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Tuesday, December 21, 2004
Ricewind on Armando's Challenge
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2004/12/20/215458/51
Armando's Challenge -- Final Edition
by rincewind
Mon Dec 20th, 2004 at 18:54:58 PST
First, the challenge: as Categorically Imperative put it,
the idea is to post a diary laying out the most comprehensive case possible for there having been fraud in Ohio. If the case made is at least as convincing as the case that Bush was AWOL from TANG, then Armando will do a front-page post on Ohio fraud.
Second, I hoped that my previous diaries on this topic would generate lots of fact-filled comments, and serve as a collection-point for the evidence that people think is most persuasive and/or most provable. Didn't happen, oh well.
So I've written up some of the facts I believe are supported by evidence AND persuasive of fraud. It's long, but I hope it's worthwhile. Read on!
Trumbull County
The county's website doesn't provide precinct-level or poll/absentee/prov breakouts, so I've been unable to independently verify Dr Lange's information. He did testify under oath to one of Cong. Conyers' hearings.
Dr. Werner Lange's report, dated Dec 12, 2004:
"All absentee voters must be identified as such by name and residence in the precinct poll books of the precinct in which they are registered. Over 100 precinct poll books in Trumbull County were checked for absentee voters and that number of actual absentee voters was compared to the certified number of absentee votes. There was an inflated difference in nearly every precinct of the five communities examined. The five communities whose poll books were carefully inspected for an absentee vote overcount are: Warren City (311), Howland Township (138), Newton Falls City (34), Girard City (57), and Cortland Township (40). The 106 precincts of these five Ohio communities, about 39% of all precincts in Trumbull County, netted a total of 580 absentee votes for which there were no absentee voters identified in the poll books."
Dr Lange's full report can be read here
============================
Lucas County
The Director of Elections has resigned, and 4 BoE employees have been suspended by the board, pending an unspecified "investigation" into the conduct of the Nov 2 election.
Google-cached page of a
WTOL news report
You may remember that it was also the Lucas County Dem HQ in Toledo that was broken into in Oct.
Google-cached page of a
Toledo Blade article
============================
Greene County
The BoE office was "left unlocked" or broken into over the night of Fri Dec 10 - Sat Dec 11.
Sworn statement of witnesses (PDF)
The witness statements also include a litany of "irregularities" in the registration books and precinct books, which they documented before the BoE Director removed the books and demanded they leave.
============================
Franklin County
Franklin County reported a striking peculiarity in its "Unofficial Abstract of Votes" published on its web site on Nov 3, 2004. On pages 35-39 of the 414-pg PDF document is found a "Ward Recap" for the presidential and senate races. On page 39 are 2 line entries labeled "Absentee 1" and "Absentee 2", both of which are included in the grand-total summary line (I hand-tallied every ward entry, for every column, to verify this fact). The reported results are as follows:
Candidate Absentee 1 Absentee 2
--------- ---------- ----------
Badnarik 69 70
Bush 10158 10159
Kerry 10025 10025
Peroutka 25 25
Removed 0 0
Write-In 0 0
Fingerhut 7416 7417
Voinovich 11930 11931
Public
Precinct
Count 20680 20680
Does anyone want to calculate the odds of 2 separate bundles of absentee ballots adding up to exactly the same number of ballots? Much less the odds of those 2 separate bundles producing exactly the same or ONE more vote for each candidate?
The "Official Abstract of Votes" published on the Franklin County web site after certification (Dec 6, 2004) is also a 414-pg PDF document, and on page 39 of the "Ward Recap" for the presidential and senate races, there are 3 line entries labeled "Absentee 1", "Absentee 2", and "Absentee 3". The "Public Precinct Count" for "Absentee 3" is 12,124 and the SoS-published number of provisional ballots for Franklin County is 14,446 so it seems logical to conclude that this line item is for the valid, counted provisionals. The reported results for "Absentee 1" and "Absentee 2" are as follows:
Candidate Absentee 1 Absentee 2
--------- ---------- ----------
Badnarik 81 81
Bush 11426 11312
Kerry 11683 11491
Peroutka 29 29
Removed 0 0
Write-In 4 0
Fingerhut 8576 8511
Voinovich 13393 13340
Public
Precinct
Count 23710 23403
While there are some differences between the votes tallied in "Absentee 1" and "Absentee 2" in the official report, they're still remarkably close. I haven't seen any official declaration of how many absentee ballots were requested/mailed out/returned in Franklin County, nor any thorough examination of the poll books showing the number of registered voters who were marked as absentee; so I can't make any judgment as to whether there really were 47,113 absentee ballots, or 23,710 or 23,403.
A further note: the Franklin County web site has removed the "Unofficial Abstract" PDF file (I had downloaded it weeks ago); the only file available is the "Official Abstract" -- even though the results for the March Primary election still lists both the "Unofficial" and the "Official" abstracts.
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Warren County
The lock-out of qualified observers on Election night, in violation of OH law, has never been adequately explained, and as far as I can tell, has never been pursued.
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Recount Issues
First, what they were supposed to do:
OH SoS official recount procedures (PDF)
Of particular note:
Item C.2.a)
Boards of Elections must notify all candidates in the race of the time and place by certified mail not later than five days before an automatic or requested recount is held.
Item C.3.a)
Each candidate in the race is entitled to one witness for each counting team or tabulating unit.
Item E.2.d)
The board must randomly select whole precincts whose total equals at least 3% of the total vote. These precincts' ballots must be manually counted.
Item E.2.f)
If the computer count does not match the hand count, and after rechecking the manual count, the results are still not equal, all ballots must be hand counted.
Now, what actually happened:
= ============================
Coshocton County
11/2/04: "Unofficial" Vote Total Released to Press (and published on OH SoS web site)
Bush: 9,121
Kerry: 6,763
Peroutka: 65
Badnarik: 17
Total: 15,966
11/19/04: "Official" Vote Total Released to Press (after processing Provisionals)
Bush: 9,277 (+156)
Kerry: 6,878 (+115)
Peroutka: 67 (+2)
Badnarik: 17 (0)
Cobb: 1 (+1)
Total: 16,240 (+274)
12/06/04: "Certified" Vote Total Announced By Blackwell (and published on OH SoS web site)
Bush: 9,277 (0)
Kerry: 6,878 (0)
Peroutka: 67 (0)
Badnarik: 17 (0)
Cobb: 1 (0)
Schriner: 2 (+2)
Total: 16,242 (+2)
12/14/04: "Pre-Recount" Vote Total Distributed to Recount Observers
[Vote Total Alleged By Coshocton County Officials to be "Official November 2nd, 2004" Vote Total]
(Computer printout dated 12-10-2004)
Bush: 9,839 (+562)
Kerry: 7,378 (+500)
Peroutka: 68 (+1)
Badnarik: 15 (-2)
Cobb: 1 (0)
Schriner: 2 (0)
Total: 17,300 (+1,058)
12/15/04: "Post-Recount" Vote Total Released By Coshocton County
[To Be "Certified" as "Official" Coshocton County Results]
Bush: 9,826 (-13)
Kerry: 7,412 (+34)
Peroutka: 68 (0)
Badnarik: 13 (-2)
Cobb: 1 (0)
Schriner: 2 (0)
Total: 17,319 (+19)
Coshocton County apparently performed a "recount" on 12-10-2004, 4 days in advance of the time scheduled for the "official" recount, without issuing the required notice or permitting authorized witnesses to attend; and apparently "found" 1,077 more valid votes than they had certified 4 days earlier.
The Coshocton Tribune, on 12-18-2004, further muddied the waters by publishing the following totals as "Official Results":
Bush: 9,830 (+4)
Kerry: 7,413 (+1)
Peroutka: 68 (0)
Badnarik: 15 (+2)
Cobb: 1 (0)
Schriner: 2 (0)
Total: 17,329 (+10)
Cobb observer statement
See more/updated info about Coshocton County in this diary by jiffykeen.
============================
Washington County
In addition to other irregularities, the recount in this county appears to have "lost" even more votes than Coshocton County "found". Blackwell certified the following totals (SoS web site):
Badnarik 71
Bush 17,480
Kerry 12,475
Peroutka 69
The totals printed out and given to the recount observers as the FINAL, COMPLETE tally:
Badnarik 68
Bush 15521
Kerry 10958
Peroutka 60
So, somewhere between the certification on Dec 6 and the recount on Dec 15, Washington County lost at least 3,488 votes. No explanation has been given for this discrepancy.
============================
Confirmed tampering with tabulating machines:
Hocking County (Triad technician)
reference here (PDF)
Greene County (Triad technician)
reference here (PDF)
Monroe County (Triad technician)
reference here (PDF) and here
Mercer County (Triad technician)
reference here
Lucas County (Diebold technician)
reference here
Union County (Triad technician)
reference here
============================
Confirmed non-random selection of "3% hand count" in recount procedure:
Monroe County
reference here (PDF)
Mercer County
reference here
Allen County
reference here
Fayette County
reference here
Cuyahoga County
reference here
Huron County
reference here
Lucas County
reference here
Morgan County
reference here
Morrow County
reference here
Medina County
reference here
Fairfield County
reference here
Clermont County
reference here
Washington County
reference here
Hocking County
reference here
Mahoning County
reference here
Holmes County
reference here
Jefferson County
reference here
============================
Confirmed discrepancy between 3% hand count v. machine recount NOT resulting in full-county hand count:
Monroe County
reference here (PDF) and here
Tuscarawas County
reference here
Fairfield County
reference here
Clermont County
reference here
Summit County
reference here
Mahoning County
reference here
Unable to confirm the results of the 3% count:
Lucas County
reference here
============================
Confirmed lack of access to public records (most BoE's claim direct order from Blackwell):
I started to list and reference each county in which this problem was reported, but it became apparent that only a handful of county boards allowed access to the records (disobeying Blackwell's order).
============================
In addition, there are numerous first-hand reports of a variety of "irregularities" in the conduct of the recounts:
- Many counties failed to seal or even lock up ballots and other election materials;
- Many counties refused to allow witnesses to see all stages of the recount process;
- An astonishing number of counties report a PERFECT match between their certified results and their recount results. Given the high proportion of punch-card counties, this strains credulity beyond the breaking point.
I've linked to most of the Cobb observers' reports above, but they're all worth a read.
Therefore, I, Rincewind, hereby submit these witness reports, sworn statements, MSM reports, and numerical discrepancies as evidence that election fraud did occur in Ohio.
Posted at 02:07 am by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Monday, December 20, 2004
Bush, torture, smoking gun
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: media@aclu.org
Newly Obtained FBI Records Call Defense Department’s Methods "Torture," Express Concerns Over "Cover-Up" That May Leave FBI "Holding the Bag" for Abuses
NEW YORK -- A document released for the first time today by the American Civil Liberties Union suggests that President Bush issued an Executive Order authorizing the use of inhumane interrogation methods against detainees in Iraq. Also released by the ACLU today are a slew of other records including a December 2003 FBI e-mail that characterizes methods used by the Defense Department as "torture" and a June 2004 "Urgent Report" to the Director of the FBI that raises concerns that abuse of detainees is being covered up.
"These documents raise grave questions about where the blame for widespread detainee abuse ultimately rests," said ACLU Executive Director Anthony D. Romero. "Top government officials can no longer hide from public scrutiny by pointing the finger at a few low-ranking soldiers."
The documents were obtained after the ACLU and other public interest organizations filed a lawsuit against the government for failing to respond to a Freedom of Information Act request.
The two-page e-mail that references an Executive Order states that the President directly authorized interrogation techniques including sleep deprivation, stress positions, the use of military dogs, and "sensory deprivation through the use of hoods, etc." The ACLU is urging the White House to confirm or deny the existence of such an order and immediately to release the order if it exists. The FBI e-mail, which was sent in May 2004 from "On Scene Commander--Baghdad" to a handful of senior FBI officials, notes that the FBI has prohibited its agents from employing the techniques that the President is said to have authorized.
Another e-mail, dated December 2003, describes an incident in which Defense Department interrogators at Guantánamo Bay impersonated FBI agents while using "torture techniques" against a detainee. The e-mail concludes "If this detainee is ever released or his story made public in any way, DOD interrogators will not be held accountable because these torture techniques were done [sic] the ‘FBI’ interrogators. The FBI will [sic] left holding the bag before the public."
The document also says that no "intelligence of a threat neutralization nature" was garnered by the "FBI" interrogation, and that the FBI’s Criminal Investigation Task Force (CITF) believes that the Defense Department’s actions have destroyed any chance of prosecuting the detainee. The e-mail’s author writes that he or she is documenting the incident "in order to protect the FBI."
"The methods that the Defense Department has adopted are illegal, immoral, and counterproductive," said ACLU staff attorney Jameel Jaffer. "It is astounding that these methods appear to have been adopted as a matter of policy by the highest levels of government."
The June 2004 "Urgent Report" addressed to the FBI Director is heavily redacted. The legible portions of the document appear to describe an account given to the FBI’s Sacramento Field Office by an FBI agent who had "observed numerous physical abuse incidents of Iraqi civilian detainees," including "strangulation, beatings, [and] placement of lit cigarettes into the detainees ear openings." The document states that "[redacted] was providing this account to the FBI based on his knowledge that [redacted] were engaged in a cover-up of these abuses."
The release of these documents follows a federal court order that directed government agencies to comply with a year-old request under the Freedom of Information Act filed by the ACLU, the Center for Constitutional Rights, Physicians for Human Rights, Veterans for Common Sense and Veterans for Peace. The New York Civil Liberties Union is co-counsel in the case.
Other documents released by the ACLU today include:
- An FBI email regarding DOD personnel impersonating FBI officials during interrogations. The e-mail refers to a "ruse" and notes that "all of those [techniques] used in these scenarios" were approved by the Deputy Secretary of Defense. (Jan. 21, 2004)
- Another FBI agent’s account of interrogations at Guantánamo in which detainees were shackled hand and foot in a fetal position on the floor. The agent states that the detainees were kept in that position for 18 to 24 hours at a time and most had "urinated or defacated [sic]" on themselves. On one occasion, the agent reports having seen a detainee left in an unventilated, non-air conditioned room at a temperature "probably well over a hundred degrees." The agent notes: "The detainee was almost unconscious on the floor, with a pile of hair next to him. He had apparently been literally pulling his own hair out throughout the night." (Aug. 2, 2004)
- An e-mail stating that an Army lawyer "worked hard to cwrite [sic] a legal justification for the type of interrogations they (the Army) want to conduct" at Guantánamo Bay. (Dec. 9, 2002)
- An e-mail noting the initiation of an FBI investigation into the alleged rape of a juvenile male detainee at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. (July 28, 2004)
- An FBI agent’s account of an interrogation at Guantánamo - an interrogation apparently conducted by Defense Department personnel - in which a detainee was wrapped in an Israeli flag and bombarded with loud music and strobe lights. (July 30, 2004)
The ACLU and its allies are scheduled to go to court again this afternoon, where they will seek an order compelling the CIA to turn over records related to an internal investigation into detainee abuse. Although the ACLU has received more than 9,000 documents from other agencies, the CIA refuses to confirm or deny even the existence of many of the records that the ACLU and other plaintiffs have requested. The CIA is reported to have been involved in abusing detainees in Iraq and at secret CIA detention facilities around the globe.
The lawsuit is being handled by Lawrence Lustberg and Megan Lewis of the New Jersey-based law firm Gibbons, Del Deo, Dolan, Griffinger & Vecchione, P.C. Other attorneys in the case are Jaffer, Amrit Singh and Judy Rabinovitz of the ACLU; Art Eisenberg and Beth Haroules of the NYCLU; and Barbara Olshansky and Jeff Fogel of CCR.
The documents referenced above can be found at: http://www.aclu.org/torturefoia/released/fbi.html.
Posted at 11:43 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Sunday, December 19, 2004
This last week has been much talk across the blogosphere about retiring Conrad Burns in 2006. Kos floated the name of Jon Tester, the philosopher-farmer who will begin serving as Senate President in a couple weeks.
Over at Left in the West, Matt Singer evaluates Tester's prospects against Burns by saying, "The newly minted Senate President is a badass...The man has 7-fingers and a real chance to win."
Kos's post titled, "Montana on the road to swing state" has this to say:
State Democrats are bubbling with excitement at their sudden reemergence. They believe they can take Republican Conrad Burns in the 2006 Senate race, who just barely defeated current Democratic governor Brian Schweitzer in the 2000 contest. Dems are looking to John Tester, a bona fide Western farmer (complete with missing finger from farming accident) who is now Senate Majority Leader. He's literally from the middle of nowhere, and naturally speaks the language of rural America.
It is important to remember that Senator Burns was barely relected in 2000. The Swing State Project has this to say about Montana's junior senator:
Senator Conrad Burns has build his image as the caricature of the hill-billy politician. A darling of the energy companies, he has had a most unremarkable time in DC. Historically, Montana sends legislative titans to DC and Burns has failed to meet these obligations. In 2000, he was nearly knocked out by a complete unknown, never-run-before candidate with little backing from the Party.
In 1988, Burns ran for Senate as an outsider who would serve only two terms if elected. He lied. Now Conrad has become exactly what he was elected to counter which may explain why he is desperately seeking a golden parachute from the telecommunications industry. If Burns is on the ballot in 2006, this will be one of the best pick-up opportunities in the country. If he isn't, it will be one of the most competitive open seats in the country.
Governor-elect Brian Schweitzer wrote the playbook Tester would need. In 2000, too many Democrats assumed Burns would be re-elected and didn't provide Schweitzer the resources that might have put him over the top. Will Democrats make the same mistake in 2006?
Posted at 10:20 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
New Partnership for America's Future
New Partnership for America's Future
Throughout our nation's history, hope and optimism for the future have always defined the American spirit. Our tradition has been to expand opportunity, and strengthen family and community. A vibrant middle class and an informed electorate have formed the foundation of our democracy. That is why House Democrats have joined together to put aside partisanship and put forward the needs of the American people through our "New Partnership for America's Future." This new agenda reaffirms the commitment of House Democrats to six core values for a strong and secure middle class.
> Learn more about the 6 core values:
> Find out how the New Partnership impacts your state (.pdf)
> Sign up to get regular email updates from House Democrats
> Download our brochure outlining the "New Partnership for America's Future" (.pdf)
Posted at 10:16 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Saturday, December 18, 2004
Discretionary Political Warfare
I am a Reform Democrat because I want Democrats to budget for change. I want us to have non-dedicated resources available to quickly create and distribute large programs in reaction to changing situations. I want Democrats to plan for favorable unknowns and be prepared go big when they present themselves. I believe the battle never ends I want our Democratic Party ready for a campaign that never ends.
I want to expand on this and introduce the concept of Discretionary Political Warfare as an example of how post-modern politics can utilize military strategy and create Democratic Political Special Forces. |
Thinking back on Senator Kerry's loss, here is what Mary Beth Cahill had to say about the Swift Boat ads:
"This is the best $40,000 investment made by any political group."
Forty years after the Daisy Ad that Democrats pioneered we are still entirely unprepared to politically engage in a leveraged manner. Considering that Democrats will spend around a billion dollars between now and the 2006 election I suggest we invest in creating multiple cells of extremely well trained operatives with the financing necessary to engage in Discretionary Political Warfare.
As a minority party we have the most to gain by creating guerrilla political units that can operate independently and at will. Progressives have hundreds of organizations focusing on different progressive issues but how many organizations do we have with the mission to fight the GOP? I'm not talking about electing Democrats, I just talking about attacking Republicans.
Attacking the GOP
I want an organization that is only tasked with fighting the GOP. I would actually like to see multiple, independent organizations. I would like each organization to have a small number of highly trained, post-modern hacks. Political Special Forces. No rules and high expectations.
I want organizations that scan the morning news and decide who to hit that day. If five of these cells each hit the same GOP Congressman, I think that is wonderful. I want real-time politics and no roadblocks.
I believe we will see this sooner of later. I'd like Democrats to lead the way so we can capture the early adapter benefits. The internet demands this type of politics. |
Posted at 10:14 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Friday, December 17, 2004
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12/17/2004 |
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House Democrats Demand Real Economic Reform
This week the Bush Administration held a summit to trot out its economic agenda for the next four years - more unaffordable tax cuts, Social Security privatization, and "tort reform." House Democrats hope that the priorities of working families will not be forgotten in the rush to push Republican plans for the 109th Congress that are already well known. They want to rewrite the tax code to favor wealthy corporate interests at the expense of middle-class Americans, eliminate the secure and stable income provided by the Social Security system, and "reform" the legal system to protect multinational corporations from injured Americans who are seeking justice and fair compensation. It is disingenuous for the President to hold this economic summit while ignoring the real solutions our nation's working families are looking for - a more fair and less complex tax system, retirement security, affordable health care, and provisions that toss out junk lawsuits while protecting victims' rights.
Read the Letter from Leader Pelosi and Her Colleagues Calling for Tax Simplification.
Learn more about the Democratic plan for a strong economy.
Learn more about the Democratic commitment to protecting Social Security.
Troops in Iraq Ask Administration for Armor
"Our vehicles are not armored. We're digging pieces of rusted scrap metal and compromised ballistic glass that's already been shot up, dropped, busted, picking the best out of this scrap to put on our vehicles to take into combat."
- Spec. Thomas Wilson
In a question and answer meeting with the Secretary of Defense, the troops in Iraq sent a clear message to the Administration: they are not getting the armor and protection they need. As soldiers expressed frustration about the lack of armored vehicles, modern equipment and adequate supplies, the Secretary of Defense dismissed complaints by saying, "If you think about it, you can have all the armor in the world on a tank and a tank can be blown up." When our troops are sent into battle, they risk their lives every day, and it is our duty to provide them with the best equipment available. The Administration must accept responsibility for the consequences of this poorly planned war and provide our troops with the protection they need and deserve.
Read about the Democratic pledge to leave no soldier behind.
Risky Republican Proposal Will Cut Social Security Benefits
Many Americans are worried about retirement security, and whether the combination of Social Security, their 401(k) plan or pension, and their savings will be enough. And now, Republicans want to privatize Social Security saying the program is no longer sustainable even though Congress' nonpartisan scorekeeper has found that the system will stay solvent for nearly fifty years and after that, will still be able to pay about 80 percent of benefits. Privatization would steal our retirement savings, cut Social Security's guaranteed benefits and undermine the only safe and secure retirement income for millions of Americans. As the baby boom generation approaches retirement, the Social Security benefit faces manageable long-term challenges that will require changes to the program over time. But Republican plans for privatization would drain trillions of dollars from social security, force benefit cuts for current and future retirees and increase our already record-high deficits. Privatization is not the right solution for America's retirees.
Learn more about the Democratic commitment to protecting Social Security.
Paying More and Getting Less?
Across the country, seniors are paying more and getting less coverage under the Administration's flawed Medicare prescription drug plan. Democrats are working for a comprehensive prescription drug bill that benefits seniors and the disabled, not HMOs and big drug companies. Through drug reimportation and the negotiating of prices, Democrats want to make health care affordable for all Americans. Instead of lowering prescription drug prices and providing more choices and greater health care access for seniors, the Medicare bill put choices in the hands of special interests.
Read Leader Pelosi's Statement on Billy Tauzin accepting PhRMA position.
Read the latest news on special interests.
See the latest numbers on how the flawed prescription drug plan is impacting seniors in your state:

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Posted at 12:52 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Privatize This!
DCCC Resources on Social Security, New Video
"Proud young Americans, you are in for a con job from Washington that you can't even imagine."
-- Former Republican Congressman and ultra-conservative talk show host Joe Scarborough
During the past two days, President Bush has been using an economic "forum" to push his second term agenda, most prominently Social Security privatization. We at the DCCC have been developing our own resource center on Social Security privatization, which you can find at:
http://www.PrivatizeThis.com
There you'll find, first and foremost, a new DCCC Video - watch it now!
The Social Security Crapshoot
You will also find a page dedicated to research and articles from independent organizations and media outlets. Help us get the word out by visiting the site and using our user-friendly tools to send the truth onto your friends!
http://www.PrivatizeThis.com
DeLay Gets Punk'd
Late last week Tom DeLay and his indicted cohorts got some bad news:
Company agrees to cooperate with investigation [AP]
"A company that made a $50,000 contribution to a Republican political action committee has agreed to cooperate with a state investigation into possible illegal campaign contributions in exchange for the dismissal of charges against it, according to a motion approved by a judge Thursday.
"Diversified Collections Services, Inc. was one of eight corporations accused of giving a total of $190,000 to Texans for a Republican Majority during the 2002 legislative campaign. The use of corporate money for political purposes is illegal in Texas.
"Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle said in the motion to dismiss that the company agreed to cooperate with the state 'in its prosecution of any other indicted person for any offense related to the corporate contribution.'
"Three associates of Republican U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay also have been indicted in the ongoing investigation.
"Diversified Collections also agreed to develop internal policies to prevent making illegal corporate political contributions."
But here's the funny part. Really funny. The news came just days after the company got their payback:
"When Reps. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., and Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. , teamed up in September to get the House to pass an amendment blocking the use of private companies to collect back taxes from delinquent taxpayers, it seemed the Bush administration plan might be doomed for at least a year.
"But in the final hours of drafting a 3,300-page spending bill last month, House and Senate negotiators eliminated Capito's and Van Hollen's handiwork, clearing the way for the Internal Revenue Service to hire commercial debt collectors. These private agents could keep as much as 25 percent of the amounts they recovered.
"While the Bush administration has strongly supported the initiative as a way to increase revenue collections amid growing deficits, critics contend it could lead to harassment of taxpayers and breaches of privacy. Labor groups representing federal workers also oppose the change. But it has the backing of the debt-collection industry, which has contributed heavily to GOP organizations and causes since Bush became president.
One company that lobbied for the change is Union City-based Diversified Collection Services Inc., one of eight companies indicted in September by a Texas grand jury, along with three Republican fund-raisers for House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, on charges of alleged money laundering and illegal corporate campaign contributions."
In fact, it appears that the company turned on DeLay less than 24 hours after Bush signed that bill into law.
Never hustle a hustler!
Also of note, an independent website called Raw Story appears to have gotten a hold of the letter DeLay sent to Rules Committee Chairman Dreier asking him to change the ethics rules, which has a largely overlooked section suggesting legal action against the watchdog groups that helped with the complaint. The watchdog groups also had a pretty good laugh:
"CREW's Executive Director Melanie Sloan scoffed at the complaint, which was aired Wednesday by The Brad Blog.
"'As far as I know they don't have a jail,' Sloan told RAW STORY Wednesday. 'That's not to say you couldn't fashion a cell. But it would be, I would think, international news really, if they put someone in jail in the basement of the Capitol.'
"'It's my fantasy if they would do that,' she laughed. 'And I think the courts would have me out of there in an hour.'"
"The Majority Leader's and the Rules Committee offices did not return requests for comment.
"In the letter, Bethune also notes CREW's 'agenda of counterbalance[ing] the conservative legal watchdog groups.' Curiously, one of the most notable conservative judicial groups, Judicial Watch, actually agrees with Sloan.
"Judicial Watch chief Tom Fitton said the complaint would never succeed, seeing it as a desperate attempt for DeLay to save face. The group, which by and large supports a Republican agenda, has been critical of DeLay's attempts to insulate himself from ethics charges.
"'It's just not serious,' Fitton said. 'They don't have any jurisdiction. This is a man who was admonished three times for ethics violations and this is his flailing about - it's not terribly becoming.'
"'It was Tom DeLay who was admonished on three separate instances on three separate issues,' he added. 'It's really a silly response to a serious issue.'"
Tom DeLay, laughing stock.
The Truth About Social Security
Rep. Robert Matsui of California is not only the current chair of the DCCC, he is the ranking member on the Ways and Means subcommittee on Social Security.
Wearing that hat, Rep. Matsui penned this op-ed in Roll Call recently:
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Social Security Needs to Be Stabilized for Future
Social Security has revolutionized how America's workers prepare for their retirement. It operates as both retirement security and social insurance, offering a lifetime, inflation-protected benefit for senior citizens, disabled workers and widows. It has saved millions from poverty, reducing the number of seniors living at or below the poverty line from 50 percent to less than 10 percent today. Since its inception in 1935, this New Deal has been a good deal for hundreds of millions of Americans.
Today, we find ourselves being asked if Social Security is still a good deal for Americans. The answer is a resounding yes. Together, pensions, personal savings and Social Security make up the three key components of American retirement portfolios; however, it is only Social Security that ensures our workers have retirement security. Today, only 41 percent of retirees have an employer-sponsored pension - and less than one in five low-income workers receive a pension. While 60 percent of retirees receive income from assets, this income tends to be very modest - less than $2,000 a year for the median retiree.
We should certainly increase incentives for individuals to save and for employers to offer pensions, but we must also acknowledge that Social Security remains the cornerstone of retirement security for most Americans.
As such, its long-term financial solvency must be closely monitored - and it is. According to the Social Security actuaries, the trust funds currently carry enough reserves to pay full benefits to all who are eligible through 2042. The Congressional Budget Office projects that the trust funds are even stronger than that, carrying enough in reserves to pay full benefits through 2052. At that time, the trust funds will still have enough in revenue to pay 73 to 81 percent of benefits, according to the actuaries and CBO respectively.
Critics of Social Security point to these dates and sound the alarm bells. Yes, Social Security needs to be shored up, and the sooner we do so, the easier this task will be. But, Social Security is not facing an immediate financial crisis. Efforts by critics to paint it as such are patently false, as are arguments that privatization "strengthens" Social Security.
Let's be very clear: Privatization proponents do not support private accounts in addition to Social Security. They support private accounts instead of Social Security. And, replacing Social Security with private accounts does not improve the solvency of Social Security - it significantly worsens it, eroding the foundation of the system and jeopardizing guaranteed retirement benefits for seniors, disabled workers and survivors.
The president has suggested that a plan put forth in 2001 by his handpicked Social Security commission would be a "good blueprint" for reform. Under this plan, one-third of a worker's contributions to Social Security would be diverted from the trust funds into private accounts. As a result of this plan, the trust funds would lose almost $2 trillion in the first 10 years alone.
This diversion weakens the trust funds so significantly that the date by which they are no longer able to pay full benefits is moved up by more than two decades - 21 years - from 2042 to 2021. Expediting insolvency is an odd way of shoring up Social Security.
Worse yet, these losses will not stop after the first decade. These so-called "transition costs" continue for 50-60 years. Although the plan claims it will find additional money to put into the trust funds so current beneficiaries can continue to be paid, it resorts to accounting gimmicks to hide trust fund deficits. For example, the plan relies heavily upon deficit financing - more than $200 billion a year until 2054. But, it never tells us where this money comes from or how we pay it back. Borrowing of this magnitude would mean that our national debt will rise to unprecedented levels. This new debt alone - debt in addition to what is already projected under current law - would grow to equal 24 percent of gross domestic product.
These staggering "transition costs" will force substantial benefit cuts. Private accounts are touted as voluntary - if you want to remain in traditional Social Security, proponents claim you will be free to do so. However, even those who opt not to participate in a privatized system will see benefit cuts. For example, if you are in your late 20s today, when you retire at age 65 in 2042 your benefits will be 25 percent less than they would have been under today's Social Security system.
Further, these benefit cuts won't just apply to retirees - disability and survivors' benefits are cut as well. Today, almost 30 percent of Social Security beneficiaries - approximately 14.1 million people - receive either disability or survivors' benefits. All of these beneficiaries - who range from severely disabled workers to children who have lost a parent - would see the same cuts as retirees.
Although this commission plan is viewed as a starting point for privatization, the president has yet to endorse or propose any specific legislation.
To date, President Bush has offered the American people only generalities, a set of principles loosely outlining his vision for reform. Unfortunately, principles are not the same as policy. The benefits and drawbacks of President Bush?s plans for privatization, and their impact on our seniors, cannot be fully measured absent a specific, detailed proposal.
If the president and leaders of his party are serious about Social Security reform, I urge them to come forward with a concrete legislative proposal. Its costs must be fully accounted for in his fiscal 2006 budget, so the fiscal impact of privatization can be made plain for all Americans to see. Once the facts - and the benefit cuts - are unveiled, workers and retirees alike can decide for themselves whether privatization enhances their retirement options - or whether the administration is trying to replace the New Deal with a raw one.
It Never Ends From the Texas GOP...
While the Texas redistricting was a sham that both undermined democracy nationally and foisted several more Tom DeLay "automatons" onto the United States Congress, the precursor of that effort - the apparently illegal engineering of the Texas State House elections - will have even more longstanding and direct implications for Texans themselves.
At this very moment, in fact, the very same Tom DeLay puppets brought in by DeLay's dubious corporate fundraising prowess are bringing his philosophy of partisanship at all costs to the local level. You see, Democrats actually made gains in this bastion of ultra-conservatism, and the GOP just can't have that. That's why the Republicans are currently contesting three different Democratic victories, re-hiring their chief election lawyer and mudslinger to make their case and hurl around unfounded allegations of voting irregularities. In at least one case, where Democrat Hubert Vo pulled off a heroic campaign to unseat 22-year GOP veteran Talmadge Heflin, the Speaker of the Texas House - himself possibly in Grand Jury hot water - is abusing his power to throw aside the will of the people and turn the election over to his cronies in the state House. A committee is currently "evaluating" the election, and may decide to simply call for a new election, or - get this - simply declare their fellow Republican the winner.
In light of all this, in addition to DeLay and Bush's retention of power, it's probably worth revisiting the roots of the modern-day Texas Republican Party. Blogger and commentator Kevin Drum, who now writes for Washington Monthly, took a look at the Republican Party platform for 2000 and summarized some of what he found:
The Supreme Court should not be allowed to decide the constitutionality of laws regarding abortion, religion, or anything else related to the Bill of Rights. In these areas, Congress should be allowed to pass any laws it wishes.
We should completely do away with separation of church and state.
Gay sex should be a criminal offense.
All abortion of all kinds should be permanently outlawed by constitutional amendment.
Gays should be treated like child molesters and should not be allowed to visit children unsupervised.
The Biblical story of creation should be taught in science classes.
Social Security should be abolished.
The federal income tax should be abolished.
The federal minimum wage should be abolished.
The EPA, HUD, HHS, the Department of Education, and several other federal agencies should be eliminated. Since these departments supervise all federal welfare programs for the poor and sick, they are presumably advocating the complete abolishment of the federal welfare state.
Get the United States out of the UN.
Remember this next time you're tempted to give George Bush or Tom DeLay the benefit of the doubt...
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Posted at 11:44 am by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Thursday, December 16, 2004
Bill O'Reilly
The O'Reilly Factor
FOX News Channel
1211 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10036
Dear Mr. O'Reilly:
In May of this year, I asked that you allow me to come on The O'Reilly Factor to discuss your attacks on philanthropist George Soros. Your producer denied my request, saying you were no longer discussing the topic. Yet in subsequent weeks, you continued to discuss Mr. Soros on your radio and television programs. Despite my offer to discuss Soros, you still did not invite me on -- even complaining during your June 1 Radio Factor, "I mean, we really can't get anybody in here [to defend Soros] that's not a raving, raving Far-Left person, and why we would want to do that, I don't know."
In recent months, you have repeatedly attacked me and my organization, Media Matters for America:
- On the June 28 O'Reilly Factor, you referred to Media Matters as a "Far Left website";
- On the August 5 Radio Factor, you likened Media Matters to Mao Zedong;
- On the August 5 O'Reilly Factor, you claimed your critics are "hiding"; in response, I reiterated my willingness to appear on your television show;
- During your August 7 debate with New York Times columnist Paul Krugman on CNBC, you compared Media Matters to the Ku Klux Klan and Fidel Castro;
- On August 13, Media Matters noted your recent attacks on us, and wondered how long it would be before you compared us to Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels. It took less than a month: On the September 14 Radio Factor, you referred to comments I made as "Joseph Goebbels Nazi stuff";
- On the December 9 Radio Factor, you called Media Matters "the most vile, despicable human beings in the country";
- On the December 14 Radio Factor, you called Media Matters "sneaky"; accused us of "tak[ing] things out of context"; called us a "Far Left, deceitful, disgusting website"; and called us "character assassins" and "despicable weasels."
As you can see, Mr. O'Reilly, you have repeatedly and personally attacked me, Media Matters for America, and my fine staff, calling us "vile," "despicable," and "weasels," and comparing us to the Ku Klux Klan, Castro, Mao, and the Nazis. And you have refused my repeated requests to appear on your broadcast.
You once offered your viewers your definition of the word "coward." On the January 5, 2004, O'Reilly Factor, you declared: "If you attack someone publicly, as these men did to me, you have an obligation to face the person you are smearing. If you don't, you are a coward."
Well, Mr. O'Reilly, you have attacked me publicly on numerous occasions, and you refuse to face me. You, sir, are a coward -- by your own definition of the term. You are "hiding under your desk" (to paraphrase your August 26, 2003, claim about a "coward" who declined to appear on your show) rather than allowing me on your program to discuss your insults. You are "gutless," to borrow the phrase you used on January 10, 2003, and February 8, 2001, to describe people who would not appear on your program. I attach additional examples of your pejorative descriptions of those who decline invitations to appear on your broadcast.
Your frequent complaint that your words are taken out of context appears to have spurred your recent assault on my organization. While reasonable people can disagree about conclusions we, or you, have drawn about your comments, you are simply wrong to say that we took you out of context. I remain willing and eager to appear on either your television or radio program to discuss your contention that my organization has taken your comments out of context.
Should you continue to refuse this offer, it is only reasonable that the American people will conclude that you are not only -- as you would put it -- a "coward," but a hypocrite as well.
Sincerely,
David Brock
President and CEO
Media Matters for America
Highlights from Bill O'Reilly's comments about people who refuse to appear on his program
O'Reilly frequently calls people "cowards":
The O'Reilly Factor, 1/5/04:
O'REILLY: [reading a critical review] John Wright, The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah: "I graduated from one of the best journalism schools in the country, the University of Florida. You, Bill, are not a journalist. You spew propaganda. For example, you said the journalism professors from Rutgers and Lehigh were cowards because they would not come on The Factor. That's not true. Maybe they simply didn't want to appear."
Well, I'm sorry, Mr. Wright. If you attack someone publicly, as these men did to me, you have an obligation to face the person you are smearing. If you don't, you are a coward. Wise up, sir.
The O'Reilly Factor, 12/19/03:
O'REILLY: We asked them both [Rutgers professor Steven] Miller and [Lehigh professor Jack] Lule to appear on The Factor, but they are too frightened.
[...]
O'REILLY: But, Professor [Victor] Navasky, what you're missing is -- you're missing that Lule and Miller and all of these other cowards who make these erroneous statements and won't back them up by coming in here and talking about them are basically telling their students in big schools -- Rutgers is a big school, all right -- that the FOX News Channel is not worthy, it's not journalism, it's garbage and ignore it. And that, sir, is dishonest and doesn't serve the student well.
NAVASKY: OK. First of all, I don't know that you know that they're cowards, and secondly --
O'REILLY: Yes, we know. We gave them --
NAVASKY: And secondly --
O'REILLY: We gave them any time they could appear.
The O'Reilly Factor, 8/26/03:
O'REILLY: I mean, this Dan Golden was a coward. We tried to get him on. He hid under his desk.
The O'Reilly Factor, 4/24/03:
O'REILLY: You know, I am so angry. I am so angry, Niger [Innis]. I mean I'm almost at the verge -- if [Brooklyn District Attorney Charles] Hynes were here --
INNIS: Well, you should be.
O'REILLY: And he's a coward. He's a coward because we gave him months. This story was on the board before the war, Niger. All right. We bumped it because of the war. We gave Hynes months to come up with his side of the story, explain it to us, tell us what happened, why he did it, and, you know, he gave us the finger. That's what he did.
O'Reilly calls people "gutless":
The O'Reilly Factor, 1/10/03:
O'REILLY: He may have? That's not his prerogative. We have to demand, Mr. [Silver Lake High School alumnus Dan] Sullivan, you at Harvard, me here on The Factor, and everybody in the state of Massachusetts and around the country that these principals uphold principles and not run and hide.
Look, this guy [Silver Lake High School principal Richard Kelley] could be sitting where you're sitting, Mr. Sullivan. He could be in your chair. He's gutless.
The O'Reilly Factor, 2/8/01:
O'REILLY: [Congressman Henry] Waxman wouldn't come on this program, by the way. He's gutless.
Posted to the web on Thursday December 16, 2004 at 3:15 PM EST
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Posted at 11:00 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Atrios brings it all together
Hmmm....
September 16, 2000 NY Daily News:
A homeless woman lying on the ramp of an upper East Side parking garage was crushed to death early yesterday when she was run over by a mammoth sport utility vehicle, police said.
The driver, real estate executive Anthony Bergamo, told investigators he did not see the woman from his driver's seat.
Bergamo was driving a 5,770-pound Ford Expedition.
Medics pronounced the unidentified woman dead at the scene.
An autopsy determined that she died of crushing injuries to her chest, said a spokeswoman for the city medical examiner.
The death was ruled accidental and Bergamo, 54, who manages the Milford Plaza hotel in Times Square for its owner, real estate magnate Howard Milstein, was not charged.
Who was police commissioner then? Why, Bernard Kerik. And who is Anthony Bergamo? Oh, THAT Anthony Bergamo...
Rescue workers were combing through the World Trade Center rubble around the clock when Mr. Kerik called Anthony Bergamo, a well-connected vice chairman of the Milstein family real estate company and a police buff, and asked for help finding a place for the workers to rest during breaks, the executive said.
The family owned Liberty View, a 28-story yellow brick tower two blocks southwest of the trade center at the corner of West Street and Third Place.
According to the executive, who knows Mr. Bergamo, the vice chairman arranged for Mr. Kerik to have the use of an apartment there. Several apartments in the buildings had been used by rescue workers on breaks, and by Red Cross staff who were treating them, in the months after 9/11, according to a real estate executive.
(thanks to a sharp reader)
Posted at 10:57 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
Posted at 03:31 pm by blog swarm
Political News Permalink
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