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Rivalry

Ben Sargent
© Ben Sargent

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Up in the air… it’s a bird, it’s a plane!

Lisa Benson
© Lisa Benson

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McCain is now running for Karl Rove’s third term

Yesterday, McCain did a major reorganization of his campaign staff, the second such shake-up in a year. But what should be setting off warning bells is the people who are now in charge of his campaign. McCain elevated Steve Schmidt to full operational control. Schmidt is considered a pupil of Rove, and he is a veteran of Bush’s 2004 presidential campaign. According to the NY Times, “Mr. Schmidt’s elevation is the latest sign of increasing influence of veterans of Mr. Rove’s shop in the McCain operation.”

Other Rove associates added to McCain’s campaign include Nicolle Wallace, communications director for the 2004 Bush campaign, as a senior advisor, who will travel with McCain. Greg Jenkins, another Rove veteran, has joined the McCain communications team.

Is it a coincidence that McCain has gone deeply negative in the last few days, attacking not only Obama, but Gen. Wesley Clark and Sen. Jim Webb?  The Times also notes that, under Rove, Schmidt was in charge of the Bush campaign’s “war room” and that “one sign of Mr. Schmidt’s increasing influence in the campaign’s rapid response operation was the quickness with which it seized on a remark by Gen. Wesley K. Clark.”

Consider this a warning that McCain’s campaign is going very very negative. Get ready for the same nasty tactics that were used against McCain himself in Bush’s 2000 primary campaign.

UPDATE: They wasted no time at all — already releasing their first attack ad against Obama:

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How far can McCain distance himself from Cheney?

There are reports that McCain has been trying to distance himself from president Bush, because of Bush’s record-breaking unpopularity. But the only person less popular than Bush is his vice president, Dick Cheney. McCain hasn’t said much about Cheney recently, but if you go back to 2004, when McCain was campaigning for Bush, he called Cheney “one of the most capable, experienced, intelligent and steady vice presidents this country has ever had.”

http://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-07-28-mccain_x.htm

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Will Bush break the all-time record?

President Bush is within striking distance of the all-time record of vacation days taken by a sitting president. Reagan’s record was 436, and with Bush starting a vacation today, he is sitting (and I do mean sitting) at 423. Can he do it?

http://rawstory.com/news/2007/Daily_Show_salutes_Bush_presidential_vacation_0816.html

What’s truly ironic about this is that on Tuesday, White House spokesman Tony Fratto accused the Democrats in the Senate of slacking off, because they left for their Independence day break with unfinished legislation. Hypocritically, the unfinished legislation named by Fratto includes a housing bill, which was delayed by Nevada Republican John Ensign, and a Medicare bill, which the White House themselves asked Republican Arlen Specter to delay.

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Hitchens – “Believe me, it’s torture”

Christopher Hitchens, who is unabashedly pro-war, and who has (in the past now) drawn a distinction between “extreme interrogation” techniques and “outright torture”, agreed to be waterboarded to show that it was not torture. In a turnaround that was hardly a surprise, Hitchens now says that waterboarding is definitely torture. This is despite the fact that he was allowed to stop the process at any time by giving a signal (which he did).

You may have read by now the official lie about this treatment, which is that it “simulates” the feeling of drowning. This is not the case. You feel that you are drowning because you are drowning—or, rather, being drowned, albeit slowly and under controlled conditions and at the mercy (or otherwise) of those who are applying the pressure. The “board” is the instrument, not the method. You are not being boarded. You are being watered. This was very rapidly brought home to me when, on top of the hood, which still admitted a few flashes of random and worrying strobe light to my vision, three layers of enveloping towel were added. In this pregnant darkness, head downward, I waited for a while until I abruptly felt a slow cascade of water going up my nose. Determined to resist if only for the honor of my navy ancestors who had so often been in peril on the sea, I held my breath for a while and then had to exhale and—as you might expect—inhale in turn. The inhalation brought the damp cloths tight against my nostrils, as if a huge, wet paw had been suddenly and annihilatingly clamped over my face. Unable to determine whether I was breathing in or out, and flooded more with sheer panic than with mere water, I triggered the pre-arranged signal and felt the unbelievable relief of being pulled upright and having the soaking and stifling layers pulled off me. I find I don’t want to tell you how little time I lasted.

… If waterboarding does not constitute torture, then there is no such thing as torture.

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The absolutely worst moments of the Bush presidency

Brad Reed at AlterNet has distilled the Bush presidency into its top 10 most disastrous and embarrassing events:

10: Bush Gets re-elected using the most negative campaign in history
9: Alberto Gonzales’ Congressional Testimony
8: North Korea Conducts a Nuclear Test
7: Colin Powell’s Bogus WMD Presentation at the U.N.
6: The Terri Schiavo Affair
5: Bush and Condi’s Excellent Gaza Adventure
4: “Brownie, You’re Doing a Heckuva Job
3: Abu Ghraib
2: 9/11
1: “Mission Accomplished

In case your least favorite moment got left out, here’s a list of the dishonorable mentions: warrantless wiretapping; Valerie Plame; Scooter Libby’s sentence commuted; Bush believes Rafael Palmeiro is innocent; soldiers face neglect at Walter Reed; signing statements; the Kyoto treaty ripped uployalty oaths; the fake turkey; a stagedteleconference with troops, staged FEMA press conference, extraordinary rendition, support for junk scienceendorsement of neo-creationist “intelligent design”; inaction against global warming; record oil prices; record budget deficits; record trade deficits; record number of Americans without health insurance; two recessions; no-bid contracts; bin Laden still at large; the Federal Marriage Amendment; stem cell research vetoed; waterboarding ban vetoed; “Last throes”; “Old Europe”; “It’s hard work”; “Bring it on”; “Yo, Blair!”; “I’m the decider”; “I’m the commander guy”; “I’m a war president”; “This is the guy who tried to kill my dad”; “So?”; “Let the Eagle Soar“; John Bolton; Kenny Boy; Harriet Miers; John Roberts; Sam Alito; Blair talks Bush out of bombing al-Jazeera; Cheney shoots some guy in the face; the Military Commissions Act; Jose Padilla arrested and held without charge or access to counsel; endless tax cuts for the rich; let’s waste a shitload of money by sending people to Mars and let’s hire some Heritage Foundation staffers to rebuild Iraq.

http://www.alternet.org/election08/89686/?ses=e918a4e8abdaec17ee7764e3fc376f33

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Day-by-day death spiral of the Republican Party

Want to know why Republican congressmen and senators are dropping like flies? The Swing State Project has put together a “comprehensive compendium of Republican hubris, fuckups, and misfortunes”.  They nickname it the “Year of Living Catastrophically”. It has not been a good two years for the GOP. Enjoy.

http://www.swingstateproject.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=2303

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What Wesley Clark said — and how the media covered it

If you ever wanted clear evidence of how bad our mainstream media has become, watch this:

A simple video consisting first of Gen. Wesley Clark during an interview being asked about McCain. Followed by the media going absolutely rabid.

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It was OK when Reagan said it

In USA Today, conservative idiot Jonah Goldberg attacks Obama’s patriotism (again) based on something Obama said.

Well, um, except that Obama was repeating something that Reagan said during his inauguration speech.

I’m just happy that conservatives are willing to hold Reagan to the same patriotic standards as they hold Democrats.

It is worth reading the whole report: http://www.jedreport.com/2008/07/jonah-goldberg.html

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Olbermann on McCain’s Double-Talk Express

In watching this extensive list of McCain’s flip-flops, I noticed that there are a few major ones that didn’t get mentioned. Should we watch for “McCain’s flip-flops, the mini-series” coming soon?

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The US Department of Just Us

If you don’t know what this is about, read this, or this.
Matt Wuerker
© Matt Wuerker

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McCain – what is he hiding about his military record?

On Sunday, Gen. Wesley Clark said that McCain’s military service, while honorable, did not necessarily prepare McCain to be a good president.

What is interesting to me is that the McCain himself went on the offensive immediately, trotting out a number of retired military men — including Bud Day, one of the original Swift Boat veterans — to condemn Clark’s comments. As you might recall, the Swift Boat veterans were a 527 group that attacked John Kerry’s military service in a number of TV ads, ads that at the time were denounced by John McCain as “dishonest and dishonorable”.

Why is this interesting?  Because Clark did not actually attack McCain’s military service, just the idea that his military service somehow means that one cannot question McCain’s military judgement. In fact, Clark praised McCain’s service. McCain also attacked Obama, denouncing “the kind of campaign Sen. Obama and his surrogates and supporters want to engage in,” even though Obama consistently praises McCain’s service, calling him “a genuine American hero.” (On the other hand, Bud Day directly and dishonestly attacked Kerry’s service four years ago.)

So, when someone completely overreacts to a mild criticism, it makes me think they are trying to hide something. You know, like when you make a mild comment about someone having a drink at a party and they freak out and accuse you of calling them a drunk.

So what could McCain be hiding about his service? Well, here are a few things we do know about it:

Those are the things that McCain has admitted to. The more interesting part is that (unlike John Kerry) John McCain has never released all his military records, preferring to keep them secret. Even the stuff we do know about McCain’s record should cause us to ask some serious questions. But McCain doesn’t want any of those questions answered, and will use known liars to attack anyone who dares to ask even the most innocuous question.

UPDATE: Wesley Clark is not backing down, and other military men are coming to his defense.

UPDATE 2: During a McCain campaign conference call (his second on the subject in as many days) McCain surrogate Orson Swindle said:

General Clark probably wouldn’t get that much praise from this group. I can’t speak for them, but we all know that General Clark, as high-ranking as he is, his record in his last command I think was somewhat less than stellar.

So let me get this straight. The McCain campaign is claiming that it is unacceptable to attack someone’s military record, and to prove their point they attack Clark’s military record — except that Clark didn’t actually attack McCain’s record. Incidentally, Clark’s last command was as the Supreme Allied Commander of NATO.

UPDATE 3: Despite what the media keeps repeating, McCain wasn’t actually a fighter pilot, he was a bomber pilot. On 60 Minutes in 1997 he said “I am a war criminal. I bombed innocent women and children.”

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Bill Kristol sucks

Now that neocon ideology has utterly failed, its proponents don’t seem to know when to shut up and go home. Take Bill Kristol, who appeared on Fox News Sunday this morning and suddenly started acting like Hillary Clinton’s best friend:

I think Hillary Clinton was gracious. She’s put behind her the horrible sexism and misogyny the Democratic primary voters demonstrated, which I’m appalled by personally, never would have happened in the Republican Party.

Aha! So it was the Democratic voters who were misogynous! You mean like the person who said this?

The only people for Hillary Clinton are the Democratic establishment and white women… it would be crazy for the Democratic party to follow the establishment that’s led them to defeat year after year… White Women are a problem – but, you know… we all live with that…

Oh wait, that was Kristol himself, also speaking on Fox News. But that would never happen in the Republican party.

Hmmm, what about Republican operative Alex Castellanos, who said that it is OK to call some women bitches, and in Hillary’s case “it’s accurate”. Or Marc Rudov (also on Fox News!) saying that Clinton’s “nagging voice” was the reason she lost.

http://www.crooksandliars.com/2008/06/29/fox-news-sunday-kristol-says-gop-much-more-open-to-strong-women/

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Ross Perot — He’s Baaaack!

Ross Perot has started a website called Perot Charts. The purpose of the website is to “help Americans understand the serious fiscal challenges facing our nation.”

If you are one of the many people who miss Ross and his charts, this site is for you:

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