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    June 27

    Impeachment manager speaks!

    Will wonders never cease? Remember Barr's assholic persecution of Clinton as one of the House's "impeachment managers"? Agree with Noam Scheiber over at The Stump that this Bloggingheads' sequence w/ Bob Barr on Bush and Clinton is rich. Rich, I tell you!

    I remember well that period: late '98, early '99, when I had just come back from Switzerland after breaking up w/ my ex-wife for the first time. I was riveted by the whole scene and just livid that the whole thing was happening in the first place. That was when MoveOn.org was born, and that was perhaps one of the key moments in our glorious "politics of personal destruction" of the past 20+ years--the very politics that Obama strives to put in our collective rearview mirror. Seems just insane that Clinton would be impeached for his peccadilloes and lame-ass prevarications, and here we are with a President who's run wholesale roughshod over the Constitution, as if it were a half-crumpled McDonald's bag discarded into the road by a passing motorist.

    Ok, the metaphor is a bit overwrought, but what the hell: you get the point.

    - dave//

    UPDATE: At least we can say this about Barr: there's a certain perverse consistency in his view of the "rule of law"--that hammer that he, Asa Hutchinson, and the other managers used over and over again in their prosecution of Clinton. I just have to wonder, now that he sees what true "crimes and misdemeanors" really look like in the slaughterhouse of the Bush presidency, whether he feels any shame at all about his petty, sanctimonious grandstanding against Clinton back in the '90s? Still, you have to revel in seeing this old cast of characters from that time playing out their internal and external conflicts on the stage of the 2008 elections. Makes for some often very ironic political theater.

    June 25

    Of mice and men

    Gnawing, always gnawing at unexpected corners and with preternatural vanity: Nader, dismissing Obama as too white/black. Reminds me of a certain Geraldine. Amazing.

    And now, look over here: counter-intuitive delusionals looking forward to an Obama presidency. As long as they keep it to themselves in that perverse echo-chamber of theirs.

    - dave//

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    June 20

    Gasoline on the fire

    So I'm trying out the new corporate bus system, partly to save on some gas and also to alleviate some of the stress of my commute from Ballard to Redmond and back, which typically hits 50 mins to an hour each way. If I didn't have regular off-campus appointments during the week, I'd have long been a regular rider. In fact, this very post I'm doing on the bus right now, jarring bumps notwithstanding. One of the nice features of the corporate bus line is that they have these things equipped w/ wi-fi; makes either work or casual browsing pretty easy to do in transit.

    Anyhow, so I was thinking: the last tank of gas I filled cost me north of $60.00 for the first time. Although I've got a small car, I'm constrained to use premium. If I manage to do the bus a couple times a week, I'm liable to save some 1/3 of my petrol outlay, which begins to be significant, week to week, month to month. And that's fine. I should do more, though. I have this idea that my next car will be the Great Leap Forward in automotive technology--some mass-market incarnation of today's lithium-ion powered prototypes. We'll see if I make it that long; it could be a very long wait before we get there.

    Or not. It depends on what kinds of choices we make as we twist and squirm under the squeeze of skyrocketing oil prices. Do we buy the line that somehow we just need to produce more oil by drilling offshore or in ANWR, and maybe, in 5 years time, see a blip in increased domestic oil production that will have already been offset by increased consumption? Do we continue to stick that black needle in our arm and expect somehow that we won't crave more next time? Do we grovel and whine, shake and groan, imploring our dealers to please just give us one more fix to tide us over?

    Or do we say, no, enough, it's time to change. Time to stop opting for the easy fix. Time to change the world by changing ourselves first, rather than somehow always, unfailingly expecting that it needs to happen the other way around. Imagine what the world might be like, how different it would be, if we could break the most destructive of our habits...

    Ah, I see my bus stop is coming up. Some busses you need to get on and stay on for a while, others, well, you just need to get off, otherwise you'll go around and around and around and never get anywhere.

    - dave //

    June 15

    A little perspective

    No doubt there will be a lot of noise, hand-wringing, worry-warting, and other acts of carrying on about the race recently enjoined for the General Election. To be sure, there's a lot at stake, at home and abroad, depending on who comes out on top in November. Of course, much work must still be done, voters must still be registered, and votes gotten out between now and then. I don't need to belabor the obvious.

    But think, just think: the economy is tanking, W. is the most reviled of presidents in the history of polling, we're still ensconced in a tragic misadventure in Iraq that the American people want only to end, our Constitutional liberties are in dire peril, etc., etc. The odds are EXTREMELY LONG for McCain to prevail in these circumstances; if history teaches us anything this election year, it should be that the party in power is quite likely to be booted from the White House, whether the standard-bearer is an actual or perceived incumbent.

    And this doesn't even begin to take into account the glaring weaknesses of the Republican standard-bearer himself, whose mealy-mouthed mish-mash of contradictory policy positions, lobbyist-enamored ethical lapses, and tone-deaf, scratch-your-head-in-disbelief-at-the-utter-ineptitude politicking should put many an anxious Democrat's mind at ease. Green-screen amateur hour, anyone? Here's a, um, somewhat abridged version of that speech courtesy the JedReport:

     

     

    What's more, it is only by the skin of his teeth that McCain has the support of the Republican conservative establishment; what motivates them is not a positive support for McCain and his policies, but rather a desire only to see that the Democrats don't win. Without an energized base and positive message, they can only get so far this year on fumes of negativity, particularly in the face of an extremely energized, forward-looking Democratic party. And don't believe for a moment this ridiculous narrative that Clintonian dead-enders are flocking to McCain en masse and that the Democrats are hopelessly split after a hard-fought, dare I say, "bitter" primary season.

    Simply put, this one's ours to win.

    - dave//

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    June 07

    A long train of abuses and usurpations

    Over the past 5 months, I've been following the Democratic--and to a much lesser extent, Republican--nominating process, state by state, statistic by statistic, key talking point by key talking point. According to some who are close to me, I may have been following it a little too closely--perhaps obsessively. It's been hard not to, in my view, given everything at stake this year, and our need for a major realignment of our political culture, values, and policies.

    Let me try to spell out as clearly as I can what I mean here.

    We simply cannot ignore, ever forget, much less forgive the crimes of these past 7+ years committed against the People and Constitution of the United States by the administration of George Walker Bush--as fate would have it, the boy-king installed illegitimately by a decree of the Supreme Court and sustained in power through a cynical and relentless exploitation of the fear and loathing of the People. Where we fail to today, posterity must assuredly condemn our 43rd president for these offenses among many others too innumerable to recount here:

     

    • The corruption of the solemn meaning, profound obligation, and unique opportunity of 9/11 by a band of ruthless neo-con ideologues operating darkly behind the throne, which succeeded only in squandering the sympathy of the world for all time and hobbling for years to come our moral authority to rally the world to causes of global impact, like trans-national terrorism, climate change, genocide, and world hunger.
    • The perversion of intelligence by politics, the deceitful manipulation of public opinion by means of bald-faced lies and propaganda worthy of none other than Joseph Goebbels--and the concomitant acquiescence of reason and morality by those who knew better and failed in their duty to protect and serve and uphold the Constitution--that led to the invasion of Iraq and the bottomless human tragedy ever since.
    • The illicit outing of a covert intelligence officer whose husband's inconvenient regard for the truth about WMDs challenged the fundamental premise for war, and the cover-up at the highest levels which to this day, though widely known, has not substantially been called to account as our law affords and our consciences must demand.
    • The blatant disregard for the public welfare and the plight of the underprivileged as demonstrated to an appalled nation and world in the wake of Katrina--wrongs still, to this day, not righted, but further compounded by the rapacious profiteering and bureaucratic bungling in the aftermath that have sickened and defeated her long-suffering victims, depriving whole communities in the Gulf of the energy and life needed to move forward, rebuild, and at long last recover.
    • The constitutional depredations of a "unitary executive" theory of power, which has, in practice, circumvented the will of the people as expressed by acts of Congress through the application of extra-legal signing statements far more numerous and overreaching than any administration's in history.
    • The subversion of Justice from impartial executor of the nation's laws into a political tool for enforcing loyalty to the chief executive and justifying the means for the political ends of the President and his administration, whose disdain for law and the Constitution has nowhere been more evidenced than in the dismemberment of habeas corpus and the embrace of torture as a legitimate weapon in the so-called "war on terror."
    • The mismanagement of the federal budget to the outrageous benefit of the rich, powerful, and venal--including profiteering oil companies, no-bid and unaccountable contractors like Halliburton and Blackwater, and the rest of the military-industrial complex about which Eisenhower warned us nearly 50 years ago--which has hamstrung domestic spending programs for decades to come and effectively bankrupted the national treasury, adding trillions of dollars of new debt for future generations to assume.
    • The amateurism, cronyism, and thoroughgoing disregard for basic standards of professional conduct that have resulted in a post war management team with no real policy talent, cultural depth, or institutional support to deal with an insurgency as it was taking root, an Iraqi society that was fracturing predictably along ethnic and religious lines, and all the Iraqi and American dead that were accumulating in the streets and markets of Baghdad, day-in and day-out; in the investiture and unquestioning support of high-ranking public officials with no shred of integrity, intelligence, or shame; and in the arrogant, mocking, unapologetic disdain for moral or intellectual consistency and honesty in all matters of policy and public concern, including the integrity of science, the importance of education, the key threats to public health, and the management of the nation's economy.

    How many more abuses must we recount to justify our outrage? How many more crimes must be brought to light, substantiated, and added to the list before we should be bold enough to act? Any one of them should be enough for us to take action and vigorously hold accountable those responsible to the full extent of the law. But here, after more than 7 years, the offenses continue to pile up, the next upon the last--and still nothing is done to assure the just redress of our grievances. Are we so numbed to reality or punch-drunk from the battering we've taken that we are no longer capable of acting?

    Our founding documents provide the guidance we need for the crises we face even today. Let us recall Thomas Jefferson's exhortation in the Declaration of Independence (emphasis mine):

    We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.

    What choice do we have but to advocate and fight for the kind of revolution envisioned by the Founders? (Or, failing that, what then?)

    For these reasons, I see the movement to elect Barack Obama president as perhaps the last, best hope we have for effecting the change we so desperately need, for arresting and reversing our precipitous decline before it's too late-- before the American Experiment should fail and the Republic might fall.

    - dave//

    June 05

    Come together, right now

    As she will suspend her campaign on Saturday and endorse Obama as presumptive nominee, we can all breathe a sigh of relief. Perhaps that will signal to enough of her hardened supporters in Hillaryland that they can soften and begin the process of reconciliation and acceptance of the new kid in town. And it will also begin to lay to rest this notion that a so-called "unity ticket" is not only desirable but necessary; in any event, there's no way either Hillary or her wayward spouse will submit to the vetting process and muzzling that will be required of them in order for her to be on the ticket.

    It's clear enough to anyone paying attention that this is a monumental achievement by almost any count, whether you attempt to include popular votes or not in your analysis (and, for the record, I don't: it's a specious metric). You better believe that millions of us are going to do everything we can in the months ahead to bring fundamental change to our domestic and international politics and policies, starting with the election Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States.

    We know that the world is watching and waiting. Time to come together.

     

      

    - dave//

     

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    June 03

    Seeing clearly now

    Skies are clearing. Don't pay too much attention to the clouds that linger; they'll soon pass. Via Al:

      

    (Fwiw, I thought that Hillary's speech was obnoxious and ungracious in the extreme, but as my GF said to me more or less, it wasn't much of a surprise--at least she's consistent in that regard. Thing is, you just hope for a hint of grace in defeat so you can get that elusive emotional property referred to as "closure." Guess that would just be too simple and convenient this year, now wouldn't it?)

    Anyhow, O's speech made the two that preceded it seem absolutely juvenile and petty by comparison. Admittedly, I'm biased--but, hey, can you blame me? At least, so far this year, I've tried to back up my convictions with the courage of my actions.

    While I'm on a bit of a hiatus from political activity this summer, I promise byall that I hold dear that I'll be reengaging in the combat in the fall. And I'll bring reinforcements.

    Yes. We. Can.

    - dave //