he couldn't ask questions. "I was just in a state of fear," he said. "I was looking at the ceiling and I didn't know what to expect, I was so scared."

They actually threatened to shoot him because he wanted to ask a question of the president. [when I wake up from this nightmare, will Bush go away?]

Read the whole story at the from the Des Moines Register.

Look Ma, No Tables

I'm towards the end of the process of removing tables (except where intended such as tabular data) from my site converting American Idle over to a CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) Design. My site is a very complicated mosaic of multiple blogs and I have close to a 1000 entries so it's tedious process, but the end is in sight.

Why am I doing this? The basic idea of CSS Design is that the substance of the site, the entries and the information, and the style of the site, how it looks, are separated completely. The great advantage is that once the meat of the site is removed from the style, it's very easy to change the look and feel of the site because one cascading style sheet controls everything about the site from what fonts you use to where information is placed.

To see how this works, have a look at my site without a style sheet applied. This is simply the blog in its rawest form. In the future, without too much effort, if I want to give my site a facelift, all I need to do is compose a new stylesheet which is far easier than going into every document and finding places where changes need to be made.

Since I'm in the middle of this process, the site is in a state of flux, so if you see something weird, don't worry, I'm probably just testing something new. However, there might be problems that I'm not aware of so if you see something straight-up wrong, just email me and let me know.

If you really want to see this in action, check out the CSS Zen Garden

Here It Comes

Tahoe Snow Report:

SNOW LEVELS ARE EXPECTED TO START OUT AROUND 7000 FEET THIS MORNING...BEFORE DROPPING DOWN TO NEAR THE VALLEY FLOORS TUESDAY NIGHT. TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATIONS OF 5 TO 10 INCHES ARE EXPECTED BELOW 7000 FEET ...WITH 1 TO 2 FEET ABOVE 7000 FEET. THERE MAY BE A BREAK IN THE SNOWFALL TUESDAY EVENING ...BEFORE ADDITIONAL SNOW DEVELOPS WEDNESDAY AS ANOTHER DISTURBANCE APPROACHES FROM CENTRAL CALIFORNIA.

I heard on the news this morning that there could be 12 feet of snow in the Sierras, but I think the news anchor was confused and actually meant 1-2 feet, but I'll take it. Heavenly plans to open on the 19th. Before then I need to get my tail down to San Diego where I left all my ski gear and fetch it back up here. I have a feeling it's going to be an awesome season.

October 25, 2004

I Hate to Say It, But...

...Please Shut Up!

from Mark Twang:

Wolfpaks For Truth

They told us we were shooting a Greenpeace commercial!
--The Wolves

This is the Bush Campaignistration's answer to Reagan's "Bear in the Woods" ad from 1984. It's not clear whether the wolves in the ad represent liberals or terrorists, but it is clear that the Bush ad people don't care, as long as you come away with a negative opinion of John Kerry.

I have only seen the ad online and on news programs. Precious little national political advertising is on the California airwaves. I have no idea what affect, if any, it might be having in the various battleground states. Personally, I think the ad is weak and won't work.

Whatever the president does or says, it remains true that his approval rating is below 50% and that's a death knell for an incumbent politician. Traditionally undecideds break in favor of the challenger, 4-1. If Kerry can keep it close, he will win. If Democrats can parlay their sizeable advantage in new voter registration to Kerry votes, he might win, well, maybe not a landslide, but by more than a handful of electoral votes. This is my preferred outcome because the larger the victory, the less likely this election will be decided in the courts.

The get the skinny on the ad, take a gander at the story from FactCheck.org

The Bullshit Piles Up So Fast in Iraq,
You Need Wings To Stay Above It

380 tons of powerful conventional explosives --MISSING.

When Scott McClellan, the president's press secretary was asked about this, he said that not only did we only find out about the theft in the last few weeks, but "that the sites now are really -- my understanding, they're the responsibility of the Iraqi forces." I guess the buck doesn't stop at the president.

The problem is, according the NYT article, the US was informed by the IAEA about the explosive caches prior to the invasion.

The International Atomic Energy Agency publicly warned about the danger of these explosives before the war, and after the invasion it specifically told United States officials about the need to keep the explosives secured, European diplomats said in interviews last week. Administration officials say they cannot explain why the explosives were not safeguarded, beyond the fact that the occupation force was overwhelmed by the amount of munitions they found throughout the country.

I can hardly believe what I read in today's McClellan briefing. When asked about Senator Kerry's remarks calling this one of the greatest blunders in the Iraq mission and this presidency, here's how McClellan responded:

Well, Senator Kerry has a strategy of protest and retreat for Iraq. It is essential that we succeed in Iraq, because Iraq is critical to winning the war on terrorism. The President will talk in his remarks today about how the terrorists understand how high the stakes are in Iraq. They are doing everything they can to try to disrupt the progress we are making toward free elections in Iraq. And this is a critical difference in how the two candidates view the war on terrorism. Senator Kerry has a strategy for retreat and defeat in Iraq. The President has a strategy for success in Iraq.

A couple of things. Let's get one thing straight. Is Kerry's strategy "protest and retreat" or "retreat and defeat"? We need to settle that once and for all. If the president has a "strategy for success in Iraq" it's about time we see it, huh?

Say it with me:

Wrong War. Wrong Place. Wrong Time.

Once more for emphasis:

Wrong War. Wrong Place. Wrong Time.

Remember what Bush said in the first debate:

I know how these people think. I deal with them all the time. I sit down with the world leaders frequently and talk to them on the phone frequently. They're not going to follow somebody who says this is the wrong war at the wrong place at the wrong time.

Yes, they are. They are not going to follow someone who ignores and distorts reality and fails to admit a mistake.

Wax My Skis & Sharpen My Edges

Two good things happened to me this morning. The first is that I paid my Visa bill in full and longer have any credit card debt. The second is that I my Season Ski Pass for Heavenly is bought and paid for.

It was a no brainer. The pass costs only 300 bucks for the entire season. That's right. Only 300 bucks. I don't know what Heavenly charges for day passes, but I do know that the mountain is owned by Vail Resorts where a lift ticket costs 73 bucks a day during most of the season. So for slightly more than the cost of four full-priced days, I can ski all season.

It's not going to be the same as last year where I lived in Vail and skied every day, but I will ski as many weekends as I want and take at least one and probably two full week vacations in the Sierras. On top of that, the pass also includes 3 days at Vail, Beaver Creek or Breckenridge, so I want to make a trip back to Colorado, I can ski for free.

So it's time to wax my skis and sharpen my edges and get ready to hit the slopes!

October 21, 2004

Bush Supporters Still Believe Iraq Had WMD or Major Program

A report from the Program on International Policy Attitudes graphically illustrates how the support for President Bush regarding the war in Iraq is based largely on innaccurate information. Big surprise, considering much of Bush support is not rooted in anything close to reality.

Here's how the report begins:

Even after the final report of Charles Duelfer to Congress saying that Iraq did not have a significant WMD program, 72% of Bush supporters continue to believe that Iraq had actual WMD (47%) or a major program for developing them (25%). Fifty-six percent assume that most experts believe Iraq had actual WMD and 57% also assume, incorrectly, that Duelfer concluded Iraq had at least a major WMD program. Kerry supporters hold opposite beliefs on all these points.

Possibly even more interesting is when asked if the United States should have gone to war with Iraq if US intelligence sources had agreed that Iraq was not making WMD or providing support to al Qaeda, 58% of Bush supporters said the US should not have, and 61% assume that in this case the President would not have. Therefore, the only way for them to continue to support the president is through a cloud of cognitive dissonance that shields them from having face difficult facts aka reality.

And you wonder why the country is so divided?

Read the entire report from the Program on International Policy Attitudes.

John Kerry for President

It's no big suprise that the New York Times has come out with an endorsement for John Kerry. I doubt highly that it will change any minds not already made up, despite being the most influencial newspaper in the country (or most hated if you're one of those who decries the "liberal" media bias". However, the piece makes a powerful case that Kerry will make a better president and how and where George Bush has failed. Here's one example

The president who lost the popular vote got a real mandate on Sept. 11, 2001. With the grieving country united behind him, Mr. Bush had an unparalleled opportunity to ask for almost any shared sacrifice. The only limit was his imagination.

But the president asked for no sacrifice. He missed the opportunity to take a galvinized population to support a cause, any cause that would have benefited the United States or the world. Instead he called for more tax cuts and told people to go about their lives as normal, and above all, don't stop spending.

This missed opportunity will be the crux of how Bush's failed presidency is remembered after he is gone, whether he wins a second term or not, despite the president's assertion (as detailed by Bob Woodward) that we won't know how history will judge him because we will all be dead. He's as wrong about that as he is about anything from stem cell research to the war in Iraq.

Read the whole editorial from the New York Times

Senator John Kerry goes toward the election with a base that is built more on opposition to George W. Bush than loyalty to his own candidacy. But over the last year we have come to know Mr. Kerry as more than just an alternative to the status quo. We like what we've seen. He has qualities that could be the basis for a great chief executive, not just a modest improvement on the incumbent.

We have been impressed with Mr. Kerry's wide knowledge and clear thinking - something that became more apparent once he was reined in by that two-minute debate light. He is blessedly willing to re-evaluate decisions when conditions change. And while Mr. Kerry's service in Vietnam was first over-promoted and then over-pilloried, his entire life has been devoted to public service, from the war to a series of elected offices. He strikes us, above all, as a man with a strong moral core.

There is no denying that this race is mainly about Mr. Bush's disastrous tenure. Nearly four years ago, after the Supreme Court awarded him the presidency, Mr. Bush came into office amid popular expectation that he would acknowledge his lack of a mandate by sticking close to the center. Instead, he turned the government over to the radical right.

Mr. Bush installed John Ashcroft, a favorite of the far right with a history of insensitivity to civil liberties, as attorney general. He sent the Senate one ideological, activist judicial nominee after another. He moved quickly to implement a far-reaching anti-choice agenda including censorship of government Web sites and a clampdown on embryonic stem cell research. He threw the government's weight against efforts by the University of Michigan to give minority students an edge in admission, as it did for students from rural areas or the offspring of alumni.

When the nation fell into recession, the president remained fixated not on generating jobs but rather on fighting the right wing's war against taxing the wealthy. As a result, money that could have been used to strengthen Social Security evaporated, as did the chance to provide adequate funding for programs the president himself had backed. No Child Left Behind, his signature domestic program, imposed higher standards on local school systems without providing enough money to meet them.

If Mr. Bush had wanted to make a mark on an issue on which Republicans and Democrats have long made common cause, he could have picked the environment. Christie Whitman, the former New Jersey governor chosen to run the Environmental Protection Agency, came from that bipartisan tradition. Yet she left after three years of futile struggle against the ideologues and industry lobbyists Mr. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney had installed in every other important environmental post. The result has been a systematic weakening of regulatory safeguards across the entire spectrum of environmental issues, from clean air to wilderness protection.

The president who lost the popular vote got a real mandate on Sept. 11, 2001. With the grieving country united behind him, Mr. Bush had an unparalleled opportunity to ask for almost any shared sacrifice. The only limit was his imagination.

He asked for another tax cut and the war against Iraq.

The president's refusal to drop his tax-cutting agenda when the nation was gearing up for war is perhaps the most shocking example of his inability to change his priorities in the face of drastically altered circumstances. Mr. Bush did not just starve the government of the money it needed for his own education initiative or the Medicare drug bill. He also made tax cuts a higher priority than doing what was needed for America's security; 90 percent of the cargo unloaded every day in the nation's ports still goes uninspected.

Along with the invasion of Afghanistan, which had near unanimous international and domestic support, Mr. Bush and his attorney general put in place a strategy for a domestic antiterror war that had all the hallmarks of the administration's normal method of doing business: a Nixonian obsession with secrecy, disrespect for civil liberties and inept management.

American citizens were detained for long periods without access to lawyers or family members. Immigrants were rounded up and forced to languish in what the Justice Department's own inspector general found were often "unduly harsh" conditions. Men captured in the Afghan war were held incommunicado with no right to challenge their confinement. The Justice Department became a cheerleader for skirting decades-old international laws and treaties forbidding the brutal treatment of prisoners taken during wartime.

Mr. Ashcroft appeared on TV time and again to announce sensational arrests of people who turned out to be either innocent, harmless braggarts or extremely low-level sympathizers of Osama bin Laden who, while perhaps wishing to do something terrible, lacked the means. The Justice Department cannot claim one major successful terrorism prosecution, and has squandered much of the trust and patience the American people freely gave in 2001. Other nations, perceiving that the vast bulk of the prisoners held for so long at Guantánamo Bay came from the same line of ineffectual incompetents or unlucky innocents, and seeing the awful photographs from the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad, were shocked that the nation that was supposed to be setting the world standard for human rights could behave that way.

Like the tax cuts, Mr. Bush's obsession with Saddam Hussein seemed closer to zealotry than mere policy. He sold the war to the American people, and to Congress, as an antiterrorist campaign even though Iraq had no known working relationship with Al Qaeda. His most frightening allegation was that Saddam Hussein was close to getting nuclear weapons. It was based on two pieces of evidence. One was a story about attempts to purchase critical materials from Niger, and it was the product of rumor and forgery. The other evidence, the purchase of aluminum tubes that the administration said were meant for a nuclear centrifuge, was concocted by one low-level analyst and had been thoroughly debunked by administration investigators and international vetting. Top members of the administration knew this, but the selling went on anyway. None of the president's chief advisers have ever been held accountable for their misrepresentations to the American people or for their mismanagement of the war that followed.

The international outrage over the American invasion is now joined by a sense of disdain for the incompetence of the effort. Moderate Arab leaders who have attempted to introduce a modicum of democracy are tainted by their connection to an administration that is now radioactive in the Muslim world. Heads of rogue states, including Iran and North Korea, have been taught decisively that the best protection against a pre-emptive American strike is to acquire nuclear weapons themselves.

We have specific fears about what would happen in a second Bush term, particularly regarding the Supreme Court. The record so far gives us plenty of cause for worry. Thanks to Mr. Bush, Jay Bybee, the author of an infamous Justice Department memo justifying the use of torture as an interrogation technique, is now a federal appeals court judge. Another Bush selection, J. Leon Holmes, a federal judge in Arkansas, has written that wives must be subordinate to their husbands and compared abortion rights activists to Nazis.

Mr. Bush remains enamored of tax cuts but he has never stopped Republican lawmakers from passing massive spending, even for projects he dislikes, like increased farm aid.

If he wins re-election, domestic and foreign financial markets will know the fiscal recklessness will continue. Along with record trade imbalances, that increases the chances of a financial crisis, like an uncontrolled decline of the dollar, and higher long-term interest rates.

The Bush White House has always given us the worst aspects of the American right without any of the advantages. We get the radical goals but not the efficient management. The Department of Education's handling of the No Child Left Behind Act has been heavily politicized and inept. The Department of Homeland Security is famous for its useless alerts and its inability to distribute antiterrorism aid according to actual threats. Without providing enough troops to properly secure Iraq, the administration has managed to so strain the resources of our armed forces that the nation is unprepared to respond to a crisis anywhere else in the world.

Mr. Kerry has the capacity to do far, far better. He has a willingness - sorely missing in Washington these days - to reach across the aisle. We are relieved that he is a strong defender of civil rights, that he would remove unnecessary restrictions on stem cell research and that he understands the concept of separation of church and state. We appreciate his sensible plan to provide health coverage for most of the people who currently do without.

Mr. Kerry has an aggressive and in some cases innovative package of ideas about energy, aimed at addressing global warming and oil dependency. He is a longtime advocate of deficit reduction. In the Senate, he worked with John McCain in restoring relations between the United States and Vietnam, and led investigations of the way the international financial system has been gamed to permit the laundering of drug and terror money. He has always understood that America's appropriate role in world affairs is as leader of a willing community of nations, not in my-way-or-the-highway domination.

We look back on the past four years with hearts nearly breaking, both for the lives unnecessarily lost and for the opportunities so casually wasted. Time and again, history invited George W. Bush to play a heroic role, and time and again he chose the wrong course. We believe that with John Kerry as president, the nation will do better.

Voting for president is a leap of faith. A candidate can explain his positions in minute detail and wind up governing with a hostile Congress that refuses to let him deliver. A disaster can upend the best-laid plans. All citizens can do is mix guesswork and hope, examining what the candidates have done in the past, their apparent priorities and their general character. It's on those three grounds that we enthusiastically endorse John Kerry for president.


October 20, 2004

God: The Ultimate Flip-Flopper

[File this under funny if it weren't so damn scary]

There's this extraordinary story on CNN where the founder of the U.S. Christian Coalition Pat Robertson describes a conversation he had with George Bush prior to the start of the war in Iraq in which he delivers the following anecdote:

"You remember Mark Twain said, 'He looks like a contented Christian with four aces.' I mean he was just sitting there like, 'I'm on top of the world,' " Robertson said on the CNN show, "Paula Zahn Now."

"And I warned him about this war. I had deep misgivings about this war, deep misgivings. And I was trying to say, 'Mr. President, you had better prepare the American people for casualties.' "

Robertson said the president then told him, "Oh, no, we're not going to have any casualties."

Then Robertson went on to say, "I mean, the Lord told me it was going to be A, a disaster, and B, messy. I warned him about casualties."

Now, who are we to believe here? Is "God" speaking to Robertson or Bush? Is he speaking to both but giving them opposite and contradictory information?

Based on this limited information it would appear that Robertson has the ear of "God" while Bush is still getting disinformation from the Almighty. What I want to know is has "God" told Robertson who is going to win Game 7 between the Yanks and the Sox?

Bush Relatives for Kerry

It doesn't get any more personal than this:

Bush Relatives for Kerry

October 19, 2004

Don't Misunderestimate Us



Bonds Ball

How much would you pay for a Costa Rican-made piece of rawhide and thread?

Sweet Jesus I Hate Bill O'Reilly

Well, I don't hate Bill, I just dislike him immensely, but this guy does:

Sweet Jesus, I hate Bill O'Reilly, International is an organization
dedicated to the dissemination of information that exposes
Bill O'Reilly for what he is: an ego-driven, biased individual who
spreads fear, hate and misunderstanding. His views are firmly
anchored to the political right. He works tirelessly to enrage
Americans and pit them against anything he considers "liberal"
or, worse yet, "secular". Mr. O'Reilly uses highly manipulative
forms of presentation, phrasing and, yes, "spin".

--Sweet Jesus, I Hate Bill O'Reilly
an organization of hope

Then again, maybe I do hate him. (if you are one of the thousands of people who haven't heard of Bill O'Reilly you can find out all about him in the Rolling Stone expose)

Like freedom to Afghanistan, the sexual harrasment story is a gift from the Almighty to the publisher of Sweet Jesus I Hate Bill O'Reilly.

For the man on the street take on Bill O'Reilly, check this out.

Cross Party Endorsement

Michigan's former Republican Governor William Milliken has come out with a statement of support for John Kerry that eloquently dams current administration policy on everything from Iraq to fiscal policy to the environment and just about everything in between in a way that Kerry doesn't seem to be able to. Here's one example:

"My Republican Party is the party of Michigan Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg who helped forge a bipartisan foreign policy that served this nation well and produced strong alliances across the globe. This president has, in a highly partisan, unilateral way rushed us into a tragic and unnecessary war that has cost the lives of more than 1,000 of our young men and women. In this arrogant rush to war, he has alienated this nation from much of the world.

What's worse, the basic premises upon which we were taken to war proved to be false. Now, we find ourselves in the midst of an occupation that was largely unplanned and has become a disaster from which we cannot easily extricate ourselves."

I believe that there are many people of conscience on the Republican side who feel exactly the same way as Mr. Milliken does, but are afraid to speak out. I don't think his statement is going to affect the race in Michigan which is going to fall in the Dems column comfortably, but maybe it will convince likeminded people to come out declare for Kerry.

Read the full statement below.

As a lifelong Republican, I have had mounting concern watching this year's presidential campaign.

I have always been proud to be a Republican. My Republican Party is a broad-based party, that seeks to bring a wide spectrum of people under its umbrella and that seeks to protect and provide opportunity for the most vulnerable among us.

Sadly, that is not the Republican Party that I see at the national level today.

My Republican Party has always been a party that stood for fiscal responsibility. Today, under George W. Bush, we have the largest deficit in the history of our country - a deficit that jeopardizes economic growth that is so desperately needed in a nation that has lost 2.6 million jobs since he took office.

To make matters even worse, this president inherited a surplus, but squandered it with huge tax cuts structured primarily to benefit the wealthy and powerful.

My Republican Party is the party of Michigan Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg who helped forge a bipartisan foreign policy that served this nation well and produced strong alliances across the globe. This president has, in a highly partisan, unilateral way rushed us into a tragic and unnecessary war that has cost the lives of more than 1,000 of our young men and women. In this arrogant rush to war, he has alienated this nation from much of the world.

What's worse, the basic premises upon which we were taken to war proved to be false. Now, we find ourselves in the midst of an occupation that was largely unplanned and has become a disaster from which we cannot easily extricate ourselves.

My Republican Party is the party of Theodore Roosevelt, who fought to preserve our natural resources and environment. This president has pursued policies that will cause irreparable damage to our environmental laws that protect the air we breathe, the water we drink and the public lands we share with future generations.

My Republican Party is the party of Lincoln, who freed an enslaved people. This president fought in the courts to strike down policies designed to provide opportunity and access to our own University of Michigan for minority students.

My Republican Party is the party of Eisenhower, who warned us to beware of the dangers of a military-industrial complex. This president has pursued policies skewed to favor large corporations in the defense and oil industry and has gone so far as to let those industries help write government policies.

My Republican Party is a party that respects and works with the men and women of the law enforcement community who put their lives on the line for us every day. This president ignored the pleas of law enforcement agencies across America and failed to lift a finger to renew the assault weapons ban that they strongly supported as an essential safeguard for public safety.

My Republican Party is a party that values the pursuit of knowledge. But this president stands in the way of meaningful embryonic stem-cell research that holds so much promise for those who suffer from diabetes, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, spinal cord injuries and other conditions.

My Republican Party is the party of Gerald R. Ford, Michigan's only president, who reached across partisan lines to become a unifying force during a time of great turmoil in our nation's history. This president has pursued policies pandering to the extreme right wing across a wide variety of issues and has exacerbated the polarization and the strident, uncivil tone of much of what passes for political discourse in this country today.

Women's rights, civil liberties, the separation of church and state, the funding of family planning efforts world-wide - all have suffered grievously under this president and his administration.

The truth is that President George W. Bush does not speak for me or for many other moderate Republicans on a very broad cross section of issues.

Sen. John Kerry, on the other hand, has put forth a coherent, responsible platform of progressive initiatives that I believe would serve this country well. He wants to balance the budget, step up environmental protection efforts, rebuild our international relationships, support stem-cell research, protect choice and pursue a number of other progressive initiatives that moderates from both parties can support.

As a result, despite my long record of active involvement in the Republican Party, and my intention still to stay in the Republican Party, when I cast my ballot November 2, I will be voting for John Kerry for President.


It's Raining, It's Pouring

The rain has been coming down hard all night and all morning. People here in California have no clue how to drive in the wet, so it took me a half hour longer to get to work than usual. That's the bad news.

The good news is that the Sierras are going to get 2 to 3 feet of snow, which is a great start to pack the base for ski season just around the corner. I'm going to be picking up a season pass for Heavenly Lake Tahoe. It's only $299 for the entire season with a few blackout dates. If things go well, I should get 20-30 days of skiing in, and for a working stiff like me, that's hard to beat.

Electoral Vote Predictor 2004

There's two weeks to go an anything can happen in the campaign for the Presidency. If you follow the polls, the race is either a dead heat or Bush has a marginal lead. But that's in the national poll, or the "popular vote", which as we know, doesn't mean squat. Bush is making up ground in large states like New York and California and new Democrat registrants are undercounted which skews the national polls towards him, but he is behind in the Electoral College, if you believe the results on electoral-vote.com, the only thing that matters.

What I don't want is a situation like 2000 where Kerry wins the Electoral College and Bush wins the Popular Vote. Hopefully it won't happen like that, but you never know. Then we'll really see the true colors of the conservatives. If they let it go, they'll seem honorable. If they contest the election on that basis, we'll know what they are truly made of.

However, what's even more scary is the chance for a contested election in any of the close battleground states, Florida or otherwise, that will throw the result to one party or the other. Then we will have a recipe for chaos.

Sinclair Getting Hammered

Sinclair Broadcasting Group (), the conservative publicly traded owner of over 60 local television stations which plans to air the anti-Kerry film "Stolen Honor", is getting hammered in the market, down yet again, and trading at or near 52-week lows. SBGI is suffering from a multi-pronged attack from stockholders and institutional investors, from the progressive blogosphere which is going after advertisers and from the inside with Jonathan Lieberman, their Washington Bureau chief (that is until yesterday when he was canned), bravely criticizing his employers for not offering equal time to the opposition.

The stock has lost more than 100 million in market cap since the decision to air the film, which is looking worse by the day, was made a few weeks ago and stirred up a hornet's net of controversy. The closest SBGI market to me is in Sacramento, so if SBGI decides to go ahead with the plans to air the film, I won't be able to see it, but their network of stations, the largest in the nation by the way, reaches 25% of the American public, many in the so-called battleground states.

This story raises so many issues, about election law, about the public airwaves and broadcaster responsibility, but most importantly and frightening, if you believe that the Sinclair's obvious agenda to see Bush re-elected is not merely ideological, is the problem of media conglomeration. Personally I think the large scale media holdings in the hands of fewer and fewer companies is dangerous. Right now the law, which I believe is damaging enough, allows for a single corporation to own no more than 2 stations in any given market. I don't think they should be able to own more than one. Clearly, SBGI was hoping to help swing the election towards Bush who is in favor of less government central and weaker regulations.

Hopefully, the downward trends of the stock and other efforts will stop Sinclair in its tracks. Right now the market cap has been driven so low, beneath 300 million, that someone like George Soros could come in and buy the damn company and stop this madness.

October 18, 2004

No Flu Vaccine Crisis?:

According to Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson, there is no health crisis. Apparently he hasn't been watching the news lately. Or maybe he has and doesn't care, since like President Bush, every they say is gospel, up is down, black is white, we're making progress in Iraq and the economy is turning the corner. Uh-huh. I'm right there with you Mr. Thompson, except, when I say I'm right there with you, I mean I'm not right there with you. See how this works?

The Book on Bush

Here are two articles that everyone should read before you go to polls on November 2:

Without a Doubt
by Ron Suskind

Remember the Alamo: How George W. Bush reinvented himself
by Nicholas Lemann

WITHOUT A DOUBT

By Ron Suskind

Bruce Bartlett, a domestic policy adviser to Ronald Reagan and a treasury official for the first President Bush, told me recently that ''if Bush wins, there will be a civil war in the Republican Party starting on Nov. 3.'' The nature of that conflict, as Bartlett sees it? Essentially, the same as the one raging across much of the world: a battle between modernists and fundamentalists, pragmatists and true believers, reason and religion.

''Just in the past few months,'' Bartlett said, ''I think a light has gone off for people who've spent time up close to Bush: that this instinct he's always talking about is this sort of weird, Messianic idea of what he thinks God has told him to do.'' Bartlett, a 53-year-old columnist and self-described libertarian Republican who has lately been a champion for traditional Republicans concerned about Bush's governance, went on to say: ''This is why George W. Bush is so clear-eyed about Al Qaeda and the Islamic fundamentalist enemy. He believes you have to kill them all. They can't be persuaded, that they're extremists, driven by a dark vision. He understands them, because he's just like them. . . .

''This is why he dispenses with people who confront him with inconvenient facts,'' Bartlett went on to say. ''He truly believes he's on a mission from God. Absolute faith like that overwhelms a need for analysis. The whole thing about faith is to believe things for which there is no empirical evidence.'' Bartlett paused, then said, ''But you can't run the world on faith.''

Forty democratic senators were gathered for a lunch in March just off the Senate floor. I was there as a guest speaker. Joe Biden was telling a story, a story about the president. ''I was in the Oval Office a few months after we swept into Baghdad,'' he began, ''and I was telling the president of my many concerns'' -- concerns about growing problems winning the peace, the explosive mix of Shiite and Sunni, the disbanding of the Iraqi Army and problems securing the oil fields. Bush, Biden recalled, just looked at him, unflappably sure that the United States was on the right course and that all was well. '''Mr. President,' I finally said, 'How can you be so sure when you know you don't know the facts?'''

Biden said that Bush stood up and put his hand on the senator's shoulder. ''My instincts,'' he said. ''My instincts.''

Biden paused and shook his head, recalling it all as the room grew quiet. ''I said, 'Mr. President, your instincts aren't good enough!'''

The democrat Biden and the Republican Bartlett are trying to make sense of the same thing -- a president who has been an extraordinary blend of forcefulness and inscrutability, opacity and action.

But lately, words and deeds are beginning to connect.

The Delaware senator was, in fact, hearing what Bush's top deputies -- from cabinet members like Paul O'Neill, Christine Todd Whitman and Colin Powell to generals fighting in Iraq -- have been told for years when they requested explanations for many of the president's decisions, policies that often seemed to collide with accepted facts. The president would say that he relied on his ''gut'' or his ''instinct'' to guide the ship of state, and then he ''prayed over it.'' The old pro Bartlett, a deliberative, fact-based wonk, is finally hearing a tune that has been hummed quietly by evangelicals (so as not to trouble the secular) for years as they gazed upon President George W. Bush. This evangelical group -- the core of the energetic ''base'' that may well usher Bush to victory -- believes that their leader is a messenger from God. And in the first presidential debate, many Americans heard the discursive John Kerry succinctly raise, for the first time, the issue of Bush's certainty -- the issue being, as Kerry put it, that ''you can be certain and be wrong.''

What underlies Bush's certainty? And can it be assessed in the temporal realm of informed consent?

All of this -- the ''gut'' and ''instincts,'' the certainty and religiosity -connects to a single word, ''faith,'' and faith asserts its hold ever more on debates in this country and abroad. That a deep Christian faith illuminated the personal journey of George W. Bush is common knowledge. But faith has also shaped his presidency in profound, nonreligious ways. The president has demanded unquestioning faith from his followers, his staff, his senior aides and his kindred in the Republican Party. Once he makes a decision -- often swiftly, based on a creed or moral position -- he expects complete faith in its rightness.

The disdainful smirks and grimaces that many viewers were surprised to see in the first presidential debate are familiar expressions to those in the administration or in Congress who have simply asked the president to explain his positions. Since 9/11, those requests have grown scarce; Bush's intolerance of doubters has, if anything, increased, and few dare to question him now. A writ of infallibility -- a premise beneath the powerful Bushian certainty that has, in many ways, moved mountains -- is not just for public consumption: it has guided the inner life of the White House. As Whitman told me on the day in May 2003 that she announced her resignation as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency: ''In meetings, I'd ask if there were any facts to support our case. And for that, I was accused of disloyalty!'' (Whitman, whose faith in Bush has since been renewed, denies making these remarks and is now a leader of the president's re-election effort in New Jersey.)

The nation's founders, smarting still from the punitive pieties of Europe's state religions, were adamant about erecting a wall between organized religion and political authority. But suddenly, that seems like a long time ago. George W. Bush -- both captive and creator of this moment -- has steadily, inexorably, changed the office itself. He has created the faith-based presidency.

The faith-based presidency is a with-us-or-against-us model that has been enormously effective at, among other things, keeping the workings and temperament of the Bush White House a kind of state secret. The dome of silence cracked a bit in the late winter and spring, with revelations from the former counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke and also, in my book, from the former Bush treasury secretary Paul O'Neill. When I quoted O'Neill saying that Bush was like ''a blind man in a room full of deaf people,'' this did not endear me to the White House. But my phone did begin to ring, with Democrats and Republicans calling with similar impressions and anecdotes about Bush's faith and certainty. These are among the sources I relied upon for this article. Few were willing to talk on the record. Some were willing to talk because they said they thought George W. Bush might lose; others, out of fear of what might transpire if he wins. In either case, there seems to be a growing silence fatigue -- public servants, some with vast experience, who feel they have spent years being treated like Victorian-era children, seen but not heard, and are tired of it. But silence still reigns in the highest reaches of the White House. After many requests, Dan Bartlett, the White House communications director, said in a letter that the president and those around him would not be cooperating with this article in any way.

Some officials, elected or otherwise, with whom I have spoken with left meetings in the Oval Office concerned that the president was struggling with the demands of the job. Others focused on Bush's substantial interpersonal gifts as a compensation for his perceived lack of broader capabilities. Still others, like Senator Carl Levin of Michigan, a Democrat, are worried about something other than his native intelligence. ''He's plenty smart enough to do the job,'' Levin said. ''It's his lack of curiosity about complex issues which troubles me.'' But more than anything else, I heard expressions of awe at the president's preternatural certainty and wonderment about its source.

There is one story about Bush's particular brand of certainty I am able to piece together and tell for the record.

In the Oval Office in December 2002, the president met with a few ranking senators and members of the House, both Republicans and Democrats. In those days, there were high hopes that the United States-sponsored ''road map'' for the Israelis and Palestinians would be a pathway to peace, and the discussion that wintry day was, in part, about countries providing peacekeeping forces in the region. The problem, everyone agreed, was that a number of European countries, like France and Germany, had armies that were not trusted by either the Israelis or Palestinians. One congressman -- the Hungarian-born Tom Lantos, a Democrat from California and the only Holocaust survivor in Congress -- mentioned that the Scandinavian countries were viewed more positively. Lantos went on to describe for the president how the Swedish Army might be an ideal candidate to anchor a small peacekeeping force on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Sweden has a well-trained force of about 25,000. The president looked at him appraisingly, several people in the room recall.

''I don't know why you're talking about Sweden,'' Bush said. ''They're the neutral one. They don't have an army.''

Lantos paused, a little shocked, and offered a gentlemanly reply: ''Mr. President, you may have thought that I said Switzerland. They're the ones that are historically neutral, without an army.'' Then Lantos mentioned, in a gracious aside, that the Swiss do have a tough national guard to protect the country in the event of invasion.

Bush held to his view. ''No, no, it's Sweden that has no army.''

The room went silent, until someone changed the subject.

A few weeks later, members of Congress and their spouses gathered with administration officials and other dignitaries for the White House Christmas party. The president saw Lantos and grabbed him by the shoulder. ''You were right,'' he said, with bonhomie. ''Sweden does have an army.''

This story was told to me by one of the senators in the Oval Office that December day, Joe Biden. Lantos, a liberal Democrat, would not comment about it. In general, people who meet with Bush will not discuss their encounters. (Lantos, through a spokesman, says it is a longstanding policy of his not to discuss Oval Office meetings.)

This is one key feature of the faith-based presidency: open dialogue, based on facts, is not seen as something of inherent value. It may, in fact, create doubt, which undercuts faith. It could result in a loss of confidence in the decision-maker and, just as important, by the decision-maker. Nothing could be more vital, whether staying on message with the voters or the terrorists or a California congressman in a meeting about one of the world's most nagging problems. As Bush himself has said any number of times on the campaign trail, ''By remaining resolute and firm and strong, this world will be peaceful.''

He didn't always talk this way. A precious glimpse of Bush, just as he was ascending to the presidency, comes from Jim Wallis, a man with the added advantage of having deep acuity about the struggles between fact and faith. Wallis, an evangelical pastor who for 30 years has run the Sojourners -- a progressive organization of advocates for social justice -- was asked during the transition to help pull together a diverse group of members of the clergy to talk about faith and poverty with the new president-elect.

In December 2000, Bush sat in the classroom of a Baptist church in Austin, Tex., with 30 or so clergy members and asked, ''How do I speak to the soul of the nation?'' He listened as each guest articulated a vision of what might be. The afternoon hours passed. No one wanted to leave. People rose from their chairs and wandered the room, huddling in groups, conversing passionately. In one cluster, Bush and Wallis talked of their journeys.

''I've never lived around poor people,'' Wallis remembers Bush saying. ''I don't know what they think. I really don't know what they think. I'm a white Republican guy who doesn't get it. How do I get it?''

Wallis recalls replying, ''You need to listen to the poor and those who live and work with poor people.''

Bush called over his speechwriter, Michael Gerson, and said, ''I want you to hear this.'' A month later, an almost identical line -- ''many in our country do not know the pain of poverty, but we can listen to those who do'' -- ended up in the inaugural address.

That was an earlier Bush, one rather more open and conversant, matching his impulsiveness with a can-do attitude and seemingly unafraid of engaging with a diverse group. The president has an array of interpersonal gifts that fit well with this fearlessness -- a headlong, unalloyed quality, best suited to ranging among different types of people, searching for the outlines of what will take shape as principles.

Yet this strong suit, an improvisational gift, has long been forced to wrestle with its ''left brain'' opposite -- a struggle, across 30 years, with the critical and analytical skills so prized in America's professional class. In terms of intellectual faculties, that has been the ongoing battle for this talented man, first visible during the lackluster years at Yale and five years of drift through his 20's -- a time when peers were busy building credentials in law, business or medicine.
Biden, who early on became disenchanted with Bush's grasp of foreign-policy issues and is among John Kerry's closest Senate friends, has spent a lot of time trying to size up the president. ''Most successful people are good at identifying, very early, their strengths and weaknesses, at knowing themselves,'' he told me not long ago. ''For most of us average Joes, that meant we've relied on strengths but had to work on our weakness -- to lift them to adequacy -- otherwise they might bring us down. I don't think the president really had to do that, because he always had someone there -- his family or friends -- to bail him out. I don't think, on balance, that has served him well for the moment he's in now as president. He never seems to have worked on his weaknesses.''

Bush has been called the C.E.O. president, but that's just a catch phrase -- he never ran anything of consequence in the private sector. The M.B.A. president would be more accurate: he did, after all, graduate from Harvard Business School. And some who have worked under him in the White House and know about business have spotted a strange business-school time warp. It's as if a 1975 graduate from H.B.S. -- one who had little chance to season theory with practice during the past few decades of change in corporate America -- has simply been dropped into the most challenging management job in the world.

One aspect of the H.B.S. method, with its emphasis on problems of actual corporations, is sometimes referred to as the ''case cracker'' problem. The case studies are static, generally a snapshot of a troubled company, frozen in time; the various ''solutions'' students proffer, and then defend in class against tough questioning, tend to have very short shelf lives. They promote rigidity, inappropriate surety. This is something H.B.S. graduates, most of whom land at large or midsize firms, learn in their first few years in business. They discover, often to their surprise, that the world is dynamic, it flows and changes, often for no good reason. The key is flexibility, rather than sticking to your guns in a debate, and constant reassessment of shifting realities. In short, thoughtful second-guessing.

George W. Bush, who went off to Texas to be an oil wildcatter, never had a chance to learn these lessons about the power of nuanced, fact-based analysis. The small oil companies he ran tended to lose money; much of their value was as tax shelters. (The investors were often friends of his father's.) Later, with the Texas Rangers baseball team, he would act as an able front man but never really as a boss.

Instead of learning the limitations of his Harvard training, what George W. Bush learned instead during these fitful years were lessons about faith and its particular efficacy. It was in 1985, around the time of his 39th birthday, George W. Bush says, that his life took a sharp turn toward salvation. At that point he was drinking, his marriage was on the rocks, his career was listless. Several accounts have emerged from those close to Bush about a faith ''intervention'' of sorts at the Kennebunkport family compound that year. Details vary, but here's the gist of what I understand took place. George W., drunk at a party, crudely insulted a friend of his mother's. George senior and Barbara blew up. Words were exchanged along the lines of something having to be done. George senior, then the vice president, dialed up his friend, Billy Graham, who came to the compound and spent several days with George W. in probing exchanges and walks on the beach. George W. was soon born again. He stopped drinking, attended Bible study and wrestled with issues of fervent faith. A man who was lost was saved.

His marriage may have been repaired by the power of faith, but faith was clearly having little impact on his broken career. Faith heals the heart and the spirit, but it doesn't do much for analytical skills. In 1990, a few years after receiving salvation, Bush was still bumping along. Much is apparent from one of the few instances of disinterested testimony to come from this period. It is the voice of David Rubenstein, managing director and cofounder of the Carlyle Group, the Washington-based investment firm that is one of the town's most powerful institutions and a longtime business home for the president's father. In 1989, the catering division of Marriott was taken private and established as Caterair by a group of Carlyle investors. Several old-guard Republicans, including the former Nixon aide Fred Malek, were involved.

Rubenstein described that time to a convention of pension managers in Los Angeles last year, recalling that Malek approached him and said: ''There is a guy who would like to be on the board. He's kind of down on his luck a bit. Needs a job. . . . Needs some board positions.'' Though Rubenstein didn't think George W. Bush, then in his mid-40's, ''added much value,'' he put him on the Caterair board. ''Came to all the meetings,'' Rubenstein told the conventioneers. ''Told a lot of jokes. Not that many clean ones. And after a while I kind of said to him, after about three years: 'You know, I'm not sure this is really for you. Maybe you should do something else. Because I don't think you're adding that much value to the board. You don't know that much about the company.' He said: 'Well, I think I'm getting out of this business anyway. And I don't really like it that much. So I'm probably going to resign from the board.' And I said thanks. Didn't think I'd ever see him again.''

Bush would soon officially resign from Caterair's board. Around this time, Karl Rove set up meetings to discuss Bush's possible candidacy for the governorship of Texas. Six years after that, he was elected leader of the free world and began ''case cracking'' on a dizzying array of subjects, proffering his various solutions, in both foreign and domestic affairs. But the pointed ''defend your position'' queries -- so central to the H.B.S. method and rigorous analysis of all kinds -- were infrequent. Questioning a regional supervisor or V.P. for planning is one thing. Questioning the president of the United States is another.
Still, some couldn't resist. As I reported in "The Price of Loyalty," at the Bush administration's first National Security Council meeting, Bush asked if anyone had ever met Ariel Sharon. Some were uncertain if it was a joke. It wasn't: Bush launched into a riff about briefly meeting Sharon two years before, how he wouldn't ''go by past reputations when it comes to Sharon. . . . I'm going to take him at face value,'' and how the United States should pull out of the Arab-Israeli conflict because ''I don't see much we can do over there at this point.''

Colin Powell, for one, seemed startled. This would reverse 30 years of policy -- since the Nixon administration -- of American engagement. Such a move would unleash Sharon, Powell countered, and tear the delicate fabric of the Mideast in ways that might be irreparable. Bush brushed aside Powell's concerns impatiently. ''Sometimes a show of force by one side can really clarify things.''

Such challenges -- from either Powell or his opposite number as the top official in domestic policy, Paul O'Neill -- were trials that Bush had less and less patience for as the months passed. He made that clear to his top lieutenants.

Gradually, Bush lost what Richard Perle, who would later head a largely private-sector group under Bush called the Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee, had described as his open posture during foreign-policy tutorials prior to the 2000 campaign. (''He had the confidence to ask questions that revealed he didn't know very much,'' Perle said.) By midyear 2001, a stand-and-deliver rhythm was established. Meetings, large and small, started to take on a scripted quality. Even then, the circle around Bush was tightening. Top officials, from cabinet members on down, were often told when they would speak in Bush's presence, for how long and on what topic. The president would listen without betraying any reaction. Sometimes there would be cross-discussions -- Powell and Rumsfeld, for instance, briefly parrying on an issue -- but the president would rarely prod anyone with direct, informed questions.

Each administration, over the course of a term, is steadily shaped by its president, by his character, personality and priorities. It is a process that unfolds on many levels. There are, of course, a chief executive's policies, which are executed by a staff and attending bureaucracies. But a few months along, officials, top to bottom, will also start to adopt the boss's phraseology, his presumptions, his rhythms. If a president fishes, people buy poles; if he expresses displeasure, aides get busy finding evidence to support the judgment. A staff channels the leader.

A cluster of particularly vivid qualities was shaping George W. Bush's White House through the summer of 2001: a disdain for contemplation or deliberation, an embrace of decisiveness, a retreat from empiricism, a sometimes bullying impatience with doubters and even friendly questioners. Already Bush was saying, Have faith in me and my decisions, and you'll be rewarded. All through the White House, people were channeling the boss. He didn't second-guess himself; why should they?

Considering the trials that were soon to arrive, it is easy to overlook what a difficult time this must have been for George W. Bush. For nearly three decades, he had sat in classrooms, and then at mahogany tables in corporate suites, with little to contribute. Then, as governor of Texas, he was graced with a pliable enough bipartisan Legislature, and the Legislature is where the real work in that state's governance gets done. The Texas Legislature's tension of opposites offered the structure of point and counterpoint, which Bush could navigate effectively with his strong, improvisational skills.

But the mahogany tables were now in the Situation Room and in the large conference room adjacent to the Oval Office. He guided a ruling party. Every issue that entered that rarefied sanctum required a complex decision, demanding focus, thoroughness and analytical potency.

For the president, as Biden said, to be acutely aware of his weaknesses -- and to have to worry about revealing uncertainty or need or confusion, even to senior officials -- must have presented an untenable bind. By summer's end that first year, Vice President Dick Cheney had stopped talking in meetings he attended with Bush. They would talk privately, or at their weekly lunch. The president was spending a lot of time outside the White House, often at the ranch, in the presence of only the most trustworthy confidants. The circle around Bush is the tightest around any president in the modern era, and ''it's both exclusive and exclusionary,'' Christopher DeMuth, president of the American Enterprise Institute, the neoconservative policy group, told me. ''It's a too tightly managed decision-making process. When they make decisions, a very small number of people are in the room, and it has a certain effect of constricting the range of alternatives being offered.''


On Sept. 11, 2001, the country watched intently to see if and how Bush would lead. After a couple of days in which he seemed shaky and uncertain, he emerged, and the moment he began to lead -- standing on the World Trade Center's rubble with a bullhorn -- for much of America, any lingering doubts about his abilities vanished. No one could afford doubt, not then. They wanted action, and George W. Bush was ready, having never felt the reasonable hesitations that slowed more deliberative men, and many presidents, including his father.

Within a few days of the attacks, Bush decided on the invasion of Afghanistan and was barking orders. His speech to the joint session of Congress on Sept. 20 will most likely be the greatest of his presidency. He prayed for God's help. And many Americans, of all faiths, prayed with him -- or for him. It was simple and nondenominational: a prayer that he'd be up to this moment, so that he -- and, by extension, we as a country -- would triumph in that dark hour.

This is where the faith-based presidency truly takes shape. Faith, which for months had been coloring the decision-making process and a host of political tactics -- think of his address to the nation on stem-cell research -- now began to guide events. It was the most natural ascension: George W. Bush turning to faith in his darkest moment and discovering a wellspring of power and confidence.

Of course, the mandates of sound, sober analysis didn't vanish. They never do. Ask any entrepreneur with a blazing idea when, a few years along, the first debt payments start coming due. Or the C.E.O., certain that a high stock price affirms his sweeping vision, until that neglected, flagging division cripples the company. There's a startled look -- how'd that happen? In this case, the challenge of mobilizing the various agencies of the United States government and making certain that agreed-upon goals become demonstrable outcomes grew exponentially.

Looking back at the months directly following 9/11, virtually every leading military analyst seems to believe that rather than using Afghan proxies, we should have used more American troops, deployed more quickly, to pursue Osama bin Laden in the mountains of Tora Bora. Many have also been critical of the president's handling of Saudi Arabia, home to 15 of the 19 hijackers; despite Bush's setting goals in the so-called ''financial war on terror,'' the Saudis failed to cooperate with American officials in hunting for the financial sources of terror. Still, the nation wanted bold action and was delighted to get it. Bush's approval rating approached 90 percent. Meanwhile, the executive's balance between analysis and resolution, between contemplation and action, was being tipped by the pull of righteous faith.

It was during a press conference on Sept. 16, in response to a question about homeland security efforts infringing on civil rights, that Bush first used the telltale word ''crusade'' in public. ''This is a new kind of -- a new kind of evil,'' he said. ''And we understand. And the American people are beginning to understand. This crusade, this war on terrorism is going to take a while.''

Muslims around the world were incensed. Two days later, Ari Fleischer tried to perform damage control. ''I think what the president was saying was -- had no intended consequences for anybody, Muslim or otherwise, other than to say that this is a broad cause that he is calling on America and the nations around the world to join.'' As to ''any connotations that would upset any of our partners, or anybody else in the world, the president would regret if anything like that was conveyed.''

A few months later, on Feb. 1, 2002, Jim Wallis of the Sojourners stood in the Roosevelt Room for the introduction of Jim Towey as head of the president's faith-based and community initiative. John DiIulio, the original head, had left the job feeling that the initiative was not about ''compassionate conservatism,'' as originally promised, but rather a political giveaway to the Christian right, a way to consolidate and energize that part of the base.

Moments after the ceremony, Bush saw Wallis. He bounded over and grabbed the cheeks of his face, one in each hand, and squeezed. ''Jim, how ya doin', how ya doin'!'' he exclaimed. Wallis was taken aback. Bush excitedly said that his massage therapist had given him Wallis's book, ''Faith Works.'' His joy at seeing Wallis, as Wallis and others remember it, was palpable -- a president, wrestling with faith and its role at a time of peril, seeing that rare bird: an independent counselor. Wallis recalls telling Bush he was doing fine, '''but in the State of the Union address a few days before, you said that unless we devote all our energies, our focus, our resources on this war on terrorism, we're going to lose.' I said, 'Mr. President, if we don't devote our energy, our focus and our time on also overcoming global poverty and desperation, we will lose not only the war on poverty, but we'll lose the war on terrorism.'''

Bush replied that that was why America needed the leadership of Wallis and other members of the clergy.

''No, Mr. President,'' Wallis says he told Bush, ''We need your leadership on this question, and all of us will then commit to support you. Unless we drain the swamp of injustice in which the mosquitoes of terrorism breed, we'll never defeat the threat of terrorism.''

Bush looked quizzically at the minister, Wallis recalls. They never spoke again after that.

''When I was first with Bush in Austin, what I saw was a self-help Methodist, very open, seeking,'' Wallis says now. ''What I started to see at this point was the man that would emerge over the next year -- a messianic American Calvinist. He doesn't want to hear from anyone who doubts him.''
But with a country crying out for intrepid leadership, does a president have time to entertain doubters? In a speech in Alaska two weeks later, Bush again referred to the war on terror as a ''crusade.''

In the summer of 2002, after I had written an article in Esquire that the White House didn't like about Bush's former communications director, Karen Hughes, I had a meeting with a senior adviser to Bush. He expressed the White House's displeasure, and then he told me something that at the time I didn't fully comprehend -- but which I now believe gets to the very heart of the Bush presidency.

The aide said that guys like me were ''in what we call the reality-based community,'' which he defined as people who ''believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.'' I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. ''That's not the way the world really works anymore,'' he continued. ''We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you're studying that reality -- judiciously, as you will -- we'll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that's how things will sort out. We're history's actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.''

Who besides guys like me are part of the reality-based community? Many of the other elected officials in Washington, it would seem. A group of Democratic and Republican members of Congress were called in to discuss Iraq sometime before the October 2002 vote authorizing Bush to move forward. A Republican senator recently told Time Magazine that the president walked in and said: ''Look, I want your vote. I'm not going to debate it with you.'' When one of the senators began to ask a question, Bush snapped, ''Look, I'm not going to debate it with you.''

The 9/11 commission did not directly address the question of whether Bush exerted influence over the intelligence community about the existence of weapons of mass destruction. That question will be investigated after the election, but if no tangible evidence of undue pressure is found, few officials or alumni of the administration whom I spoke to are likely to be surprised. ''If you operate in a certain way -- by saying this is how I want to justify what I've already decided to do, and I don't care how you pull it off -- you guarantee that you'll get faulty, one-sided information,'' Paul O'Neill, who was asked to resign his post of treasury secretary in December 2002, said when we had dinner a few weeks ago. ''You don't have to issue an edict, or twist arms, or be overt.''

In a way, the president got what he wanted: a National Intelligence Estimate on W.M.D. that creatively marshaled a few thin facts, and then Colin Powell putting his credibility on the line at the United Nations in a show of faith. That was enough for George W. Bush to press forward and invade Iraq. As he told his quasi-memoirist, Bob Woodward, in ''Plan of Attack'': ''Going into this period, I was praying for strength to do the Lord's will. . . . I'm surely not going to justify the war based upon God. Understand that. Nevertheless, in my case, I pray to be as good a messenger of his will as possible.''

Machiavelli's oft-cited line about the adequacy of the perception of power prompts a question. Is the appearance of confidence as important as its possession? Can confidence -- true confidence -- be willed? Or must it be earned?

George W. Bush, clearly, is one of history's great confidence men. That is not meant in the huckster's sense, though many critics claim that on the war in Iraq, the economy and a few other matters he has engaged in some manner of bait-and-switch. No, I mean it in the sense that he's a believer in the power of confidence. At a time when constituents are uneasy and enemies are probing for weaknesses, he clearly feels that unflinching confidence has an almost mystical power. It can all but create reality.

Whether you can run the world on faith, it's clear you can run one hell of a campaign on it.

George W. Bush and his team have constructed a high-performance electoral engine. The soul of this new machine is the support of millions of likely voters, who judge his worth based on intangibles -- character, certainty, fortitude and godliness -- rather than on what he says or does. The deeper the darkness, the brighter this filament of faith glows, a faith in the president and the just God who affirms him.

The leader of the free world is clearly comfortable with this calculus and artfully encourages it. In the series of televised, carefully choreographed ''Ask President Bush'' events with supporters around the country, sessions filled with prayers and blessings, one questioner recently summed up the feelings of so many Christian conservatives, the core of the Bush army. ''I've voted Republican from the very first time I could vote,'' said Gary Walby, a retired jeweler from Destin, Fla., as he stood before the president in a crowded college gym. ''And I also want to say this is the very first time that I have felt that God was in the White House.'' Bush simply said ''thank you'' as a wave of raucous applause rose from the assembled.

Every few months, a report surfaces of the president using strikingly Messianic language, only to be dismissed by the White House. Three months ago, for instance, in a private meeting with Amish farmers in Lancaster County, Pa., Bush was reported to have said, ''I trust God speaks through me.'' In this ongoing game of winks and nods, a White House spokesman denied the president had specifically spoken those words, but noted that ''his faith helps him in his service to people.''

A recent Gallup Poll noted that 42 percent of Americans identify themselves as evangelical or ''born again.'' While this group leans Republican, it includes black urban churches and is far from monolithic. But Bush clearly draws his most ardent supporters and tireless workers from this group, many from a healthy subset of approximately four million evangelicals who didn't vote in 2000 -- potential new arrivals to the voting booth who could tip a close election or push a tight contest toward a rout.

This signaling system -- forceful, national, varied, yet clean of the president's specific fingerprint -- carries enormous weight. Lincoln Chafee, the moderate Republican senator from Rhode Island, has broken with the president precisely over concerns about the nature of Bush's certainty. ''This issue,'' he says, of Bush's ''announcing that 'I carry the word of God' is the key to the election. The president wants to signal to the base with that message, but in the swing states he does not.''

Come to the hustings on Labor Day and meet the base. In 2004, you know a candidate by his base, and the Bush campaign is harnessing the might of churches, with hordes of voters registering through church-sponsored programs. Following the news of Bush on his national tour in the week after the Republican convention, you could sense how a faith-based president campaigns: on a surf of prayer and righteous rage.

Righteous rage -- that's what Hardy Billington felt when he heard about same-sex marriage possibly being made legal in Massachusetts. ''It made me upset and disgusted, things going on in Massachusetts,'' the 52-year-old from Poplar Bluff, Mo., told me. ''I prayed, then I got to work.'' Billington spent $830 in early July to put up a billboard on the edge of town. It read: ''I Support President Bush and the Men and Women Fighting for Our Country. We Invite President Bush to Visit Poplar Bluff.'' Soon Billington and his friend David Hahn, a fundamentalist preacher, started a petition drive. They gathered 10,000 signatures. That fact eventually reached the White House scheduling office.
By late afternoon on a cloudy Labor Day, with a crowd of more than 20,000 assembled in a public park, Billington stepped to the podium. ''The largest group I ever talked to I think was seven people, and I'm not much of a talker,''

Billington, a shy man with three kids and a couple of dozen rental properties that he owns, told me several days later. ''I've never been so frightened.''
But Billington said he ''looked to God'' and said what was in his heart. ''The United States is the greatest country in the world,'' he told the rally. ''President Bush is the greatest president I have ever known. I love my president. I love my country. And more important, I love Jesus Christ.''

The crowd went wild, and they went wild again when the president finally arrived and gave his stump speech. There were Bush's periodic stumbles and gaffes, but for the followers of the faith-based president, that was just fine. They got it -- and ''it'' was the faith.

And for those who don't get it? That was explained to me in late 2002 by Mark McKinnon, a longtime senior media adviser to Bush, who now runs his own consulting firm and helps the president. He started by challenging me. ''You think he's an idiot, don't you?'' I said, no, I didn't. ''No, you do, all of you do, up and down the West Coast, the East Coast, a few blocks in southern Manhattan called Wall Street. Let me clue you in. We don't care. You see, you're outnumbered 2 to 1 by folks in the big, wide middle of America, busy working people who don't read The New York Times or Washington Post or The L.A. Times. And you know what they like? They like the way he walks and the way he points, the way he exudes confidence. They have faith in him. And when you attack him for his malaprops, his jumbled syntax, it's good for us. Because you know what those folks don't like? They don't like you!'' In this instance, the final ''you,'' of course, meant the entire reality-based community.

The bond between Bush and his base is a bond of mutual support. He supports them with his actions, doing his level best to stand firm on wedge issues like abortion and same-sex marriage while he identifies evil in the world, at home and abroad. They respond with fierce faith. The power of this transaction is something that people, especially those who are religious, tend to connect to their own lives. If you have faith in someone, that person is filled like a vessel. Your faith is the wind beneath his or her wings. That person may well rise to the occasion and surprise you: I had faith in you, and my faith was rewarded. Or, I know you've been struggling, and I need to pray harder.

Bush's speech that day in Poplar Bluff finished with a mythic appeal: ''For all Americans, these years in our history will always stand apart,'' he said. ''You know, there are quiet times in the life of a nation when little is expected of its leaders. This isn't one of those times. This is a time that needs -- when we need firm resolve and clear vision and a deep faith in the values that make us a great nation.''

The life of the nation and the life of Bush effortlessly merge -- his fortitude, even in the face of doubters, is that of the nation; his ordinariness, like theirs, is heroic; his resolve, to whatever end, will turn the wheel of history.
Remember, this is consent, informed by the heart and by the spirit. In the end, Bush doesn't have to say he's ordained by God. After a day of speeches by Hardy Billington and others, it goes without saying.

''To me, I just believe God controls everything, and God uses the president to keep evil down, to see the darkness and protect this nation,'' Billington told me, voicing an idea shared by millions of Bush supporters. ''Other people will not protect us. God gives people choices to make. God gave us this president to be the man to protect the nation at this time.''

But when the moment came in the V.I.P. tent to shake Bush's hand, Billington remembered being reserved. '''I really thank God that you're the president' was all I told him.'' Bush, he recalled, said, ''Thank you.''

''He knew what I meant,'' Billington said. ''I believe he's an instrument of God, but I have to be careful about what I say, you know, in public.''

Is there anyone in America who feels that John Kerry is an instrument of God?
''I'm going to be real positive, while I keep my foot on John Kerry's throat,'' George W. Bush said last month at a confidential luncheon a block away from the White House with a hundred or so of his most ardent, longtime supporters, the so-called R.N.C. Regents. This was a high-rolling crowd -- at one time or another, they had all given large contributions to Bush or the Republican National Committee. Bush had known many of them for years, and a number of them had visited him at the ranch. It was a long way from Poplar Bluff.

The Bush these supporters heard was a triumphal Bush, actively beginning to plan his second term. It is a second term, should it come to pass, that will alter American life in many ways, if predictions that Bush voiced at the luncheon come true.

He said emphatically that he expects the Republicans will gain seats to expand their control of the House and the Senate. According to notes provided to me, and according to several guests at the lunch who agreed to speak about what they heard, he said that ''Osama bin Laden would like to overthrow the Saudis . . . then we're in trouble. Because they have a weapon. They have the oil.'' He said that there will be an opportunity to appoint a Supreme Court justice shortly after his inauguration, and perhaps three more high-court vacancies during his second term.

''Won't that be amazing?'' said Peter Stent, a rancher and conservationist who attended the luncheon. ''Can you imagine? Four appointments!''
After his remarks, Bush opened it up for questions, and someone asked what he's going to do about energy policy with worldwide oil reserves predicted to peak.

Bush said: ''I'm going to push nuclear energy, drilling in Alaska and clean coal. Some nuclear-fusion technologies are interesting.'' He mentions energy from ''processing corn.''

''I'm going to bring all this up in the debate, and I'm going to push it,'' he said, and then tried out a line. ''Do you realize that ANWR [the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge] is the size of South Carolina, and where we want to drill is the size of the Columbia airport?''

The questions came from many directions -- respectful, but clearly reality-based. About the deficits, he said he'd ''spend whatever it takes to protect our kids in Iraq,'' that ''homeland security cost more than I originally thought.''
In response to a question, he talked about diversity, saying that ''hands down,'' he has the most diverse senior staff in terms of both gender and race. He recalled a meeting with Chancellor Gerhard Schröder of Germany. ''You know, I'm sitting there with Schröder one day with Colin and Condi. And I'm thinking: What's Schröder thinking?! He's sitting here with two blacks and one's a woman.''

But as the hour passed, Bush kept coming back to the thing most on his mind: his second term.

''I'm going to come out strong after my swearing in,'' Bush said, ''with fundamental tax reform, tort reform, privatizing of Social Security.'' The victories he expects in November, he said, will give us ''two years, at least, until the next midterm. We have to move quickly, because after that I'll be quacking like a duck.''

Joseph Gildenhorn, a top contributor who attended the luncheon and has been invited to visit Bush at his ranch, said later: ''I've never seen the president so ebullient. He was so confident. He feels so strongly he will win.'' Yet one part of Bush's 60-odd-minute free-form riff gave Gildenhorn -- a board member of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and a former ambassador to Switzerland -- a moment's pause. The president, listing priorities for his second term, placed near the top of his agenda the expansion of federal support for faith-based institutions. The president talked at length about giving the initiative the full measure of his devotion and said that questions about separation of church and state were not an issue.

Talk of the faith-based initiative, Gildenhorn said, makes him ''a little uneasy.'' Many conservative evangelicals ''feel they have a direct line from God,'' he said, and feel Bush is divinely chosen.

''I think he's religious, I think he's a born-again, I don't think, though, that he feels that he's been ordained by God to serve the country.'' Gildenhorn paused, then said, ''But you know, I really haven't discussed it with him.''

A regent I spoke to later and who asked not to be identified told me: ''I'm happy he's certain of victory and that he's ready to burst forth into his second term, but it all makes me a little nervous. There are a lot of big things that he's planning to do domestically, and who knows what countries we might invade or what might happen in Iraq. But when it gets complex, he seems to turn to prayer or God rather than digging in and thinking things through. What's that line? -- the devil's in the details. If you don't go after that devil, he'll come after you.''

Bush grew into one of history's most forceful leaders, his admirers will attest, by replacing hesitation and reasonable doubt with faith and clarity. Many more will surely tap this high-voltage connection of fervent faith and bold action. In politics, the saying goes, anything that works must be repeated until it is replaced by something better. The horizon seems clear of competitors.

Can the unfinished American experiment in self-governance -- sputtering on the watery fuel of illusion and assertion -- deal with something as nuanced as the subtleties of one man's faith? What, after all, is the nature of the particular conversation the president feels he has with God -- a colloquy upon which the world now precariously turns?

That very issue is what Jim Wallis wishes he could sit and talk about with George W. Bush. That's impossible now, he says. He is no longer invited to the White House.

''Faith can cut in so many ways,'' he said. ''If you're penitent and not triumphal, it can move us to repentance and accountability and help us reach for something higher than ourselves. That can be a powerful thing, a thing that moves us beyond politics as usual, like Martin Luther King did. But when it's designed to certify our righteousness -- that can be a dangerous thing. Then it pushes self-criticism aside. There's no reflection.

''Where people often get lost is on this very point,'' he said after a moment of thought. ''Real faith, you see, leads us to deeper reflection and not -- not ever -- to the thing we as humans so very much want.''

And what is that?

''Easy certainty.''

Ron Suskind was the senior national-affairs reporter for The Wall Street Journal from 1993 to 2000. He is the author most recently of ''The Price of Loyalty: George W. Bush, the White House and the Education of Paul O'Neill.''




100 Years of Ineptitude

100 Years of IneptitudeIt's hard to watch Red Sox games these days. It really is. I want them to win as badly as any non-Sox fan, but it's tough to sit through a game against the Yanks, especially one at Fenway, and see all the long faces in the stands saying, "oh, here we go again", in concert. Last night's extra-inning victory was outstanding and a great moment for the team and its fans, but it only delayed the inevitable, another loss to the Yankee machine.

The next thing Red Sox fans have to look forward to is the end of the 2017 season when they can get together and celebrate 100 years of ineptitude.

If they can't beat the Yankees this year with Schilling and Matrinez on the mound, they are never going to beat them. The worst thing for the Sox is that every Yankee win gives them more money and further entrenches them as the best team ever, fair or not.

I definitely feel for. My team (Dodgers) hasn't won shpilkas since 1988 and it's killing me, but at least it was in my lifetime. I would like nothing more than to see a Cubs-Red Sox series some time in the next few years to at least give one of these sorry cities something to celebrate.

October 15, 2004

Rock The Vote, The RNC & The Draft

Take a look at this. It's a cease and desist letter to Rock the Vote from RNC Chairman Ed Gillespie trying to get them to stop discussing the possibility of draft with a threat to remove their status as a non-profit (as if he has the power to do that).

To defend his point, Gillespie qoutes members of the adminstration like, well, the president:

""We don't need the draft. Look, the all-volunteer force is working..."

What the hell else is he going to say? Gillespie goes on to write that claims that the draft could be instituted is tantamount to "malicious intent and a reckless disregard for the truth." I suppose that's one way to squelch healthy debate in America.

The oddest thing is that at the end of the letter Gillespie tries to make nice by saying that "the Republican National Committe shares the goal of your organization to encourage voter registration and "empower yonug people to change the world." I think what he meant to say was the RNC values younger voters so long as they take their political ques from Brittany Spears.

Jon Stewart to Tucker Carlson: "You're a Dick"

Jon Stewart is my hero.

He went on Crossfire today and instead of joking around as the clueless hosts obviously expected him to, he took them task for shirking their responsibility as journalists. Then he actially called Carlson a "dick", something most Americans would probabaly have loved to have said to the "journalist".

CARLSON: I do think you're more fun on your show. Just my opinion.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: OK, up next, Jon Stewart goes one on one with his fans...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: You know what's interesting, though? You're as big a dick on your show as you are on any show.

Amazing. My hero. You can read the whole transcript of the show on the Crossfire website.

The Trouble With Sinclair

If you're at all bothered by the impact of media conglomeration in this country and want to see an example of how it is being abused in the 2004 campaign, then the story brewing about the Sinclair Broadcast Group and their plans to run an anti-Kerry documentary has got your blood boiling.

So much has been written about this already that I'm just going to point you to a very well written piece by Jay Rosen that covers the spectrum of the SBG issue:

Like Agnew with TV Stations: Sinclair Broadcast Group Takes On Kerry and The Liberal Media

The Ironic Faux Cheney Outrage

This fake Cheney family outrage about John Kerry referencing their daughter in a response in the 3rd debate to a question about homosexuality is really bothering me, not because I think it's going to the Democratic campaign any harm, but because Lyn Cheney's charge of a "Cheap and tawdry political trick" is so hypocrital it's beyond funny.

The irony is that Cheney's fake outrage is exactly the sort of the "Cheap and tawdry political trick" that takes the focus away from W getting trounced in the debates, away from real issues, and focuses attention on something meaningless, which, for whatever reason, voters are drawn to like moths to the light. Seriously, who, other than me, is going to question a mother of a lesbian when she pretends to be outraged?

I'm not just pulling this shit out my keister. The reason I think this is because I watched the VP debate when this issue was brought up, not by John Edwards, but by Gwen Ifill. The exchange is really telling.

IFILL: The next question goes to you, Mr. Vice President.

I want to read something you said four years ago at this very setting: "Freedom means freedom for everybody." You said it again recently when you were asked about legalizing same-sex unions. And you used your family's experience as a context for your remarks.

Can you describe then your administration's support for a constitutional ban on same-sex unions?




Here, Cheney could have showed outrage to the moderator at bringing up his family in reference to homosexuality, but he didn't. He answered what must have been a tough question for him because he obviously disagrees with the president on this issue.

CHENEY: Gwen, you're right, four years ago in this debate, the subject came up. And I said then and I believe today that freedom does mean freedom for everybody. People ought to be free to choose any arrangement they want. It's really no one else's business.

That's a separate question from the issue of whether or not government should sanction or approve or give some sort of authorization, if you will, to these relationships.

Traditionally, that's been an issue for the states. States have regulated marriage, if you will. That would be my preference.

In effect, what's happened is that in recent months, especially in Massachusetts, but also in California, but in Massachusetts we had the Massachusetts Supreme Court direct the state of -- the legislature of Massachusetts to modify their constitution to allow gay marriage.

And the fact is that the president felt that it was important to make it clear that that's the wrong way to go, as far as he's concerned.

Now, he sets the policy for this administration, and I support the president.




When it came time for John Edwards to respond, he brought up Mary Cheney in the same way that Kerry has been lambasted for in the 3rd debate.

Now, as to this question, let me say first that I think the vice president and his wife love their daughter. I think they love her very much. And you can't have anything but respect for the fact that they're willing to talk about the fact that they have a gay daughter, the fact that they embrace her. It's a wonderful thing. And there are millions of parents like that who love their children, who want their children to be happy.

Did Cheney respond with outrage. How dare you bring my daughter into this. No. Quite the opposite.

IFILL: Mr. Vice President, you have 90 seconds.

CHENEY: Well, Gwen, let me simply thank the senator for the kind words he said about my family and our daughter.

I appreciate that very much.

IFILL: That's it?

CHENEY: That's it.

Was the VP being disingenuous when he thanked Edwards for the "kind words he said about my family and our daughter?" I don't think so. It was one of the VP's only human responses of the evening. So how can we justify the difference in the two responses following each debate except to say that the Cheney outrage is the exact kind of that they are accusing John Kerry of. The Cheney's were tripping over themselves to launch yet another (undeserved) character attack on Kerry.


**UPDATE**

Activist accuses GOP of 'attacking gays'
Head of gay GOP group Log Republicans lashes out

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The head of the nation's largest gay and lesbian Republican group slammed fellow Republicans Friday for "feigning outrage" over comments by Sen. John Kerry, and called on President Bush to "stop attacking gay families on the campaign trail." [more]

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October 14, 2004

Late Night Humor

From the "Late Show with David Letterman", via the Associated Press:

Top Ten President Bush Explanations For The Bulge In His Jacket

10. "It's connected to an earpiece so Cheney can feed me answers -- crap, I wasn't supposed to say that!"

9. "It's a device that shocks me every time I mispronounce a word."

8. "Just a bunch of intelligence memos I haven't gotten around to reading yet."

7. "Mmm, delicious Muenster cheese."

6. "John Kerry initially voted for the bulge in my jacket, then voted against it."

5. "I'll tell you exactly what it is -- it's a clear sign this economy is moving again."

4. "Halliburton is drilling my back for oil."

3. "Oh, like you've never cheated in a presidential debate!"

2. "Accidentally took some of Governer Schwarzenegger's (ste)'roids."

1. "If Kerry's gonna look like a horse, then I'm gonna look like a camel."




Assault Weapons Ban Disconnect

It should be obvious to anyone who knows anything about the president that his "support" of the Assault Weapons Ban is a joke. There's just no excuse with a Republican House and a Republican Senate to credibly say that he's for the bill while it's being quashed in Congress.

But then he said something in the meat of his response that is so at odds with his approach to terrorism that I can't make heads of tails of it.

But the best way to protect our citizens from guns is to prosecute those who commit crimes with guns.

Not only do I fundamentally disagree with the premise of this statement I find it shocking in it's implicit alignment with 2nd amendment wingnuts. Why isn't it just as important to "pre-emptively" act to stop gun crimes as it is to stop terrorism?

"Of Course" Watch

Dan Froomkin over at the Washington Post has made a fascinating observation about a tendencency of George Bush's to preface remarks that appear questionable with "Of Course".

Here's every instance of "of course" from last night:

• "Gosh, I just don't think I ever said I'm not worried about Osama bin Laden. It's kind of one of those exaggerations. Of course we're worried about Osama bin Laden."

• "Of course we're meeting our obligation to our veterans, and the veterans know that."

• Regarding his Social Security plans: "And we're of course going to have to consider the costs."

Read the whole article for more examples both inside and outside of the debates.

Answer The Question!

One of the most annoying parts of the last debate is that again and again, when faced with a question he could not or would not answer, President Bush didn't and instead went on to talk about education or legal reform or anything else that would take people's mind off the fact that he has an indefensible record. Here are some examples:

SCHIEFFER: Mr. President, I want to go back to something Senator Kerry said earlier tonight and ask a follow-up of my own. He said -- and this will be a new question to you -- he said that you had never said whether you would like to overturn Roe v. Wade. So I'd ask you directly, would you like to?

BUSH: What he's asking me is, will I have a litmus test for my judges? And the answer is, no, I will not have a litmus test. I will pick judges who will interpret the Constitution, but I'll have no litmus test.




That was Bush's entire two minute response. It confused Kerry so much that he had had to ask for clarification as to how much time he had to respond.

On the minimum wage:

Actually, Mitch McConnell had a minimum-wage plan that I supported that would have increased the minimum wage.

But let me talk about what's really important for the worker you're referring to. And that's to make sure the education system works. It's to make sure we raise standards.

On the assault weapons bad:

Actually, I made my intentions -- made my views clear. I did think we ought to extend the assault weapons ban, and was told the fact that the bill was never going to move, because Republicans and Democrats were against the assault weapon ban, people of both parties.

I believe law-abiding citizens ought to be able to own a gun. I believe in background checks at gun shows or anywhere to make sure that guns don't get in the hands of people that shouldn't have them.

on Affirmative Action:

Well, first of all, it is just not true that I haven't met with the Black Congressional Caucus. I met with the Black Congressional Caucus at the White House.

And secondly, like my opponent, I don't agree we ought to have quotas. I agree, we shouldn't have quotas." (Bush only met with the "Black Congressional Caucus" when they showed up at the White House and demanded to meet with him after he repeatedly refused.)

Again, if you missed the debate, you can read the entire transcript at the including the Washington Post.

Chiron, The Flu, The President & You

SCHIEFFER: New question, Mr. President, to you.

We are talking about protecting ourselves from the unexpected, but the flu season is suddenly upon us. Flu kills thousands of people every year.

Suddenly we find ourselves with a severe shortage of flu vaccine. How did that happen?

BUSH: Bob, we relied upon a company out of England to provide about half of the flu vaccines for the United States citizen, and it turned out that the vaccine they were producing was contaminated. And so we took the right action and didn't allow contaminated medicine into our country.

We're working with Canada to hopefully -- that they'll produce a -- help us realize the vaccine necessary to make sure our citizens have got flu vaccinations during this upcoming season.

My call to our fellow Americans is if you're healthy, if you're younger, don't get a flu shot this year. Help us prioritize those who need to get the flu shot, the elderly and the young.

The CDC, responsible for health in the United States, is setting those priorities and is allocating the flu vaccine accordingly.

I haven't gotten a flu shot, and I don't intend to because I want to make sure those who are most vulnerable get treated.

We have a problem with litigation in the United States of America. Vaccine manufacturers are worried about getting sued, and therefore they have backed off from providing this kind of vaccine.

One of the reasons I'm such a strong believer in legal reform is so that people aren't afraid of producing a product that is necessary for the health of our citizens and then end up getting sued in a court of law.

But the best thing we can do now, Bob, given the circumstances with the company in England is for those of us who are younger and healthy, don't get a flu shot.




First, Since I work for Chiron, the company in question, which, as I know since I'm currently sitting here in our corporate offices, is not an English company, but one based in Emeryville, CA, that the President is wrong when he says this is a an English company. It's an American company with a manufacturing plant in the U.K.

Second, if we're working with Canada to help produce more flu vaccine and that is obviously "safe", then importing prescription drugs from Canada should also be deemed safe.

Third, Bush said "'We took the right action and didn't allow contaminated medicine into our country", which is not true, since it was English regulators who shut down the plant.

Finally the reason that companies like Chiron don't want to produce the flu vaccine has nothing to do with "manufacturers .... worried about getting sued", but has everything to do with an unstable market from year to year. Companies are reluctant to produce the vaccine because they have no idea whether or not it will sell. If it doesn't they have to throw away millions of vials because the vaccine doesn't keep from year to year. It has nothing to do with litigation, frivolous or otherwise.

The Bin Laden Problem

SCHIEFFER: Anything to add, Senator Kerry?

KERRY: Yes. When the president had an opportunity to capture or kill Osama bin Laden, he took his focus off of them, outsourced the job to Afghan warlords, and Osama bin Laden escaped.

Six months after he said Osama bin Laden must be caught dead or alive, this president was asked, "Where is Osama bin Laden?" He said, "I don't know. I don't really think about him very much. I'm not that concerned."

We need a president who stays deadly focused on the real war on terror.

SCHIEFFER: Mr. President?

BUSH: Gosh, I just don't think I ever said I'm not worried about Osama bin Laden. It's kind of one of those exaggerations.

Of course we're worried about Osama bin Laden. We're on the hunt after Osama bin Laden. We're using every asset at our disposal to get Osama bin Laden.




The problem is Kerry wasn't exaggerating at all. (I think maybe Bush forgot that he was running against the serial flip-flopper and confused him with Gore, the serial exaggerator). Back in a March 2003 news conference, Bush was asked then by Kelly Wallace of CNN why he so rarely mentioned bin Laden, and whether bin Laden was, in fact, dead or alive.

Bush's answer: "Well, deep in my heart, I know the man is on the run if he's alive at all. Who knows if he's hiding in some cave or not? We haven't heard from him in a long time. And the idea of focusing on one person is -- really indicates to me people don't understand the scope of the mission.

"Terror is bigger than one person. And he's just -- he's a person who's now been marginalized. His network is -- his host government has been destroyed. He's the ultimate parasite who found weakness, exploited it, and met his match. He is -- as I've mentioned in my speeches, I do mention the fact that this is a fellow who is willing to commit youngsters to their death, and he himself tries to hide -- if, in fact, he's hiding at all.

"So I don't know where he is. You know, I just don't spend that much time on him, Kelly, to be honest with you. . . . I truly am not that concerned about him."

I think I'll just let that stand for itself.

No Child Left Behind: The Panacea

I didn't realize this until watching the 3rd presidental debate (again at the Parkway Lounge in Oakland), but apparently the No Child Left Behind legislation that President Bush signed is going to solve all the problems that this country faces.

Almost every time the president was uncertain how to answer a question he returned to the No Child Left Behind Act.

about jobs:

"Listen, the No Child Left Behind Act is really a jobs act when you think about it."

about partisanship:

"The No Child Left Behind Act"

about everything:

"The No Child Left Behind Act"

This was part and parcel of an issue that the President had all night. Again and again, he chose not to answer the question asked and instead went off on some tangent.

This is one of the most telling responses:

SCHIEFFER: Let's go to a new question, Mr. President. Two minutes. And let's continue on jobs.

You know, there are all kind of statistics out there, but I want to bring it down to an individual.

Mr. President, what do you say to someone in this country who has lost his job to someone overseas who's being paid a fraction of what that job paid here in the United States?

BUSH: I'd say, Bob, I've got policies to continue to grow our economy and create the jobs of the 21st century. And here's some help for you to go get an education. Here's some help for you to go to a community college.

We've expanded trade adjustment assistance. We want to help pay for you to gain the skills necessary to fill the jobs of the 21st century.

You know, there's a lot of talk about how to keep the economy growing. We talk about fiscal matters. But perhaps the best way to keep jobs here in America and to keep this economy growing is to make sure our education system works.

I went to Washington to solve problems. And I saw a problem in the public education system in America. They were just shuffling too many kids through the system, year after year, grade after grade, without learning the basics.

And so we said: Let's raise the standards. We're spending more money, but let's raise the standards and measure early and solve problems now, before it's too late.

No, education is how to help the person who's lost a job. Education is how to make sure we've got a workforce that's productive and competitive.

Got four more years, I've got more to do to continue to raise standards, to continue to reward teachers and school districts that are working, to emphasize math and science in the classrooms, to continue to expand Pell Grants to make sure that people have an opportunity to start their career with a college diploma.

And so the person you talked to, I say, here's some help, here's some trade adjustment assistance money for you to go a community college in your neighborhood, a community college which is providing the skills necessary to fill the jobs of the 21st century. And that's what I would say to that person.

SCHIEFFER: Senator Kerry?

KERRY: I want you to notice how the president switched away from jobs and started talking about education principally.

Let me come back in one moment to that, but I want to speak for a second, if I can, to what the president said about fiscal responsibility.

Being lectured by the president on fiscal responsibility is a little bit like Tony Soprano talking to me about law and order in this country.

(LAUGHTER)

This president has taken a $5.6 trillion surplus and turned it into deficits as far as the eye can see. Health-care costs for the average American have gone up 64 percent; tuitions have gone up 35 percent; gasoline prices up 30 percent; Medicare premiums went up 17 percent a few days ago; prescription drugs are up 12 percent a year.

But guess what, America? The wages of Americans have gone down. The jobs that are being created in Arizona right now are paying about $13,700 less than the jobs that we're losing.

And the president just walks on by this problem. The fact is that he's cut job-training money. $1 billion was cut. They only added a little bit back this year because it's an election year.

They've cut the Pell Grants and the Perkins loans to help kids be able to go to college.

They've cut the training money. They've wound up not even extending unemployment benefits and not even extending health care to those people who are unemployed.

I'm going to do those things, because that's what's right in America: Help workers to transition in every respect.




Oh, Nevermind

In one of the oddest responses in a series of debates where President Bush has looked downright uncomfortable, he responded to Kerry's defense of his health plan by saying:

In all due respect, I'm not so sure it's credible to quote leading news organizations about -- oh, nevermind.

I listened hard afterward to commentators on CNN, MSNBC, NPR and Fox and not one mentioned this very strange moment.

You can find the transcript of the entire debate at the washingtonpost.com

the full text of that part of the debate follows:

SCHIEFFER: Let me direct the next question to you, Senator Kerry, and again, let's stay on health care.

You have, as you have proposed and as the president has commented on tonight, proposed a massive plan to extend health-care coverage to children. You're also talking about the government picking up a big part of the catastrophic bills that people get at the hospital.

And you have said that you can pay for this by rolling back the president's tax cut on the upper 2 percent.

You heard the president say earlier tonight that it's going to cost a whole lot more money than that.

I'd just ask you, where are you going to get the money?

KERRY: Well, two leading national news networks have both said the president's characterization of my health-care plan is incorrect. One called it fiction. The other called it untrue.

The fact is that my health-care plan, America, is very simple. It gives you the choice. I don't force you to do anything. It's not a government plan. The government doesn't require you to do anything. You choose your doctor. You choose your plan.

If you don't want to take the offer of the plan that I want to put forward, you don't have do. You can keep what you have today, keep a high deductible, keep high premiums, keep a high co-pay, keep low benefits.

But I got a better plan. And I don't think a lot of people are going to want to keep what they have today.

Here's what I do: We take over Medicaid children from the states so that every child in America is covered. And in exchange, if the states want to -- they're not forced to, they can choose to -- they cover individuals up to 300 percent of poverty. It's their choice.

I think they'll choose it, because it's a net plus of $5 billion to them.

We allow you -- if you choose to, you don't have to -- but we give you broader competition to allow you to buy into the same health care plan that senators and congressmen give themselves. If it's good enough for us, it's good enough for every American. I believe that your health care is just as important as any politician in Washington, D.C.

You want to buy into it, you can. We give you broader competition. That helps lower prices.

In addition to that, we're going to allow people 55 to 64 to buy into Medicare early. And most importantly, we give small business a 50 percent tax credit so that after we lower the costs of health care, they also get, whether they're self-employed or a small business, a lower cost to be able to cover their employees.

Now, what happens is when you begin to get people covered like that -- for instance in diabetes, if you diagnose diabetes early, you could save $50 billion in the health care system of America by avoiding surgery and dialysis. It works. And I'm going to offer it to America.

SCHIEFFER: Mr. President?

BUSH: In all due respect, I'm not so sure it's credible to quote leading news organizations about -- oh, nevermind. Anyway, let me quote the Lewin report. The Lewin report is a group of folks who are not politically affiliated. They analyzed the senator's plan. It cost $1.2 trillion.

The Lewin report accurately noted that there are going to be 20 million people, over 20 million people added to government-controlled health care. It would be the largest increase in government health care ever.

If you raise the Medicaid to 300 percent, it provides an incentive for small businesses not to provide private insurance to their employees. Why should they insure somebody when the government's going to insure it for them?

It's estimated that 8 million people will go from private insurance to government insurance.

We have a fundamental difference of opinion. I think government- run health will lead to poor-quality health, will lead to rationing, will lead to less choice.

Once a health-care program ends up in a line item in the federal government budget, it leads to more controls.

And just look at other countries that have tried to have federally controlled health care. They have poor-quality health care.

Our health-care system is the envy of the world because we believe in making sure that the decisions are made by doctors and patients, not by officials in the nation's capital.




George Bush: Record of Acheivement

Maybe this is why W has such a hard time defending his record when he pressed by an articulate opponent. He beleives his own propoganda.

There's also a new column by Tom Friedman which is very revealing about some of the problems that afflict this administration that is well worth reading.

ADDICTED TO 9/11

I don't know whether to laugh or cry when I hear the president and vice president slamming John Kerry for saying that he hopes America can eventually get back to a place where "terrorists are not the focus of our lives, but they're a nuisance." The idea that President Bush and Mr. Cheney would declare such a statement to be proof that Mr. Kerry is unfit to lead actually says more about them than Mr. Kerry. Excuse me, I don't know about you, but I dream of going back to the days when terrorism was just a nuisance in our lives.

If I have a choice, I prefer not to live the rest of my life with the difference between a good day and bad day being whether Homeland Security tells me it is "code red" or "code orange" outside. To get inside the Washington office of the International Monetary Fund the other day, I had to show my ID, wait for an escort and fill out a one-page form about myself and my visit. I told my host: "Look, I don't want a loan. I just want an interview." Somewhere along the way we've gone over the top and lost our balance.

That's why Mr. Kerry was actually touching something many Americans are worried about - that this war on terrorism is transforming us and our society, when it was supposed to be about uprooting the terrorists and transforming their societies.

The Bush team's responses to Mr. Kerry's musings are revealing because they go to the very heart of how much this administration has become addicted to 9/11. The president has exploited the terrorism issue for political ends - trying to make it into another wedge issue like abortion, guns or gay rights - to rally the Republican base and push his own political agenda. But it is precisely this exploitation of 9/11 that has gotten him and the country off-track, because it has not only created a wedge between Republicans and Democrats, it's also created a wedge between America and the rest of the world, between America and its own historical identity, and between the president and common sense.

By exploiting the emotions around 9/11, Mr. Bush took a far-right agenda on taxes, the environment and social issues - for which he had no electoral mandate - and drove it into a 9/12 world. In doing so, Mr. Bush made himself the most divisive and polarizing president in modern history.

By using 9/11 to justify launching a war in Iraq without U.N. support, Mr. Bush also created a huge wedge between America and the rest of the world. I sympathize with the president when he says he would never have gotten a U.N. consensus for a strategy of trying to get at the roots of terrorism by reshaping the Arab-Muslim regimes that foster it - starting with Iraq.

But in politicizing 9/11, Mr. Bush drove a wedge between himself and common sense when it came to implementing his Iraq strategy. After failing to find any W.M.D. in Iraq, he became so dependent on justifying the Iraq war as the response to 9/11 - a campaign to bring freedom and democracy to the Arab-Muslim world - that he refused to see reality in Iraq. The president seemed to be saying to himself, "Something so good and right as getting rid of Saddam can't possibly be going so wrong." Long after it was obvious to anyone who visited Iraq that we never had enough troops there to establish order, Mr. Bush simply ignored reality. When pressed on Iraq, he sought cover behind 9/11 and how it required "tough decisions" - as if the tough decision to go to war in Iraq, in the name of 9/11, should make him immune to criticism over how he conducted the war.

Lastly, politicizing 9/11 put a wedge between us and our history. The Bush team has turned this country into "The United States of Fighting Terrorism." "Bush only seems able to express our anger, not our hopes," said the Mideast expert Stephen P. Cohen. "His whole focus is on an America whose role in the world is to negate the negation of the terrorists. But America has always been about the affirmation of something positive. That is missing today. Beyond Afghanistan, they've been much better at destruction than construction."

I wish Mr. Kerry were better able to articulate how America is going to get its groove back. But the point he was raising about wanting to put terrorism back into perspective is correct. I want a president who can one day restore Sept. 11th to its rightful place on the calendar: as the day after Sept. 10th and before Sept. 12th. I do not want it to become a day that defines us. Because ultimately Sept. 11th is about them - the bad guys - not about us. We're about the Fourth of July.

--Tom Friedman


October 13, 2004

Great Questions

Before the debates, the New York Times Editorial Page runs questions for both candidates. I've read it a few times and only marginally been impressed with what was being proffered until today. In the questions for Bush, Alan Ehrenhalt, the executive editor of Governing magazine, poses a few burners that would great to hear at the debate*. One can only hope that Bob Schieffer reads the paper.

Mandate Madness

As a candidate in 2000, you argued in favor of compassionate conservatism and a restoration of decency and moderation to the national government. Those of us who voted for you took this seriously. But your personal demeanor as president has been belligerent and dismissive of virtually anyone who opposes your policies. You state flatly that anyone who is not with you is against you, and at least imply that disagreement is equivalent to disloyalty. You refuse to admit making mistakes, even when it is obvious that you made them. You all but invite attacks on the country with "bring it on" taunting that makes you sound more like a gang leader than a responsible head of state. What happened to your promise of compassion? Have you concluded that moderation and decency are not useful qualities in a president?

When you were governor of Texas, you complained about the long list of mandates that Washington was imposing on the states without supplying the money to pay for them. You criticized the Republican Congress for ignoring legitimate state complaints. "Mandates are mandates, regardless of the philosophical bent of the person doing the mandating," you said in May 1998. "It starts at the White House." But your administration has imposed billions of dollars in mandates without even a pretense of offering sufficient money for states to meet them. Did your concern for fairness to Texas and the 49 other state governments simply evaporate when you moved into the White House?




* That would be if the candidates actually were responsible to answer the questions asked of them

Kill Me Ambiguously

I'm an atheist so maybe you can understand why I can't justify the "conservative" position on abortion, stem cell research and the death penalty. Presumably they all come from the 6th Commandment, Thou Shall Not Kill. I get that. And if there was a consistent position, I could at least disagree respectfully. But how can you, on the one hand, be pro-life and say abortion is murder, and be against stem cell research and say killing embryos is murder, and yet be for the death penalty?

On the other hand one can easily see how the argument could be made against the death penalty (it doesn't work) or for stem cell research (if an embryo is life then all the people who use fertility clinics are murders) or for abortion.

My argument for abortion is based on rational thinking which goes like this. Whether you are for abortion or against it, you have agree that legislating against will not decrease the demand. Instead it will criminalize women and doctors and put the health of poor women at stake because they can't fly off to Europe or Canada or anywhere else where abortion is legal. That's why it continues to be and should always be legal.

Liberal Liberal Liberal

If you don't get to chance to or want to watch the last presidential debate tonight, I'll give you a run-down on what you will miss. Kerry is going to make reasoned arguments about why his plan is better and why Bush's plan has not worked and Bush is going to say "Liberal" as loudly and as often as possible, as if "Liberal" means "baby-killer".

The Real Story of the Election

2004 Election Guide

Get Chipped Up

Applied Digital Solutions got from the FDA for their VeriChip and the stocked has jumped almost 40% in a few hours. I'm not just mentioning this since I own stock in the company.

I think VeriChip and Digital Angel are very cool, albeit a slight bit Orwellian. Digital Angel has been used in pets for medical and security reasons for a while now and it's going to be a great tool for identifying people in the years to come. Whether it will become universal or not is anyone's guess. I'm sure there will be mega-resistance from the loony left and maybe even the right, but the future is here and you can't stop progress, or so they keep telling me.

The Choice 2004

Did anyone out there see the Frontline documentary, The Choice 2004, last night? The movie rather brilliantly, I think, juxtaposed the history of the two candidates starting from their days at Yale up to the race for the presidency. It was a startling contrast between the two candidates in so many substantive ways. If you missed the 2-hour long program, it should be on again on a PBS station near year or you can watch it online. It's well worth the 2 hour investment just to become a more informed citizen.

For me, the most interesting aspect of the film was when they showed a tiny part of Kerry's speech on the floor on the Senate during the debate on going to war in Iraq.

The fascinating part is that what he said then is exactly what he's saying now and been saying all along:

Let me be clear, the vote I will give to the President is for one reason and one reason only: To disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction, if we cannot accomplish that objective through new, tough weapons inspections in joint concert with our allies.

In giving the President this authority, I expect him to fulfill the commitments he has made to the American people in recent days--to work with the United Nations Security Council to adopt a new resolution setting out tough and immediate inspection requirements, and to act with our allies at our side if we have to disarm Saddam Hussein by force. If he fails to do so, I will be among the first to speak out.

If we do wind up going to war with Iraq, it is imperative that we do so with others in the international community, unless there is a showing of a grave, imminent--and I emphasize "imminent"--threat to this country which requires the President to respond in a way that protects our immediate national security needs.




At the same time, when President Bush asked Congress to approve the war resolution he did it with the following words:

Approving this resolution does not mean that military action is imminent or unavoidable. The resolution will tell the United Nations, and all nations, that America speaks with one voice and is determined to make the demands of the civilized world mean something. Congress will also be sending a message to the dictator in Iraq: that … his only choice is full compliance, and the time remaining for that choice is limited.

These days the President goes around saying that Kerry "voted for the war" and is now against it, therefore a wiffle-waffle, flibery-gibbet, flip-flopper. Can you believe that people take this stuff seriously? If there's one thing that the GOP is good, especially when it comes their current candidate, is tarring the opposition with slanderous charges. They did it to McCain. They did it Gore. And they have been doing it Kerry for a long time now. Hopefully it will backfire this time, but you can be sure that the last three weeks of the campaign will see intensified charges of flip-flopping liberal from all corners.

I Gave at the Office

I just got back from giving blood here at the Chiron Blood Drive. It felt good to do it. It's been a long time. I haven't been able to donate since 9/11 because of all the traveling I've done. I also was central to this effort because I designed the poster for the drive, so I felt more than my normal obligation to give.

I always get a kick out of the screening process, which asks some absurd questions like have you been to Africa since 1977?, have you had sex with someone who had a blood transfusion since 1977, have you had sex with someone from Africa, have you been to Europe in the last 3 years (Mad Cow), and on and on. 1977 is relevant because it's the year AIDS reared it's ugly head, but since I was 7 in 1977, all the questions about sex are ridiculous.

When I got into the donating room, I said, "I forgot to mention that I had just unprotected sex with an African HIV+ intravenous drug user. Is that important?" Everyone but the nurses laughed, but they don't have much of a sense of humor.

October 12, 2004

AB63 Business Tax Registration Project

I got a letter the other day from the City of Oakland which is still puzzling me despite numerous phone calls to state and city officials. The salutation is "Dear Business Owner (s)", which is weird, because I've never owned a business. Then it starts, "Thank you for replying to our notice regarding the AB63 Business Tax Registration Project." Again weird, because I don't recall replying to any such notice. Then it continues, "We will need additional information to determine if you are subject to the City of Oakland's Business Tax an/or your tax liability." Fuck, I'm being audited, by THE CITY OF OAKLAND!

This had to be a mistake, right? I lived in Oakland from around mid-January of 2002 until mid-September of the same year, but I never owned a business there. I was a contract photographer working exclusively with two companies, Action Shooters and Brightroom. It never occurred to me that I was a "business," but when I called to talk to Keith G. Pryor of the Revenue Division, I was told exactly that. According the City of Oakland, I was a business. Who knew?

Once that was determined, I now I had to cough up a bunch of documents including tax returns for the last 3 years, which, of course, I don't have at my fingertips. The 2001 return is stored in Arizona. I filed my 2002 return when I was living in Samoa and I doubt I have a hard copy anywhere. 2003, I filed online and was able to print a copy from turbotax.com. I need to hunt down these documents lest the wrath of some tax bureaucrat comes crashing down on my financial house.

The funny thing is that they can't really hope to recoup a serious amount of money from me. I declared a decent amount in 2001, but I wasn't living or working in Oakland. In 2003, I was in the Peace Corps and made a grand total of $2305. 2002 is the only year in question and I was working sporadically while I waited with diminishing patience for the Peace Corps to send me my assignment. I'm not 100% sure, but I'm going to guess that my taxable income that will interest the City of Oakland is around 5 grand, and that's a generous guess.

According to Mr. Phelps, the business tax rate is "1.8% per 1000 dollars". He said exactly that. (isn't that the same as 1.8% per 100 dollars?). But I only lived in the city. All the work I did was outside of city limits, so therefore, only 30% of my gross receipts are taxable. So maybe I owe 30% of 82 bucks or $24.60 (plus interest and penalties, which are a joke, since I had no idea that I needed to pay this tax). It's not as if I was trying to evade the Oakland tax man. This is just silly.

Here is the pertinent section of the Oakland Tax Code (note the clear and concide prose):

All persons, whether or not they own, lease, occupy or otherwise maintain within or outside the City of Oakland a place or premise upon or from which they engage in business, shall nevertheless be deemed to be engaged in business within the City of Oakland when through the physical presence of themselves, their employees, or their agents, engaged in the business of providing services subject to business tax under section 5-1.28 and 5-1.29 of the Oakland Municipal Code; the following apportionment guidelines shall apply:

All persons engaging in business activities shall include the total gross receipts from work performed within the City; in addition, if such person owns, leases or otherwise maintains within the City a place or premises from which such person engages in business activities outside the City, such person shall include 30% of gross receipts from work performed outside the City in the measure of the tax.

Apartment Hunting

How much is too much to pay for an apartment?

It's a problem I've been struggling with for the last several weeks as I have looked around the Bay Area for a reasonably priced place to life. The average rate for a 1-bedroom apartment in the East Bay (Oakland, Alameda, Berkeley, Emeryville, etc.) is roughly $900 a month. However, depending on where you want to live that 900 might not go very far. For a place that I'm going to be happy with, I'm probably looking at something like $1050. The perfect place, The Courtyards at 65th, which is just down the street and brand new, would run me $1450. I know it's crazy to even think about paying that.

The most important thing for me is to find a place that's good for the cats. Ideally, they would have easy access to and from the apartment and a safe neighborhood to play around in. It's limiting to search for an apartment that allows pets let alone one in area that's good for them. But this is non-negotiable.

Then I have a list of things that I would like but I can live without including: a gas stove, hardwood floors, built-in bookcases, off-street parking, close to shopping, restaurants, public transportation.

I need my own place to sleep and keep my things, and I'm desperate to clear out my storage shed, gather my belongings from various places around California and have all my things in one place, but I'm not willing to settle for some place where I'm going to be miserable.

October 11, 2004

Letter to David Brooks

David Brooks has penned an opinion article, The Report That Nails Saddam, in the New York Times that toes the administration line on the Duelfer Report about WMDs in Iraq. I was disappointed because I feel like Brooks is one of the only reasonable voices of the right out there in our political horserace. I was so bothered by this article that I emailed him, which is something I never, ever do.

Oh come on David. You can't possibly believe your own words here. I've been watching you on the News Hour long enough to know that you are a reasonable individual who makes observations and develops opinions based on facts and thoughtful analysis. You can't possibly sell this story that the Duelfer Report justifies anything other than redoubling our efforts to reinforce the sanctions. You're telling me that our country was so weak diplomatically, which you can't, since after 9/11 and before the Iraq, America had unprecedented support in the rest of the world, that our only option was to invade and remove Saddam by force.

We had two-thirds of the country dominated by a no-fly zone. We had sanctions in place that were working despite what the President repeatedly says. Obviously if the sanctions weren't working, how can you explain the absence of weapons? It's nonsensical.

Now we find ourselves in a situation where we have an occupation force in a no-win situation with our diplomatic status around the world crumbling further endangering our struggle against fundamentalist Islamic factions and you are a stooge for administration misdirection of the truth. It's very sad.

The Report That Nails Saddam

By DAVID BROOKS
E-mail:

Published: October 9, 2004


Saddam Hussein saw his life as an unfolding epic narrative, with retreats and advances, but always the same ending. He would go down in history as the glorious Arab leader, as the Saladin of his day. One thousand years from now, schoolchildren would look back and marvel at the life of The Struggler, the great leader whose life was one of incessant strife, but who restored the greatness of the Arab nation.

They would look back and see the man who lived by his saying: "We will never lower our heads as long as we live, even if we have to destroy everybody." Charles Duelfer opened his report on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction with those words. For a humiliated people, Saddam would restore pride by any means.

Saddam knew the tools he would need to reshape history and establish his glory: weapons of mass destruction. These weapons had what Duelfer and his team called a "totemic" importance to him. With these weapons, Saddam had defeated the evil Persians. With these weapons he had crushed his internal opponents. With these weapons he would deter what he called the "Zionist octopus" in both Israel and America.

But in the 1990's, the world was arrayed against him to deprive him of these weapons. So Saddam, the clever one, The Struggler, undertook a tactical retreat. He would destroy the weapons while preserving his capacities to make them later. He would foil the inspectors and divide the international community. He would induce it to end the sanctions it had imposed to pen him in. Then, when the sanctions were lifted, he would reconstitute his weapons and emerge greater and mightier than before.

The world lacked what Saddam had: the long perspective. Saddam understood that what others see as a defeat or a setback can really be a glorious victory if it is seen in the context of the longer epic.

Saddam worked patiently to undermine the sanctions. He stored the corpses of babies in great piles, and then unveiled them all at once in great processions to illustrate the great humanitarian horrors of the sanctions.

Saddam personally made up a list of officials at the U.N., in France, in Russia and elsewhere who would be bribed. He sent out his oil ministers to curry favor with China, France, Turkey and Russia. He established illicit trading relations with Ukraine, Syria, North Korea and other nations to rebuild his arsenal.

It was all working. He acquired about $11 billion through illicit trading. He used the oil-for-food billions to build palaces. His oil minister was treated as a "rock star," as the report put it, at international events, so thick was the lust to trade with Iraq.

France, Russia, China and other nations lobbied to lift sanctions. Saddam was, as the Duelfer report noted, "palpably close" to ending sanctions.

With sanctions weakening and money flowing, he rebuilt his strength. He contacted W.M.D. scientists in Russia, Belarus, Bulgaria and elsewhere to enhance his technical knowledge base. He increased the funds for his nuclear scientists. He increased his military-industrial-complex's budget 40-fold between 1996 and 2002. He increased the number of technical research projects to 3,200 from 40. As Duelfer reports, "Prohibited goods and weapons were being shipped into Iraq with virtually no problem."

And that is where Duelfer's story ends. Duelfer makes clear on the very first page of his report that it is a story. It is a mistake and a distortion, he writes, to pick out a single frame of the movie and isolate it from the rest of the tale.

But that is exactly what has happened. I have never in my life seen a government report so distorted by partisan passions. The fact that Saddam had no W.M.D. in 2001 has been amply reported, but it's been isolated from the more important and complicated fact of Saddam's nature and intent.

But we know where things were headed. Sanctions would have been lifted. Saddam, rich, triumphant and unbalanced, would have reconstituted his W.M.D. Perhaps he would have joined a nuclear arms race with Iran. Perhaps he would have left it all to his pathological heir Qusay.

We can argue about what would have been the best way to depose Saddam, but this report makes it crystal clear that this insatiable tyrant needed to be deposed. He was the menace, and, as the world dithered, he was winning his struggle. He was on the verge of greatness. We would all now be living in his nightmare.


E-mail:




October 09, 2004

2nd Debate

I didn't want to watch the Second Presidential Debate alone, either on C-Span at my desk here at work or on my couch in Walnut Creek, so after work I headed down to the Parkway Theater in Oakland. I left the office at 5:10pm, forced my way through rush hour traffic, found a lucky parking space within a few hundred yards of the theater, but when I got there the auditorium was full and they weren't letting in more people. So I watched next door at a dive bar. It was also full, I had to stand at the bar, but it was fun to be around other people, see their reactions, have a Negra Modelo, and take in the debate.

I suppose the debate was basically a tie. I find most of the President's answers unbelievably, especially his "I've been a good steward of the environment", but the bar is so low for his performance, especially after the disaster of the first debate, that many of his supporters will be buoyed. On the other hand Kerry did nothing to undercut the Republicans assertion that he is unfit to be commander-in-chief, so his momentum should continue. I think he missed some really valuable opportunities to slam the door on the President, most notably the final question where Bush was unable to come up with even a single mistake of consequence to reflect on. Kerry needs to hammer home a few things about Bush's lack of response. One is that the President is so obviously out of touch with the facts both in Iraq and in working-class America that he doesn't see that there are any problems and if there are no problems, they can't be fixed. An obvious paradox. The other is that President, as Bush so notably pointed out in the debate, is human, and makes thousands of decisions during the course of a term. It is unconceivable that every decision is going to be correct. Therefore it is essential that the President recognize these mistakes so as to learn from then going forward. This is the hallmark of great character, which Bush so obviously lacks.

October 07, 2004

"Knowing these realities, America must not ignore the threat gathering against us. Facing clear evidence of peril, we cannot wait for the final proof -- the smoking gun -- that could come in the form of a mushroom cloud"

Thank you, W. Wrong again.

What's even more fascinating is that in the same speech in very next line after President Bush made his statements about the smoking gun mushroom cloud, he quoted President Kennedy from 1962 as follows:

"Neither the United States of America nor the world community of nations can tolerate deliberate deception and offensive threats on the part of any nation, large or small."

Wow. Talk about a boomerang. Hopefully the United States of America will not tolerate it and well throw Bush and his ilk out their collective asses in November.

Incidentally, I don't understand how Bush or anyone in the administration can still make the case that Iraq had to disclose, disarm or face the consequences when there was nothing to disclose or disarm. When Scott McClellan repeatedly says in defense of our attack, "we know that he failed to comply with the demands of the international community." What demands? Disarm? Disarm what? It's mind blowing to me. But I bet they still say it again and again until November.


October 06, 2004

The Brilliance of Le Show

There's one thing that fans of Harry Shearer can all agree on. He's wickedly funny. For those who love his work on The Simpsons and in movies like This is Spinal Tap might not even know that he does a weekly radio show. But, I'm here to tell you, he does.

Le Show is a variety program on NPR affiliate KCRW-FM in Santa Monica where Shearer satirizes everything from Johnnie Cochrane to George Bush and anything in between. You can download old shows on the site which is how I'm spending my morning, productively, I might add.

Why Kerry Must Win

I'm not a huge fan of John Kerry. I think he'll make a decent president. He'll certainly do a better job than what we've had for the last 3 + years. However, the reason that it's crucial that he win this election is simple. The Federal Courts.

Comic

We've got a serious problem coming up in the next 4 years. Many members of our aging Supreme Court could retire. Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, 80, has more than hinted at his desire to leave jurisprudence prudence behind and hit links. Justice Stevens is 84. O'Connor is 74. Ginsberg, a cancer survivor, is 71. All but one, Clarence Thomas is over 65.


Now George W Bush has already said that his nominees to the court will be in the mould of Scalia and Thomas, strict constructionalist and arch-conservative. Replacing Rehnquist with another conservative will have little or no affect on the many 5-4 decisions that the court has brought down in recent years. But in replacing progressives Stevens and Ginsburg and moderate O'Conner, Bush could swing the balance of the court to the right in a way that will affect decisions for years to come and put in jeopardy cases like Roe v. Wade, amongst others.

Both Kerry and Bush would love to be first president to nominate an Hispanic American to the bench. If Bush is re-elected his choice could be Alberto Gonzales. Gonzales is the legal mind behind the memos circulated in the corridors of power about how the Geneva Conventions didn't apply in Iraq and Afghanistan. He set up the military tribunals. He's responsible for the decision to label American citizens as "enemy combatants", enabling the government to hold them indefinitely without charge or legal counsel. He's a scary individual and he's only 47 which means he could be levying his controversial brand of justice for 30 years or more, far beyond the limited years in which a president's policies can do damage. (Remember that Rehnquist was nominated by Nixon). Not a happy prospect. Another possibility is that he might replace Ashcroft at the Justice Department. But that would only leave a spot for someone equally conservative but less controversial to take his spot as Bush's nominee.

And even more dire problem is 4 more years of Republican nominees headed to the federal bench. Federal courts hear far more cases and can do much more damage to civil rights, the environment and other sensitive issues that the Supreme Court could ever dream of. 8 straight years of conservative court packing is going to leave this country in a sorry state.

I'm not sure why this issue isn't a major one on the campaign trail. Maybe the campaigns don't want to scare swing-voters, but I think it's sad that we can't have a discussion about this on a national level when the future of this country hangs in balance.

October 05, 2004

Who's The Best Fighter Pilot You Ever Saw?

Hot Dog
You're looking at him.

I didn't really know Gordo Cooper, but I felt like I did. Almost everything I know about this man comes from reading Tom Wolfe'sThe Right Stuff and repeatedly watching the movie in which he was played with great charm by Dennis Quaid. The power of both the performance and the time have etched Gordo Cooper indelibly in my mind.

Gordo Cooper died yesterday. Via Con Dios, Hot Dog

One Good Weekend

It was really more than good for Dodger and Angel fans. It was amazing. Not only did both teams clinch division titles together in the same year for the first time, but in the process they closed the curtain on the season for their dreaded Northern California rivals, the Giants and the Athletics.

It was particularly sweet for me, a lifelong Dodger fanatic. I don't bleed Dodger Blue, it's ingrained in my DNA. My dad grew up in Brooklyn. Like so many others, he moved west following his team. I grew up in Los Angeles. I haven't lived there in many years, but I will be a Dodger fan to the end of my days (or at least while Vin Scully walks the earth).

It's been a long time for the Dodgers. The last time the Dodgers were in the World Series, 1988, I was a freshman in college. I had just moved to Northern California for the first time. The Dodgers were huge underdogs to the overpowering Oakland A's. All the people I watched the game with were supporting the A's. Kirk Gibson gimped off the bench and hit his game winning home run off Dennis Eckersley and the Dodgers went on the win the series. It was awesome. But it's been a long, dry spell since.

The Dodgers have not won a single playoff game since 1988. This year we've got a long road ahead, playing the best team in baseball, the St. Louis Cardinals, in the first round. With the best record in the NL, they should be playing the wild card team, but since that team, the Astros, is from their own division, the Dodgers have to play them instead. It's going to be tough. I don't give the Dodgers much of a chance, but I haven't given them much of a chance all season and look where they are.

Angels have had more recent success, winning it all 2002, a series I missed since I was in Samoa. I like the Angels. But since they are in Anaheim, I didn't get to many games at the Big A, but I did get to some great game. My dad took my brother and I to a game there on our birthday in 1985. It happened to be the game that Rod Carew swatted his 3000th hit. The last time I was there was way back in 1986 when the Angels clinched their last division title against Texas. It was probably the most exciting game I have ever been to. All the fans rushed the field after the game. I have a few vivid memories of the post game festivities. One is that my friend Mark Castleman was determined to lift a piece of the turf and take it home as a prize. He did and kept it in a zip lock bag until it crumbled in ash. The other (apropos of nothing) is that I found a watch on the field that was engraved on the back with "Sal is Bueno".

Good luck to both the Angels and the Dodgers.

My prediction: Twins beat Cards 4-3 in WS. (I'm secretly pulling for a Dodger-Red Sox series with the Sox winning).

Oops

Gee, I wonder if this will come up in the debate tonight...

White House on Defensive After Bremer Talk

The White House staunchly defended its Iraq policy Tuesday as new questions emerged about President Bush's prewar decisions and postwar planning: An impending weapons report undercut the administration's main rationale for the war, and the former head of the American occupation said the United States had too few troops in Iraq after the invasion. Four weeks before Election Day, Democrat John Kerry pounced on the acknowledgment by former Iraq administrator Paul Bremer* that the United States had "paid a big price" for insufficient troop levels.




It's amazing to me that this administration can't admit a single mistake, not even something so obvious that we didn't have enough troops to maintain security, and then make the changes to fix the problem. Whether you were for or against the war or for or against this administration, you have to be for creating order from the chaos that Iraq has become. We're obviously not going to be pulling out and we're not getting the job done with the current troop levels. What option does that leave us?

Read more of Paul Bremer's statements on Iraq on the The Council of Insurance Agents & Brokers website.

*Note to Paul Bremer: Stay on Message.

October 04, 2004

Damn, I Hope the Kerry People Read This

Tom Friedman of the New York Times is back (and not a moment too soon) from his sabbatical and writing clear, common sense prose about Iraq. Iraq: Politics or Policy? states clearly where the Bush Administration has made the wrong choices in so many of the crucial steps on the road to the miasma that we are currently facing in Mesapotamia.

Kerry needs to pay attention to what Friedman is saying and start incorporating some of these charges into his stump speech.

*Iraq: Politics or Policy? is posted below because the NY Times website will archive it into the pay to read section in a week or two.

IRAQ: POLITICS or POLICY?

Sorry, I've been away writing a book. I'm back, so let's get right down to business: We're in trouble in Iraq.

I don't know what is salvageable there anymore. I hope it is something decent and I am certain we have to try our best to bring about elections and rebuild the Iraqi Army to give every chance for decency to emerge there. But here is the cold, hard truth: This war has been hugely mismanaged by this administration, in the face of clear advice to the contrary at every stage, and as a result the range of decent outcomes in Iraq has been narrowed and the tools we have to bring even those about are more limited than ever.

What happened? The Bush team got its doctrines mixed up: it applied the Powell Doctrine to the campaign against John Kerry - "overwhelming force" without mercy, based on a strategy of shock and awe at the Republican convention, followed by a propaganda blitz that got its message across in every possible way, including through distortion. If only the Bush team had gone after the remnants of Saddam's army in the Sunni Triangle with the brutal efficiency it has gone after Senator Kerry in the Iowa-Ohio-Michigan triangle. If only the Bush team had spoken to Iraqis and Arabs with as clear a message as it did to the Republican base. No, alas, while the Bush people applied the Powell Doctrine in the Midwest, they applied the Rumsfeld Doctrine in the Middle East. And the Rumsfeld Doctrine is: "Just enough troops to lose." Donald Rumsfeld tried to prove that a small, mobile army was all that was needed to topple Saddam, without realizing that such a limited force could never stabilize Iraq. He never thought it would have to. He thought his Iraqi pals would do it. He was wrong.

For all of President Bush's vaunted talk about being consistent and resolute, the fact is he never established U.S. authority in Iraq. Never. This has been the source of all our troubles. We have never controlled all the borders, we have never even consistently controlled the road from Baghdad airport into town, because we never had enough troops to do it.

Being away has not changed my belief one iota in the importance of producing a decent outcome in Iraq, to help move the Arab-Muslim world off its steady slide toward increased authoritarianism, unemployment, overpopulation, suicidal terrorism and religious obscurantism. But my time off has clarified for me, even more, that this Bush team can't get us there, and may have so messed things up that no one can. Why? Because each time the Bush team had to choose between doing the right thing in the war on terrorism or siding with its political base and ideology, it chose its base and ideology. More troops or radically lower taxes? Lower taxes. Fire an evangelical Christian U.S. general who smears Islam in a speech while wearing the uniform of the U.S. Army or not fire him so as not to anger the Christian right? Don't fire him. Apologize to the U.N. for not finding the W.M.D., and then make the case for why our allies should still join us in Iraq to establish a decent government there? Don't apologize - for anything - because Karl Rove says the "base" won't like it. Impose a "Patriot Tax" of 50 cents a gallon on gasoline to help pay for the war, shrink the deficit and reduce the amount of oil we consume so we send less money to Saudi Arabia? Never. Just tell Americans to go on guzzling. Fire the secretary of defense for the abuses at Abu Ghraib, to show the world how seriously we take this outrage - or do nothing? Do nothing. Firing Mr. Rumsfeld might upset conservatives. Listen to the C.I.A.? Only when it can confirm your ideology. When it disagrees - impugn it or ignore it.

What I resent so much is that some of us actually put our personal politics aside in thinking about this war and about why it is so important to produce a different Iraq. This administration never did. Mr. Kerry's own views on Iraq have been intensely political and for a long time not well thought through. But Mr. Kerry is a politician running for office. Mr. Bush is president, charged with protecting the national interest, and yet from the beginning he has run Iraq policy as an extension of his political campaign.

Friends, I return to where I started: We're in trouble in Iraq. We have to immediately get the Democratic and Republican politics out of this policy and start honestly reassessing what is the maximum we can still achieve there and what every American is going to have to do to make it happen. If we do not, we'll end up not only with a fractured Iraq, but with a fractured America, at war with itself and isolated from the world.
--Tom Friedman




October 01, 2004

Practice to Deceive

In surfing the net this morning for information on the debate reaction, I came across a story, Practice to Deceive by Joshua Marshall about the neoconservative agenda and the real reason behind our involvement in Iraq and the wider Middle East.

I've always felt that the neo-cons were misguided. These were the same guys, Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Norman Podhoretz et al. who were warning of Soviet domination, that the intelligence was underestimating Soviet power when it fact the intelligence was grossly over exaggerated. The fact that they are Jewish and cloak many of their policies with the defense of anti-Semitism is even more disturbing for me, being Jewish and all.

But in the case of the Soviets, at least they were out in public making their case. These days they work in the shadows, keeping their policies and over-reaching agenda a secret from the American people. It would be bad if they were right, but since they seem to be so often wrong, it's downright frightening.

Jim Lehrer: An Idiot or Just Plain Dumb

Ok, so that's not really fair, Lehrer is certainly a smart man, but I thought he was, once again, miserable as the moderator. I really like Lehrer as a newsman and I watch the News Hour regularly, but in these debates, he is seriously deficient when it comes to asking questions.

I'm still in shock that we had a 90 minute debate about foreign policy and there wasn't a single question about Israel and Palestine. Not one. Now, I understand that Iraq and the "War on Tara" have dominated the headlines, but if you don't think that resolving the Israel/Palestine issue will go a long way to aliening tensions around the world, you're fooling yourself. The Bush administration has made statements about what it would like to see, a Palestinian state, but it has done nothing substantive in 3 1/2 years, seriously dropping the ball after the efforts made by the Clinton administration came so close to a solution. What is Kerry's position on what our role should be in the peace process? I haven't a clue but he has never said anything about it and Lehrer didn't ask about it once.

Nor did he ask about so many fronts that he could have brought up to increase the breadth of the discussion including, our relationship with China or with Cuba, the problems of Pakistan, anything about NAFTA or other trade issues, anything about WTO, IMF and globalization, anything about the war on drugs, anything about our deteriorating relationship with our European allies, nothing about NATO, nothing about our unilateral decisions to back away from international treaties, nothing about the Geneva Conventions, nothing about human rights, and nothing, not one thing about our friendly pal, Saudi Arabia. It was disappointing to say the least.

Lehrer has moderated the last 4 presidential debates. It's time to put him out to pasture permanently. We need someone who is going to ask tough questions on a wide variety of subjects. Charles Gibson is up next in the town hall debates on domestic policy. Can he do better? I hope so, but I honestly don't know much about him.

Refelctions on the Debate

I think the most uncomfortable people in the entire US last night had to be Bush and Republican surrogates who had to come out after the debates and defend their candidate who, by any measure, just performed miserably. Bush was so bad it was shocking. Not only did he seem unprepared for the attacks levied against him, but he was uncomfortable at the podium, he couldn't wait to get Jim Lehrer's attention to make a rejoinder, but then had nothing to say. It was really astonishing to watch him stammer, to constantly say "um" and to stare into the camera with long pauses when he was trying to, I think, collect his thoughts and respond. It was awkward and painful to watch. On the other hand, Kerry was calm, collected, and concise. He stood tall at the podium where as Bush was slouching and hunching. Kerry needed to come and look presidential and he did. So on style points, which seems to matter more to most Americans, Kerry clearly was victorious.

For the meat of the debate, each candidate made their case which basically comes down to change versus status quo. If you're happy with the way things are going, you'll vote Bush. If you think we're on the wrong track and need change, then you'll vote Kerry. People will have to make up their minds eventually. Of course it gets more complicated than that. Do you believe Kerry has the character to be president or does he send "mixed messages", which I suppose is the polite form of "flip-flopper"? Do you think Bush's approach to war is steady and measured or do you think his stay the course no matter what mentality is just a stubborn unwillingness to admit mistakes, adjust to facts on the ground and move forward? I know where I stand. Where do you stand?

I was surprised at a few things. I thought that Kerry missed many opportunities to turn the tables on Bush. He couldn't find a way to explain that his vote against the $87 billion which makes sense if you believe Kerry thought there were fundamental problems with that bill that another similar bill could address. Instead he apologized. Kerry also missed a really opportunity to turn the charges of flip-flopper against Bush with regards to the 9/11 commission, going to the UN, having Condi Rice testify and so many other events that the Bush administration has changed course on during his term of office. Since this has been the most damming attack by the Republicans, Kerry really ought to have addressed it with the same frequency and ferocity with which he was constantly charged as delivering mixed messages. He also missed the opportunity to demonstrate that world opinion about the US, which was at an all time high after 9/11, has reversed course completely to the point that we are more feared and hated than ever before. He missed the chance to talk about how our standing in the world affects our ability to win the "War on Tara". Since his campaign slogan is "Stronger at Home, Respected in the World", he really needed to take this opportunity to explain why it so important for America to be respected in the world, because so many people don't see why, and he blew it. Kerry missed the chance to talk not only about Bush, but about his administration, especially about the incompetence of Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and the rest of the DOD. He missed a chance to talk about what difference did it make that he voted against the 87 billion because the DOD is so disorganized, it can't figure out how to spend the money. While he did a fine job, he could have done much, much better.

All in all, despite all the problems, the debate was fascinating. There was more give and take then the rules suggested there might be. Hopefully many Americans watched and won’t rely on news outlets to distill the debate into packaged sound bytes.