Friday, November 7, 2008


Joe Must Go

The arguments, notwithstanding Bayh, for Joe Lieberman to be booted from the Democratic committee leadership staff are significant.

Aside from Lieberman's traitorous performance in his support of John McCain, Steve Benen points to his total lack of holding Bush accountable for domestic issues, not the least of which was FEMA's response to hurrican Katrina.

Joe says that we should let bygones be just that. I have one more reason to disagree.

Norm Coleman - Minnesota.

A race now separated by 230-something votes BEFORE the recount that could have put a WIN in the Democratic caucus in the Senate. It's very important to remember that, not only did Lieberman campaign for John McCain and against Obama, he BACKED the Republican Senate candidate in a should-have Democratic swing state.

Yes, he might have been principled in supporting McCain over Obama - although he was ridiculously over the edge with his "Marxism" and not putting country first. But, there is no doubt that his backing of Coleman puts him squarely in the Republican camp. He didn't just campaign for McCain, he sought to overthrow efforts to get a cloture majority in the Senate.

Let me say that one more time: Lieberman sought to overthrow efforts to get a cloture majority in the Senate!

In fact, his actions in that race alone, without looking at his inaction as Chairman of the Senate committee overseeing homeland security, beg for his expulsion from the Democratic caucus.

While the Senate elite (yes, I dare to use the word) seek to coddle Lieberman because he was faithful to his belief that McCain best represented his world view on Iraq, the War and the Middle East, the truth is much uglier.

Lieberman covered the Bush administration's ass on their response to Katrina.

Worse, he deliberately sought to keep the Democrats from a cloture majority.


I'm not buying the all-make-nice argument. You don't put a fox in charge of the hen house.




There's more: "Joe Must Go" >>

Wednesday, May 28, 2008


The Company He Keeps

Forget nutcase preachers Hagee and Parsley - the republican presidential nominee has a much more serious problem associate.

What on earth is John McCain doing embracing as his BFF someone who is:

  • a Vietnam War draft-resister
  • a liberal super-dove whose first book equated America and the Soviet Union as equally dangerous to peace
  • a man who less than 10 years ago embraced Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan and eagerly proposed talking - with no preconditions?

Who is this McCain buddy and why aren't conservatives condemning him as an un-American traitor?

Cross-posted at BlueGrassRoots.




There's more: "The Company He Keeps" >>

Thursday, February 28, 2008


S.2191-- America's Climate Security Act of 2007

You would be hard pressed to find a popular bill that has more varied and passionate opponents than S.2191, America's Climate Security Act of 2007. Introduced by Senator Joe Lieberman (I-Ct) on October 18, 2007, and currently sponsored by Sen. Benjamin Cardin [D, MD], Sen. Robert Casey [D, PA], Sen. Norm Coleman [R, MN], Sen. Susan Collins [R, ME], Sen. Elizabeth Dole [R, NC], Sen. Thomas Harkin [D, IA], Sen. Amy Klobuchar [D, MN], Sen. Bill Nelson [D, FL], Sen. John Warner [R, VA] and Sen. Ron Wyden [D, OR], S.2191 (informally called the Lieberman-Warner Climate Security Act) embodies a very serious and comprehensive commitment to significantly reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Section 3 states that its purposes are:

(1) to establish the core of a Federal program that will reduce United States greenhouse gas emissions substantially enough between 2007 and 2050 to avert the catastrophic impacts of global climate change; and

(2) to accomplish that purpose while preserving robust growth in the United States economy and avoiding the imposition of hardship on United States citizens.
Among many other things this "Cap and Trade" bill sets emission allowances for 2012-2050, with a declining cap on greenhouse gases (GHGs) and establishes a market for selling, exchanging, transferring, submitting, retiring, or borrowing emission allowances. The bipartisan bill has a lot of support among members of Congress including Presidential candidates Obama, Clinton and McCain, who like its moderate approach.

More after the break.



In fact the three candidates seem to be fighting for the label of preeminent greenhouse gas warrior. Myron Ebell in a post for GlobialWarming.org called Cap&Trade 101 notes that
Senator John McCain (R-Az.), now the presumptive presidential nominee of the Republican Party, said this week . . . that he had shown stronger leadership on global warming than the two leading Democratic Party presidential candidates, Senators Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and Hillary Clinton (D-NY). He noted that both Obama and Clinton are now co-sponsors of his climate bill, S. 2191, the Climate Security Act.
This universal commitment by the three candidates has lead the blog the "Conservative Common Man" to call them "Global Warming Hysterics."
There may be subtle differences between the top three presidential candidates but when it comes to saving the planet from the impending inferno created by the planet’s arch enemy, man, they are birds of a (red) feather. They see climate change as imminent doom and as they are in the elite class of super-citizens that can leap common sense in a single bound, they know it is up to them to take a stand. They must lend their illustrious names to whatever loony legislation is penned to cripple U.S. manufacturing and displace even more American workers.
As part of a blistering assault on Lieberman-Warner the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has produced a funny if utterly uninformative video. The Chamber's take is that the bill calls for change beyond the current technology and that will make energy prohibitively expensive.

Conservative opposition on the web has also been ferocious. A typical example of conservative opposition is Vincent Gioia's post entitled Global warming dupes on both sides of the aisle want to change how we live and bring down our country in the process. The title accurately summarizes his opposition.

A very well reasoned response to the conservative argument that Lieberman-Warner will lead to the end of America's economy can be found in an article by Daniel J. Weiss. Writing for the Center for American Progress, he examines the economic arguments and concludes
Studies examining the economic effects of the Lieberman Warner Climate Security Act (S. 2191) will be released in the coming months leading up to Senate consideration of the bill. Many of these studies will likely predict that the reductions of greenhouse gases required by the cap-and-trade system will lead to huge hikes in electric rates, reductions in jobs, and all sorts of other economic havoc.

But these studies also have one other common element: They will eventually be proven wrong once the program is underway.

These studies base their cost assumptions on existing technologies and practices, which means that they do not account for the vast potential for innovation once binding reductions and deadlines are set.
Opposition to Lieberman-Warner isn't limited to the Chamber and their allies on the right. There is plenty of opposition on the left, especially from groups who oppose nuclear power. A post in ProgressOhio.org sums up the opposition of the anti-nuclear power faction.
It’s too weak on climate…. It’s too strong on nuclear…. STOP THE LIEBERMAN/WARNER CLIMATE CHANGE BILL!

An aide to Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT) says the Lieberman/Warner climate change bill (S. 2191) “would be the most historic incentive for nuclear in the history of the United States.” (E&E Daily, February 8, 2008).

He’s not kidding: the bill’s complicated “cap-and-trade” carbon system could give billions of dollars—perhaps $500 Billion (no, that’s not a typo--$500 Billion)--to “zero or low-carbon” energy technologies, including dirty energy like nuclear power.

Moreover, the bill falls far short of the carbon emissions cuts necessary to address the climate crisis: a cut of only about 60-65% by 2050. There is a better way: we need to go carbon-free and nuclear-free, and it can be done by 2050—but only if we all act to make it happen.
ProgressOhio doesn't explain what that better way might be beyond saying it should include non-carbon and non-nuclear renewable energy.

Broader "lefty" opposition to Lieberman-Warner is lead by the Friends of the Earth. Their position is that
Corporate polluters will hit the jackpot if global warming legislation proposed by Sens. Joe Lieberman and John Warner becomes law. With key amendments supported by Friends of the Earth failing in committee, the bill now on its way to the Senate floor would hand them pollution permits worth hundreds of billions of dollars. Stick with Friends of the Earth as we try to stop the giveaways again on the Senate floor.
Bryan Beutler of Grist has written an excellent article outlining the struggle over Lieberman-Warner in the environmental movement. Shorthand summary:
Friends of the Earth are calling for no "half-measures" or compromises, while more establishmentarian groups like Environmental Defense are embracing moderate legislation on the grounds that it might actually pass. Other green groups are staking out their ground in between, praising bipartisan progress while stressing that moderate legislation needs to be strengthened.
The blog Eco-Pragmatism recently took on the argument that the bill is a giant giveaway to polluters.
One man’s “giveaway to polluters” is another man’s “transition assistance.” The Lieberman-Warner bill (S.2191) devotes 8% of the cumulative value of allowances from enactment though 2050 to transition assistance (“giveaways to polluters”). The remaining 92% goes to state governments, energy consumers, wildlife adaptation, farmers and foresters, etc. The attached chart (also posted here: http://lieberman.senate.gov/documents/acsaemission.pdf) shows three snapshots of the allocation system over time (2012, 2022, and 2031).

By 2031, polluters are not receiving any free allowances. The economic modeling shows that if you do not provide regulated entities with a substantial amount of free allowances in the early years of the program, before the advanced energy technologies have had a chance to deploy widely, then the program will be substantially more expensive for energy consumers and others.
You would think that a bill that could either wreck the American economy or save the world would be front page news every night. According to OpenCongress the bill has produced over 221 blog comments but only 67 news articles and nearly all of those articles have been in trade publications. I am sure that once the Britney Spears story is finished the mainstream media will be all over this little "destroy the economy/save the world" story like white on rice.









There's more: "S.2191-- America's Climate Security Act of 2007" >>

Wednesday, September 26, 2007


The Beltway Wing of the Democratic Party Stands Firm With Bush/Cheney Against The Democratic Wing of the Democratic Party

The House has just passed a resolution 341-79 condemning MoveOn.org for the New York Times ad asking whether Gen. David Petraeus should be called "General Betray Us." This follows a similar Senate resolution last week. Also today the Senate passed a reportedly watered down version of the Kyl-Lieberman Let's Bomb Iran Resolution 76-22. The watered down resolution probably gives Bush/Cheney the cover they need to order an air strike on Iran. The votes for the Kyl-Lieberman included Hillary Clinton. Somehow Barack Obama avoided voting.

Before we get lost in the details I think it is important to step back and take a look at what our Democratic leadership is saying to the Democratic wing of the Democratic party. Essentially, they, including Hillary, are saying, "progressives, go Cheney yourselves. We can afford to take you for granted because we know you haven't got any place to go. We don't want the media and our contributors in the Israel lobby jumping all over us for not signing on with Dick Cheney's Iranian war, and for not condemning MoveOn.org over a trumped up distraction invented by the Republican spin machine."

More after the break.



The President commented last week that Democrats are more afraid of MoveOn than they are of the "military." He was wrong. The Democratic leaders, including Hillary, are more afraid of the President and the neo-con wing of the mainstream media than they are of their own base. In fact, they are scared to death to oppose Republicans. Maybe it is time we members of the Democratic wing of the Democratic party stopped enabling the current Democratic leadership.

What do we do to get their attention? Maybe it is time we tell Hillary that if she really wants war with Iran so bad she should join the Republican party. I would recommend everybody write Hillary condemning her for voting for the Kyl-Lieberman Let's Bomb Iran Resolution. The Democratic "leadership" seems to be motivated by fear more than principle. Maybe it is time we contacted the Pelosi, Obey, Reid and the rest of the house and Senate leadership to tell them no more money until you sign on for peace.




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Tuesday, September 11, 2007


Joe Lieberman Demands More War Now!!!

Joe Lieberman doesn't think the United States has enough problems in Iraq and Afghanistan. Now he wants the US to start a war with Iran. Listen to Joe whining for more war. The man sounds a blood thirsty Likudite who wants to "ban" all the Arabs from Samaria and Judea. Somebody ought to tell him that he isn't a member of the Knesset. I think he is confused.



Thanks to TPM for the video.




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Thursday, September 6, 2007


The Road Out of Iraq Leads Through David Vitter

The Rude Pundit gets way too much attention for his Triple-X-rated rants, and nowhere near enough for his dead-on and usually unique political insights.

On Tuesday, he revealed the possible way out for Democrats on Iraq by forcing David Vitter out of office before November.

Read the whole thing, but Rude starts from the premise that the only thing keeping Harry Reid and the Senate Democrats from telling Smirky and Darth to fuck off and die is the threat of Joe Lieberman throwing the Senate to the Republicans (Cheney tie-breaker.) So far, so conventional wisdom. But then Rude makes the leap that could save the dems' ass - and as a bonus, the nation and the planet.

(Excerpt edited from XXX to merely X-rated.)

So Senate Democrats have gotta get rid of the Lieberman factor. With one more Democratic Senator, Lieberman will no longer control which way the wind blows until 2009.

And that's where David Vitter comes back into the equation. The oughta-be-disgraced, whoremongering Republican Senator from Louisiana has been embraced back into the Republican fold, as if he's a big goddamn hero for having kept his crimes hidden until after the statute of limitations had run out on him being arrested for soliciting hookers. Of course it's the basest sexual hypocrisy that Republicans went after Larry Craig because the Idaho Senator's case involved gay fucking and because Idaho's got a Republican governor and Louisiana's got a Democrat.

But here's the deal on Vitter: Republicans only have to stand by him until the end of the year. Louisiana elects a new governor this year, in 2007, with an open primary in October and a general election, if needed, in November. And you can sure as s**t bet a Republican's gonna win post-Katrina and Rita, probably Bobby Jindal. So, in as much as the Rude Pundit does the prognosticatin', Vitter's gone in January, so that no Republican running for President has to deal with questions of Republican sexual hypocrisy (at least as relates to current scandals). And, barring any other surprises, the same Lieberman-centric Senate until 2009.

So here's the deal: Democrats have to go Rove on Vitter. They have only a few months to get him out of there, so it's time to bring out the political demons in a savage way that pussies like Bob Shrum have nightmares about. Get the prostitutes out in front of the cameras, talking to Larry King about how Vitter likes to s**t himself in diapers and then get spanked while getting wiped by big-titted sluts. Get front groups to make ads about what a sleazy motherf***er Vitter is. Get outraged Senators talking to the pumpkinhead of Tim Russert about how it's just impossible to work with a man like Vitter. Take different angles: Barbara Boxer can talk about his exploitation of women, Mark Pryor or Ken Salazar can talk about how Vitter demeans the Senate by his presence and how can they be expected to hold their vomit in while working with a man like that.

Chase that motherf***er out of town and do it for a good cause: to end the war. You get rid of Vitter, you save American lives. Surely Democrats can wallow in the mud for a little while for such a noble end.


Yeah, I know, what makes me think that this time the dems will actually show some spine.

But this time there's no downside, no risk, no way to lose. Attacking Vitter is win-win-win: acquire a real majority in the Senate, marginalize Lieberman, and grow a gigantic set of brass ones.

Hell, get Rahm Emmanuel out of the House to lead the charge - I hate him for a DLC stooge, but that Chicago boy knows how to play dirty.

C'mon, Harry: you have nothing to lose, and literally the entire world to gain.




There's more: "The Road Out of Iraq Leads Through David Vitter" >>

Sunday, July 15, 2007


Oh Goody, Cheney Is Said To Be Back On Top Of Iran Policy

The Guardian is reporting that the balance in the internal White House debate over Iran has shifted back in favor of military action.

The vice-president, Dick Cheney, has long favoured upping the threat of military action against Iran. He is being resisted by the secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, and the defence secretary, Robert Gates.

Last year Mr Bush came down in favour of Ms Rice, who along with Britain, France and Germany has been putting a diplomatic squeeze on Iran. But at a meeting of the White House, Pentagon and state department last month, Mr Cheney expressed frustration at the lack of progress and Mr Bush sided with him. "The balance has tilted. There is cause for concern," the source said this week.
Ominously, neither Bush nor Cheney "trust" any of their possible successors to deal with Iran decisively, as a result Cheney intends to make sure American attacks Iran before leaving office.
No decision on military action is expected until next year. In the meantime, the state department will continue to pursue the diplomatic route.
It looks like George and Dick might give crazy Joe Lieberman (L-Conn) the Hanukkah gift he most desires.

Tell me again why impeachment is off the table? These monsters are going to drag us into another God forsaken war.




There's more: "Oh Goody, Cheney Is Said To Be Back On Top Of Iran Policy" >>

Lessons Learned? Hardly. Paving the way for an attack on Iran

From Think Progress:

On Wednesday, the Senate voted 97-0 to pass a resolution sponsored by Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT) to censure Iran “for what it said was complicity in the killing of U.S. soldiers in Iraq.” The resolution required the Bush administration to regularly report to Congress on Iran’s role in Iraq.

While the resolution explicitly rejected authorization for immediate military action, the gist of the resolution declared Iran is participating in acts of war against the United States, thereby laying the foundation for a confrontation with Iran. Newshoggers wrote that the resolution may provide the“political cover for launching a war.”

I hate it when Congress does stuff like this. I know some people like to think that all Congress is supposed to do is pass laws and provide oversight, and for sure, that is their most important role. I believe, though, that Congress also has very important ceremonial roles to play as well, and a part of that is passing non-binding resolutions, Congressional recognition of extraordinary individuals, granting honorary citizenship for significant foreign nationals, and all other forms of pomp. These non-binding-but-feel-good-fuzzy bills help develop a sense of civic nationality, and strengthen the national identity of American citizens. However, bills like that cited in the Think Progress article annoy this shit out of me.

First, I think it's just generally inappropriate for Congress to identify national security threats outside of their oversight obligations. If Iran is really that big a problem for the United States, then the Bush administration should man up, provide significant evidence, a plan of action, and submit it to Congress for the legislative legitimacy that foreign expeditions require. All this bill does is let dorks like Lieberman and his ilk bona fide their conservative credentials by Muslim bashing (which is, let's be honest, what this is about), without having to back it up with any actual facts. I recognize, of course, that the Bush Administration has proven itself untrustworthy in this regard as well, but at least when the executive submits something to Congress there is an expectation that the legislative branch will use the tools at its disposal to vet the claims against independently collected intelligence, and that intelligence provided by the appropriate executive agencies. When it is conducted the other way around (Congress to the President), it gives the executive much more latitude to act without making the appropriate information available to the proper oversight committees, and essentially transfers the oversight responsibilities to the White House. Instead of Bush coming to Congress and saying "Here's a verifiable threat, here's the intelligence, we need to take action" he can simply take action and justify it after the fact by pointing to this ridiculous legislation.

Second, even though the language of the bill requires the Administration to submit regular reports to Congress on Iran's role in Iraq, that caveat does not provide any substantively helpful information. The very fact that Congress is requiring these reports assumes that those reports are worth submission; it assumes that Iran is substantively providing the machinations of war to the different (assumedly Shi'a) sects in the conflict. While I understand that Congress has many resources at its disposal, I also know that the executive branch probably has better access to the appropriate intelligence in this regard than Congress, and we all know how excited the executive intelligence agencies are to grant oversight committees unfettered access to their intelligence. I just don't think that Congress is in a position to make this judgement call. In a related note, Think Progress links to an LA Times article which suggests that "the largest number of foreign fighters and suicide bombers in Iraq come from a third neighbor, Saudi Arabia, according to a senior U.S. military officer and Iraqi lawmakers." So, not only is this legislation, in my opinion, inappropriate, it is also misinformed (assuming a good faith effort was made in researching its necessity, which I doubt), but it also assumes something that is likely untrue - Iran poses a greater threat to Iraqi stability than other neighboring states like Saudi Arabia, or, say, the Turks (here, here, here, and here).

Third, we have all seen how these legislative actions have been abused years down the road. As Think Progress noted:

When the Congress vote to authorize force against Iraq in 2002, it cited as justification the fact that Congress had passed a law in 1998 sponsored by Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS) and co-sponsored by Lieberman that concluded Iraq posed a serious threat. From the 2002 resolution:
Whereas in Public Law 105-235 (August 14, 1998), Congress concluded that Iraq’s
continuing weapons of mass destruction programs threatened vital United States
interests and international peace and security, declared Iraq to be in `material
and unacceptable breach of its international obligations’ and urged the
President `to take appropriate action, in accordance with the Constitution and
relevant laws of the United States, to bring Iraq into compliance with its
international obligations’

These actions set precedent, and when Congress goes about blowing its wad on poorly developed, short-term-thinking legislation, it bites us all in the ass a few years later.

Now, it must be noted that I recognize I am assuming a great deal about the executive branch. I understand that this particular Administration has done nothing to justify the trust that the American people and the Constitution place in the executive institutions. However, the issues I take with this bill stem not from this particular administration, but rather, that which is institutionally appropriate, and substantively wise. The fact that the Bush Administration can not be trusted to provide wise, measured, and careful foreign and military policy advise to the House and the Senate is simply indicative of how terrible this particular administration has been. This bill does not change that. It doesn't strengthen Congress' oversight role, nor does it provide the executive any legitimate route to escalate our foreign relations in the region. All it does is provide the political ass-covering that Bush and co. might use to justify further military action in the Middle East, and I am, quite frankly, ashamed that it passed the Senate unanimously. One can only hope that the House kills this bill in committee, because due to the wording of the bill, it is particularly difficult to vote against.

Update: I was having difficulty with the time stamp. It's been updated to reflect when it was actually posted. Sorry if this caused any problems.




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Saturday, July 14, 2007


al-Maliki Say's Its OK, Can We Bring Our Kids Home Now ?

The AP is reporting that

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said Saturday that the Iraqi army and police are capable of keeping security in the country when American troops leave "any time they want," though he acknowledged the forces need further weapons and training.
Tony Snow says the Iraqi Parliament has decided to go on vacation for the entire month of August. I think we ought send our entire army to the beach right along with al-Maliki and the boys. Then, after a little R&R, our troops should be redeployed home. I don't think many Americans would object, not even Billo. I don't think the Iraqis would either.

About the only people who would be upset are George Bush, Dead Eye Dick Cheney, Joe Lieberman, and a bunch of crazed neocons. Somebody needs to tell them


PS, We can leave a few trainers. For starters how about leaving William Kristol, Paul Wolfowitz, and Doug Feith?




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