"I've
got a pretty long track record covering politics and news," she said.
"so I'm not particularly worried that one-day blog chatter is going to
destroy my reputation. The proof is in the pudding. They can watch the
debate tomorrow night and make their own decisions about whether or not
I've done my job." Others in the McCain-Palin nexus sowed seeds of doubt about Ifill. Asked
by Sean Hannity if she was worried about Ifill, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin
said, "I am not going to let it be a concern," adding "that just makes
us work harder. It makes us want to communicate even clearer and more
profoundly with the electorate, letting them know what the contrasts
are between these two tickets." In addition, on a conference call
set up by the McCain-Palin campaign, former New York Mayor Rudy
Giuliani -- while calling Ifill a "very honest, decent journalist" and
saying there is "no question that she will be perfectly fair in the way
she asks the questions" -- also raised that very question. "If the
moderator of this debate were someone who was writing a book that
basically was 'The Age of McCain,' I have a feeling that a lot more of
these publications would be saying that the person should not be doing
it," said Giuliani. "Now it might be totally unfair to do that. Just as
I think it's totally unfair to do this. But it's just one more
indication of how there is a double-standard in the way this campaign
is treated."
"I've
got a pretty long track record covering politics and news," she said.
"so I'm not particularly worried that one-day blog chatter is going to
destroy my reputation. The proof is in the pudding. They can watch the
debate tomorrow night and make their own decisions about whether or not
I've done my job."
long before the primaries ended,
gwen ifill was asking why hillary wouldn't drop out (on washington
week) and was referring to her as 'that woman' and so much more. gwen
ifill has always been in the tank for barack obama.
her track
record, such as it is, is for being a fluffy piece of nonsense who,
like the other beltway gas bags, sucks up and runs with the pack.
and
she's the last to critizie palin - though she has. as ava and c.i. have
repeatedly documented, gwen is the 'journalist' who brought up the 1st
amendment on air and didn't know what it said. growing flustered, she
finally said 'whatever it says' and tried to move on. a journalist
knows the 1st amendment. a 'journalist' does not.
gwen's track
record also includes defending blackwater on washington week and this
was when 'covering' the september 2007 shooting.
so gwen has no track record except as a useless gas bag.
when even juan williams is calling for her to step down, you know it's bigger than gwen lets on.
oh, by the way, remember when scooter libby was indicted? and remember when he was found guilty?
long
before that happened, gwen had assured viewers it was just 'a summer
scandal' which would quickly fade away. it didn't though, did it?
gwen's record is 1 of incompetence.
by the way, last time i highlighted jake tapper, sherry e-mailed to ask, 'why doesn't he give up news and pose for playgirl?' he is a very attractive man - especially for a journalist.
on
gwen, i hope she goes through with the debate. i like to think it could
be the career destroyer for her and 1 less gas bag on the airwaves is
always a good thing.
her 'fairness' record also includes
shutting out ralph nader, cynthia mckinney and all others from the
presidential race. but no 1 is supposed to notice that either.
or that she vouched for jeremiah wright on washington week or any of her other efforts promoting barack obama.
meanwhile,
ralph is shut out of the debates. because people are scared he might
hurt barack. apparently barack can only win on an uneven playing field.
let ralph in the debate and, oops, barack's chances might fall. so
screw democracy and the american people's right to see the candidates
running for president. better to turn the whole year (and election)
over to barack, right?
Gas
prices are still through the roof. The price for a barrel of oil has
gone down 33 percent, but gas prices have only gone down 7 percent. Our
troops are still in Iraq even though the government there wants us to
leave. Our borders are still broken seven years after the terrorists
attacks on our country and we still have not found and killed Osama Bin
Laden. Our food supply has been seriously compromised and the FDA
does not do a thing about it. Everyone knows how crooked and
incompetent the Bush administration is, but nothing has changed since
Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats took over both houses of Congress. There
are two over-hyped politicians by the names of Obama and McCain running
for president this year. John McCain will do nothing for the economy or
the home mortgage crisis. McCain and his Bush-league pals support the
trade policies and the deregulation that got us into this mess in the
first place. What about Obama and his Democratic buddies? Are you kidding me? A
lot of this deregulation nonsense took place during the Clinton
administration and Obama has corporate thugs from Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac advising him and funding his campaign. There is one candidate and one candidate only who truly represents change and hope. That
man is Ralph Nader! Call the commission on presidential debates at
202-872-1020 so Ralph Nader can get into the debates. What are McCain,
the maverick, and Obama, the agent for change, afraid of? If Obama is
the real deal, he should be more than happy to debate Nader instead of
running away like he has so far. Joe Thomas Brookings, Ore.
now here's some events ralph has coming up:
Oct. 4th, Noon Nader/Gonzalez 2008 Rally Waterbury, CT 195 Grand St. Waterbury, CT 06702 More info: Mike at (203) 573-9524 or events@votenader.org Map it Oct. 4th, 4pm Private Gathering with Ralph Nader Hartford, CT RSVP: Rob (202) 471-5833 or events@votenader.org Minimum Contribution: $100 Map it Oct. 4th, 7pm Nader/Gonzalez 2008 Rally Storrs, CT Edwin O. Smith High School 1235 Storrs Rd. Storrs, CT 06268 Suggested Contribution: $10/$5 students (203) 468-1268 or events@votenader.org Map it Oct. 5th, 11am Nader/Gonzalez Rally Amherst, Massachusetts U-Mass. Amherst, Bowker Auditorium in Stockbridge Hall 80 Campus Center Way, Amherst, MA 01003 Suggested Contribution: $10/$5 students (504) 319-9312 or events@votenader.org Map it Oct. 5th, 4pm Intimate Gathering with Ralph Nader Waitsfield, VT Contribution: $30 to $100 RSVP: (202) 471-5833 or rob@votenader.org Map it Oct. 5th, 7:30pm Nader/Gonzalez Rally Burlington, VT Ira Allen Chapel 26 University Place Burlington, VT 05405 Suggested Contribution: $10/ $5 students (504) 319-9312or events@votenader.org Map it Oct. 6th, 12pm Nader/Gonzalez Rally Hanover, NH Alumni Hall, Hopkins Center for the Arts Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755 Suggested Contribution: $10/$5 students (202)471-5833 or events@votenader.org Map it Oct. 6th, 7:30pm Nader/Gonzalez Rally Portland, ME First Parish in Portland Maine, Unitarian Universalist 425 Congress St. Portland, ME 04101 Suggested Contribution: $10/$5 students (202)471-5833 or events@votenader.org Map it
and
i'm going to note those again tomorrow night. i just had the best idea
for a post about nader (or i think it's the best) and if i write
anything else tonight, i'll use it. instead i want to open with it
tomorrow (and i'm wrote a note to myself to remember because otherwise
i would forget). let's close with c.i.'s 'Iraq snapshot:'
Wednesday,
October 1, 2008. Chaos and violence continue, Iraq falls off the news
radar, the big 'handover' takes place, and more.
Let me emphasize that our new
Sunni friends insist on being paid for their loyalty. I have heard, for
example, a rough estimate that the cost in one area of about 100 square
kilometers is $250,000 per day. And periodically they threaten to
defect unless their fees are increased. You might want to find out the
total costs for these deals forecasted for the next several years,
because they are not small and they do not promise to end. Remember, we
do not own these people. We merely rent them. And they can break their
lease at any moment.
The US has armed, trained and paid both
sides in the conflict. Some might point out that to be 'needed' in the
region, it helps to play both sides. During the same hearing, War Hawk
Stephen Biddle of the Council on Foreign Relations got the attention of
Senator Barbara Boxer:
Barbara Boxer: Did you just say that
Maliki uses the Iraqi security forces as his militia? Did you say
that?Biddle: Yes.Barbara Boxer: If that's true and Maliki uses his
military as a force to bring about peace -- that's scandalous and that
we would have paid $20 million to train [it] and someone that we
consider an expert says it's a militia, that's shocking.
Now the
two extremist groups (neither of whom represent the bulk of Sunni and
Shia Iraqis) are being 'partnered' and at a time when distrust runs
high. Last month Charles Levinson (USA Today) reported
on some of the suspicions of "Awakening" Council members and quoted
Mullah Shihab al-Safi stating of the al-Maliki government sudden rush
to arrest "Awakening" Council members, "Our government is after us. We
sacrificed hundreds of our sons to drive al-Qaeda out. Now the
government says we are no different than terrorists." And this tension
was well known long before today. Dropping back to the September 11
snapshot:
Meanwhile the "Awakening" Council is back in the news.
These are the Sunni thugs on the US payroll ($300 a month for males,
$280 for females) because, as US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker told
Congress repeatedly in April, paying them off means they don't attack
US equipment or soldiers. That's a lot of lunch money to fork over each
money to be safe on the 'playground.' Puppet of the occupation, Nouri
al-Maliki, has long been vocally opposed to the "Awakening" Councils.
That's because he staffed with Shi'ite thugs. The two most extreme
segments of Iraq are at war with one another. al-Maliki has made it
very clear he has little use for the "Awakening" Councils and his staff
has echoed that repeatedly. With US Senators and House Reps loudly
objecting to the tax payer monies being spent on this program (one
Petraeus hails) last April, there's been a push to have the puppet
government (sitting on billions) pay the "Awakening" Council itself.
(Senator Barbara Boxer was especially vocal in April asking why the
puppet government wasn't paying them.) The new talk is that al-Maliki
will begin paying them but distrust remains on both sides.
Nicholas Spangler and Mohammed al-Dulaimy (McClatchy Newspapers) report
that despite for-show motions in public on the part of the puppet
government, "Awakening" Council leaders remain skepitcal (with one
saying after the latest press conference, "I don't trust a word they
say") that the puppet government will take charge and pay the 99,000
"Awakening" members or that 20,000 will be absorbed "into the police
and army" starting October 1st. Thursday's press conference found Gen
Abud Ganbar declaring, "The government has ordered that monthly
salaries be paid until we can put (Awakening members) into security
forces or ministires. Payments will continue until they find jobs."
That leaves "Awakening" leaders skeptical and the reporters quote
various voices explaining why including the claim that the puppet
government has hired al Qaeda members. Khalid al-Ansary and Waleed Ibrahim (Reuters) report
on the puppet government side where grave doubts are repeatedly raised
("But he also expressed distaste for some members of the predominantly
Sunni Arab Awakening movement, an aversion shared by some other
officials.") as is the argument that there is need "to weed out"
certain members. In other words, Thursday's press conference reassured
no one and the tensions remain.
September 23rd, Erica Goode (New York Times) reported
on the tensions in Baghdad as the transfer of "Awakening" to the puppet
government approaches and notes that "Awakening" Councils in Adhamiya
"have posed increasing problems. . . . Some residents complain that the
men, not a few of them swaggering street toughs, use their power to
intimidate people. Sometimes violence erupts." At the start of last
month, Rania Abouzeid (Time magazine) was quoting
the "Awakening" Council spokesperson Mohammed Mahmood al Natah on his
dismay over the 'handover', "We wanted it to be postponed but the
decision had already been made by the government and we cannot change
it." Despite the very public nature of the tensions and the fears on
both sides, things appear to have been rushed through with very little
planning.
Near the end of September,
Lt Gen Lloyd Austin gave a briefing where he praised the "Awakening"
Council and declared, "One of our primary focus areas as we move foward
is transitioning the Sons of Iraq program to the Iraqi government. The
volunteer movement that started in Anbar and spread across the rest of
the country significantly contributed to the security successes that we
are now taking advantage of. The Sons of Iraq have paid a heavy price
fight al Qaeda and other insurgent groups, and it's important that the
government of Iraq responsibly transition them into meaningful
employment. Prime Minister Maliki has assured me that the government
will help those who help the people of Iraq. And so next week in
Baghdad the government will accept responsibility for approximately
54,000 Sons of Iraq, and we will be there to assist in the transfer."
And yet for all the words expressed, no planning appeared to have gone
into what happened next, a point NPR's JJ Sutherland repeatedly
attempted to explore. The exchange ended with this:
JJ
Sutherland: Sir, I understand that but I'[m saying, "What happens in
October? I understand eventually you want to have them be plumbers or
electricians. But in October, there are a lot of checkpoints that have
been manned by the Sons of Iraq. Are those checkpoints all going to go
away? Are they only going to be staffed by Iraqi police now? That's my
question. It's not eventually, it's next month.
Lt Gen Lloyd
Austin: Yeah. Next month the Iraqi government will begin to work their
way through this. And there's no question that some of them, some of
the checkpoints, many of the checkpoints, will be -- will be manned by
Iraqi security forces. In some cases, there may be Sons of Iraq that
will be taksed to help with that work. But in most cases, I think the
Iraqi government will be looking to transition people into different
types of jobs.
That was September 22nd and the US military was
apparently operating under the notion that things could be figured
("begin to work their way through this") at some point in October. Ann Scott Tyson (Washington Post) reported
this morning on the new Pentagon report to Congress which cited the
Pentagon's belief in the importance of the "Awakening" Councils and
also noted the "[t]ension between the government and Sunni volunteers .
. . in Diyala Province, where the Sunni population is fearful that the
government is using military opeations ostensibly aimed at al-Qaeda in
Iraq as a pretext to 'arrest, intimidate, or kill moderate Sunnis and
SOI groups who are otherwise interested in participating the political
process'." The Pentagon's report to Congress is [PDF format warning] "Measuring Stability and Security in Iraq" and it hails the "Awakening" Councils:
The
emergence of the SoI remains one of the major developments of the past
18 months; however, the integration and employment of SoI remain a
significant challenge. The SoI provide significant security benefits to
their local communities by protecting neighborhoods, securing key
infrastructure and roads, and identifying malign activity. What began
primarily as a Sunni effort has now taken hold in many Shi'a and mixed
Sunni-Shi'a communities as well. Today there are over 98,000 SoI
contributing to local security.
If the Pentagon believes that
one has to wonder how they missed the various "Awakening" Council
members speaking to the press repeatedly about either being on strike
(while at a checkpoint) because there was an arrest warrant out for an
"Awakening" member or telling the press that they'd learned their
checkpoint would be shut down after the 'handover'?
Leila Fadel (McClatchy Newspapers) sketched out
the basics, "Unemployment in Sunni areas remains high, basic services
are still poor, distrust of the United States and the Shiite-led Iraqi
government is widespread and fears of Shiite militias persist. On
Wednesday, al Qaisi and 54,419 other men in Baghdad province will
transition to Iraqi government control. That's more than half of the
Sons of Iraq (SOI) who're now being paid by the U.S. military to
protect neighborhoods -- and in some cases not to shoot at American
troops." John Hendren (ABC News) reports:
"Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh told ABC News Iraq plans to
give 20 percent of the nation's 100,000 Sons of Iraq jobs to the police
force and army. 'I don't think that the Iraqi government neither the
Multi National Forces could achieve such success and security without
their participation,' al-Dabbagh told ABC News. But here in the small
village of Jambariyah, an al Qaeda stronghold north of Baghdad until
early this year, just one of 70 Sons of Iraq has been hired to date,
and of the 1,200 in the city of Dujail, none." Despite those (and
other) realities, the 'handover' took place today. Mary Beth Sheridan (Washington Post) reports,
"The handover of the armed groups was a low-key affair in Baghdad,
where government offices are closed for a six-day holiday marking the
end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. The transition was largely
symbolic, since the U.S. military plans to stay involved with the
groups for several months as the Iraqi government begins paying their
salaries and decides how to employ them." Last month, Erica Goode and Muhafer al-Husaini (New York Times) noted
that Brig Gen Tarek Abdul Hameed declare that the puppet government in
Baghdad would indeed pick up their payrolls for the "Awakening"
Councils -- as did many outlets. However, Tim Albone (Times of London) explains,
"Senior US military sources said that America would pay the salaries of
any members of the force who did not find alternative employment." UPI cites
KUNA to inform that, according to Maj Gen Jeffery Hammond, though the
'handover' took place today al-Maliki's government will not begin
paying until November 10th. Meanwhile Nizar Latif (UAE's The National) offers this
evaluation, "However, the US military and the Sahwa themselves are
concerned that the Iraqi government may simply disband the councils and
push the former insurgents back into the role of active insurgents. In
essence it would be a repeat of a former devastating mistake, when
America disbanded the Iraqi army in 2003, leaving thousands of trained
soldiers without jobs and a score to settle against the US military."
Turning to some of today's reported violence . . .
Moving over to the US presidential race. David Hoff (Education Week) explores
what the presidential choices mean in terms of the No Child Left Behind
Act (also known as "No Learning, Just Crib Notes") since both GOP
presidential nominee John McCain and Democratic presidential nominee
Barack Obama support it. Hoff notes three who are for quality education
(first step, end NCLB):
Ralph Nader, who is running as an independent, says
"federal policy needs to be transformed from one that uses punishments
to control schools, to one that supports teachers and students; from
one that relies primarily on standardized tests, to one that encourages
high-quality assessments. Broader measures of student learning are
needed that include reliance of classroom-based assessments along with
testing."
Bob Barr, the Libertarian Party candidate, writes:
"Turning education over to the federal government, as through such
legislation as the No Child Left Behind Act has not worked. Trying to
fix failing schools with more money and regulations also has failed to
do anything other than waste taxpayer money without results." He
proposes ending the federal government's role in education and turning
decisions back to state and local governments.
The Green Party,
which has nominated Cynthia McKinney to be its candidate, writes in its
draft platform that "the federal Act titled No Child Left Behind
punishes where it should assist and hinders its own declared purpose.
It should be repealed or greatly redesigned." The federal government's
roles should be limited to ensuring students across states have a
"level playing field," the platform says.
Hoff notes that Barr and McKinney did vote for NCLB in 2001 while both were members of the US House of Representatives. Anita Zimmerman (The Chetek Alert) covers many presidential candidates and we'll note this section:
The
state's Green party has many of the same challenges. They don't get
much media coverage, their candidates are rarely invited to debates,
and their resources are too limited for national advertisement. Like
the Constitution party, there are "scattered individuals" but no
cohesive Barron County organization, says Jeff Peterson, co-founder of
the Wisconsin Green Party. Peterson, a 20-year veteran of the party and
a Luck resident, believes presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney
appeals to urban voters and young people. Peterson's been "politicking
from his computer," he adds. On the national level, the Green party's
base is split between 20-somethings and 50-somethings, Peterson
explains. While the party enjoys support on college campuses, it has
never succeeded in garnering the 5-percent vote necessary to "unlock
all sorts of resources," especially the monetary kind. Peterson's goal
for the election is to "maintain a presence." Voters need third-party
options, he believes, and candidates like McKinney, a former
congresswoman from Georgia, take stances on issues Republicans and
Democrats may not address.
Many
people tend to see the economic crisis as a problem from nowhere,
divorcing it from the deliberate and systematic dismantling of
regulation and oversight waged by the corporate sector in its fight for
ever-greater profits. Many of these same people view Barack Obama's
candidacy in similar but opposite terms, seeing him as the change
candidate from nowhere who will save our economic and political our
economic and political system--divorcing his hope message from his
actual platforms and legislative history. In
part two of her February analysis of Obama's campaign, Pam Martens
makes the connection between our rootless critiques of the economy and
our rootless support of Obama. When the same people causing a crisis are funding the man claiming to solve a crisis, we can expect more of the same.
"I do," Palin said. "I'm a feminist who, uh, believes in equal rights
and I believe that women certainly today have every opportunity that a
man has to succeed, and to try to do it all, anyway. And I'm very, very
thankful that I've been brought up in a family where gender hasn't been
an issue. You know, I've been expected to do everything growing up that
the boys were doing. We were out chopping wood and you're out hunting
and fishing and filling our freezer with good wild Alaskan game to feed
our family. So it kinda started with that."
Today,
Chief Warrant Officer 4 Michael J. Durant (Ret.) issued the following
statement on Joe Biden's apparently false accounts of near-misses on
the battlefields of Afghanistan and Iraq: "Senator Biden claimed
at a debate last year that he'd been 'shot at' while visiting Iraq. And
he has claimed repeatedly, most recently last week, that his helicopter
was 'forced down' in Afghanistan -- leaving his audience with the
impression that it was fire from the Taliban which had grounded the
aircraft. Neither of these stories appears to be true, and Senator
Biden has never accounted for the discrepancies. "I've been on a
helicopter that was 'forced down' by enemy fire, and I've been 'shot
at.' Neither is easily confused with being caught in a snow storm or
awakened by a loud bang in the night. Senator Biden has a
responsibility to come clean on what actually happened, and explain why
he would ever say such things to the American people. And with the Vice
Presidential Debate coming up on Thursday, it is incumbent on the news
media to ask Senator Biden the tough questions -- as they have so far
failed to do -- and examine his responses closely for inconsistencies
of the kind we've witnessed in recent months. "The American people
expect and deserve leaders who tell the truth about their record and
their experiences, and a news media that holds all candidates -- no
matter their party -- to the same standard."