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Monday, May 15, 2006
Bush Plumbers Tracking Press Calls

This might get the press to ask more questions about the illegal spying program:

A senior federal law enforcement official tells ABC News the government is tracking the phone numbers we call in an effort to root out confidential sources.

"It's time for you to get some new cell phones, quick," the source told us in an in-person conversation.

ABC News does not know how the government determined who we are calling, or whether our phone records were provided to the government as part of the recently-disclosed NSA collection of domestic phone calls.

Other sources have told us that phone calls and contacts by reporters for ABC News, along with the New York Times and the Washington Post, are being examined as part of a widespread CIA leak investigation.

Until the criminals are locked up, members of the press might need to go down to 7-11 and start using throw-away cell phones. Pretty sad when the press have to use the same tactics terrorists do just to ensure their 1st Amendment freedom is not illegally violated by a criminal administration.





Posted at 10:56 am by blogswarm
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MT-Sen: Tester is Fact Checked

The Gazette fact checked Jon Tester:

CLAIM: "Jon Tester worked with Brian Schweitzer for cheaper prescription drugs and better schools."

FACT: Tester sponsored a bill in 2005 that created a new state program to help low-income families buy prescription drugs. He also supported the Schweitzer administration's proposals to increase state funding for public schools by $160 million in the current two-year budget, the largest increase in 15 years.

CLAIM: "Jon Tester (has a) plan for affordable health care."

FACT: Tester has advanced several proposals on health care, including expansion of the government-funded Children's Health Insurance Program to cover all kids without insurance, extending the deadline on signing up for Medicare "Part D" prescription drug coverage, amending Part D to allow the government to negotiate lower drug prices, and increase spending on public health programs.

CLAIM: "Jon Tester (will) put an end to Senator Burns' kind of corruption."

FACT: The claim is a reference to Burns' alleged ties to lobbyist Jack Abramoff, whose associates and clients gave more campaign money to Burns than any other member of Congress. Burns has returned the money, has denied any wrongdoing or undue influence by Abramoff, and has not been officially charged with anything.

Wow, an ethical candidate for U.S. Senate and he gets things done!

Posted at 10:34 am by blogswarm
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CT-Sen: Agree to Change Senators

This is a great post:

We all can agree that the Senator disagrees with the people of Connecticut. He approves of the Iraq occupation and believes we are succeeding there. Looking at recent polls, it's clear the people of Connecticut have the opposite view. We see no light at the end of the tunnel. We see that for all the heroic deeds and good intentions of our soldiers, the civilian leadership has put our military in the middle of a bloody insurgency and civil war. We the people of Connecticut want to bring our troops home and put an end to this disastrous blunder. Yet Senator Lieberman won't change his mind.

But even if we can't change each other's minds, there is still a choice about what we do next. The first option is for the Senator to reflect on the will of the the people of Connecticut, and despite his personal views on the subject, act in accordance with his constituents. Senator Lieberman could vote how the people want him to vote and seek the path that returns our soldiers home safely. He doesn't have to change his mind, just his vote. He can put his constituents first, his personal opinions second.

Unfortunately, Senator Lieberman wants to do it His way. He doesn't want to change his mind and he doesn't want to change his vote. He wants us to let him vote however he wants. He wants to value his own opinion over the opinions of the millions of citizens he represents. So while the citizens of Connecticut want to end a war, Senator Lieberman wants to prolong it. And while we want our troops to come home safely, he's satisfied with leaving them in a shooting gallery a few more years.

What comes next?

Mr. Lieberman specifically expressed his philosopy of voting in his In Praise of Public Life:

When it comes to votes in the Senate, I first consider the merits of the issue. If I have strong opinion about the issue, I am going to vote that way, regardless of the preferences of any interest group or even of the general public....If I conclude that a majority of my constituents have a strong opinion on an issue, and I do not, then I will vote my constituents' opinion regardless of what the special interests want. That is true of most members of Congress and, of course, is the way our democracy is supposed to work.
[My emphasis added]

In the case of Iraq, Lieberman is invoking his "strong opinion" clause, and refusing to listen to the public.

The conclusion is clear: if we cannot change the Senator's mind, or his vote, we have to change the Senator.

Indeed.

Posted at 10:29 am by blogswarm
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Sunday, May 14, 2006
Ned Lamont Video

Chris Bowers at  MyDD says:

This video is being linked simultaneously on numerous other blogs, and its part of the largest, political blogosphere video launch in history. Click on the picture and watch the video to take part.

This is a big day in the history of the progressive blogosphere.

The netroots are coming together to effectively organize against Joe Lieberman and put the Democratic Party back on track.

Spread the word about Ned Lamont!

Spread this video far and wide, it deserves to be seen.



Posted at 05:06 pm by blogswarm
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John Morrison can't beat Conrad Burns

john  morrison 2006John Morrison can't win the general election against U.S. Senator Conrad Burns. Try has he might, Morrison is dirty just like Conrad Burns is dirty.

It makes no sense for Democrats to vote for John Morrison as such a vote is a vote to re-elect Conrad Burns.

John Morrison needs to stop trying to explain away is ethical lapses and begin telling the truth. Here is what today's Billings Gazette says:

Burns has already started attacking the Democrats in his ads, while his spokesman refers to Morrison and "his wealthy trial lawyer pals." A successful Helena trial lawyer before being elected auditor, Morrison was the state's lead attorney in the tobacco lawsuit and collected a $667,000 legal fee. Under the national settlement, Montana is slated to receive $832 million from tobacco companies through 2025, although it will be less if smoking declines.

Ask Jack Mudd or Dusty Dechampes if Montana voters want a big city lawyer to represent them.

Although the topic went unmentioned during his recent day on the road, Morrison has been on the defensive recently. News stories have questioned how Morrison handled a securities fraud case involving a Flathead Valley businessman, David Tacke, who later married a woman with whom Morrison had an extramarital affair before he was elected auditor.

In recent debates, Tester has alluded to the issue by saying he's the only Democrat who can go "belly to belly" with Burns on the critical ethics issue because he has no skeletons in his closet. When pressed, Tester criticizes how Morrison's office handled the Tacke case. Morrison, however, says his office didn't shy away from investigating Tacke.

It is unfortunate that the press is playing softball with Morrison's ethical scandals. Unlike John Morrison, Jon Tester isn't another politician who is too focused on his career to be ethical.

Craig Wilson, a Montana State University-Billings political science professor, said he expects either Morrison or Tester to run competitively against Burns in the November election.

"But I think that Morrison is weakened quite a bit on the ethics issues because of his own personal problems that impacted his position as state auditor," Wilson said.

If it's Morrison vs. Burns, Wilson said, "I think they're going to be throwing some mud at each other on ethics, and in the end, it could just cancel out."

Tester, on the other hand, "has a stronger case than Morrison" in going after Burns on the ethics issue, Wilson said.

Voting for John Morrison is like eating rotten fruit, when you go with the damaged goods it hurts.

Posted at 04:09 pm by blogswarm
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Joe Lieberman running as an Independent

What a dipshit:

The GOP will also decide on a challenger with the unenviable task of tackling three-term Democratic U.S. Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman, who has vowed to run as an independent in the unlikely event that he loses an primary battle with anti-war candidate Ned Lamont.

This would require Lieberman to start gathering signatures before the primary election. Voters are getting a clear view of where Lieberman stands, which might be with a clipboard outside a supermarket if he thinks Ned Lamont will win the primary. What a disgrace.



Posted at 10:28 am by blogswarm
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Saturday, May 13, 2006
Dick Cheney is a Criminal

This is illegal:

In the weeks after the Sept. 11 attacks, Vice President Dick Cheney and his top legal adviser argued that the National Security Agency should intercept purely domestic telephone calls and e-mail messages without warrants in the hunt for terrorists, according to two senior intelligence officials.

But N.S.A. lawyers, trained in the agency's strict rules against domestic spying and reluctant to approve any eavesdropping without warrants, insisted that it should be limited to communications into and out of the country, said the officials, who were granted anonymity to discuss the debate inside the Bush administration late in 2001.

The N.S.A.'s position ultimately prevailed. But just how Gen. Michael V. Hayden, the director of the agency at the time, designed the program, persuaded wary N.S.A. officers to accept it and sold the White House on its limits is not yet clear.

Hayden shouldn't be confirmed and Cheney should be impeached. Billmon says:

But I get a little crazy in the head when I hear people (usually on the authoritarian right) citing the latest poll numbers as a political justification for their own position.

The whole point of having civil liberties is that they are not supposed to be subject to a majority veto. Hobbes may not have believed in natural rights, but our founders did. And their opponents, the anti-Federalists, were even more zealous about restraining the powers of the federal superstate, which is why they forced the Federalists to write the Bill of Rights directly into the Constitution.

It defeats the purpose of having a 4th Amendment if its validiity is entirely dependent on breaking 50% in the latest poll. It would be nice to have "the people" on our side in this debate, and obviously a lot of them are, even if Doherty's plurality still prefers Leviathan's crushing embrace. But some things are wrong just because they're wrong -- not because a temporary majority (or even a permanent one) thinks they're wrong.

And his update says in part:

But constitutional rights are different. A true natural lawist would argue that they are beyond the power of governments or the voters to grant or deny. Like the man said, they're "self evident," not to mention "inalienable."

In the end, the framers were more pragmatic: If the majority wants to abolish the 4th Amendment -- or the entire Bill or Rights, for that matter -- all it has to do is get two thirds of each house of Congress to pass a new amendment, get the president to sign it and three fourths of the states to ratify it. Or, it can get two thirds of the states to call a constitutional convention, and try its luck there. Win that battle, and the NSA can tap everbody's phones until the cows come home. But until then, the 4th Amendment stands, and it is most definitely not subject to majority rule.

Of course, this president and this Congress and this Supreme Court have already proven that constitutional rights -- natural or not -- mean very little in the face of money, power and expediency. And as long as the polls continue to show that a majority, or even an influential minority, of the voters is willing to put up with that state of affairs, the powers that be will go right on riding roughshod over the Constitution. As Shrub likes to say, he already had his accountability moment -- at a different set of polls.

So polls (both kinds) obviously matter. And those who favor the unlimited surveillance state can certainly try to cite public opinion as proof that the Cheney regime has the power to break the law. But they can never cite the polls -- accurate or not -- to prove that they have the right to break the law, and we should never forget that.

Indeed. The Times continues:

By several accounts, including those of the two officials, General Hayden, a 61-year-old Air Force officer who left the agency last year to become principal deputy director of national intelligence, was the man in the middle as President Bush demanded that intelligence agencies act urgently to stop future attacks.

On one side was a strong-willed vice president and his longtime legal adviser, David S. Addington, who believed that the Constitution permitted spy agencies to take sweeping measures to defend the country. Later, Mr. Cheney would personally arrange tightly controlled briefings on the program for select members of Congress.

On the other side were some lawyers and officials at the largest American intelligence agency, which was battered by eavesdropping scandals in the 1970's and has since wielded its powerful technology with extreme care to avoid accusations of spying on Americans.

As in other areas of intelligence collection, including interrogation methods for terrorism suspects, Mr. Cheney and Mr. Addington took an aggressive view of what was permissible under the Constitution, the two intelligence officials said.

'Aggressive view' is polite journalism for violated the constitution.

Even with the N.S.A. lawyers' reported success in limiting its scope, the program represents a fundamental expansion of the agency's practices, one that critics say is illegal. For the first time since 1978, when the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act was passed and began requiring court approval for all eavesdropping on United States soil, the N.S.A. is intentionally listening in on Americans' calls without warrants.

The spying that would become such a divisive issue for the White House and for General Hayden grew out of a meeting days after the Sept. 11 attacks, when President Bush gathered his senior intelligence aides to brainstorm about ways to head off another attack.

"Is there anything more we could be doing, given the current laws?" the president later recalled asking.

General Hayden stepped forward. "There is," he said, according to Mr. Bush's recounting of the conversation in March during a town-hall-style meeting in Cleveland.

By all accounts, General Hayden was the principal architect of the plan. He saw the opportunity to use the N.S.A.'s enormous technological capabilities by loosening restrictions on the agency's operations inside the United States.

Hayden should be locked up instead of confirmed. I'm sure the blogosphere and netroots will be watching closely.


Posted at 11:12 pm by blogswarm
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Lee Newspapers' Coverup

Twenty missing words:

The Helena Independent Record version of the original Morrison/Tacke story contains these twenty words:
Sources said Morrison was advised to stay out of the negotiations entirely, to avoid any appearance of conflict of interest.

Those twenty words do not appear in the Gazette version of the story (or in the Montana Standard, as near as I can tell; they do appear in the Missoulian online).

Why were these twenty words omitted by these editors? Is it simply because it is anonymously sourced? That doesn't explain it — the editors allowed this paragraph to remain:

Some former staffers told the Gazette State Bureau they were troubled by fact that the settlement allowed Tacke to continue at the company and allow more shares to be sold, as part of an effort to pay off other investors. Tacke wasn't fined.

Is it a difference in how well sourced these two stories are? The lack of recusal in this case is a big deal. It's an even bigger deal if Morrison was specifically urged to fully recuse himself and decided not to.

John Morrison might refuse to answer questions but Lee Newspapers' readers deserve an explanation.


Posted at 09:58 pm by blogswarm
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Mike McCurry is a loser

Don't trust Mike McCurry -- he has zero credibility:

McCurry and his flacks are pulling the ultimate insider move - calling the 600,000 people who have signed the petition and the thousands of bloggers who have written about this issue childish rabble and unfit for discourse. Way to go and insult 600,000 people, Mike McCurry! McCurry's company (ironically titled Grassroots Enterprises) sure knows the grassroots!

Serious, this is a totally clueless attempt to attack and discredit the grassroots and the blogs.  By coming out with a dishonest and destructive campaign that repeats every single reactionary attack on bloggers, McCurry and his ilk are revealing themselves as naively unprepared for the future.

Ok, now the substance. The ad makes a couple of claims. One, that web site operators don't pay for the internet. That is a lie. They pay massive sums of money for bandwidth, on the order of $10 billion last year alone. So does the public in tax subsidies for telecom companies, perhaps as high as $200 billion over the years (though it's hard to tell with all the mergers and weird accounting). Yes, that you read that right. Two, they claim they have never degraded a web site or service. Of course, executives for these companies are on record discussing their plans to do precisely that. The telco sponsored legislation would strip the FCC from being able to deal with degraded service or blocked web sites. Three, the telecom companies claim that net neutrality means intrusive government regulation. This claim is a bit harder to unpack, but it's worth following me here since what they are saying is in fact 180 degrees from the truth.

Here's the deal.  The internet has always had rules.  One of those rules is that even if you own a pipe, you're not allowed to tell people what they can put through that pipe.  You can't block web sites, you can't say 'don't stream video', and you can't dictate what people and can't say.  You do have to pay for the pipe you use; Google pays millions a month on one end, and millions of consumers pay smaller amounts ($20-$60) a month on the other.  But no one can tell you what you can do with those pipes.  It's very much the opposite of cable TV.  There are no gatekeepers, and that's by design.  This has created a highly competitive marketplace.

Through a series of regulatory decisions from 2002-2005, the FCC stripped these protections for broadband pipes.  Now telecom companies can do whatever they want, and they have basically announced business models that depend on their ability to turn the internet into a more cable-like service.  This new playground for them is tenous, because the FCC could at any point reverse themselves. To firm this up, the telecom companies want to legislate a change in the rules, stripping authority from the FCC to hold ISPs accountable for degrading service.

So that's what this is all about.

Now, in their ad campaigns, the telecoms are portraying something very different. They are trying to pretend that they don't want government regulating the internet. In fact, they just want to make sure that the rules that have worked for thirty years are stripped away so they can control it.

This was on full display at a lobbyist sponsored event I attended yesterday put on for community groups.  They asked me not to record it so I don't have verbatim transcripts, but let's just say it was a bunch of bad faith in fancy suits. Company flacks scaremongered about telemedicine and how it can't be reliably delivered unless you get rid of network neutrality and allow phone companies to control the innards of the internet.  They talked about how the government will somehow destroy the internet (even though the government did, you know, build the internet).  They implied that there will be no parental controls if Congress doesn't get rid of net neutrality.  They said if they don't get their way 'internet freedom will vanish forever'.  They said that the government doesn't regulate the internet yet you shouldn't worry because under their plan the FCC has authority to protect consumers from abusive behavior by telecoms on the internet, as if that's not a regulation.

I'm getting really tired of this. We're trying to discuss policy options on how to make the internet work. They are lying about us and what we're after. There is no debate here. What's remarkable is that this industry likes to pretend it's in a competitive marketplace when it receives billions of subsidies for network build-outs, as well as government franchises to eliminate competition. It literally profits from the public treasury while insulting the public with dishonest PR campaigns. I am beginning to think that these telecom companies and cable operators, with their billions in tax subsidies and monopoly franchises, want to see legislation that removes their government determined advantages. I mean why else would they treat the public as if we're stupid? Why else would they kick up this hornets nest and then insult us with hysterics? Why else would they call us rabble? If they really want competition, and that means no more assistance from the public treasury, maybe that's what they should get. If they really want a competitive broadband market, then maybe we should give it to them.

How does that sound, Mr. McCurry, grassroots internet expert?

I think this might be the most important post Matt Stoller has ever written (which is a BOLD statement). I'm posting this on a free service (thanks Blogdrive for letting me write here). Yet this site has as much access to the people as the New York Times' website. That is a good thing, but it won't stay so if asshole sellouts like Mike McCurry get their way. We need to Save the Internet!


Posted at 09:31 pm by blogswarm
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WSJ on Ned Lamont

James Taranto interviews Ned Lamont for the Wall Street Journal:

He approached prominent Nutmeg State Democrats "and said, 'You ought to do this. I'll support you every step of the way.' . . . They couldn't do it, for a whole variety of reasons. They said, 'If you feel so strongly about it, you do it, Ned.' " And so he did. Next Friday the party holds its nominating convention; if 15% of the delegates there support him, he will win a spot alongside Mr. Lieberman on the Aug. 8 primary ballot. Alternatively, he can collect 15,000 signatures by June 2.

"I think it's really doable," he says. "We're going to win." If he does, it will be the upset of the year, maybe the decade. Senators typically have a re-election rate of about 85%, and only three of them have been defeated in primaries in the past quarter-century. In a Quinnipiac College poll released last week, Mr. Lieberman, who is seeking a fourth term, led Mr. Lamont among registered Democrats, 65% to 19%.

Then again, Connecticut is far from a Bush stronghold, even though the president was born in New Haven. So it's not inconceivable that a campaign whose literature promises "a Senator who will stand up to George Bush" will catch on. Mr. Bush's statewide approval rating in that same Quinnipiac poll was just 25%. What's more, only Democrats can vote in the primary, and their approval rating for Mr. Bush was a minuscule 6%, with 91% disapproving.

Party leaders in Washington frown on challenges to incumbents, and Minority Leader Harry Reid has reportedly asked Mr. Lamont to back off. But the challenger can count on strong support from the "netroots"--left-wing blogs like DailyKos.com and Web sites like MoveOn.org--which bring in money and moral support from around the country. Call him a Kos celeb, though the world of blogs is new to him.

I think a lot of people lost a lot of respect for Harry Reid coming to the defense of somebody who has constantly undermined the Democratic caucus, but it is clear that people are taking the netroots as seriously -- if not more seriously -- then the Democratic Minority Leader when it comes to the 2006 Democratic Party primary in Connecticut.

Mr. Lamont criticizes Democrats--and not just Joe Lieberman--for timidity. "I think we should have been a lot bolder as a party during [the 2004] campaign, and probably the previous campaigns. Come out and say what you believe. . . . The Republicans are really good at talking about the principles that they believe in. And be bold. If you think preschool should be a right for all 4-year-olds . . . go out there and say it, and give people something to believe in."

It's not enough, he says, to be anti-Bush, although he certainly is that. "This administration may be leading the country in the wrong direction . . . but there's also a sense that the Democrats aren't standing tall and being constructive and offering real alternatives, and [voters] want the Democrats to stand up and offer real alternatives."

Yet he faults Mr. Lieberman for doing just that, in ways that, in Mr. Lamont's view, depart from Democratic principles: "If you think vouchers or education savings accounts are a constructive alternative to investing in our public education infrastructure, yes. But within the party, I think there's a sense that that is taking resources away from public education. When it comes to private savings accounts as an alternative to Social Security as a defined benefit, he's always right at the edge, saying this is something we've got to consider, something we've got to think about. When it comes to universal health care for everybody in this country as a basic right, that's a principle of the Democratic Party that Sen. Lieberman has never quite embraced. He's come up with tax incentives for businesses to see if they might be a little more inclined to insure their people. So he generally has not embraced a lot of the Democratic goals and certainly the Democratic methods to achieving where we want to go."

He says his experience as a businessman informs his views on policy. "I think the progressives are a little more creative about coming up with solutions--it doesn't have to be a government solution, but they're striving to solve these problems. I think they're more entrepreneurial--it's a more entrepreneurial party."

Except for Joe Lieberman who only wants to water down the GOP approach.

But politics is not without surprises. Just ask Mr. Lieberman, who 18 years ago upset a three-term incumbent, liberal Republican Sen. Lowell Weicker, by running to his right. Not surprisingly, Mr. Weicker, who subsequently left the GOP, this year is backing Mr. Lamont. All politics is local, even when it's national.

Lamont can win this race and it is important for the Democratic Party that he succeed.

Posted at 11:56 am by blogswarm
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