U.S. Attorney General Resigns 845
willie3204 is one of many to mention that U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has resigned. One of Gonzales' main opponents praised his decision stating that: "'For the previous six months, the Justice Department has been virtually nonfunctional and desperately needs new leadership,' said the Schumer statement. 'Democrats will not obstruct or impede a nominee who we are confident will put the rule of law above political considerations. We beseech the Administration to work with us to nominate someone whom Democrats can support and America can be proud of.'"
Thank goodness (Score:5, Funny)
Not likely (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not likely (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not likely (Score:5, Insightful)
An old sentiment (Score:5, Insightful)
Politics is like football. We've been at it so long that we forget that fitness was the original purpose of the game, and just care about winning.
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This particular governmental power was hastily repealed in 1802 when it became likely that Thomas Jefferson (a staunch opponent of the act and those who passed it) would win the next presidency.
Is this the same Thomas Jefferson who was elected President in 1800?
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Well, you see, they didn't have Diebold machines back then, so they had to do the recounts by hand, and that took some time; so why Jefferson was elected in 1800, they didn't know it until two years later. That's why you need electronic voting
Re:An old sentiment (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Not likely (Score:5, Insightful)
So, in other words, the message you're sending them is "Unless you do what I want, I'll just ignore you and let you do whatever you want".
Yeah, good plan. To express your disapproval of government power-grabbing, you're going to help them grab more.
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Re:Not likely (Score:5, Interesting)
Interesting dance (Score:3, Funny)
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Oh, they'll notice alright. They'll just campaign to only the 20% of people who vote.
Re:Not likely (Score:4, Informative)
But where do you think the power will go? It doesn't just go away.
We did the mistake of voting in term limits here in Oregon for legislators. The result has been essentially a transfer of power and influence from legislators to their aids and the lobbyists - who don't get removed after so many terms.
Voter turnout less than 20%? That's what the entrenched parties want. If you can get the middle to be apathetic and not turn out then all you have to do is activate your base more than the other guy. The middle voters are so unpredictable that it's better to keep them at home and unwilling to participate.
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"Stop doing what you're doing, or I'll ignore you even harder and make it even easier for you to keep doing what you're doing, and to make more money and power for you and your friends."
I bet they're terrified of your apathy-foo.
Re:Not likely (Score:5, Insightful)
we the American people hired incompetents to run our business. or we abdicated, left the hiring up to the lamers who'll actually stand in line to vote - those dumbfucks don't have anything else better to do??
we the people used to be in charge but we slacked off. and now who's in charge? assholes. but who hired them? who _let_ them?
if the American people are ever going to be in charge of their own lives again then we have to wake up, take responsiblity, quit crying like pussies that "someone stole my country" and fucking take it back
fucking vote! even if it's for Ralph Nader. fucking vote. campaign. volunteer. shoot your mouth off. act like you give a shit! be loud. be proud. be a real patriot. and realize you might have to sacrifice something. do it anyway
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But in the US, we've been marginalized with stupidity. We are absolutely void of critical thought. All we needs is a "support our troops" sticker, an American flag flying outside of our hou
Your doing it wrong... (Score:5, Interesting)
If you think that 20% voter turn out will get the governments attention, just imagine what a 70% turnout would do to them with 30% of the votes going to third party candidates! So, don't encourage your family and friends not to vote at all. Don't try to convince them that they should think a third party will get elected. Just explain that if they are going to withhold/throw away their votes, withhold them from the possible winners by putting them on a third party.
If not voting is supposed to be the death by a thousand cuts, voting for a third party is the salt you rub into the wounds.
Re:Not likely (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course this was how the founding fathers envisioned that the government would work, three equal branches of government would check each other. Instead, in the early part of the 21st century, the three branches of government shifted dramatically to the right and began to collude with each other, instead of checking each other. The result is the fascist government we have had these last (almost) 8 years.
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The 90's were great because Clinton stood up the Republicans on bs like the bankruptcy bill and slashing the budget to give tax cuts to the rich. The main issue that the Republican's stood up to Clinton and won was defeating universal health care, which has cost Americans hundreds of billions of dollars for crappy care. Thanks, GOP! Once they had the White House and Congress all bets were off.
It's also worth mentio
Re:Not likely (Score:5, Informative)
Were you around during the Clinton presidency?
No war?
You don't remember Somalia, Kosovo (and the bombing of Belgrade, where the US managed to bomb the Chinese embassy), and the bombings in Iraq (Desert Fox, anyone?), and missile attacks in the Sudan and elsewhere?
And as for terrorism, the WTC bombing in '93, the USS Cole, US embassies in Africa? Where hundreds died?
It's quite true there wasn't a conflict like Iraq, and we didn't lose over three thousand US troops in combat. But thousands died, just most of them weren't Americans.
Yes, the Clinton years were years of relative peace compared to now. But the idea that there was "no war" (and I'm speaking of conflict directly involving the US military; obviously there were a lot of other wars going on) is pretty peculiar.
Go tell the citizens of Yugoslavia, Sudan, Somalia, Kosovo, and even Iraq that there was "no war" in the Clinton years. You might get quite an earful.
Holmwood.
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Which is the correct way to run a war.
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Re:Not likely (Score:4, Informative)
Sorry, but I think that after watching some of the hypocrisy of the past seven years, many Americans now know the difference between substantive policy and "talking things."
Of course, if the Repubs wanted to "co-opt" these issues by regulating business and trade practices, building a better education system, cutting pollution, and ensuring that the citizens of the world's richest country have access to health care, then I'd be all for them, but I somehow doubt that their shareholders...er, major donors want anything to do with it.
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If you think Hillary Clinton won't abuse any power, then you have forgotten the flurry of Executive Orders that her husband issued during the last 90 days of his presidency. http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/c-execorder s.html [leaderu.com] Bill Clinton abused the use of Executive more than any other president.
Oh, did he? [englishfirst.org]
Well, unlike the Probe Ministries (whose mission is to reclaim the primacy of Christian thought and values in Western culture through
Re:Not likely (Score:5, Insightful)
No recess appointments (Score:4, Informative)
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WRT losers: damn right. I'm almost more disgusted with the Congressional Dems who don't have the spine to stand up to Bush's abuses than I am with The Decider himself.
Re:Not likely (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Not likely (Score:4, Interesting)
What does work is the National Popular Vote, and it's not a huge overhaul of the electoral process. It's an interstate agreement to assign all their electors to the winner of the national popular vote. Once enough states sign on (enough to make a majority of electoral votes), the law goes into effect. It's simple and fair.
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Tragic. They'll have to feel how 47/48 non-swing states feel right now.
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The problem is the use of electoral di
Re:Not likely (Score:4, Informative)
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He also would have won the electoral vote in 2000 if there had been a statewide recount of Florida's votes.
You mean like this [cnn.com]?
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- A comprehensive study of the 2000 presidential election in Florida suggests that if the U.S. Supreme Court had allowed a statewide vote recount to proceed, Republican candidate George W. Bush would still have been elected president.
It doesn't matter how many times you say it, or how many left-wing websites you quote, Al Gore tried to steal the election in 2000 and failed. Granted, if you change enough rules, Gore could have pulled it out, but that would not really be fair, would it? You can't change the rules AFTER the election to favor one side
Re:Thank goodness (Score:4, Funny)
I always felt that Peter Gabriel's song "I don't remember"
could have been Gonzales' theme music:
I don't remember,
I don't recal,
I have no memory
of anything at all.
Now will the opposing party actually push back? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Now will the opposing party actually push back? (Score:5, Insightful)
Political parties have no duties, only the need and desire to keep themselves in power. Congress (controlled by Democrats) has one of the lowest approval ratings ever at present. They aren't pushing for anything now.
Re:Now will the opposing party actually push back? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Now will the opposing party actually push back? (Score:5, Insightful)
Bull-fucking-shit. Care to try to explain the Clinton impeachment process then?
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No, he's saying that you can lie to a grand jury about anything the *judge* determines is not a material fact in the case. And he's 100% correct. If you want to tell a grand jury investigating a murder that the Sun revolves around the Earth, even though you know it for a fact to be untrue, you haven't committed perjury because it has nothing to do with the case.
The point of defining perjury in
Re:Now will the opposing party actually push back? (Score:5, Insightful)
... and the Daily Show is off this week. (Score:5, Interesting)
Is anyone noticing a trend where resignations seem to occur while The Daily Show is off on break?
Re:... and the Daily Show is off this week. (Score:5, Insightful)
They are all mere comedians. Find it ironic or not; The Daily Show is the single most factual source of political news and comentary in the US.
It's not ironic. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:... and the Daily Show is off this week. (Score:4, Interesting)
Much of what the media does to pretend that it's being fair is talk to people from both sides of the issue, and pretend like that's their job, to have a platform for a republican to talk about an issue, and then a democrat talk about that issue. But that's only a small part of their job. Their job is not just to allow each side to give their take on it, the media needs to verify all that stuff, challenge it, and call out what's true and what's not.
So CNN has a republican tell me that we're making progress in Iraq, followed by a democrat telling me that there's no real progress and things aren't getting better; that doesn't help me make an informed decision. The media needs to quantify and qualify what they're being told. And if it turns out that one side is spewing nonsense, then the media needs to call them out on it, or at least stop giving them a stage to spread that incorrect information.
Of course, a lot of that is a moot point as far as a couple of shows on comedy central are concerned, because, you know, they're comedy shows.
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Satire isn't in itself informative, but the people who read it are informed because the content of the media is directed towards the informed.
Lightbulbs (Score:5, Funny)
One, but he'll end up doing it multiple times because he can't recall doing it before.
Re:Lightbulbs (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, a $6 billion no-bid bulb-changing contract was already given to Halliburton.
The people's office.... (Score:3, Interesting)
One of the most frustrating, maddening things about this administration is disregard for the people's will. Bolton was a good example. He was only supported by the president and Republicans. When appointing someone that represent the American people you need to have the support of the American people not just your party.
It's in that same spirit that I'm voting Republican in the next presidential election. Do you REALLY think one party rule is going to better under Democrats? I like the idea of one party controlling the White House and the other controlling Congress. It forces people to work together. Something this country BADLY needs now... and for the world as well before we damage things even more.
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Back in my I Myth-ed the special they did for Walter Cronkite's 90th birthday. This weekend my wife and I finally got around to watching it.
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Imagine Walter Cronkite as a guest on The Daily Show!
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Was he faking, or was he brain dead? (Score:5, Interesting)
Anyway, I'm still amazed that Dubya let him resign, even if Chertoff is the replacement (according to rumors). The last thing the neo-GOP wants now is a functional DoJ. Everything is coming unraveled for them.
One more thing. Don't let the door hit ya' on yer way out.
Must be a bigger fascist in the bullpen. (Score:4, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Thank Talking Points Memo. (Score:3, Informative)
Talking Points Memo [talkingpointsmemo.com]
Re:Thank Talking Points Memo. (Score:5, Informative)
I shouldn't even have to post this, because anyone still spewing the above bullshit obviously already knows the answer and is just blowing smoke, but just in case anyone else was wondering: Replacing all the political appointees as part of coming into office is traditional. Replacing in the middle of a term, only those attorney generals who prosecuted Republicans, or refused to prosecute Democrats is what's scandalous here. The Justice Department had a long history of being largely independant and non-partisan, and that is what was ruined by the Bush administration. That is not normal, nor expected, and that is why morale at the Justice Department is at an all-time low, with scores of senior staff leaving [findlaw.com]. Allowing that to continue would result in a country without rule of law, only political persecution of the party not in power, by the party in power.
Re:Thank Talking Points Memo. (Score:4, Insightful)
You make me sick.
Re:Thank Talking Points Memo. (Score:5, Informative)
Carol Lam was the one who put Cunningham in prison. She was working her way up the chain of command and was getting too close to the Whitehouse and Pentagon.
One of the new USA's replacing Cummins was the man who crafted the caging lists that denied black soldiers their right to vote in 2004 and 2006. He went to the Pentagon and found what black soldiers were deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. They then sent a "do not forward" letter to their stateside post. When the letter was returned, they used that letter as evidence to challenge their votes. vote caging is illegal.
The USA's that remain are to a man, people who enforced caging lists, voter roll purges, and brought politically motivated cases timed for greatest effect at the polls. The calls of voter fraud was just a cover for their own illegal acts.
No matter what side of the political spectrum you my land you should be concerned when the Attorney General's office becomes a political arm of any party.
I want an AG that is loyal to the law, not the president. Even the much maligned Janet Reno was a far sight better than Gonzales. She went after Clinton with the same gusto as a Republican.
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One of the new USA's replacing Cummins was the man who crafted the caging lists that denied black soldiers their right to vote in 2004 and 2006. He went to the Pentagon and found what black soldiers were deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. They then sent a "do not forward" letter to their stateside post. When the letter was returned, they used that letter as evidence to challenge their votes. vote caging is illegal.
That one seems a bit over the top. I've honestly never heard of this before. Got a source for it?
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http://www.slate.com/id/2167284/pagenum/all/#page
It seems the original source of this was Monica Goodling, the AG's staffer who resigned and claimed executive priviledge for most answers during her congressional hearing.
It was about time (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's another one...the VP also used this "I do not recall..." slogan while under fire. It's about time our constitution was amended to automatically have a senior official resign when the all of a sudden they cannot recall matters so important and held so dear to these United States.
Re:It was about time (Score:5, Funny)
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Schumer's a camera whore (Score:3, Funny)
Reminds me to donate - (Score:5, Insightful)
Events like this remind me to donate to the ACLU.
i didn't think much of ag ag (Score:5, Informative)
it takes some effort to make john ashcroft look like a brave defender of american's freedoms. and ag ag did that, by acting like some sort of blitzkrieg operative for the extension of capricious and dubious powers. all very shady, all very slick, all very despicable, and forever afterward in my mind ag ag was worthy of not just resignation, but prosecution and punishment
now it looks like, like a previous white house operative [wikipedia.org] (ag was the general counsel of gw bush in texas), that he's just the fall guy for his higher ups. resigning and taking the heat that rightfully should lead to dick cheney, karl rove, and gw bush
i'm not one for impeachment, it's a radical act, but i'm wondering where all the self-righteous a-holes who were ready to pillory clinton for whitewater and getting a blowjob from an intern are on the subject of gw bush, (or iran-contra, for that matter). or is it just a partisan game to get the other team at all costs, regardless of any actual judgment of the scale of wrongdoing?
personally, clinton could have had roman orgies on the scale of caligula in the white house. compared to what bush has done to this country's image in the world, orgies in the white house ranks as an impeachable offense a couple of orders of magnitude below what the shocktroops of chicanery the gw bush team has given us
gw bush: the usa's worst president, ever. he's just a moronic drunk rich kid. he wasn't even rightfully elected by the will of the american people. can you imagine how different things would be on the world stage today if al gore was in the white house?
the 2008 elections cannot come fast enough
Re:i didn't think much of ag ag (Score:4, Insightful)
it took you this long? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's easy to be suspicious when the wind if finally blowing that direction--where were you when this crap started? I knew about Abu Ghraib before I knew about Abu Ghraib, because I've read about the Zimbardo prison experiment. This has been ugly since day one, and I'm not too sympathetic to anyone who gave Gonzalez et al the benefit of the doubt for this many years when they gutted habeus corpus, normalized torture, built secret prisons, etc.
Ablative Armor (Score:5, Insightful)
To those who call themselves Republicans and resist this idea, just imagine Hillary Clinton as president with all the powers Bush and Cheney have arrogated to themselves. It should give you screaming nightmares, because it sure does me.
Loyalty more important than competence (Score:5, Insightful)
While this may have always been true, it's never been more true now and this exemplifies the weakness of the American system of government. You elect a president, and then he puts incompetent cronies in positions of huge responsibility in important areas of the government. We've also seen that Bush has no reservations against using loopholes like congressional recess appointments to get around the checks and balances in Congress.
In other countries like Switzerland, heads of each major area of government, from transportation to defense, are independently, democratically elected. The next time an American starts talking about "democracy", remind them that they need to look elsewhere, far outside of their own country, to find a more true example of the democracy.
Re:Loyalty more important than competence (Score:5, Insightful)
What's really fun/annoying about this is the win/win nature of it for the ones who did it.
They've got their cronies in all of these positions and are tilting the agencies agendas in "loyalist directions" besides. Clearly a WIN.
On the other hand, if those agencies are called upon to fulfill their primary missions, as understood by the rest of the nation...
Those filling the positions are not fully competent to do so, and the agency falls down on its job. How is this a WIN? Simple, the folks selecting the appointees also like to say that they're in favor of smaller government, and that anything that can be privatized, should be. If the agency fails in it's job, it's clear evidence that government is incapable, therefore it should be privatized. Of course you're supposed to ignore the fact that their appointees caused the failure in the first place. It becomes a WIN.
What's truly sad here is the decimation of institutional memory. Some of that may be bad, but not all, and at the very least if the institutional memory is gone, you can't learn from it to improve. The top tier has always been political, but what's happened this time is that the second and third tiers have resigned because they couldn't stomach what the top tier was doing. There's the real problem, the core agency competence has left.
Scary, Scary, Scary: Habeas Corpus (Score:4, Informative)
What a strange 6 years we have lived through since 9/11. I'm hoping it will be over soon. At least the Gonzalez chapter is.
Wouldn't it save the taxpayers money.... (Score:3, Funny)
Just wondering.
Strategic Resignation (Score:5, Insightful)
Rove has free time now (Score:3, Funny)
Re:slashdotliberalwinning (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmph. (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong; I don't blame the conservatives. They always vote the same way (well, some vote libertarian). Same with the libs when it's their party who is screwing stuff up; gotta ride that sinking ship right to the bottom. The thing that pisses me off is the damn fickle swing vote. You'd think, since they're not really wedded to an ideology, they'd be better than the right or the left, but really, they're just a bunch of jokers who vote based on whether a candidate has "Presidential Hair" and other such simplistic crap.
We may blame all the problems on the government, but it's the responsibility of the people to demand good government, and to put good people in power.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
First past the post elections systems tend to become two party systems [wikipedia.org] after a long enough period of time.
The UK would be considered a two party system, the Labour and Conservative parties are the major parties with the Liberal Democrats
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Re:slashdotliberalwinning (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't hold your breath. (Score:5, Interesting)
When the country was founded, the founding fathers envisioned the electoral college as a hedge against mob rule...The members of the electoral college were typically rich landowners, and they weren't required to vote based on the votes of the citizens beneath them, so if the rich landowners didn't like candidate A, they could just vote for candidate B, regardless of how the people voted.
That's not the case these days. These days, most states require the EC to vote based on how the people in the state vote...No wealthy landowners here!
Except...Who do the people vote for? The candidates chosen by the two big political parties. How do the big political parties choose their candidates? Effectively it's money. Whoever can line up the most wealthy landowners behind them, that person wins. That's pretty much the point of the primary system...Trot out the candidates, and see which one the money guys like best.
Sure, there are two guys up on stage, but really they're the same. They go to the same schools. They know the same people. They do roughly the same crap in office.
Power to the people will be a first in this country, if it ever happens.
Oh give me a break please (Score:3, Insightful)
Except that the people have to exercise that power for it to make any difference. The #1 thing that takes power away from the people is this depressive meme that what they do doesn't matter anyway.
Obligatory Douglas Adams (Score:4, Insightful)
"You mean, it comes from a world of lizards?"
"No," said Ford, who by this time was a little more rational and coherent than he had been, having finally had the coffee forced down him, "nothing so simple. Nothing anything like to straightforward. On its world, the people are people. The leaders are lizards. The people hate the lizards and the lizards rule the people."
"Odd," said Arthur, "I thought you said it was a democracy."
"I did," said ford. "It is."
"So," said Arthur, hoping he wasn't sounding ridiculously obtuse, "why don't the people get rid of the lizards?"
"It honestly doesn't occur to them," said Ford. "They've all got the vote, so they all pretty much assume that the government they've voted in more or less approximates to the government they want."
"You mean they actually vote for the lizards?"
"Oh yes," said Ford with a shrug, "of course."
"But," said Arthur, going for the big one again, "why?"
"Because if they didn't vote for a lizard," said Ford, "the wrong lizard might get in. Got any gin?"
--Douglas Adams, So long, and thanks for all the fish.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Sadly, this is very true. If I, for example, really voted my conscience, I'd have to vote Green. Now, that's one less vote for the Democrats, which weakens them. If enough people on the far left vote Green or Socialist or something, it significantly weakens the position of the left-of-center party so that the right-of-center party wins the election. And since they're opposed to positions that I'm in favor of, I'm usually voting against the Republicans rather than for anyone.
The only way you'll ever have a
Re:slashdotliberalwinning (Score:5, Informative)
Shit like this really REALLY pisses me off.
Right, Left, Rebulican, Democrat...we are all AMERICANS. When will you people get that through your thick skulls?
There are no "teams" here, people. We are all in this boat together. The more of you that put a letter after your name, the more this country falls apart.
The "team" nature that this country has become obsessed with is the marking of our downfall. People like the person quoted in this post are the EXACT reason why this country is fucked. It's not because he is for the liberals or because he is for the conservatives...it's because he is declaring a "side" as "winning".
The instant you do that, we all lose.
Re:Better late than never (Score:5, Insightful)
Until there are term limits on every office, real congressional districts instead of roarshark tests, and a voting populace with a brain you're not going to see much different.
We've done too good of a job polarizing the two parties. everything they do is boiled down to one issue for that voting block and that is what makes the call. If you're against abortion, you'll vote republican no matter what because the Denmocrats want to open Joe's Abortion Clinic - you rape em we scrape em - on every corner.
If you're gay, well, you're fucked because neither party will support you 100%. However the democrats will at least wave your direction when you walk by but then turn around and tell the other folks you're just being nice to them because you feel sorry for them.
If you like guns, you'll vote republican because no matter what they say the Democrats will take away your gun the first chance they get, don't know how to hunt, or many other problems.
It doesn't matter that the candidate is a closeted gay, child molester, or anything else long as he votes for / against whatever one issue you let decide.
And I don't think this is a new phenomenon, they've just gotten better at it. No one wants to compromise anymore. It's my way or the highway seems to be the prevailing wind. You see that attitude everywhere from open source vs. closed source to civil unions vs. marriages. We wouldn't know what to do with someone who actually tried to work for a solution instead of standing up top going my way or the highway. The one campaign statement that to this day that infuriates me to know end is that over and over Bush said he was a uniter, not a divider. Post 9/11 he is the perfect example of a divisive president. The entire world was ready to invade Afghanistan and destroy anything that looked at you crosseyed after 9/11 and then next thing you know forget Afghanistan and the real issue, let's go to Iraq.
I'm not saying Saddam Hussein was some feel good hippie that just got in the way, he killed a good chunk of people and is up there with some of the bigger bad guys in the past. However the path we took really screwed us, but we can't bail out now or our leaving will kill more people than Saddam did in the first place. It's a culture battle at this point and we're too stupid to realize that. Democracy isn't for everyone, and you can't force it on them any more than you can anything else.
I've gotten to the point where I don't know what we can do. the Democratic party currently isn't offering anything worth looking at as far as the 'front runner' is. By the time my state's primary comes around the decision will already be made for me as to who the candidate is because of our fucked up system of nomination. I truly believe that the primary should be one day, nationwide, in February before the election. It's an IRV ballot where you rank your choices, winner take all. the fact that I believe it is after 'super tuesday' nothing can change the outcome.
It's not like IA, NH, and SC are really representative of the US Population either. Iowa gives whitebread a new meaning, as does NH. SC starts to represent the mix of ethnicity that makes this nation so great, but the real melting pot states aren't until later and receive less focus than any other state.
My $0.02 of ranting.
Roarshark?! (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Thanks for that excellent post. Sadly it will probably not get its due in one of these topics where most people are more interested in venting than anything else.
The attacks on the traditional primary line up and the whining of other (larger) states is largely misguided and the current trend of trying to jump the line is going to be a disaster if allowed to continue.
The early primary states are not a problem, they are a national treasure.
Any sense of disenfranchisement from states voting later in t
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I know you're going for a laugh, but it has to be said: "A congress which watched the constitution with even half as much attention as it watched it's ass."
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which is why... (Score:3, Interesting)
You know who then becomes president? Yep, that's right.
Re:Tough Position (Score:5, Informative)
Do you have any idea of the duties of the Attorney General? The Attorney General is not the President's private counsel. The Attorney General is the PEOPLE'S COUNSEL. As such, his loyalties are to the People of the United States, NOT the President.
People need to brush up on their civics lessons.
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Re:Tough Position (Score:5, Informative)
Gonzales has been with Bush since Texas. That's how long his poor judge of character has been in place.
As for him being a good lawyer, that's hard to say. I'm more concerned about whether he's an ethical and moral lawyer, which he is not; and, that didn't start when he took the AG job. Remember that it was Alberto Gonzales that convinced the president that the Geneva Conventions prohibiting torture were "quaint" and don't apply to the U.S. We have the detentions at Guantanamo of "foreign combantants" and the suspension of Habeas Corpus for Americans suspected of ties to terrorism because of him.
Gonzales was amongst the crew strongarming former Attorney General John Ashcroft in the ICU to approve the warrantless wiretapping program. The polital firings of U.S. attorney's is just the last straw on a big pile of straws.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Daily Show and The Colbert Report (Score:4, Insightful)
And repeating that sentence over and over doesn't mean there is no causation. Correlations are important, because they do imply something significant every now and then.
In this case the correlation is mostly comical though. So laugh.
Re:How is this News for Nerds? (Score:4, Insightful)
Or do you live on a planet where 80% of the world's telecommunications links do not run through the United States of America, where those 80% are not illegally wiretapped, where strong encryption wasn't suppressed under a fifty-year-old munitions law, where the most popular vendor of operating systems software did not secretly include an escrowed backdoor to their encryption engine, where merely fixing broken technology doesn't earn you an indictment and/or a designation as a terrorist, where the US government doesn't kidnap innocent people off the streets of foreign countries, torture them for months, and dump them in countries that will torture and kill them?
Nerds are still People.