Daily Kos


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Live blog V: Plame Hearings: Knodell

Fri Mar 16, 2007 at 09:50:04 AM PDT

Diary 6 is up. Unrecommend this one.
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No images. Stay on topic. Unrecommend previous. Blah blah woof woof.

Soros to Hastert: apologize, or else

Tue Aug 31, 2004 at 04:00:53 PM PDT

(From the diaries... -- kos)

Josh Marshall has posted George Soros' response to Hastert: apologize and retract the drug-cartel slander now, or face legal consequences.

Your recent comments implying that I am receiving funds from drug cartels are not only untrue, but also deeply offensive. You do a discredit to yourself and to the dignity of your office by engaging in these dishonest smear tactics. You should be ashamed.

For the Speaker of the House of Representatives, even in the midst of an election season, to descend to a level of political discourse where innuendo and slander replace reason, truth and argument is unacceptable.

This past Sunday, on national television, you suggested that I might be a criminal simply because I have exercised my First Amendment rights to dissent from the policies of the Bush administration.

I am playing a role in this election because I share the concerns of many Americans and believe President Bush is leading our nation in a ruinous direction on both economic and foreign policy.

I will continue my work despite this administration's ongoing efforts to intimidate and bully a long list of people who disagree with it, from Paul O'Neill to Joe Wilson, to Richard Clarke, to John Kerry.

I must respectfully insist that you either substantiate these claims - which you cannot do  because they are false - or publicly apologize for attempting to defame my character and damage my reputation.

Nancy Reagan endorses Bush

Tue Aug 03, 2004 at 05:08:27 PM PDT

Ron didn't convince her:

Former first lady Nancy Reagan, who opposes President Bush's policy on limiting embryonic stem cell research, is backing the Republican's re-election bid.

"The campaign is certainly about more than one issue," said spokeswoman Joanne Drake, who described Reagan on Tuesday as in "full and complete support of President Bush's candidacy

AP story.

CNN: Holland Tunnel (NYC) closed to trucks

Sun Aug 01, 2004 at 08:03:41 PM PDT

CNN is reporting that the Holland Tunnel will be closed to all commercial traffic starting at midnight.

Link.

It's starting, people.

BREAKING NEWS: Reagan dead - CBS, NBC, ABC

Sat Jun 05, 2004 at 01:50:24 PM PDT

Turn on the news now. Update [2004-6-5 17:34:8 by Jon Meltzer]: Front page thread now available.

DNC to give bloggers press credentials

Thu May 06, 2004 at 11:50:19 AM PDT

Courtesy of The Truth Left Bear:

The Democratic National Convention Committee is pleased to announce that for the first time ever, bloggers will be offered Convention access through the official media credentialing process.

Because the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston is less than 90 days away and space is extremely limited, we encourage those interested in this first-ever opportunity to act now. To apply to cover the 2004 Democratic National Convention as a blogger, you will need to submit applications to both the Senate Periodical Press Gallery AND the Democratic National Convention Committee (DNCC) Press Gallery before the May 28th deadline.

For how-to, see DNC site.

Will someone call Kos in El Salvador to get his application in before all slots are filled?

Even absentee ballots won't be safe

Thu Apr 08, 2004 at 02:44:35 PM PDT

For those who think that voting by absentee ballot is the way to get around Diebold electronic ballot fraud: well, that's been anticipated that. Absentee ballots are to be counted electronically by - Diebold machines.
Poll

In the 2004 election I will be voting

35%13 votes
8%3 votes
10%4 votes
18%7 votes
8%3 votes
18%7 votes

| 37 votes | Vote | Results

Atlantic Magazine: insider view of Dean campaign

Fri Mar 26, 2004 at 01:55:31 PM PDT

The Atlantic Monthly features in next month's issue an article by Paul Maslin, pollster for the Dean campaign. Available here.

Excerpt:

The entrance polls on caucus night were harsh and decisive: we would finish a poor third to Kerry and Edwards. We met Dean at his new campaign bus to discuss the events to follow. Dean was in no mood to linger in Iowa. A late flight awaited to what he hoped would be a more welcoming venue, in New Hampshire, but first he had to endure the necessary parade of network interviewers, all wanting him to tell them what went wrong.

We tried hard to cheer him up, and we explained the importance of seeming confident in those interviews. He did beautifully in each of them. But nobody had bothered to write up a concession speech or even a few lines to use when he faced the crowd waiting in the Val Air Ballroom, many of them Stormers. It was as if we were all in shock, and didn't even consider the importance of his first election-night appearance in front of a national television audience. A week later, in New Hampshire, we and he wouldn't make that mistake. But by then it was too late. Dean needed an immediate release that night in Iowa--a release from the pounding, the pressure, and the poor finish.

It came in the form of that famous speech ...


Sullivan: "We were all lied to. But now we know."

Fri Mar 19, 2004 at 11:59:30 AM PDT

"I have to say that I have been culpably naive about this administration on this issue. They led me to believe they weren't hostile to gay people, that they would not use anti-gay sentiment to gain votes, that they would not roll back very basic protections for gay federal employees. I was lied to. We were all lied to. But now we know. "

Link.

Eric Alterman on Dennis Miller tonight

Wed Mar 17, 2004 at 08:59:38 PM PDT

Alterman's weblog comment:

"People, watch this.  Dennis Miller is really weird."

Brooks on Spain: "It was crazy to go ahead with an election."

Tue Mar 16, 2004 at 11:37:52 AM PDT

David Brooks in The New York Times today:


I am trying not to think harshly of the Spanish. They have suffered a grievous blow, and it was crazy to go ahead with an election a mere three days after the Madrid massacre ...

I don't know what mix of issues swung the Spanish election during those final days. But I do know that reversing course in the wake of a terrorist attack is inexcusable. I don't care what the policy is. You do not give terrorists the chance to think that their methods work. You do not give them the chance to celebrate victories. When you do that, you make the world a more dangerous place, for others and probably for yourself.

Predictions for November 2004 are left to the poll.

Poll

A terrorist attack in November will

29%30 votes
15%16 votes
0%0 votes
2%3 votes
51%52 votes

| 101 votes | Vote | Results

Sullivan: Bush on wrong side of war on terror

Wed Feb 25, 2004 at 02:40:57 AM PDT

"It's the president who has to answer to the charge that in wartime, he chose to divide this country over the most profound symbol there can be: the Constitution itself. I refuse, in short, to be put in a position where I have to pick between a vital war and fundamental civil equality. The two are inextricable. They are the same war. And this time, the president has picked the wrong side. He will live to be ashamed that he did."

More.

Kerry and Edwards respond to marriage amendment

Tue Feb 24, 2004 at 05:04:27 PM PDT

Kerry:

"I believe President Bush is wrong. All Americans should be concerned when a President who is in political trouble tries to tamper with the Constitution of the United States at the start of his reelection campaign.

"This President can't talk about jobs. He can't talk about health care. He can't talk about a foreign policy, which has driven away allies and weakened the United States, so he is looking for a wedge issue to divide the American people.

"While I believe marriage is between a man and a woman, for 200 years, this has been a state issue. I oppose this election year effort to amend the Constitution in an area that each state can adequately address, and I will vote against such an amendment if it comes to the Senate floor.

"I believe the best way to protect gays and lesbians is through civil unions. I believe the issue of marriage should be left to the states, and that the President of the United States should be addressing the central challenges where he has failed - jobs, health care, and our leadership in the world rather than once again seeking to drive a wedge by toying with the United States Constitution for political purposes."

Edwards:

"I oppose gay marriage. I also oppose President Bush's attempt to amend the Constitution to ban gay marriage. Washington has no business playing politics with this issue. Marriage is left to the states today, and should remain with the states.

"I'm not surprised that the day after he kicked off his campaign, the president is already talking about gay marriage. He can't talk about jobs, because he has no new ideas to create jobs. He can't talk about health care, because he has no new ideas to hold down costs or cover every child. He can't talk about education, because he has no new ideas to help young people pay for the soaring cost of college.

"If President Bush wants to stand up for marriage, he ought to help millions of married couples who are living paycheck to paycheck. If he wants to stand up for marriage, he should tackle the marriage penalty that punishes poor families when they marry. He should help middle-class families save and invest. But instead of offering new ideas to help the families who are actually married, President Bush wants to play politics with the Constitution.

"We have had our Constitution for more than 200 years. We amended it to abolish slavery and ensure women could vote. We should not amend it over politics."

"Ricin" really paper scraps

Tue Feb 24, 2004 at 01:32:36 PM PDT

Remember the "ricin attack" on Congress last month? Remember what else was happening at that time?


There is a new theory emerging about the ricin scare two weeks ago.

NBC News has learned investigators are looking into the possibility that there never was any ricin attack in the first place.

A white powder, previously believed to be ricin, was discovered on a machine used to open envelopes in the Dirksen Senate office building. Dirksen and two other buildings were closed for several days.

There are several reasons for the new theory. Investigators haven't been able to determine an apparent source of the ricin, and the suspicous substances was found in very small amounts.

Since ricin comes from the castor bean, and some nontoxic parts of the plant are used to make paper, it might be possible that the tests found traces of the plant, but not ricin.

Investigators said there are no solid leads and this is just one of several theories.

NBC News: Ricin Tests May Have Been Wrong

9-11 Commission wants Bush/Clinton testimony

Thu Feb 12, 2004 at 11:14:48 AM PDT

Cheney and Gore, too.

The federal commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks will soon ask President Bush (news - web sites), former President Bill Clinton (news - web sites) and their vice presidents to testify in public about possible warnings they might have received from U.S. intelligence sources before the attacks.    

"We need them to testify," former New Jersey Gov. Thomas H. Kean, the bipartisan commission's chairman, told The Record of Bergen County in a story published Thursday. He said the panel would issue formal invitations within the next few weeks, although he conceded that all four men would probably decline to be questioned at a public forum.

Yahoo News

"I, George W. Bush, do solemnly swear ... "

Nader association with former LaRouchies?

Wed Jan 14, 2004 at 04:32:11 PM PDT

"Nader and the Newmanites" by Doug Ireland in The Nation; posted 1/26/04. Excerpt:

What in the world is Ralph Nader doing in bed with the ultrasectarian cult-racket formerly known as the New Alliance Party?

That's the question raised by Nader's January 11 appearance as the featured speaker at a conference in Bedford, New Hampshire, of so-called "independents" that is nothing more than a front for the New Alliance crazies. The conference was arranged by something called the Choosing an Independent President 2004 Campaign ("ChIP"). ChIP's organizers--or "convenors," as they style themselves--are none other than Dr. Fred Newman, the cult's guru, a master manipulator and former associate of mad Lyndon LaRouche; and Dr. Lenora Fulani, the Afro-American former presidential candidate of the New Alliance Party, whom Newman describes as his "greatest creation."

 

Vermin Supreme feature article in Boston Globe

Sun Jan 11, 2004 at 01:37:03 PM PDT

excerpt:

Vermin Supreme pushes his way toward the Kerry-ites. A few of them have to hop backward in order to avoid the pointy wingtips of the eagle lashed to his torso. He hoists his megaphone, conferring upon himself the electronic voice of authority. "Where does John Kerry stand on mandatory tooth brushing?" he demands. "Is he soft on plaque?" A few college kids break off to listen to the tirade. You can see it in their faces; suddenly, they're no longer members of the Kerry gang. They're just their ordinary selves again, exchanging glances with one another: Who is this guy?

As he passes through the crowd, Supreme spreads that kind of puzzlement. He has spent years figuring out how to transform a group-thinking throng back into a bunch of individuals. This is his art form.

"Vote for me," he tells a gray-haired woman, peering at her from under the rubber boot stuck on his head, the toe of which points at the sky. "I'm running for . . . something."

Boston Globe 1/11/04

Court rules Padilla must be tried

Thu Dec 18, 2003 at 01:59:56 PM PDT

Bush Overruled on Enemy Combatant Case    

By LARRY NEUMEISTER, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK - President Bush (news - web sites) does not have power to detain American citizen Jose Padilla, the former gang member seized on U.S. soil, as an enemy combatant, a federal appeals court ruled Thursday.

The decision could force the government to try Padilla, held in a so-called "dirty bomb" plot, in civilian courts. In a 2-1 ruling, a three-judge panel of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (news - web sites) said Padilla's detention was not authorized by Congress and that Bush could not designate him as an enemy combatant without the authorization.

...

The court directed Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to release Padilla from military custody within 30 days, but said the government was free to transfer him to civilian authorities who can bring criminal charges.

...

"But presidential authority does not exist in a vacuum, and this case involves not whether those responsibilities should be aggressively pursued, but whether the president is obligated, in the circumstances presented here, to share them with Congress," it added.  

AP/Yahoo


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