Sunday, September 30, 2007

Surveillance Showdown... "Privacy" zealots want America to forgo intelligence capabilities during wartime.


Would any sane country purposefully limit its ability to spy on enemy communications in time of war? That is the question Congress must answer as it takes up reform of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Privacy activists, civil libertarians and congressional Democrats argue that both foreign and domestic eavesdropping must be subject to judicial scrutiny and oversight, even if this means drastically reducing the amount of foreign intelligence information available to the government, without ever acknowledging the costs involved. It is time the American people had an open and honest debate on the relative importance of privacy and security.

FISA, of course, is the law regulating the government's interception of "electronic communications" for foreign intelligence purposes. Earlier this year the special FISA court narrowed dramatically the National Security Agency's ability to collect overseas intelligence under the law, so Congress passed a six-month amendment before its August recess to allow current surveillance programs to continue. That amendment should be made permanent. Continue to read @ Wall Street Journal

Iraq until at least 2013?


During the debate, she rarely came out of a defensive crouch, as if determined to protect her favored position. Answering the first question, she said her goal would be to withdraw all American troops from Iraq by 2013, but "it is very difficult to know what we are going to be inheriting" from the Bush administration, so she cannot make any pledge...read more of David S Broder @ Washington Post

9/11 Is Over


Not long ago, the satirical newspaper The Onion ran a fake news story that began like this:

“At a well-attended rally in front of his new ground zero headquarters Monday, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani officially announced his plan to run for president of 9/11. ‘My fellow citizens of 9/11, today I will make you a promise,’ said Giuliani during his 18-minute announcement speech in front of a charred and torn American flag. ‘As president of 9/11, I will usher in a bold new 9/11 for all.’ If elected, Giuliani would inherit the duties of current 9/11 President George W. Bush, including making grim facial expressions, seeing the world’s conflicts in terms of good and evil, and carrying a bullhorn at all state functions.”

Like all good satire, the story made me both laugh and cry, because it reflected something so true — how much, since 9/11, we’ve become “The United States of Fighting Terrorism.” Times columnists are not allowed to endorse candidates, but there’s no rule against saying who will not get my vote: I will not vote for any candidate running on 9/11. We don’t need another president of 9/11. We need a president for 9/12. I will only vote for the 9/12 candidate.

What does that mean? This: 9/11 has made us stupid. I honor, and weep for, all those murdered on that day. But our reaction to 9/11 — mine included — has knocked America completely out of balance, and it is time to get things right again. Continue with Thomas Friedman @ NYT

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Obama at Howard


A strikingly expansive speech, a reminder of what Obama can deliver when he wants to. My sense is that he is holding back, or rather has been holding back. He is very, very careful not to get too angry as a black candidate. Perhaps too careful for his core message: real change. What he needs to do is find a way to explain how serious he is about change while explaining that he alone can overcome the boomer polarization that has prevented it. And that's true on the race issue as well. Yesterday, the message got sharper. Money quote @ Andrew Sullivan

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Prison Beats College


What is wrong with this picture...nothing! However, what is wrong with this headline everything...

More than three times as many black people live in prison cells as in college dorms, the government said in a report to be released Thursday.

The ratio is only slightly better for Hispanics, at 2.7 inmates for every Latino in college housing. Among non-Hispanic whites, more than twice as many live in college housing as in prison or jail. To read more click Census Study Eyes Blacks in Prison

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

GOP Absent at Debate...


If you are a GOP Presidential candidate you need every opportunity to gain votes. The political climate for the GOP is not friendly when considering the issues of Iraq, Health Care, Energy, Environment, etc. Traditionally, when the GOP has the opportunity to slice into the Democratic voting base...they smile and swing away. Apparently, not when it comes to Minorities...soccer moms are OK but the major contenders for the GOP have taken a pass on the Thursday Republican Debate hosted in Baltimore. So the hits keep rolling for the GOP...from the left and the right. Why is the GOP scared of black voters?

Former Republican Congressman J.C. Watts Calls Decision Not to Attend 'Stupid'


Click here for ABCNEWS Video Report.

The Ugly Side of the G.O.P. by Bob Herbert @ NYT

President Bush at the United Nations


For all their nasty fights, maybe George W. Bush and the United Nations were meant for each other. They speak the same wide-eyed language of idealism, setting goals that are heavy on optimism and light on planning. And they love to strike heroic notes in the face of discordant reality. Bush tapped into that romantic synergy at the General Assembly Tuesday, calling on the U.N. and its members to rise to the promise of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and using that founding U.N. text as a sounding board for a speech on global liberation from tyranny, poverty and disease. More on President Bush's speech

Hillary...more Harry Truman than Howard Dean?



In the beginning of August, liberal bloggers met at the YearlyKos convention while centrist Democrats met at the Democratic Leadership Council’s National Conversation. Almost every Democratic presidential candidate attended YearlyKos, and none visited the D.L.C.

At the time, that seemed a sign that the left was gaining the upper hand in its perpetual struggle with the center over the soul of the Democratic Party. But now it’s clear that was only cosmetic.

Now it’s evident that if you want to understand the future of the Democratic Party you can learn almost nothing from the bloggers, billionaires and activists on the left who make up the “netroots.” You can learn most of what you need to know by paying attention to two different groups — high school educated women in the Midwest, and the old Clinton establishment in Washington. Read more of David Brooks @ NYT

Tactics from 1970 don't fit '07 reality


Just when it looked like Detroit's auto industry was poised for a breakthrough deal, the United Auto Workers strikes General Motors Corp. and we're back to 1970 all over again.

But it's not 1970, except here in Michigan. GM doesn't dominate its home market; foreign-owned rivals do. The UAW doesn't represent the growing work forces at rivals operating down South -- and probably won't anytime soon should this walkout become a recruiting poster for anti-UAW forces from Alabama to Texas.

What happened? continue @ Detroit News

Monday, September 24, 2007

What does President Bush, Israel, Syria and North Korea have in Common? A Secret...


Israel attacked Syria over Nuclear...Yes, in fact this has already happened but it is not prominently in the news? Puzzled read on...

Israel's decision to attack Syria on Sept. 6, bombing a suspected nuclear site set up in apparent collaboration with North Korea, came after Israel shared intelligence with President Bush this summer indicating that North Korean nuclear personnel were in Syria, U.S. government sources said. Read more @ Washington Post

How does Syria Respond? Read Syria's move

What Israel Really Gained by Bombing Syria...continue on @ The New Republic

Is President Bush Forsaking the GOP in 2008?


George W. Bush's damn-the-torpedoes determination to stay the course in Iraq has thus created an excruciating dilemma for the GOP. By sticking with the White House, Republicans in Congress can block the Democrats' efforts to end the war, either by filibuster or by upholding an almost certain veto of any bill challenging the war. But any such victory will be Pyrrhic, costing them dearly in next year's election. Between now and then, they'll remain trapped between a White House that isn't ready to give an inch and a Democratic caucus in the House and Senate that can force them to cast vote after embarrassing vote in defense of Bush's war over the next thirteen months, in full public view. Read more of Robert Dreyfuss, The Nation

Friday, September 21, 2007

Picks of the Week


College Football
#12 South Carolina at #2 LSU = Tigers chew up Gamecocks
Iowa at #9 Wisconsin = Hawkeyes pull the upset in Madison
#22 Georgia at #16 Alabama = Bulldogs bring the Tide back to earth
Washington at UCLA = Huskies get a big victory in LA
Oregon State at Arizona State = Reunion of OSU and Erickson goes to the Sun Devils

National Football League
San Francisco at Pittsburgh = Battle of two 2-0 teams goes to the Steelers
Indianapolis at Houston = Battle of two 2-0 teams goes to the Colts
Cincinnati at Seattle = Hawks deal another blow to the Bengals
Dallas at Chicago = Dallas learns the meaning of Big D in Chicago
Tennessee at New Orleans = Saints enjoy some home cooking and a win in the Super Dome

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Thousands rally to show support for 'Jena 6'


Buses lined roads into Jena, Louisiana, today as people from across the country came to support the "Jena 6," six black teens charged in the beating of a white classmate. Buses lined up as far as the eye could see, reported CNN.com's Eliott McLaughlin. developing story
Other links to this story that has been in the shadows...

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Federal Reserve Rate Cut: What Does It Mean?


The country's top monetary policymakers took a somewhat unusual step in trimming the discount rate. We explain what it does -- and doesn't mean.

The Federal Reserve's move to cut a half-point from the discount rate will go some distance in soothing financial markets roiled by problems in housing and subprime mortgages. But the Fed's move is significant not only for what it did, but also for what it didn't do -- cutting the federal funds rate, which has a direct impact on interest rates paid by businesses and individuals. To help you decipher what's going on, we've put together some questions and answers.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Bush Taps Retired N.Y. Judge for Attorney General Post


Calling him a "tough but fair judge" President Bush named Michael B. Mukasey as his choice to replace embattled Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who resigned after months of criticism for his management of the Department of Justice. Bush said that Mukasey is a "sound manager" who will bring "impressive credentials" to the job.

Mukasey, a retired federal judge, said he was "deeply honored" to be selected and said that his "fondest hope and prayer" was to give the employees at the Department of Justice the "support and leadership they deserve." Go to ABCNews

Iraq punishes US firm over 'random' killings


Employees of a US security firm face prosecution in Iraq after a Baghdad shooting in which 11 people were killed.

Iraq has withdrawn the licence of Blackwater, one of the biggest foreign security contractors in Iraq.

An Iraq Interior Ministry spokesman said guards working for Blackwater opened fire when mortar rounds landed near their convoy in west Baghdad's Mansour district yesterday.

"By chance the company was passing by. They opened fire randomly at citizens," Brigadier-General Abdul-Karim Mr Khalaf said. Eleven people were killed, including one policeman, and 13 people were wounded, he said. Continue here

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Somebody Else’s Mess


Thomas Friedman, New York Times
George W. Bush delivered his farewell address on Thursday evening — handing the baton, and probably the next election, to the Democrats.

Why do I say that? Because in his speech to the nation the president basically said that on the most important, indeed only, legacy issue left in his presidency, Iraq, there would be no change in policy — that a substantial number of U.S. troops would remain in Iraq “beyond my presidency.” Therefore, it will be up to his successor to end the war he started.

“In one fell swoop George Bush abdicated to Petraeus, Maliki and the Democrats,” said David Rothkopf, visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment, referring to Gen. David Petraeus and the Iraqi prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki. “Bush left it to Petraeus to handle the war, Maliki to handle our timetable and therefore our checkbook, and the Democrats to ultimately figure out how to end this.”

The sad thing for the American people is that we have no commander in chief anymore, framing our real situation and options. The president’s description on Thursday of the stakes in Iraq was delusional. An Iraqi ally fighting for “freedom” against “extremists”? There are extremists in the Iraqi government, army and police. There is a civil war on top of tribal, neighborhood and jihadist wars, fueled not by a single Iraqi quest for freedom, but by differing quests for “justice,” revenge and, yes, democracy. The only possible self-sustaining outcome in the near term is some form of radical federalism.

We also do not have a commander in chief weighing the costs of staying in Iraq indefinitely against America’s other interests at home and abroad. When General Petraeus honestly averred that he could not say whether pursuing the surge in Iraq would make America safer, he underscored how much the war there has become disconnected from every conceivable worthy goal — democratization of Iraq or spreading progressive governance in the Arab-Muslim world — and is now just about itself and abstractions of “winning” or “not failing.”

That is why I thought the most relevant comments from the Petraeus hearings last week were those offered by the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, Representative Ike Skelton, when he said at the outset:

“We must begin by considering the overall security of this nation. It’s our responsibility here in Congress under the Constitution to ensure that the United States military can deter and if needed prevail anywhere our interests are threatened. Iraq is an important piece of the overall equation, but it is only a piece. There are very real trade-offs when you send 160,000 of our men and women in uniform to Iraq. Those troops in Iraq are not available for other missions.”

While Mr. Bush’s tacit resignation last week greatly increases the odds of a Democratic victory in 2008, there are several wild cards that could change things: a miraculous turnaround in Iraq (unlikely, but you can always hope), a terrorist attack in America, a coup in Pakistan that puts loose nukes in the hands of Islamist radicals, or a recession induced by the meltdown in the U.S. mortgage market, which forces a stark choice between bailing out Baghdad or Chicago.

The first three, for sure, could propel the right Republican candidate right back into the thick of things — especially if the Democrats have not positioned themselves with a credible approach to Iraq and the wider national security issues facing the country.

There is an opportunity now for Democrats, and Americans will be listening — but they need to articulate a concrete endgame policy, and it would have to include at least three components:

First, a detailed blueprint with a fixed withdrawal date tied to a negotiation with Iraqi factions on a federal solution tied to a military redeployment plan to contain the inevitable spillover from Iraq.

Second, a commitment by the next president to impose a stiff tariff on all imported crude oil, to make sure we become less dependent on what is sure to be a more unstable Middle East as we leave Iraq. And third, a plan to deal with the broader terrorist challenge. Set a date. Set a price. That will get people’s attention.

Democratic candidates have been talking about health care and other important issues, but the overriding foreign policy message that still comes across from them to many Americans, argues Mr. Rothkopf, is that Democrats are simply “anti-Bush, antiwar and antitrade.” Be careful: despite the mess Mr. Bush has made in the world, or maybe because of it, Americans will not hand the keys to a Democrat who does not convey a “gut” credibility on national security.

Photo of the Week

Steelers win 26-3, move to 2-0


Steelers move to 2-0 on this young season against the Buffalo Bills. Steelers were lead by another impressive show on defense which has aloowed ten points after two games. Offensively, Pittsburgh was lead by "Fast" Willie Parker with back to back 100 yard games 23 carries for 126 yards. Big Ben passed for 242 yards and 1 TD. Pittsburgh Post Gazette

Friday, September 14, 2007

Picks of the Week


College Football
#22 Tennessee at #5 Florida = In the Swamp it's the GATORS!
#10 Ohio State at Washington = It will be close but no cigar for the Dawgs, OSU wins!
#1 USC at #14 Nebraska = Defense, defense, defense...USC will be victorious.
Fresno State at #19 Oregon = Oregon gets a scare but wins....
Idaho State at Oregon State = OSU back on track after their poor outing in Ohio

National Football League
Buffalo at Pittsburgh = Steelers start 2-0...Bills are beat up from Denver last week
San Diego at New England = Patriot Gate, gives NE "us against the world" edge against SD
New Orleans at Tampa Bay = Saints score points and a win in Florida
Dallas at Miami = Dallas is rolling out of Miami 2-0
Seattle at Arizona = Bad luck follows 'Zona...Seahawks win

Your thoughts fellow prognosticators?!

Why they should stay

For all General Petraeus's spin, Iraq is still a violent mess. That is why America should not leave yet

POLITICS, said the late John Kenneth Galbraith, is the art of choosing between the disastrous and the unpalatable. The problem for America in Iraq is that it is agonisingly difficult to tell which is which.

General David Petraeus, America's senior commander in Iraq, and Ryan Crocker, its ambassador, went to Capitol Hill this week to tell Congress that bringing the troops home too soon would result in disaster. The general took along a flipchart of tables purporting to show that the “surge” of recent months was beginning to work (see article). The ambassador said he could not guarantee success but that if America gave up now the consequences would be massive human suffering, the intervention of regional states and gains for Iran and al-Qaeda. Continue at The Economist...

A Humbled President


He seemed almost broken to me. His voice raspy, his eyes watery, his affect exhausted, his facial expression almost bewildered. I thought I would feel angry; but I found myself verging toward pity. The case was so weak, the argument so thin, the evidence for optimism so obviously strained that one wondered whom he thought he was persuading. And the way he framed his case was still divorced from the reality we see in front of our nose: that Iraq is not, as he still seems to believe, full of ordinary people longing for democracy and somehow stymied solely by "extremists" or al Qaeda or Iran, but a country full of groups of people who cannot trust one another, who are still living in the wake of unimaginable totalitarian trauma, who have murdered and tortured and butchered each other in pursuit of religious and ethnic pride and honor for centuries. This is what Bush cannot recognize: there is no Iraq. There are no Iraqis. There may have been at one point - but what tiny patina of national unity that once existed to counter primordial sectarian loyalty was blown away by the anarchy of the Rumsfeld-Franks invasion. The president's stunning detachment from this reality tragically endures - whether out of cynicism or delusion or, more worryingly, a simple intellectual inability to understand the country he is determined that the United States occupy for the rest of our lives. Read on...

Credit for Beginners

Economics lesson for Friday September 14, 2007, click here.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Left Attack on Petraeus Poses Problem for Democrats


The Democrats, especially the Democrats running for president, have a problem, and his name is Petraeus.

In two days of hearings on Capitol Hill, he probably didn’t change any of the views held by members of Congress about the war in Iraq. But he almost certainly impressed a lot of people sitting at home by displaying all the traits Americans hope for in a military leader.

He was, to put it simply, good, a man who came across as brave, honorable, and true, and that’s the problem.

On Monday, the day Petraeus was to begin his testimony, in the great tradition of Washington politics, MoveOn.org blasted him before hearing a word of it. In a full page ad in the New York Times, that became the talk of Congress, the talk shows, and cable news (as it was supposed to), the liberal group accused Petraeus of "cooking the books," and charged that he was betraying the American peoples' trust by spinning the facts to support the White House.

That is, by the way, how MoveOn itself summarized the ad, in an email to its supporters sent the next day, giving notice that it wasn’t backing down. Read more of Susan Estrich

A New Strain of Anti-Semitism is Spreading


Who recently said: "These Jews started 19 Crusades. The 19th was World War (1). Why? Only to build Israel."

Some holdover Nazi?

Hardly. It was former Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan of Turkey, a NATO ally. He went on to claim that the Jews -- whom he refers to as "bacteria" -- controlled China, India and Japan, and ran the United States.

Who alleged: "The Arabs who were involved in 9/11 cooperated with the Zionists, actually. It was a cooperation. They gave them the perfect excuse to denounce all Arabs."

A conspiracy nut? Answer

US Senate Race, Oregon 2008


In Oregon, the concept of doctor-assisted suicide is not a revolutionary idea. The notion that the government ought not mess with someone's guns is also well within the mainstream. The state has an income tax, but no sales tax, and anyone who tries to change that will bring upon themselves the combined wrath of Oregon's approximately 3.5 million, mostly socially liberal, fiscal conservative voters.

Divided roughly a third of the width of the state by the Cascade Mountains, there are strong conservative areas in the eastern high desert, though new transplants from California are giving Democrats a chance in state legislative elections in wealthy Bend, in the middle of the state. Those conservatives are outnumbered by liberal Portland, a town that epitomizes the concept of a Pacific Coast liberal bastion.

The combination of four straight Democratic presidential wins, a Democratic governor since 1986 and four Democrats out of five congressional representatives would seem to preclude national Republicans from having so much as a hope of picking up a Senate seat. Instead, the state is home to a long tradition of moderate Republican statesmen, including former Appropriations Committee chairman Mark Hatfield and Republican-turned-Democrat Wayne Morse.

It is no surprise, then, that Gordon Smith...read on

Oden To Miss Season


Celebrated Trail Blazers rookie center Greg Oden, the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft, will likely miss the 2007-08 season after undergoing knee surgery Thursday, the team said.

Doctors found cartilage damage during an exploratory procedure, and team physician Dr. Don Roberts performed microfracture surgery to repair the damage.

"There are things about this that are positive for Greg," Roberts said in a statement posted on the Trail Blazers' Web site. "First of all, he is young. The area where the damage was is small and the rest of his knee looked normal. All those are good signs for a complete recovery from microfracture surgery."

Seven-footer Greg Oden will spend pretty much all of his first season in the NBA on the Trail Blazers' bench.

The 7-foot center is expected to be on crutches for up to eight weeks. A full recovery likely will take six to 12 months, the team said. Read more at ESPN

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Portland: What are these people looking at?


As the sun sets each night in September, Portlanders flock to Chapman school to watch the Vaux's swifts swirl and roost in the school's big brick chimney. Elaborate picnics unfold. Frisbee games and footbag start up. Kids charge around making friends out of strangers.

Iraq Through China’s Lens


It’s nice to be in a country where Iraq is never mentioned. It’s just a little unnerving when that country is America’s biggest geopolitical and economic rival these days: China.

I heard China’s prime minister, Wen Jiabao, address an international conference here in Dalian, and what impressed me most was how boring it was — a straightforward recitation of the staggering economic progress China has made in the last two decades and the towering economic, political and environmental challenges it still faces.

How nice it must be, I thought, to be a great power and be almost entirely focused on addressing your own domestic problems?

No, I have not gone isolationist. America has real enemies that China does not, and therefore we have to balance a global security role in places like the Middle East with domestic demands.

But something is out of balance with America today. Looking at the world from here, it is hard not to feel that China has spent the last six years training for the Olympics while we’ve spent ourselves into debt on iPods and Al Qaeda.

After 9/11, we tried to effect change in the heart of the Arab-Muslim world by trying to build a progressive government in Baghdad. There was, I believed, a strategic and moral logic for that. But the strategy failed, for a million different reasons, and now it is time to recognize that and focus on how we insulate ourselves from the instability of that world — by having a real energy policy, for starters — how we protect our security interests there in more sustainable ways and how we get back to developing our own house.

By now it should be clear that Iraq is going to be what it is going to be. We’ve never had sufficient troops there to shape Iraq in our own image. We simply can’t go on betting so many American soldiers and resources that Iraqis will one day learn to live together on their own — without either having to be bludgeoned by Saddam or baby-sat by us.

So either we get help or get out. That is, if President Bush believes staying in Iraq can still make a difference, then he needs to muster some allies because the American people are not going to sustain alone — nor should they — a long-shot bet that something decent can still be built in Baghdad.

If the president can’t get help, then he has to initiate a phased withdrawal: now. Because the opportunity cost this war is exacting on our country and its ability to focus on anything else is out of all proportion to what might still be achieved in Iraq by our staying, with too few troops and too few friends.

Iraqis can add. The surge has brought more calm to Iraq largely because the mainstream Iraqi Sunnis finally calculated that they have lost and that both the pro-Al Qaeda Iraqi Sunnis and the radical Shiites are more of a threat to them than the Americans they had been shooting at.

The minute we start withdrawing, all Iraqis will carefully calculate their interests. They may decide that they want more blood baths, but there is just as much likelihood that they will eventually find equilibrium.

I have not been to Dalian in three years. It is not just a nice city for China. It is a beautiful city of wide avenues, skyscrapers, green spaces, software parks and universities.

The president of Dalian University of Technology, Jinping Ou, told me his new focus now is on energy research and that he has 100 doctoral students dealing with different energy problems — where five years ago he barely had any — and that the Chinese government has just decided to open its national energy innovation research center here.

Listening to him, my mind drifted back to Iraq, where I was two weeks ago and where I heard a U.S. officer in Baghdad tell this story:

His unit was on a patrol in a Sunni neighborhood when it got hit by an I.E.D. Fortunately, the bomb exploded too soon and no one was hurt. His men jumped out and followed the detonation wire, which led 1,500 feet into the neighborhood. A U.S. Black Hawk helicopter was in the area and alerted the U.S. soldiers that a man was fleeing the scene on a bicycle. The soldiers asked the Black Hawk for help, and it swooped down and used its rotor blades to blow the insurgent off his bicycle, with a giant “whoosh,” and the U.S. soldiers captured him.

That image of a $6 million high-tech U.S. helicopter with a highly trained pilot blowing an insurgent off his bicycle captures the absurdity of our situation in Iraq. The great Lebanese historian Kamal Salibi said it best: “Great powers should never get involved in the politics of small tribes.”

That is where we are in Iraq. We’re wasting our brains. We’re wasting our people. We’re wasting our future. China is not.

Iowa vs. America


In America, Hillary Clinton holds a solid and enduring 15- to 20-point lead over Barack Obama, who, in turn, enjoys a 2-to-1 advantage over John Edwards, who languishes in third place. But in Iowa, Edwards is often in first place in the polls and, at best, Hillary is locked in a three-way tie with her rivals.

In America, Rudy Giuliani continues to lead the Republican field while Fred Thompson edges past the ill-fated Mitt Romney and the snakebit John McCain. But in Iowa, it is all Romney all the time as the former Massachusetts governor, riding a wave of paid television ads, has first place all to himself and has been atop the Iowa polls for four or five months. Meanwhile, Arkansas's former governor, Mike Huckabee, way down in the national polls, is surging in Iowa and now boasts 14 percent in the polls. Ahead of McCain, he is challenging Thompson and Giuliani in the first-in-the-nation caucuses.

So which is reality? To read the rest of Dick Morris's article click here.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Sen. Obama (D) and Sen. Hagel (R)

Today the Senate hearings continued with Petraeus and Crocker and it heated up with some outstanding rhetoric from the left-side and right-side of the aisle, click Barack Obama and Chuck Hagel to view their assessment of the non-strategy in Iraq. What your thoughts with regard to the comments made by Obama and Hagel?

In Search of a GOP St. George


Iowa Republicans will tell you that the Devil does not wear Prada; she wears a pantsuit, low-heeled shoes and a sunny, I-told-you-so smile. Karl Rove insists that Sen. Hillary Clinton is a "fatally flawed candidate," and many Democrats agree. In a new book, "The Neglected Voter," journalist David Kuhn charts the party's waning appeal among white men—a debilitating trend Clinton seems ill-suited to reverse. But Iowans aren't reassured by Rove or flow charts. They assume Clinton will be the nominee, and, with typical earnestness, are searching for the right Saint George to take on the dragon lady. More of Howard Fineman's article from Newsweek...

The Road to Partition


Musawi’s words are just one more piece of evidence that Iraq will not be put together the way it was. It’s one more piece of evidence that America’s best course is not to reunify Iraq, but simply to inhibit the violence as Iraqis feel their own way to partition.

What we’re really trying to build, in other words, is a road to partition. We’re trying to build a pathway to separation that involves the sort of low-intensity civil war that Iraq is enduring right now. We’re trying to prevent a pathway that is even worse — a high-intensity genocide.

As I was watching yesterday’s hearings, I was thinking of the sensible yet sectarian Musawi. How many American lives is it worth to save those like her? Is it realistic to think U.S. troops can help Iraqis move on that less barbaric path? To read more of David Brooks thoughts...

In Memory of...


How do you feel our government has done in its efforts to capture and bring to justice Osama Bin Laden?

Sunday, September 9, 2007

Mt.Hood, Oregon


Mt Hood, Oregon from Lawrance Lake Rd

Steelers Bruise Browns, 34-7


The Cleveland Browns opened the season with hopes of a successful season but those hopes quickly turned into a chorus of boos as their offense struggled against a Steeler defense that looked like they were in mid-season form recording six sacks in the game including collecting five Brown turnovers. The Steeler offense was outstanding early as they took advantage of a short field multiple times and lit up the scoreboard with 17 points in the first quarter. Overall, Ben Roethlisberger threw for four touchdowns, a career high for Big Ben and on the ground "Fast" Willie Parker ran for 109 yards. Next week the Steelers home opener has the Buffalo Bills coming to Heinz Field. The Buffalo Bills lost their home opener 15-14 as Jason Elam kicked a winning field goal as time expired to give the Broncos the win. Steelers 1-0!

Election 2008 National Head-to-Head Polls


It is the greatest race in America. The stakes are high. The candidates are announced, the media is tracking every step, and the pollsters have the latest numbers.

CIA agent says we're letting Bin Laden win


So on this 9/11, we must accept this sad and infuriating reality: Bin Laden is winning. He has defied us, attacked us, eluded us and inspired new threats we cannot begin to enumerate.

To be victorious in this long war, we must get smarter and more ruthless. That means reducing U.S. intervention in the Muslim world, keeping policies essential to U.S. security and unloading those that undermine it — like energy dependence on the Saudi and other Gulf regimes. This will start to deflect Islamist and Muslim ire onto their main enemy, the Arab world's Islamofascist rulers. To read more click Michael Scheuer.

Bernanke, the Fed and 2008


If the economy falters, as it increasingly looks as if it will, it would undercut one of the few positive developments President Bush and the Republican candidates have been able to cite in appealing to the public to keep the White House in conservative hands. A sharp rise in home foreclosures and a fall in home prices would also hurt, reinforcing the Democratic argument that Republican policies help the rich while leaving the middle class less secure and the poor worse off. Fed chairman, Ben S. Bernanke

Political Cartoon

What’s Missing in Baghdad


One of the most troubling lessons of the Iraq invasion is just how empty the Arab dictatorships are. Once you break the palace, by ousting the dictator, the elevator goes straight to the mosque. There is nothing in between — no civil society, no real labor unions, no real human rights groups, no real parliaments or press. So it is not surprising to see the sort of clerical leadership that has emerged in both the Sunni and Shiite areas of Iraq.

But this is not true in northern Iraq, in Kurdistan. Though not a full-fledged democracy, Kurdistan is developing the key elements of a civil society. To read further...Thomas Friedman

Ducks Fly Over Michigan


Boy, was I wrong on my prediction! Oregon dominates the Wolverines in Ann Arbor for a 39-7 win. It was clear at halftime this game could have been called for a lack of competition by Michigan. The storied football team has seriously stumbled out of the gate here in 2007. First, losing to I-AA Appalachian State University and then getting trounced by Oregon. Will Michigan bounce back to have a winning season? Can the Ducks maintain the momentum or will they fall flat after an emotinal win in Ann Arbor as they go against a tough Fresno State team that enters Autzen Stadium Saturday?

Friday, September 7, 2007

Oregon Enters The Big House...

After Appalachian State University embarrassed Michigan last week, the Ducks enter the Big House filled with 107,000 rowdy Michigan fans and some very angry Wolverine players...my expectation is that we are going to see a bunch of duck feathers on the field Saturday afternoon in Ann Arbor. Final Score: Michigan 38 - Oregon 20
Some notable facts about the Michigan-Oregon matchup

That One Is Going To Leave A Mark!

Senator Susan Collins (Maine) is getting attacked for her support of President George W. Bush's Iraq War Policy. Presuming that conditions do not improve dramtically prior to the general election in 2008. Do you think this type of commerical will be influential to voters in 2008?

Wailea Sunset


The glow in the center is the Island of Lanai off the South Maui Coast.

The New Social Contract


Health care the elephant in the room...that no one wants to talk about. An interesting take by an Englishman as presented by David Brooks of the New York Times. For more in depth look at Stuart M. Butler's thoughts on American Health Care go to The Hamilton Project.

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

The Case for Pragmatic Idealism,


James A. Baker, III writes an insighful take on America's position in the world today and in the future. Mr. Baker does not believe in all of the gloom and doom that seemingly surrounds our nation internationally.
THE PRINCIPLES that guide American foreign policy during the coming years will determine how successful the United States will be as it addresses the complex global challenges that confront us. A foreign policy simply rooted in values without a reasonable rationale of concrete interests will not succeed. But our foreign policy will also fail if it too narrowly focuses on the national interest and disregards the role that democratic ideals and human rights play in establishing a more secure world. These truths will confront the next president regardless of his or her political party. He or she will face an international environment in which the use or misuse of American power in all its manifestations—military, diplomatic and economic—will bear decisively on our national security and on global stability.
Click here to read his viewpoint on America's bright future. Mr. Baker has served our nation as the Chief of Staff and Secretary of the Treasury for President Ronald Reagan, including Secretary of State for President George H.W. Bush.

New England Fall Colors

Cartoon of the Week

Sizing Up The GOP Front-Runners



Could it be that the Evangelicals like a social moderate like Rudy Giuliani? What gives? When the GOP social conservatives have other candidates (e.g.) Mike Huckabee and Sam Brownback...could it be that the GOP has moved foreign policy to the front seat and the social/moral issues have been pushed to the back seat? Your thoughts after reading further...

Letter From Baghdad


3 scenes from Iraq on Thomas Friedman's visit...to read further click here