Thursday, December 29, 2016

The Trumpf Inauguration Committee Finds The Perfect Inauguration Entertainment At Last!

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2016 In Review: America Off The Rails, Part 3



by Noah

There have been a lot of stories lately about the difficulties Herr Trumpf's troops have had finding people who want to perform at his inauguration. His entertainment committee can't even find a local or regional high school marching band that's willing to participate. Such bands always participate; not this time. The stench is strong with this one.

Naturally, the media points out that many music artists, being lefties, aren't about to avail themselves of the dubious opportunity and the soiling exposure it would provide for their careers; especially since being associated with a horrific stew of 1-percenters, mindless hypnotized fanatics, Russian mobsters, Atlantic City mobsters, Hate Radio and FOX "News" types, and a cross-section of every white-supremacy group known to man isn't a normally well-adjusted persons' idea of a great night out.

Even worse, imagine if you were performing onstage and looked out in the crowd and saw the likes of "Drooling Rudy" Giuliani, "Dr. Strangelove" Cheney, or Kellyanne "Cruella De Vil" Conway looking back at you. That would be enough to make anyone change careers. You'd never have another night of nightmare-free sleep again.



There's another obvious reason a sane person won't take the job, and that is Herr Trumpf's reputation, well-justified or not, for not paying those he hires. Hell, the word in New York is that he's known for making a lot of money by getting people to work for a small percentage of the contracted or agreed amount under threat of lawsuit. The joke around New York is that he pays for his bankruptcy attorneys on the backs of those he stiffs. It's hard to fight back when he can throw more lawyers at you. Even the young troupe of singing-and-dancing girls USA Freedom Kids, who were hired to perform at a Trumpf campaign rally, had to sue his campaign to get their stipend for travel expenses.

Given Herr Trumpf's penchant for pathological lying, we should soon be seeing tweets that George Michael was all set to come across the pond and do a show. Can't you just see the tweet:


Yes. Sad. And righteous! Trumpie feels he is entitled to the attention of and glorification by what he calls A-list celebrities. His idea of an inauguration is a bunch of jesters and clowns groveling before him, but it's just not happening. He even got the producers of the Radio City Rockettes to speak for their troupe and commit them to perform, almost. Reportedly, even their union had been leaned on and was about to force participation. It seems that once word of the possibility got out, a large number of the Rockettes spoke up for themselves and said "Hell, NO!"

Quite an Internet reaction, too! One Rockette, Phoebe Pearl, went public, posting a protest "Not My President" Instagram, taking to the Internet eloquently saying:
I usually don't use social media to make a political stand but I feel overwhelmed with emotion. Finding out that it has been decided for us that Rockettes will be performing at the Presidential inauguration makes me feel embarrassed and disappointed. The women I work with are intelligent and are full of love, and the decision of performing for a man that stands for everything we're against is appalling. I am speaking for just myself but please know that after we found out this news, we have been performing with tears in our eyes and heavy hearts.
#notmypresident
Phoebe Pearl may not realize it yet, but she has beautifully said what millions of Americans and hundreds of millions if not billions of citizens from around the world are thinking. She has articulated it magnificently. Former Rockettes have also spoken up, and it now looks like an awful, soul-crushing evening for them has been avoided. There will be no newly sworn-in president barging in on the Rockettes as they shower and change in their dressing room; no worrying about having their privates grabbed by Lord Tiny Hands either.



As of this writing, the Morman Tabernacle Choir and has-been white rapper Kid Rock, an ardent trumpie, are slated to perform. The republican crowd may not like rap music, but I'm sure all will be OK once they see that he's white and not, well, you know…  Really, if they're gonna have Kid Rock, they might as well have Pat Boone singing a medley of Little Richard and Fats Domino hits.

Jackie Evancho will also be there. Ms. Evancho is a mega-selling16-year-old former runner-up of the America's Got Talent TV show. (To be fair, she should have been declared the winner). But if you really want to see something other than a celebration of evil, cluelessness, hate, and vulgarity, Robert Reich has proposed a star-filled Anti-Trumpf Freedom United Concert that will be a better ticket, if the promoters can pull it off.

The proposed concert would run on TV the same time as the Trumpf festivities, an obvious threat to ratings for Trumpie, something that will no doubt inspire a tweet tornado from President Man Child replete with lies about superior ratings and the "librul" performers being "over-rated" and "sad," etc. The concert would be a real double whammy for republicans. Not only would it be an inaugural boycott concert featuring real A-listers; but the proceeds will benefit charities. As Herr Trumpf would say, sad.

Let's not forget that Trumpf can also pull from the vast performance-talent cesspool of his own republican party. Who can forget former George W. Bush Attorney General John Ashcroft's stirring rendition of "When Eagles Soar" and Karl Rove's rap stylings? Watch this if you're still not convinced that we need to build a lot more insane asylums.



Perhaps Herr Trumpf can call on his master, Vladimir Putin, to force some Russian dancers and singers to perform. You can bet that if Trumpf has heard of the Russian all-girl rock band Pussy Riot he's already asked, not realizing that the band is seriously persona non grata in their homeland, at least as far as Putin's government is concerned. Last I knew, the band is in jail anyway.



Failing that, maybe the southern states can provide some carnival sideshow entertainers --you know, geeks biting the heads off of chickens, snakewomen, Louie Gohmert, bearded ladies, two-headed jugglers, and magic-elixir-extolling patent-medicine salesmen offering a republican alternative to Obamacare. It's all going to be a circus anyway, why not go all the way?





HUFFPOST COMEDY WRITER/EDITOR ANDY McDONALD SAYS:
"Guy Creates Trump Inaugural Flyer
We Should All Start Passing Out"




2016 IN REVIEW: AMERICA OFF THE RAILS

Here it is, Noah's completed Year in Review for 2016:

Part 1, "Profiles in Cowardice: The Electoral College" (12/23/2016)
Part 2, "Republican Of The Year Nominee #1: Newt Gingrich" (12/27/2016)
Part 3, "The Trumpf Inauguration Committee Finds The Perfect Inauguration Entertainment At Last!" (12/29/2016)
Part 4, "Republican Of The Year Nominee #2: R-R-Reince Priebus" (1/2/2017)
Part 5, "Comrade Trump: The World’s Worst Cabinet Maker, Believe Me -- Meet The New Russian Oligarchs! (1)" (1/4/2017)
Part 6, "Comrade Trump: The World’s Worst Cabinet Maker, Believe Me -- Meet The New Russian Oligarchs! (2)" (1/5/2017)
Part 7, "Republican Of The Year Nominee #3: Governors' Edition" (1/9/2017)
Part 8, "Trump -- The Art And Acts Of The Emboldened: The Rise In Hate Crimes Under The Influence Of Comrade T" (1/10/2017)
Part 9, "Republican Of The Year Nominee #4: It's A Sad Thing When Cousins Marry Edition" (1/11/2017)
Part 10, "Republican Person Of The Year Nominee #5 -- And Winner!" (1/12/2017)
Part 11, "Comrade Trump: Inauguration Entertainment Update!" (1/15/2017)
Part 12, "A DWT Exclusive: We Have The First Draft Of Comrade Trump's Inauguration Speech!" (1/16/2017)
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Saturday, November 16, 2013

How Cheney's Illegal Domestic Spying Programs Almost Sunk The Bush White House

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Not even waiting for the Supreme Court to halt the vote count in Florida and award the White House to Bush, Cheney moved with incredible speed to fill every position in the national security apparatus with his own people and claim that part of the government as his own turf. If there is one person who can be blamed for dereliction of duty in the events that led up to 9/11, it is Dick Cheney. And if there is one person who can be blamed for the overreaction to that unmitigated disaster-- think about the gutting of the Constitution and warrantless domestic spying, etc-- it is also Dick Cheney. (Cheney also laid claim to Energy Policy and The Economy; he felt Bush could handle education, which he had shown some interest in over the years.) Barton Gellman's fantastic book, Angler> makes it more than clear who was running the show.

One of the worst Cheney-made disasters for Bush was centered around Cheney's illegal directives to the NSA which led to a crisis that could have doomed the blithely unaware Bush. Aside from putting Bush in very serious legal jeopardy with his insane theories about a presidency being tantamount to a monarchy-- what Cheney called the "unitary executive"-- he let a dispute with the Justice Department turn into a catastrophic confrontation which had the Attorney General, his top officers and their top officers, including the head of the FBI, all ready to resign en mass.

James Comey, who is today head of the FBI, was Deputy Attorney General under John Ashcroft this is the resignation letter he told Bush he would submit because of Cheney's illegal domestic spying programs:
March 16, 2004
George W. Bush

President of the United States

The White House

Dear Mr. President

At my confirmation hearing, I was asked what I would do if I concluded that a course of action was fundamentally wrong and I could not convince my superiors of that fact. I replied:

You are asking me to imagine an apocalyptic situation that I don't expect to encounter. I would not take this job if I thought I was going to be working with people who didn't share my love of the law and love of the institution. So I don't think I'll ever find myself in that position. I can commit to you though, that-- because I talk so much about integrity and about this great group behind me-- that's what I really care about. I don't care about politics. I don't care about expediency. I don't care about friendship. I care about doing the right thing. And I would never be part of something that I believe to be fundamentally wrong. I mean obviously we all make policy judgements where people disagree, but I will do the right thing.

Over the last two weeks I have encountered just such an apocalyptic situation, where I and the Department of Justice have been asked to be a part of something that is fundamentally wrong. As we have struggled over these last days to do the right thing, I have never been prouder of the Department of Justice or of the Attorney General. Sadly, although I believe this has been on of the institution's finest hours, we have been unable to right that wrong. I would give much not to be in this position. But, as I told you during our private meeting last week, here I stand; I can do no other. Therefore, with a heavy heart and undiminished love of my country and my Department, I resign as Deputy Attorney General of the United States, effective immediately.

Sincerely yours,

James B. Comey
A few minutes later, FBI Director Bob Mueller told Bush was going as well. His Administration was about to fall apart and Cheney had kept it secret from him and, worse, persuaded him against the advice of his own legal and security counsel to sign patently unconstitutional orders that certainly would have led to impeachment had their been the political courage to have pursued it.
This was a rule-of-law question [Mueller] told the president, and the answer was in the Department of Justice. The Federal Bureau of Investigation could not operations that Justice held to be in breach of criminal law. If those were his orders, he would respectfully take his leave. As for others at the Bureau, they would speak for themselves.

…One week later, Bush amended his March 11 directive. The legal certification belonged again to the attorney general. Over the next weeks and months, the program changed. It stopped doing some things, and it did other things differently. Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, the chief FISA judge, got a fuller briefing and established new rules to keep warrantless evidence out of her court
One of Bush's most trusted counselors from back in his Texas days, Dan Bartlett compared what nearly happened to Nixon's Saturday Night Massacre. Mark Corallo, Ashcroft's communications director (and before that the chief spokesperson for the RNC during Bush's first presidential run, indicates that Bush didn't understand how close to the abyss Cheney had pushed him. "You don't have to be the smartest guy to figure out that [mass resignations] would be pretty much the most devastating thing that could happen to your administration… Tell me how your presidency survives."
Corallo mapped the road to ruin. "You know, one guy resigns on principle and it can be uncomfortable, it can even be damaging. If six or seven of your top lawyers… If John Ashcroft resigned, the entire political leadership of the Justice Department goes with him. That means the heads of all the divisions, the deputies-- every political appointee of the Justice Department would have walked. We would have all walked out the door, because we would have said, 'If this is big enough for Ashcroft to resign over, we're all out of here.'… The rush to hearings on the Hill, both in the Senate and the House, would be unbelievable. The media frenzy that would have ensued would have been unlike anything we've ever seen. That's when you're getting into Watergate territory."

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Friday, November 27, 2009

A prediction: Governor Siegelman will be far from the last victim of this "Bush III"-style administration

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"As long as we have the same people in charge looking at the question of prosecutorial misconduct, we're going to get the same answers. That's because they're trying to cover their asses."
-- former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman, in an
interview with TPM Muckraker (see link below)

by Ken

This is just awful. Shocking, disgraceful. If it isn't promptly repudiated and corrected by the Obama administration, I'm afraid we're going to be . . . well, exactly where we appear to be -- suffering through a presidential administration that qualifies as "moderate" only by the standard of present-day Republicanism, where "moderate" views are so extreme that not so long ago they would have qualified people who held them as mentally incompetent.

I know I'll be accused by many self-professed liberals as one of those self-hating left-wingers who believes in the old circular firing squad. Well, like a lot of other progressives, while voicing a fair amount of disagreement with the strategy and apparent goals of the Obama administration, I've held back, hoping its policymakers might have some grand plan that might not produce the results I would hope for, but that would at least move the country decisively away from the disastrous directions in which it was driven by the evil genies of the Bush regime.

Of course the crooks and clowns of the right wing of the Democratic Party, which Howie usually refers to as "the Republican wing" of the party, are never subjected to such accusations. Never. They are free to attack the administration, and it goes without saying anyone in the party to the left of Holy Joe Lieberman and Clueless Ben Nelson, at any level of vehemence. It goes without saying too that in Congress the Republican-Democrats are free not only to attackthe president's positions (that is, when he takes positions) but to vote with the "Just Say No" Republicans -- you know, the folks sworn to destroying this administration -- as often as they like.

From the White House's point of view, why not? The only Democrats who appear to have the trust of the administration's political point man, Master Rahm Emanuel, are the ones who were card-carrying Republicans until just seconds before they announced their candidacies --true believers that what's good for the giant corporations who show members of Congress with all those megabuck bribes is good for the U.S.A.

Just last week I talked about the missed opportunity of the Obama campaign to educate the country on the destructivness of the fundamental principles, not just the crappy execution, of the Bush regime.
Candidate Barack Obama had a unique opportunity during the campaign to use the international and domestic crises brought on by years of conservative misgovernance as a teaching moment, to try to make Americans understand how the conservative philosophy had failed. The explanation was something about his not wanting to be "negative," because voters don't like that. It seems clear that once in office he and his people were consciously working to avoid the onslaught of a culture war.

The result, however, is that he's got his culture war, and no weapons with which to fight back. In my darker moments what I foresee is the wreckage of this administration being used by the forces of darkness as proof of the failure of progressive ideas -- when nobody tainted with progressive ideas seems to have been allowed anywhere near the levers of power. Meanwhle, the "centrists" who are responsible for the carnage will as always conclude that they need to hunker ever farther toward the center, which has moved so far right as to be no longer visible to the naked eye.

By the time of the 2008 presidential primaries, and even more by the time of the general election, the Right was well advanced in the process of flushing all trace of that fellow George W. Bush down the memory hole, along with all recollection of how fiercely and violently they once defended every lie he told and every abomination he perpetrated, denouncing even the slightest hint of criticism as "Bush-bashing." By that time, the occasional right-winger who still acknowledged that there might once have been such a person -- never mind that the bum was still squatting in the White House as the duly appointed president of the United States -- explained that this (possibly hypothetical) George W. Bush person wasn't "a real conservative."

Indeed in many ways he wasn't. But "real conservatism" was already beside the point. The policies of the regime were almost down the line those of modern-day Movement Conservatism, which in many ways that isn't "conservative" either. (This contradiction is similarly built into the new initiative of RNC members who fancy themselves "pure" conservatives to purge the Republican Party of impure ones.) For example, there was nothing inherently "conservative" about the idea of invading Iraq, as reflected by the fact that, until the invasion was a reality and the Right rallied around its the spokesdevils Bush and Cheney, the loudest and most persistent voices against an invasion came from the Right. (As I've said repeatedly, the sudden and complete vanishment of those voices is for me one of the amazing feats in modern American political magic.)

Now, most of us undestood that candidate Obama wasn't a "progressive," any more than candidate Hillary Clinton was. Yet candidate Obama made a more successful effort to make us think -- with those occasional eloquent, seemingly visionary speeches, which seemed to have policy implications for what he might wish to do as president -- that he shared some of our major values, like ending the imperial adventurism of our foreign policy and restoring some measure of fairness to the administration of federal justice, which had been so brutally compromised as a matter of explicit Bush regime policy.

I understand how difficulty and risky a business it is to try to educate the electorate rather than play with or, better still, actively manipulate its misunderstandings and prejudices. Nevertheless, with the level of discontent that existed in 2008 as the country awoke to the horror of the Bush regime's disastrous policies, without necessarily understanding why those policies had been so disastrous, the country was primed for a leader who could help them see what had gone wrong, and how the country could benefit from a clean break with those policies and what an alternative vision of government might look like. Given candidate Obama's oratorical skill, his demonstrated ability to bring eloquence and clairty to fundamental aspects of public policy, he certainly seemed like a candidate to rally the American public to a renewed vision of the role government had to play in leading the country in a whole other direction. However, we heard virtually nothing in the campaign about the systemic failures of the outgoing regime, how its failures resulted primarily from a determination to prove its overriding philosophy: that government has no role in improving the lives of Americans.

Polls taken during the campaign certainly seemed to vindicate the Obama campaign's let's-look-forward-not-backward operating philosophy. It seemed that people really didn't want to hear negativity, and especially didn't want to be confronted with having to defend their previous godlike worship of George W. Bush (assuming there had ever been such a person, which seemed increasingly dubious). But sometimes leadership and political courage mean sacrificing easy short-term gains for harder-won longer-term ones.

UNLESS SENATOR OBAMA DIDN'T HAVE BASIC
BELIEF CONFLICTS WITH THE BUSH REGIME . . .


As I've been acknowledging all along, there's another possible explanation for the Obama campaign's kid-gloves treatment of the malfeasances of the Bush regime, one that goes beyond mere questions of strategy: What if his philosophical differences with it are a lot narrower than ours? As I wrote in that same post last week:
It's always dangerous to underestimate the extent to which the president's own views may actually favor the most narrowly corporatist strategy that can safely be gotten away with. A case can be made that artificially resuscitating the financial services industry (a fancy way of saying the banksters and Wall Street) actually is the president's economic program, and never mind that most of the country is still left in depression. By that standard, he and Rahm [Emanuel] and Larry [Summers] and Timmy [Geithner] can all go to bed each night feeling they've had another slammin' day and sleep the sleep of the blessed.

As you may have gathered from the head on this post, and the leading quote from former Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman, the subject of my current astonishment and outrage at the Obama adminstration has to do with the case of Governor Siegeleman, who seems to me almost certainly to have been railroaded -- out of a return to the governorship and into prison -- in a calculatingly cold-blooded political prosecution orchestrated by Karl Rove.

'Disappointed' Siegelman: Obama Justice Dept. Virtually The Same As Bush DOJ

Justin Elliott | November 25, 2009, 10:42AM

When the Obama Administration argued in a filing earlier this month that the Supreme Court should not consider an appeal by Don Siegelman, the former Alabama governor wasn't surprised, even though the Obama filing maintained the Bush-era stance in Siegelman's controversial corruption case.

"There's really been no substantial change in the heart of the Department of Justice from the Bush-Rove Department of Justice," Siegelman tells TPMmuckraker in an interview.

Siegelman, a Democrat, served roughly nine months in prison after his 2006 bribery conviction. He was ordered released pending appeal in March 2008. The case, which has been dogged by allegations of politicization and prosecutorial misconduct -- including links to Karl Rove -- centers on what the government called a pay-to-play scheme in which Siegelman appointed a large donor to a state regulatory board.

Siegelman has asked the Supreme Court to consider the definition of bribery, arguing that he merely engaged in routine political transactions. But, in the Nov. 13 filing that raised Siegelman's hackles, Obama's solicitor general argued that "corrupt intent" had been established in the trial.

While Solicitor General Elena Kagan was appointed by Obama, Siegelman says the DOJ staffers who are giving advice and making decisions on his case are the same people who were at the department under Bush. "The people who have been writing the briefs for the government are the same people who were involved in the prosecution," he says.

The filing by the DOJ is a sign that the Obama Administration intends to stay the course in the case, despite entreaties to review it, including a letter from 75 former state attorneys general.


If the Supreme Court declines to hear his appeal, or rules against him, the consequences could be grave, Siegelman says.

"We've got a bunch of people in this country -- including President Obama and mayors and members of Congress -- who will be in jeopardy because any rogue prosecutor who wants to target a politician or a donor will be able to do it."

He expects the court to decide whether to consider his appeal by early next year. A separate request for a new trial in Alabama will probably not be decided before the Supreme Court decision, he says.

Another piece of unfinished business in the Siegelman saga is an inquiry by the DOJ's internal watchdog -- the Office of Professional Responsibility -- into the allegations of politicized prosecution. Bill Canary, the husband of Leura Canary, the US Attorney on the case, was a state GOP operative who had run the campaign of Siegelman's gubernatorial opponent, and was a close associate of Karl Rove. Canary allegedly said he'd get his "girls" -- including his wife -- on Siegelman.

OPR said fully 11 months ago that the results of its investigation would be released "in the near future," but the report is nowhere to be seen. Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) in September sent a letter (.pdf) to Attorney General Eric Holder urging an impartial OPR review of the case.

Siegelman, though, isn't holding his breath. "My guess is that whatever OPR comes out with will be another whitewash designed to sweep all of this under somebody's rug," he tells us. "As long as we have the same people in charge looking at the question of prosecutorial misconduct, we're going to get the same answers. That's because they're trying to cover their asses."


[All boldface emphasis added.]

We've become used to the Obama Justice Department providing defenses of repellent laws under challenge before the Supreme Court. The finest legal minds in the progressive community have stoutly reassured us that such defenses are required under U.S. legal "tradition." (Can "tradition" really require action of any kind?) And so it was suggested that we shut our traps when, for example, the DoJ issued a shocking and loathsome defense of the repugnant Defense of Marriage Act, which even Bill Clinton now expresses remorse for having been cornered into signing. Never mind that the Supreme Court justices who read the DoJ argument could be forgiven for thinking that the Obama administration was providing a ringing endorsement for DOMA.)

But now that principle has apparently been applied to endorsing the cover-up of the first gross malfeasances of the Bush regime DoJ to come under challenge before the Supreme Court: the frame job that not only thwarted Siegelman's return to the Alabama governorship but locked him safely away in prison. Maybe we shouldn't be surprised. After all, every time the question of looking into potentially criminal conduct of the Bush regimistas has arisen, hasn't President Obama always spouted the same rhetoric about not wanting to look backwards but only forward?

Did the U.S. government as a matter of official policy promote torture, in violation of both U.S. and international law? We mustn't look backwards. Did the Bush regime break U.S. law in instituting and reauthorizing its massive system of telephone surveillance, or whatever the hell it was that was so secret, we still can't be told what it was? (You remember, the whatever-it-was that brought then-White House counsel Idiot Al "The Torture Guy" Gonzales storming into the intensive-care hospital room of a semiconscious Attorney General John Ashcroft, to the considerable terror of Mrs. Ashcroft, hoping to bully him into overriding the judgment of Deputy AG Jim Comey that the whatever-it-was was illegal.)

As a lot us have screamed every time President Obama has issued another of his "free passes" for Bush regime malefactors, without some basic principle of accountability, the rule of law basically disappears from U.S. government, and with it the illusion of a functioning democracy. Now the Obama administration is giving signals -- well, in the case of Governor Siegelman, more than giving signals, actually taking a position, that the Bush regime's rigorous cover-ups of its misconduct is official Obama administration policy.

We're incidentally forced to confront again the shocking number of Bush holdovers still serving, and apparently making policy, in the Obama DoJ. This is inexcusable. Presumably it was that same lofty goal of "bipartisanship" that caused the new administration to refrain from the traditional practice of requesting resignations from all the U.S. attorneys. After all, Republicans always whine indignantly when a Democratic president does it, though not when they do it. And in this case, as candidate Obama seemed to understand, the gross politicization of the DoJ was going to be one of his most immediate problems.

It's true that it would have been a nightmare getting Senate approval for all the new U.S. attorneys who would then have had to be appointed, in addition to the large number of upper-tier department managers who weren't immediately replaced, but remember, at that point no one knew it was going to be Republican strategy to oppose every single initiative and appointment of his in order to bring as much destruction and hardship to the country as they possibly could, for their own hoped future electoral benefit.

Incredibly, vast numbers of Bush regime holdovers were left in place, and in fact may still be in place, not just in the DoJ but throughout the executive branch, and it appears that many of them are formulating policy in just the same way they did during the Bush regime. It isn't clear whether their work is even being overseen by the relatively small cadre of senior-level Obama appointees who have actually been both appointed and confirmed.

I find this situation 100 percent intolerable at Justice, and feel pretty foolish for having strongly defended the appointment of Eric Holder as attorney general. At that, however, Holder is turning out to be a prototype for a lot of the Obama cabinet appointments: a qualified enough appointee, but one whose zealousness is readily accommodated to the degree desired by the administration, which seems to be "low." We're now hearing more stories from individuals with some inside knowledge of the procedure followed in the staffing of other executive-branch agencies: no hotheads wanted. So while they may not be the same people who would have been appointed to their positions under the previous administration, they're also not boat-rockers, not the kind of folks who go looking for trouble, no matter how much trouble they may have inherited in their bailiwicks.

To the extent that the policy was designed to forestall opposition attacks, it's laughable. Now that the Republicans have officially renounced any obligation to truth, not only will they oppose everything President Obama says or does, they will do so as if each of their manufactured accusations means life or death for the future of the American republic. The resulting irony is cruel: As the current administration takes over responsibility for immunizing Karl Rove from accountability for his eight years of rampaging criminal misconduct in office, the self-same Karl Rove, posing as a TV "analyst," trashes that administration at every opportunity.

If candidate Obama had announced straight-out during the campaign that it would be his policy to disregard all issues of official misconduct, including possible criminal behavior, in the Bush regime, and to maintain the basic status quo, with only some light housecleaning, in the management and even to a large extent the staffing of the executive branch, I ask myself whether I would have voted for him. With the alternative of a McCranky administration? (No, I'm not going to resort to mention of who the Republican vice president would have been. After all, Young Johnny held her in such little regard that she surely would have had no policy role in his administration. In fact, she might have wound up making as much trouble as she has tried to make for the Obama administration.) More to the point, I'm appalled even to be pondering the question of how much worse, or rather how not-so-much-worse, a McCranky adminstration would have been.
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Thursday, December 11, 2008

Would Arlen Specter's hypocritical bloviating be less obnoxious if he had any real principles besides self-adulation?

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A photo not from the senator's website -- where none of
the pictures seem to have been taken in the last 20 years

by Ken

Do you wonder sometimes what some of our pols see when they look in the mirror?

I'm thinking just now of the ever-inscrutable Republican senior senator from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Arlen Specter.

Okay, I suppose Senator Specter isn't that inscrutable. He used to be what was known in those quaint times as a "moderate Republican." In those bygone days he was kind of hard to predict, because you never knew where he would choose to take a stand on his famous principles -- because in those days, sometimes he did actually take a stand and, you know, follow through.

Then his party went galloping off into the dark sunset of the Oh So Far Right (No, Righter, Righer!), and the senator came to his senses. Oh, he often talked about principles, but there was rarely any question any longer where his real priorities lay: perpetuating his own prestige and, especially, power.

I imagine I'm not the only one for whom the turning point came when he assumed the role of ringleader of the gang rape of Anita Hill during the confirmation hearings for Clarence Thomas's Supreme Court nomination. It was perhaps the first time I appreciated the stark contrast between the goals, and not just their strategies, of Ds and Rs on the Judiciary Committee.

Faced with Professor Hill's reluctantly proffered accusation of sexual harassment during her association with the nominee, the Ds -- led by then-Chairman Joe Biden -- obsessed over trying to determine the truth of the matter. Pathetic wretches! As if the truth mattered! The Rs, by contrast, focused on the only thing that mattered to them: winning.

I assume that, like the rest of us, the Rs had a pretty good idea that Hill was telling the truth, which gave them all the more reason not to be suckered into the fool's game of truth-seeking. No, they went straight for character assassination, and nobody did it better than our Arlen, who deployed his full prosecutor's bag of tricks in what was, as of then, the vilest public performance I had witnessed in the U.S. Congress. (I'm not counting the film of Sen. Joe McCarthy in action. But if that's where Specter enthusiasts have to reach to surpass their guy's vileness, I think their case is lost.)

Of course, those were more innocent times. Modern-day Republicans have made that sort of gutter-wallowing their model, and built on it (cf. the 2008 presidential campaign of Young Johnny McCranky, and for that matter most every Republican race across the country).

Of course I respect Senator Specter for his heroic struggles against cancer. But when you look at the use he has made of the additional leases on life he has won, well, "respect" isn't a word that pops to mind.

It was hardly surprising that when it came to the real crunch, which is to say the long darkness for truth, justice, and the American way that was the Bush regime, there aren't many pols who behaved more abominably than our Arlen. Most of the Bush rubber-stampers were at least open about their degraded values. Our Arlen, however, often continued to profess loyalty to the Constitution and legal system that the regime was so ruthlessly dismantling. Every now and then he would make noises that were made to sound like actual acts of defiance of the regime, as in the matter of the blatantly illegal Bush military tribunals. But in the end he always caved. Always, without exception. He racked up what in baseball parlance is known as an ohfer -- 0 for the Bush regime. It's hard to believe that any of the regime malefactors lost as much as a moment's rest over his theatrical posturing.

As the top-ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, he can said to have presided over the systematic destruction of the Justice Dept. and the perversion of the federal justice system by people who whose every waking effort was devoted to destroying the country's legal fabric, transforming it all into the enforcement arm of Karl Rove's White House political operation. The confirmation of John Ashcroft as attorney general was bad enough. Who knew that the regime would find him too principled, and come up with a replacement, Idiot Al "The Torture Guy" Gonzales, whose incompetent and corrupt tenure will be studied by historians and legal scholars for decades if not centuries to come?

While the Justice Dept. was being run by America-hating sociopaths and staffed at all levels -- up to the highest -- by thugs, dilettantes, and idiot children whose legal skills wouldn't have qualified them to take orders at Burger King, Arlen Specter sat on his fat, lazy, self-important, corrupt ass and let the good times roll. Remember that for the majority of the Bush regime's existence, he wasn't ranking minority member but chairman of the Judiciary Committee.

Every depradation, every breach of justice and trust perpetrated by the Bush Gang had either the active blessing or the passive I-don't-give-a-fuck sign-off of master hypocrite Specter. Just as everyone involved in the running of the Justice Dept. at least under the Gonzales Reign of Legal Horror should now be under indictment, so should their master overseer and enabler, Arlen Specter.

Now the Senate's Lion of Injustice has announced his intention to throw a monkey wrench into the confirmation proceedings of Eric Holder to be attorney general, if not actually jeopardizing the nomination then at least significantly delaying the start of a task so monumental that there's no time to lose: rebuilding the Justice Dept. from the wreckage left behind by the marauders of the Bush regime.

The goniff Specter has announced that his exalted principles require him to look into Holder's role in the pardon of Marc Rich. Now the Rich pardon was far from the Clinton administration's finest hour, but it wasn't Holder's idea, and if President Clinton and his advisers were determined to do it, it's doubtful that Holder could have stopped them. Moreover, the Obama transition team is said to have sounded out the appropriate officials, presumably including Senator Specter, about the appointment.

What it comes down to, I guess, is our Arlen living up to the Grandstander's Pledge: to always do everything possible to draw attention to himself while solemnly promising never to attempt to accomplish anything of substance. The man who sat by and watched the Justice Dept. be dismantled by thugs and goons has gall beyond imagining to say "boo" to Eric Holder. Instead, he ought to take a good look in the mirror and try to figure out what to do with a man who did as much as anyone on the planet to destroy justice in the United States.
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Monday, May 21, 2007

WHY ARE THESE DUFUSES GRINNING? THE GENIUS OF IDIOT AL "THE TORTURE GUY" GONZALES IS TO HAVE MADE HIMSELF JUST ABOUT IRREPLACEABLE

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USEFUL IDIOTS AND GRINNING A.G.'S

by Mags


Even though the hasty exit of Alberto Gonzales is predicted by many, it is likely that behind the scenes his continuing in his position for a time is functional for Bush et al.
 
It should come as no surprise that Gonzales is hesitant to leave or that Bush is hesitant to appoint another in his place. At this point in the game, who can Bush turn to? Think about it for a minute. Gonzales breaks the law whenever he is asked to break it. He has stood behind the Administration as they press further into our private lives with unwarranted wiretaps. He has been supportive of Bush policies of torture and rendition. He was instrumental in prosecuting cases that lined up with Karl Rove’s efforts to shut down the vote by claiming voter fraud. He has been at Bush’s beck and call in all willingness to do whatever it takes to whitewash his boss. It has been his job for a long time.
 
Alberto Gonzales has often been questioned by congress, and on many of those occasions he has perjured himself. As he perjured himself, he would, like George Bush get the most troubling grin on his face. Gonzales wears that eerie grin at the most inappropriate times. I first noticed it in the hearings on the torture bill, the darling of Cheney, Gonzales, and Yoo. However, one cannot believe, after hearing the stories of Gonzales’ arm-twisting of a gravely ill John Ashcroft, a person we thought would do anything for this president, that George Bush is just the happy-go-lucky idiot he is often credited with being. He is, it appears, orchestrating the illegalities and horrors that have many of us paralyzed in disbelief.
 
When you are forced to replace such an official, and I do use the term “official” lightly, what you must do is find someone with no scruples whatsoever. You must find someone who is willing to step into a situation where illegality is already under scrutiny. You must find someone who will not spill their guts about it and also will not throw you, the Commander in Chief, under the impeachment bus. This person must share your greed, your lack of character, and your disdain for the American people and the Constitution. It must be a person who is willing to hand over the machinery of this government of the people, by the people, and for the people to those incompetents who make up a pseudo-educated religious right.
 
Who will prostitute himself in such a dangerous office? Who will come in and stoop to this depth of corruption at the get go? If not even John Ashcroft could find it in himself to go along with these schemes at the height of his power and influence, then who will? That is the problem Bush faces.
 
At this point one can assume that the only folks who would accept this position would be the likes of a James Inhofe or Ted Stevens. It will take someone like Tom DeLay, who even now denies his own criminality and intent. It will take someone with that degree of self-delusion to take the place of Gonzales. In short, you need someone who will lie, who is willing to put the GOP and George Bush ahead of the rule of law and democracy, and who will betray the Constitution, thereby betraying their country and countrymen. Added to that, this person must be willing to dodge the bullets of personal liability in the face of congressional investigation.

That is a tall order. As long as Gonzales remains a target, Bush and Rove can figure out what to do next; no real change needs take place. They can buy some time to cover up. They can spin reality into something that in their last ditch effort might sound plausible. No wonder Bush is in no hurry to push Gonzales out. No wonder Gonzales is doing so much grinning lately.

[Editor's note: Whenever Howie and I talk about the "Gonzales succession," he insists that Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch is ready and willing to take the job, and points out that the chances of the Senate declining to confirm one of its own are not large.--Ken]

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