Category: Politics

  • SCOTUS Issues Rulings

    The blogosphere responds in interesting ways.

    For example, I present the Constitution Death Pool (hat tip to the Jawa Report).

    Hmmmm … there’s some potential for that blog. Goodness knows, there’s a wealth of material for the authors to harvest.

  • LLP Graphics: Just Some Ideas

    Okay, I was asked to do some graphics for the new Life, Liberty, Property community. That’s my mistake for having voluntarily done some banners for Eric. I did my time in the uniform — I should’ve know better than to volunteer for any work detail. As an aside, never let a drill sergeant know you can type. Trust me on this.

    I dawdled and, in the intervening time, GuyS came up with some buttons. As his effort was in line with one of my concepts, I have happily swiped it and just thrown some space around it. In the choices below, the files are all jpegs. I did all my work in bitmaps and, if any are wanted for further usage, they will be saved as png files. This will mean a lower degree of compression distortion than in these jpegs, at little or no space cost.

    Anyway, here are my efforts to date (UPDATE: png files are now available):

    Any feedback is, of course, appreciated. We are talking about a voluntary collection of individuals, after all.

  • Life, Liberty, Property Hits the Ecosystem

    No, this is not related to the recent Kelo decision. Well, not directly.

    Eric from Eric’s Grumbles Before the Grave has established a new community as part of the Truth Laid Bear‘s blogosphere ecosystem. The group is appropriately called Life, Liberty, Property and is meant for bloggers whose political beliefs are of a libertarian bent. Other plans for the LLP community are being discussed, including a possible spin-off group or best-of type blog. Personally, I’ve added a link and a community blogroll script to my menu column in a new “Communities” section.

    Additional blogging may be light or non-existent tonight, as I have happily taken on the task of creating some potential graphics for the group. Meanwhile, feel free to check out the blogs of the other members of Life, Liberty, Property.

  • High Court Expands Home Seizure Right

    The U.S. Supreme Court has issued a ruling in the matter of Kelo v. New London. Their decision: a swift kick to the nuts of private property rights.

    A divided U.S. Supreme Court ruled Thursday that local governments may seize people’s homes and businesses against their will for private development in a decision anxiously awaited in communities where economic growth often is at war with individual property rights.

    The 5-4 ruling – assailed by dissenting Justice Sandra Day O’Connor as handing “disproportionate influence and power” to the well-heeled in America – was a defeat for some Connecticut residents whose homes are scheduled for destruction to make room for an office complex. They had argued that cities have no right to take their land except for projects with a clear public use, such as roads or schools, or to revitalize blighted areas.

    As a result, cities now have wide power to bulldoze residences for projects such as shopping malls and hotel complexes in order to generate tax revenue.

    The libertarian in me cries that this is almost, so freaking atrociously almost, Dred Scott v. Sandford kind of horrible. I can, to a degree, see the need for the ability of government to seize land, given adequate compensation, for a strong public interest. I cannot accept that the government should have the power to essentially choose arbitrarily between private and non-related entities, stripping one of its property in favor of the other.

    Excellent collections of reactions around the blogosphere have been assembled by John Little, Michelle Malkin and Eric Cowperthwaite .

  • House Approves Flag-Burning Amendment

    It’s been said that the definition of insanity is trying the same thing over and over while expecting a different result. While this definition may fail when experiencing computer problems with Windows, it certainly should hold up on matters of outlawing flag desecration.

    A constitutional amendment to ban desecration of the U.S. flag moved closer to reality Wednesday when the House of Representatives passed it 286-130.

    It was the seventh time the House has approved an amendment since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a Texas law in 1989 and the next year ruled the federal Flag Protection Act unconstitutional. Although the bill has been endorsed by all 50 states, it has failed four times to get out of the Senate.

    Those on both sides of the issue say this may be the year. Vote counts by the Citizens Flag Alliance, which supports the amendment, and the American Civil Liberties Union, which opposes it, show the Senate could be only two votes shy of the 67 needed to send the measure to the states for ratification.

    As disgusting and disturbing as I may find the desecration of the Stars and Stripes, as angered as I may be by the destruction of the flag I swore allegiance to as both a child and a soldier, this legislation should not join the highest law of our land. In fact, it is for precisely those reactions that it should not be banned — it is an effective means of expressing an opinion, and especially of drawing attention to that expression, that actually harms no other. I swore my fealty to the flag and to the republic it represents; that republic should hold forth a greater notion of the value of its freedoms than of its symbols.

  • Texas Governor’s Race Takes Shape

    Rick Perry is in as the Republican incumbent. U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison has opted against a gubernatorial challenge, a move that may have averted a juggling of positions among Texas Republicans.

    The GOP holds every statewide elected office in Texas and party leaders had been gearing up for a grand game of political musical chairs in case U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison jumped into the 2006 governor’s race.

    Instead, Hutchison opted for another run at the Senate, leaving most GOP office holders sitting right where they are.

    “Everybody stays home,” said Republican political consultant Bill Miller.

    The lone exception: Agriculture Commissioner Susan Combs, who has already declared her candidacy for comptroller. Sen. Todd Staples, a Republican from Palestine, is expected to run for agriculture commissioner.

    There had been wide speculation that if Hutchison challenged Perry, Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst would campaign for her Senate seat and Attorney General Greg Abbott would launch a bid for lieutenant governor. Railroad Commissioner Michael Williams was considered a potential candidate for Abbott’s seat.

    With Hutchison out, state comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn has decided to throw her hat in the ring as a primary challenge to Perry, a challenge that may grow bitter.

    It promises to be an ugly battle between Republicans for the right to run for governor. Saturday, state comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn threw her name in the hat, and the political punches are already flying.

    Strayhorn made the announcement just blocks away from the State Capitol. The 65-year-old grandmother thrilled the crowd with her fiery rhetoric.

    “It is time for a change — it is time to send Governor Perry packin’,” she said.

    […]

    “Now it’s time to replace this do-nothin’ drugstore cowboy with one tough grandma,” said Strayhorn — one tough grandma who’s promising one tough primary fight.

    One thing is certain about the upcoming campaign, and that is that I will be absolutely sick of the phrase “one tough grandma” long before a single ballot is cast.

    So far, no Democrat has declared.

  • Turning to the Blogroll

    I’m not in the mood to blog tonight, as should be obvious from my feeble previous post. I don’t know why — it just ain’t there.

    I have been in the mood to read and surf, however, so I’ll just poach some goodies off my blogroll.

    Let’s open with Kevin Aylward at Wizbang! as he slaps around Congressman Conyers on the Downing Street memo.

    Rep. John Conyers, as predicted here 10 days ago, will hold one of his patented “fake hearings” on the Downing Street Memo Thursday afternoon at 2:30 p.m. EST. Pay no attention to the fact that the witnesses list is lead by the same lead witness (John Bonifz) who presented at his Ohio vote-rigging “hearing,” or that Conyers will trot out Valerie Plame’s husband, Joseph Wilson, who can regale the “hearing” with tales of yellowcake and book sales. Luckily for Wilson no members of the Senate Intelligence Committee will be present to bitch-slap him again. Given the lack of reporting about his cratered credibility, Wilson probably sounded like a great witness to Conyers.

    Now let’s turn to the favorite (and deservedly so) target of the day: Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and his pathetic loss of perspective on Gitmo.

    Let’s open with Paul at Powerline:

    Scott gave me credit for “anticipat[ing] the rabid foaming at the mouth” of Durbin and his partner in defamation Senator Leahy. In fact, however, I never expected that any U.S. Senator would express such absurd sentiments. I didn’t realize that leftist fever swamp extends so profoundly into the Senate.

    Just for the record (as if that matters to the left) Rowan Scarborough in the Washington Times reminds us of the following:

    Adolf Hitler – About 9 million dead
    Soviet gulags – About 2.7 million dead
    Pol Pot – About 1.7 million dead
    Gitmo – zero dead
    Gitmo – five instances of Koran abuse by prison guards
    Gitmo-15 instances of Koran abuse by prisoners.

    Then we’ll move on to Steve Verdon at Outside the Beltway, whose headline “What a Dick” really says it all:

    Apparently Dick Durbin doesn’t think much about the Holocaust, the genocide of the Khmer Rouge and Josef Stalin and its victims. Calling the detention center at Guantanamo Bay a death camp is just stupid.

    Chad at In the Bullpen chimes in with “Another Day, Another Nazi Comparison“:

    Over 13 million people died in the above mentioned camps throughout the years. The majority of those held in those camps were innocent whereas the vast majority of detainees in Guantanamo were found on the battlefields of Afghanistan. Can Senator Durbin not tell the difference?

    In an update, Chad turns his aim to liberal blogger Markos Moulitsas ‘Kos’ Zunigas and his site The Daily Kos (lack of link intentional). Dr. Rusty Shackleford of the Jawa Report comes out guns a-blazin’ at Kos (emphasis in original, and you should consider yourself warned that he really means it).

    You, Kos, are a certifiable idiot whose blind partisanship is disgusting and unethical.

    Warning: Graphic images follow.

    Speaking of Gitmo, Ace explains at length the justifiability and reasoning behind the detentions there. I particularly liked this nugget (emphasis again in the original):

    Okay. Let’s take you at your word.

    Given the fact that by your own admission that not only is the Global War on Terrorism not over, but we are actually losing this war, why the f*** are you constantly agitating to release enemy combatants so that they may rejoin their allies and kill more of our soldiers and citizens?

    Leaving Gitmo, over at Eric’s Grumbles Before the Grave (great banners, by the way), our caped crusader Eric has apparently found an arch-nemesis and has been waging a oneman war. For a moment, he almost seems to lose his edge, but not quite:

    I realize that I have gotten a bit personal with some on the left lately and have attacked them directly. If that offends anyone, I’m sorry you’re offended. But I’m not sorry for what I’ve said.

    In fact, Eric decides to adapt to the enemy’s tactics (EDIT: I doubt Eric will actually change course; he seems quite happy having actual facts on his side):

    Yep, just like the Left, I’m just going to make crap up out of thin air, allege that I have evidence to prove it, promise to tell you at some undetermined date in the future what my evidence is and insist that it’s worth “checking out”.

    Fight the good fight, Eric.

    Above all these important issues, you can never beat Scott at The Fat Guy for some good ol’ Texas-style common sense.

    Man, I do love my Blogroll so.

  • Time Report Fuels Guantanamo Criticism

    A new storm is building around Gitmo, and the winds this time around are blowing from a pressure system built on a report in Time of a detainee interrogation log.

    The U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay drew fresh criticism Sunday following a Time magazine report on a logbook tracing the treatment of a detainee who officials believe was intended to take part in the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

    Time’s report on the treatment received by Mohammed al-Qahtani prompted a quick defense from the Pentagon along with outrage from several members of Congress.

    Al-Qahtani was denied entry to the United States by an immigration officer in August 2001 and later captured in Afghanistan and sent to the detention camp at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

    The 84-page logbook obtained by Time and authenticated by Pentagon spokesman Larry Di Rita is the “kind of document that was never meant to leave Gitmo,” a senior Pentagon official told the magazine.

    According to the logbook, which covers al-Qahtani’s interrogations from November 2002 to January 2003 [emphasis added], the Time article reports that daily interviews began at 4 a.m. and sometimes continued until midnight.

    Remember those dates, folks.

    The interrogation techniques included refusing al-Qahtani a bathroom break and forcing him to urinate in his pants.

    “It’s not appropriate,” said Sen. Chuck Hagel on CNN’s “Late Edition.” “It’s not at all within the standards of who we are as a civilized people, what our laws are.

    “If in fact we are treating prisoners this way, it’s not only wrong, it’s dangerous and very dumb and very shortsighted,” the Nebraska Republican said.

    “This is not how you win the people of the world over to our side, especially the Muslim world.”

    During the period covered by the logbook, Time reported, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld approved 16 additional interrogation techniques for use on certain detainees.

    Afterward, interrogators began their sessions with al-Qahtani at midnight and awakened him with dripping water or Christina Aguilera music if he dozed off, the magazine article reported.

    Okay, I’ll grant that Christina Aguilera music may be a tad much.

    The magazine said the techniques approved by Rumsfeld included “standing for prolonged periods, isolation for as long as 30 days, removal of clothing, forced shaving of facial hair” and hanging “pictures of scantily clad women around his neck.”

    Hagel said such treatment should offend the sensibilities of “any straight-thinking American, any straight-thinking citizen of the world.”

    Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a California Democrat, said on the same program that the treatment outlined in the article presents “a kind of ludicrous view of the United States.”

    “I don’t know what tree we’re barking up,” she said. “It is a terrible mistake.”

    “I don’t know why we didn’t learn from Bagram,” she added, referring to a U.S. base in Afghanistan. “I don’t know why we didn’t learn from Abu Ghraib [prison in Iraq], but here we are in Guantanamo with many of the same things surfacing.”

    I said pay attention to the dates. That is something seemingly beyond Feinstein’s capabilities. Apparently, by the senator’s reasoning, the discovery of the Abu Ghraib abuses in late 2003 and their resulting media frenzy in April 2004 should have caused these Gitmo interrogation tactics to cease in late 2001 and early 2002. That, my dear senator, is an impossibility without a functioning flux capacitor. Please be so kind as to check your facts, senator, before denouncing our efforts before the world.

    Hagel raised questions about the quality of leadership that would allow such things to happen, drawing a comparison to his own experience fighting in Vietnam.

    “We’ve been reassured for the last two years it’s not happening when in fact it is happening,” he said.

    Again, check the dates.

    Maybe, somewhere in this story, we can find a voice of reason.

    Others, however, said they did not see the treatment as abuse.

    Rep. Duncan Hunter, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, defended the Guantanamo facility and flatly rejected suggestions that prisoners are mistreated.

    “I think that’s accepting a falsehood and giving to the American people that somehow we don’t treat prisoners right,” said Hunter, a Republican from California.

    Hunter cited a menu of food served to prisoners Sunday — including oven-fried chicken, rice pilaf, fruit and pita bread — as a sign that they are treated well.

    “These are the people who tried to kill us,” he said. “It includes the guy — the 20th hijacker, that was Mr. Qahtani who was caught coming in — who didn’t make it to the planes that drove into New York,” Hunter said following an appearance on “Fox News Sunday.”

    Congressman Hunter, how about a money shot?

    Earlier on the program, Hunter said the “legend” of Guantanamo Bay is “different than the fact” and repeatedly cited the menu.

    “Here you have a guy who was on his way to kill 5,000 Americans,” he said. “And we have people complaining because he had a dog bark at him in Guantanamo.”

    Keep in mind the story of the actual detainee in question.

    Nineteen hijackers commandeered four commercial airliners on September 11, 2001, piloting two into the World Trade Towers and one into the Pentagon. Another, United Airlines Flight 93, crashed in a Pennsylvania field. The death toll from the attacks was just under 3,000.

    All the planes were hijacked by five men except Flight 93, which was commandeered by four. Some officials have speculated that al-Qahtani might have been the missing hijacker on Flight 93.

    According to the Time article, lead hijacker Mohammed Atta was waiting for al-Qahtani outside the airport in Orlando, Florida, when he was detained by an immigration officer a month before the attacks.

    In the CNN piece’s “Related” links, there’s a brief collection of extracts from the interrogation log in question. Please allow me to extract from the extracts.

    13 December 2002
    1115
    : Interrogators began telling detainee how ungrateful and grumpy he was. In order to escalate the detainee’s emotions, a mask was made from an MRE box with a smily face on it and placed on the detainee’s head for a few moments. A latex glove was inflated and labeled the “sissy slap” glove. The glove was touched to the detainee’s face periodically after explaining the terminology to him. The mask was placed back on the detainee’s head. While wearing the mask, the team began dance instruction with the detainee. The detainee became agitated and began shouting.

    20 December 2002
    1115:
    Detainee offered water—refused. Corpsman changed ankle bandages to prevent chafing. Interrogater began by reminding the detainee about the lessons in respect and how the detainee had disrespected the interrogators. Told detainee that a dog is held in higher esteem because dogs know right from wrong and know how to protect innocent people from bad people. Began teaching the detainee lessons such as stay, come, and bark to elevate his social status up to that of a dog. Detainee became very agitated.

    That is as bad as the extracts get — a smily-face mask, a “sissy slap” glove, and dog training. Add to that repeated offers of food and water, as well as attention to bandages to prevent chafing.

    I can only actually hope that there is far worse in the unextracted log. No, I don’t hope for abuses and violations. I do, however, hope that it takes far more than the treatment detailed in the story and linked extracts, treatment I would have laughed at as a fraternity pledge, to stir the need in the media to feed our enemy’s propaganda. I doubt anybody involved with the publishing of this story does not believe we are dealing with an actual terrorist here, and yet, this story and it’s “tortures” will echo.

    Close Gitmo — a detainee’s face was touched with an inflated latex glove, condemning him as a sissy! Shut it down! Move the sissies!

    This is beyond a lost sense of perspective. The utter recklessness and disregard for our security efforts shown by our media is simply disgusting.

  • Bush Resists Carter Call to Shut Gitmo

    Former President Jimmy Carter has once again felt obligated to thrust himself onto the international stage by foolishly calling for the closure of the detention center at Guantanamo. He means well, I think. President Bush has been diplomatic in his response.

    US President George Bush left open yesterday the possibility of closing the Guantánamo Bay prison, a day after his White House predecessor Jimmy Carter called for it to be shut.

    “We’re exploring all alternatives as to how best to do the main objective, which is to protect America,” Mr Bush said when asked in an interview on Fox television if he would close the detention centre.

    He added, however, that comparisons between Guantánamo and the Soviet gulag were “just absurd”. Mr Carter had told a conference in Atlanta that the prison should be shut to demonstrate the US commitment to human rights.

    “Despite President George W Bush’s bold reminder that America is determined to promote freedom and democracy around the world, the US continues to suffer terrible embarrassment and a blow to our reputation as a champion of human rights because of reports concerning abuses of prisoners in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantánamo,” he said.

    In addition to closing Guantánamo Bay and two dozen other detention facilities, Mr Carter said, the US needed to make sure all detainees were told the charges against them.

    Short answer for the former president: No. Now go be quietly supportive, or at least just quiet, like a good ex-president.

    On a related note, I’ve heard this book is a good read. I’ll have to give it a gander.

  • Hey, Senator Biden

    Shut up or start making sense. It’s your call.

    Two days ago, I pointed y’all to a blog post by Chad at In the Bullpen examining the call by Sen. Joe Biden (D-Some asylum) to shut down the Guantanamo detention center. Chad appropriately titled the piece “Biden is Off His Rocker.”

    Today, I’ve found more evidence that the man is losing his grip.

    Having recently returned from his fifth visit to Iraq, Sen. Biden spoke of the need to avoid a complete withdrawal from the country.

    “And if we leave now, I guarantee you there will be a civil war, which a lot of our folks are worrying about now anyway,” said Biden, D-Del., said on ABC’s “This Week with George Stephanopoulos. “We made a giant mistake in the beginning over the objection of a number from both parties.”

    U.S. forces decommissioned the entire army, the so-called de- Ba`athification and that left Iraq with no military, according to Biden.

    Biden said the training of Iraqi troops is on track, however, the United States waited a year and a half to start the process of training Iraqi troops.

    A year and a half? That would be a tragic mistake indeed. By Biden’s count, the training of Iraqi forces by Americans did not begin until at least October 2004. Well, he’s been there five times — he must know what he’s talking about, right?

    Wrong. In fact, not even close. In January 2004, the Department of Defense released the following:

    The first of nine brigades planned for the new Iraqi army nearly is complete, the officer responsible for helping to rebuild the country’s military reported in a Baghdad briefing today.

    Addressing progress in the rebuilding effort, Maj. Gen. Paul Eaton, commander of the coalition’s military assistance and training team in Iraq, said three battalions of Iraqi soldiers have graduated from military training academies since October. The desired “end state” is to eventually have “Iraqi officers and soldiers take over the training of their own soldiers,” Eaton said.

    “I would like to emphasize that this will be an Iraqi Army, trained by Iraqis,” he said.

    And who were the Iraqis hoped to relieve from the duty of training their forces? You guessed it, the Coalition Provisional Authority, according to one of its own briefings from September 2003. Oh by the way, the coalition included Americans.

    Let me begin with a little bit on the new Iraqi army, as such. The new Iraqi army began training the first battalion around the first of August, and that first battalion will be commissioned and enter operational service on October 4th, the training being now about three-quarters completed.

    The training takes place at a place called Kirkush, which is an old Iraqi military base about 80 kilometers northeast of Baghdad and about 30 kilometers from the Iranian border, which we reconditioned and are using as the training facility. As battalions go through, we will expand the capacity of that facility and have something like four battalions ready and operational by early next year.

    The actual day-to-day training is being done by U.S. contract trainers with very close Coalition military oversight. The military oversight is done by an organization called the Coalition Military Assistance Training Team, which is commanded by an American, Major-General Paul Eaton, who was, until he took up this assignment, the commander of infantry training for the United States Army. So we have sent our best expert on that issue.

    His deputy is British, and his staff includes officers from a variety of Coalition countries.

    NATO trainers began arriving in August 2004 to expand efforts, and a military academy for Iraqi officers was already in the works in October 2004, when Biden claims we became involved in training Iraqi forces.

    Well, the good senator was only off by well over a year.

    Then there’s another curious statement just today by the senator during the confirmation hearings on Zalmay Khalilzad, nominee for the position of U.S. ambassador to Iraq.

    Joseph Biden, the senior Democrat on the Senate foreign relations committee, said on returning from his fifth visit to Baghdad that he and the American public were losing patience.

    “I’m not sure I could in good faith, a year from now, if things aren’t drastically different, continue to support American forces being in Iraq because we just seem not to get it yet,” he told Mr Khalilzad. The US “loss” of Iraq would be an “absolute disaster for the better part of a generation”, he said.

    Let me see if I can get a grip on this convoluted bilge spewing forth from Biden. Losing Iraq would be an absolute disaster but he cannot support the presence of our forces there another year without great improvement. Did I get that right? If things are not drastically improved, the senator would prefer to opt for what he himself sees as a tragedy.

    He calls for the shutting down Gitmo, either lies or is grossly mistaken about American training efforts in a country where he’s been on the ground enough times to know better, and shows a convoluted but resoundingly spineless support of our efforts while knowing the dreadful consequence of failure.

    Though I oppose the concept of term limits for members of the U.S. Congress, Biden does provide evidence to support at least consideration of the idea.