Category: Politics

  • White House Takes Fire in Cheney Hunting Mishap

    Accidental blood on the hunting ground is now predictably followed by a feeding frenzy in the White House media pool.

    The Bush White House took a pounding from reporters today for not immediately disclosing Saturday night that Vice President Dick Cheney had accidentally shot a fellow hunter, sending him to the hospital with shotgun pellet wounds in his face and chest.

    During his daily briefing, Press Secretary Scott McClellan said that Cheney had agreed to allow a member of the hunting party and an eyewitness to the shooting, Katharine Armstrong, to call a reporter for the Corpus Christi Caller-Times on Sunday to report the incident.

    The newspaper quickly posted the story on its website. Cheney’s press aides then answered some rudimentary questions, but provided few details.

    The incident at the vast Armstrong family ranch in South Texas occurred about 5:30 p.m. Saturday. The victim was Harry Whittington, an Austin attorney, who was listed in stable condition today at Christus Spohn Hospital in Corpus Christi.

    Peter Banko, the hospital administrator, said Whittington would be transferred to a “step-down” unit later today, indicating progress in the treatment.

    McClellan insisted that the vice president’s and his staff’s overriding concern after the shooting was getting Whittington proper medical care. McClellan said that top White House aides, including chief of staff Andrew H. Card Jr., were being updated in Washington with fragmentary information throughout the night and into the wee hours of Sunday morning.

    “The initial report that we received was that there had been a hunting accident. We didn’t know who all was involved, but a member of his party was involved in that hunting accident, and then additional details continued to come in overnight,” McClellan said.

    “It’s important always to work to make sure you get information out like this as quickly as possible, but it’s also important to make sure that the first priority is focused where it should be, and that is making sure that Mr. Whittington has the care that he needs,” he said.

    After the shooting, Cheney rushed to Whittington’s assistance, McClellan said.

    [Sad attempt at NSA/Katrina tie-in deleted. Check the source if you want the garbage]

    The White House’s hands-off role in Saturday’s accident seemed to incite many members of the White House press corps, who bombarded McClellan today with questions suggesting that the White House had been derelict in not getting the information out quickly Saturday evening.

    McClellan referred numerous questions about the incident to Cheney’s press office. But one reporter, ABC News’ Jessica Yellin, complained that the vice president’s office was not providing the answers.

    McClellan said that Card first informed Bush that there had been a shooting accident between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturday.

    At one point, McClellan seemed on the verge of losing his poise, as his voice began to rise amid the avalanche of questions being shouted at him. But he quickly regained his trademark composure.

    “I think you can always look at — you can always look back at these issues and look at how to do a better job,” he acknowledged.

    The story goes on to give the details of the incident, which are certainly worth reading — unless one is hoping to use the situation to demonize the vice-president.

    Is this even news? Well, of course it is. The vice-president of the United States of America was involved in an incident resulting in a man being shot. How could that not be news? The Telegraph underlines this point by mentioning the following:

    Historians speculated that this was the first time a vice-president had shot someone since Aaron Burr killed his rival, Alexander Hamilton, one of the founding fathers, in a duel in 1804.

    Is this well within the domain of late-night television satirists and humorists? Well, of course it is, and they have made use of it aplenty.

    Now, I’ve stated what the story is. Here’s what I feel it isn’t: significant. There will be no long-term ramifications, except for a parade of disgusting sniping from the far left. This will provide no leverage for the anti-gun movement. Though I may agree with some of their arguments in some cases, any attempt to capitalize on this obvious accident will fail — they ain’t going to make a dent based on a birdhunt-shotgun peppering. This event may eventually become an answer to a Trivial Pursuit question.

    Here’s what else should be taken from the story: the media really need to reign themselves in before (I know I’m almost certainly too late here) they turn themselves into a parody of actual journalism. I only caught a few minutes of the White House press conference before work called me away, but disgust had already settled in over the display. My advice for the traditional media is as follows:

    • First, check your arrogance. That the story wasn’t immediately spoon-fed to you but instead given to the locals by the locals is not a sign of a cover-up.
    • Second, piss-poor decorum in the White House on the trail of a relatively non-event will not win you points with the American public, a public that grows increasingly tired of such partisanship in our nation’s capital.
    • Third, a sense of perspective would help. After a hunting accident, there is no need for accusatory questions about the vice-president’s seemingly hoped-for resignation, however much the so-called journalist may wish for the demise of Cheney. Follow the story, but don’t try to invent one.

    And that is probably all I’m going to say on this matter, other than to wish the best for Mr. Whittington.

  • Sheehan Won’t Run Against Feinstein

    Damn it, Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan, you’re such a tease.

    Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan, who has criticized President Bush and other elected officials for their war support since her son was killed in Iraq, said today that she won’t run for office against U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein.

    “I felt that putting pressure on her from the outside would be more effective than working from the inside,” said Sheehan, 48, of Berkeley during a morning press conference.

    Sheehan, whose son Casey was killed in Iraq in 2004, had considered running in the Democratic primary to energize other anti-war candidates. The primary is in June, and candidates must submit their statements by Feb. 14.

    […]

    Sheehan, who has never held or run for elected office, considered a Senate run after accusing Feinstein of being out of touch with Californians on the situation in Iraq. Sheehan said the California lawmaker voted for authorizing the use of force in Iraq and will not support calls to immediately bring the troops home.

    My, but that would have been good for some chuckles, and the media would have been left with no way to avoid covering Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan’s rather questionable ramblings.

    Damn.

  • Bush Gets an Earful at Coretta King’s Funeral

    Unfortunately, a tribute meant to pay worthy honor to a life lost is also utilized as an arena for political gain and attack. Equally unfortunate is the fact that there is little surprise to be found in the development.

    A day of eulogizing Coretta Scott King turned into a rare, in-person rebuke of President Bush, with a succession of civil rights and political leaders assailing White House policies as evidence that the dream of social and racial equality pursued by King and her slain husband is far from reality.

    Bush and his wife, Laura, sat on stage as worshippers cheered the suggestions from several speakers that the civil rights movement — led in the 1960s by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and fostered since his assassination by the widowed Coretta — remains alive, its goals not fully realized.

    Tuesday’s service, lasting six hours, much of it carried live nationally on cable television, marked an unusual combination of political pageantry and civil rights history. The spectacle included humor, interpretive dance, gospel and classical music, shouting and testifying, and a list of dignitaries that made room for three former presidents, poet Maya Angelou and crooner Michael Bolton.

    But it also included pointed political commentary, much of it aimed at Bush. The president and his wife watched as the sanctuary at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church near Atlanta filled with raucous cheers for their White House predecessors, Bill and Hillary Clinton — a reminder that five years into his term, Bush and the Republican Party he leads have not found the acceptance across black America that GOP strategists had hoped.

    “This commemorative ceremony this morning and this afternoon is not only to acknowledge the great contributions of Coretta and Martin, but to remind us that the struggle for equal rights is not over,” said former President Carter, a Democrat and former Georgia governor, to rising applause. “We only have to recall the color of the faces of those in Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi, those who were most devastated by Katrina, to know that there are not yet equal opportunities for all Americans.”

    Carter, who has had a strained relationship with Bush, drew cheers when he used the Kings’ struggle as a reminder of the recent debate over whether Bush violated civil liberties protections when he ordered warrantless surveillance of some domestic phone calls and e-mails.

    Noting that the Kings’ work was “not appreciated even at the highest level of the government,” Carter said: “It was difficult for them personally — with the civil liberties of both husband and wife violated as they became the target of secret government wiretapping, other surveillance, and as you know, harassment from the FBI.” Bush has said his own program of warrantless wiretapping is aimed at stopping terrorists.

    The most overtly partisan remarks came from the Rev. Joseph Lowery, a King protege and longtime Bush critic, who noted Coretta King’s opposition to the war in Iraq and criticized Bush’s commitment to boosting the poor.

    “She deplored the terror inflicted by our smart bombs on missions way afar,” he said. “We know now there were no weapons of mass destruction over there. But Coretta knew and we knew that there are weapons of misdirection right down here. Millions without health insurance. Poverty abounds. For war, billions more, but no more for the poor.”

    Anybody else reminded of the pep rally … err … funeral for Senator Paul Wellstone? Why is it that such affairs cannot be managed with due dignity and that it is one side of the political spectrum that seems to have a problem managing an actual tribute? If I recall correctly, there were no digs in the direction of Jimmy Carter during the ceremonies as Ronald Reagan was laid to rest.

    To his credit, President Bush reportedly carried himself well and in the intended spirit of the occasion.

    As the barbs flew, Bush seemed to take the heat in stride, smiling at times, giving Lowery a standing ovation and even pulling the civil rights leader in for a bear hug.

    The president himself received polite applause before and after his seven-minute eulogy, in which he said he attended the service “to offer the sympathy of our entire nation at the passing of a woman who worked to make our nation whole.”

    “As a great movement of history took shape, her dignity was a daily rebuke to the pettiness and cruelty of segregation,” the president said.

    Such is the tone and behaviour memorial services deserve. It would be best for our entire nation to remember and embrace this notion.

  • Carnival of Liberty XXXI

    This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community’s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Louisiana Libertarian. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.

  • Carnival of Liberty XXX

    This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community’s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Mover Mike. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.

  • State of the Union Transcript

    … can be found here in case you missed the speech like I did.

  • Sheehan Arrested in House Gallery

    Okay, I missed tonight’s State of the Union address, so I’m about to head over to the Vodka Dude and catch up with his traditional live-blogging.

    It seems I’m not the only one who missed the event, though. The State of the Union address? Just another opportunity for Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan to score another hit of her drug of choice — attention.

    Peace activist Cindy Sheehan was arrested Tuesday in the House gallery after refusing to cover up a T-shirt bearing an anti-war slogan before President Bush’s State of the Union address.

    “She was asked to cover it up. She did not,” said Sgt. Kimberly Schneider, U.S. Capitol Police spokeswoman, adding that Sheehan was arrested for unlawful conduct, a misdemeanor.

    The charge carries a maximum penalty of one year in jail, Schneider said.

    Unfortunately, I doubt that Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan will get the maximum. Still, she is now a repeat offender. I wonder what this will do to her senatorial bid? Okay, that’s prossibly a joke site, but Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan has threatened to run.

    Previous Gold Star mom Cindy Sheehan blogging:

  • Carnival of Liberty XXIX

    This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community’s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Combs Spouts Off. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.

  • Leftist Peacenik Group Caught Photoshopping

    Code Pink has been caught red-handed manipulating a photo in a rather disgusting manner by Publius Pundit‘s A.M. Mora y Leon.

    Unbelievable. Code Pink, an anti-American, anti-Iraqi-freedom, anti-Iranian-democracy full-Sandalista nuisance group, has taken to photoshopping photographs of Iranian freedom babes brave enough to protest against the monstrous mullahs of Iran, and used their beautiful images as recruiting tools for their own odious, anaphrodisiac cause. This cause just happens to be cut-and-run from Iraq, so that mullahs will be free to oppress women in ‘peace.’ That’s Code Pink’s cause! It is so disgusting!

    They can’t even tell the difference between Iranians and Iraqis, among other things, and just don’t care. But that’s not nearly as bad as changing the message the women were putting their lives on the line to get across.

    Go check out the photographic evidence. Realize, of course, that the useful idiots of Code Pink are the newest friends of pro-retreat Congressman John Murtha (D-IsForDefeat).

  • Carnival of Liberty XXVIII

    This week’s installment of the Life, Liberty, Property community’s Carnival of Liberty is up over at Below the Beltway. Go read another fine collection of posts from a libertarian slant.