ON WILLIAM SAFIRE'S ASSNESS

9/11, Bin Laden

I’m going to remain calm.

But I get physically ill at the thought of this weasel;

cute language columns vs. 625,000 Iraqis dead…

I know I know,,,but we have to start calling the Joe “turning a corner!”Liebermans and William (uh) Safires and Thomas (next 6 months!) Friedmans and David “Mealy Mouthed” Brooks’ on their complete and utter full-of-shitness/wrongness/assness… They were wrong about everything and are still wrong….wrong!

But they’ve just numbed us out with all their antics and just last week the President used the Iraq-Al-Qaeda connection yet AGAIN!

I mean WTF!?

1441!!!!!!!!!!!

P.S.

PLAME WAS UNDERCOVER YOU FUCKING MOTHERFUCKERS!

thanks

JT

 

International Herald Tribune

The disc of terror : LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Friday, February 13, 2004

I must take issue with William Safire’s contention that an intercepted document, allegedly written by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, establishes a clear link between Saddam Hussein and Al Qaeda. (“Saddam’s links to terror, on disc,” Views, Feb. 12) This highly suspect message refers to ongoing and future operations to maintain a destabilized Iraq. It suggests, if anything, that the U.S. invasion and occupation has encouraged terrorist networks to team with Iraqi nationalists in order to focus on a common enemy.

To claim that because Al Qaeda may now be operating in Iraq confirms that the terror network was there under Saddam’s regime is yet another poor attempt to justify President George W. Bush’s pre-emptive war.

Buck Rutledge, Knoxville, Tennessee

 

International Herald Tribune

Follow our plans : LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Thursday, January 22, 2004

 

Thomas Friedman tells the Europeans to let Turkey join the European Union, or else (“Turkey, the EU and history,” Views, Jan. 12). William Safire solves the Kurdish question by telling the Kurds this and the Turks that. (“How to answer the Kurdish question,” Views, Jan. 15).

.There seems to be agreement between the two columnists: The world needs to be told what to do, or else.

Fons van Mourik, Tannay, Switzerland

William Safire, minister of disinformation

The New York Times runs corrections when reporters get a middle initial wrong. So why does its conservative columnist get away with glaring errors that shape world affairs?

By Barry Lando

Pages 1 2

February 21, 2004 | With daily revelations of how the White House made use of faulty intelligence to bolster its political agenda, the media is also beginning to examine its own role in the affair. There’s plenty to examine: Take, for instance, William Safire and the New York Times, frequently cited as a conduit for official disinformation.

A recent example was his trumpeting of the sensational charges published last November in the Weekly Standard, a conservative magazine. The article proved, according to Safire, “that Saddam Hussein’s spy agency and top al-Qaida operatives certainly were in frequent contact for a decade, and that there is renewed reason to suspect an Iraqi spymaster in Prague may have helped finance the 9/11 attacks.” Those charges were based on the leak of a secret memorandum from Douglas Feith, a senior Pentagon official, to the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee.

Safire had been pounding on the Prague connection since November 2001, two months after the 9/11 terror attacks. Fired anew by the Weekly Standard’s story, he fired off two imperious columns of his own, demanding action from FBI Director Robert Mueller and the Senate Intelligence Committee. “I’d also assign new agents to follow up leads in Prague,” he advised.

“Intrepid journalists,” Safire assured his readers, “will ultimately bring the full story of the Saddam-bin Laden connection to light. In the meantime, the F.B.I. should stop treating 9/11 as a cold case.”

Sounds pretty sensational indeed, except for the fact that the Pentagon immediately issued an unusual statement declaring that reports claiming that the new information proved there had been contacts between al-Qaida and Iraq “are inaccurate.”

Further, the Pentagon continued, the leak “was deplorable and may be illegal.”

The memo consists mainly of 50 excerpts drawn from raw intelligence reports from four U.S. agencies from 1990 to 2003. They are vague, mostly unsourced and far from conclusive. Indeed, according to several retired intelligence officers, the memo represents the same kind of ideological cherry-picking of intelligence that led to the U.S. invasion of Iraq in the first place.

In short, the original headline-making conclusions are now seen by most to be threadbare. But not to Safire, who has made no mention of the Pentagon denials and remains incredulous that anyone might doubt the charges.

 


That, of course, is vintage Safire. Which might be fine if he were writing for a small town paper in Northern Maine. But the fact is that, whether Times editors like it or not, for most readers, Safire’s charges also carry the weighty validation of the planet’s most important newspaper of record. It’s a problem the Times has yet to face.

I speak from the experience of looking into three Safire columns attacking France.

Countries cannot sue for libel. Otherwise, France would have quite a case against Safire and the Times. Safire’s wild charges in a three-column barrage last year helped to deepen the war-related alienation between the U.S. and France. And though erroneous, they have entered the realm of historical verity — and remain there to this day, thanks to the Times.

What is particularly outrageous is that Safire and his sources were allowed to continue their campaign using the Times and the International Herald Tribune as their podium — even though the editors of both papers had been advised that the charges didn’t hold water.

Further, according to Times policy, neither Safire nor his editors are under any obligation whatsoever to correct those errors.

Safire’s main accusation was that French companies, with the knowledge of French intelligence services, helped supply vital rocket fuel components to Saddam.

As a former producer for 30 years with CBS’ “60 Minutes,” I looked into Safire’s claim. I concluded that his story was based more on Francophobia than fact, built on flimsy evidence and biased reporting.

Safire’s case has two parts. The first is that a French trader, CIS Paris, was the key intermediary enabling a Chinese company, Qilo Chemicals, to ship a product known as HTPB to Iraq. HTPB is used as a “binder” for solid rocket propellants. His charge is based on quotes from an exchange of e-mails, leaked to Safire from “an Arab source.” The most damning message was sent Sept. 4, 2002. In that e-mail, James Crown of Qilo Chemicals wrote, “Thank you for your order to our HTPB-III! We just have sent a 40′ container to Tartous (Syria) last month.”

According to Safire, the chemical was received there by a trading company that was an intermediary for the Iraqi missile industry, the end user. The HTPB was then trucked across Syria to Iraq. According to Safire, it was the French connection — CIS Paris — that made the whole deal possible.

CIS Paris president Jean-Pierre Pertriaux makes no secret of his long-term relationship with Iraq, including brokering materials destined for military ends, like HTPB. He also admits having contacted the Chinese company, Qilo Chemicals. Like many such brokers, he skirts the law. By acting only as a go-between, strictly speaking, he would not be breaking any French or European export regulations, if the HTPB were not exported from France.

But the key point is that, according to Pertriaux, he was never able to consummate the deal for HTPB. When contacted by phone, James Crown of Qilo also claimed he’d never completed the sale.

What about the e-mails cited by Safire?

Read in their entirety, they make no sense, one sentence contradicting the next. Indeed, carefully analyzed, the whole convoluted exchange of e-mails quoted by Safire doesn’t hold together, which may be why Safire quotes sparingly from them.

Safire also noted that Pertriaux claimed the deal with Qilo Chemicals was never consummated, but there was no way that denial would blunt his attack.

His target wasn’t a single French trader but the government of France. CIS Paris, he charged, would never have been able to pursue its trade without the knowledge of French intelligence. “French intelligence has long been aware of it,” he wrote.

Safire was right on that point, but totally wrong on his conclusions. In July 2002, both the U.S. State Department and the Defense Intelligence Agency warned France of CIS Paris’ attempts to purchase various products for Iraq’s arms industry. The French immediately investigated CIS’s activities but found nothing illegal. They requested more information from the United States — information that might permit France to intercept any eventual delivery.

The U.S. authorities never replied.

“We’re still waiting,” says a French source close to the investigation.

TWO

So why did the deal between Qilo Chemical and CIS Paris never go through? Because, despite the lack of response from the U.S., the French continued to monitor CIS Paris’ activities and, in August 2002, when it looked as if CIS Paris was about to make a firm order, the authorities warned CIS Paris to back off. “There are many different ways to exert pressure,” says the French source.

It wasn’t just one private French broker involved with Saddam’s rocket program, Safire continued, but firms controlled by the French government itself.

“I’m also told,” he wrote, again with no attribution, “that a contract was signed last April in Paris for five tons of 99 percent unsymmetric dimethylhydrazine, another advanced missile fuel, which is produced by France’s Societe Nationale des Poudre [sic] et Explosifs (SNPE). In addition, Iraqi attempts to buy an oxidizer for solid propellant missiles, ammonium perchlorate, were successful, at least on paper.”

The Times’ columnist concluded his vitriolic attack: “Perhaps a few intrepid members of the Chirac Adoration Society, formerly known as the French media, will ask France’s lax export-control authorities about these shipments.”

The French government immediately investigated Safire’s charge. The conclusion: SNPE exported neither product to Iraq, nor to any Middle Eastern country — other than the state of Israel.

I submitted an Op-Ed piece to the Times ticking off the many serious flaws in Safire’s column. Within hours, editor David Shipley replied that under Times policy, the Op-Ed page did not run pieces that quarrelled with its own columnists. He didn’t question the points I made in my article. He suggested I write a brief letter to the editor.

Fine, I thought, can’t argue with New York Times policy, but at least they’d been advised of the errors in Safire’s report. I also e-mailed Safire saying I’d found problems with his column and would like to talk with him. There was no reply.

Just a few hours later, though, the Times published another vitriolic Safire salvo, “French Connection II,” continuing the same erroneous blather about the French and Saddam’s rocket fuel, this time targeting President Chirac.

Now the Times, like most newspapers, maintains that pieces on its Op-Ed page represent the personal views of their columnists. Their relationship is with the publisher, Op-Ed editor David Shipley told me, not with the editors. They are not subject to the same meticulous checking as more mortal Times reporters.

That lack of editorial oversight may make for provocative columns, but most readers don’t recognize such fine distinctions, which is understandable. Particularly when, as in the case of those Safire columns, we were not presented with opinion but opinion disguised as investigative reporting — in reality a pretense, a caricature of investigative reporting. One would expect such explosive charges to be subject to the Times’ famous editorial checks and balances.

But one would be wrong.

With the imprimatur of his august paper, Safire’s charges were picked up by newspapers and Internet sites around the globe, and consecrated as fact “reported in the New York Times.” They fueled the firestorm against the French — and they continue to do so.

I wrote a rebuttal that was published in Le Monde and by Tompaine.com. The Times bureau in Paris immediately asked for a translation of the Le Monde article and I thought that ended the matter. I had demonstrated that Safire’s charges were seriously flawed, if not completely false. At the very least, I had given the Times editors the specific facts behind my charge that they were giving Safire’s wild fiction a totally undeserved platform. No one from the Times contacted me or questioned my article.

Incredibly — at least as I saw it — a few days later, the Times published yet another column by Safire, continuing his same fabricated charge; this time, he challenged the CIA to reveal what it knew about France’s role in shipping rocket fuel to Iraq. (Why won’t the CIA tell all? Aha, another government coverup!)

The next day, Safire’s column ran in the International Herald Tribune, as had the first two Safire attacks against France. The editors there also knew Safire’s charges had gaping holes, but they had no choice in the matter. Since the paper is owned by the Times, its editors are required to republish the Times’ star columnists without question.

As Walter Wells, the managing editor of the IHT wrote me: “It’s apparent that Safire — like Krugman or Friedman — has free rein in his columns, even when he’s dead wrong.”

This is not the first time William Safire has been accused of mistaking fiction for fact, floating charges based on information leaked by unnamed high-level sources. After the World Trade Center attack, it was Safire who claimed as “undisputed fact” that, just five months prior to 9/11, Mohamed Atta had met secretly in Prague with a top-ranking Iraqi intelligence officer. In the supercharged months following 9/11, that accusation was the journalistic equivalent of tossing a lighted match into a powder keg, bolstering the case of those pushing for the U.S. to topple Saddam.

Over the following months, however, other more serious reporters found that Safire’s reporting was, once again, flimsy at best. It was based on erroneous information from Czech intelligence, and was finally denied by Czech President Vaclav Havel himself. But the best evidence of Safire’s ongoing error was that Colin Powell, desperate to demonstrate even the shakiest link between al-Qaida and Saddam, made no mention of that supposed Prague meeting to build the U.S. case before the United Nations

Safire, typically, has never backed down, inventing one conspiracy after another to explain away the Czech denials. The truth about Atta, Safire promised — and the French rocket fuel companies — would be uncovered once U.S. forces had taken Baghdad and had access to all those secret files and Iraqi officials. Well, the U.S. forces have been there now for months, and we’re still waiting. Now, he announces, he’s found proof of the Atta-Iraq connection in the memo leaked to the Weekly Standard. The memo, you’ll recall, that the Pentagon called inaccurate.

And this is the New York Times, mind you, a paper that regularly runs a “Corrections Box” to fess up to the most picayune of inaccuracies, from an incorrect middle initial to the misspelling of a company name — but not to innuendo and error on its Op-Ed page.

Recently, editor David Shipley wrote a piece attempting to explain the makeup of the Times Op-Ed page. I thought that was an ideal opening to submit another article. Using the Safire anti-French diatribes as case in point, I suggested it was a bit too much to expect the average reader to comprehend that while the Times stands behind the facts on its news pages, it can set a much lower standard for the “facts” presented by its columnists.

Shipley suggested I send the piece instead to Times ombudsman, Dan Okrent. Okrent, in reply, said I raised some interesting points which, one day, he might deal with.

On Feb. 15, in an astonishing admission, Okrent wrote that one issue that has attracted his attention is “whether columnists should be free, as they are now, to decide whether and when to publish corrections of their own mistakes.”

Is all of this old history? Not really. Just Google “Safire” and “France.” You’ll find scores of sites around the world that still carry Safire’s venomous opinions as indisputable fact, backed by the credibility of the New York Times.

What Modern Conservatism Is Really All About

9/11, Bin Laden, Rove

untitledunionjack1.jpg THEY ARE US May 27, 2007

The Sociopathic Disease of Conservatism

By F. Vyan Walton

I’ve made this argument – that Conservatism is a Disease – for quite sometime, but this will be one of the first times I really get down to the nitty gritty of it. It’s been my feeling that the modern day conservative cult that thrives in America is fueled by a low-grade form of anti-social pathology and compulsive-addictive disorder. They’re like Hate-Junkies. And the number one thing they hate are Liberals.

Recently the following screed was posted as a comment on my lonely little blog.

Anonymously – of course.

It began with “Liberalism is a Mental Disorder” – and went downhill from there.

Liberalism is a mental disorder,
This is the agenda of the Left. And they don’t even try to hide it:

1. Re-establish the “Fairness Doctrine” to silence Conservative Talk Radio
2. Insure the success of the Mexican (and other Third World) invasion and conquest of White America.
3. Disarm all law-abiding citizens
4. Silence all speech of which they disaprove by expanding the definition of “Hate Speech”, and pass laws to make such speech punishable by imprisonment.
5. Immediately surrender to the enemy in the Islamic War.
6. Establish Islam as a State-Protected Religion with assistance by CAIR and government schools.

My immediate response was the following.
If they “don’t try to hide it” could you find any single respected “Liberal” who openly, or even on the sly – endorses any of that crap?

My own view is…

1. Re-establish the “Fairness Doctrine” to silence Conservative Talk Radio.

The Fairness Doctrine would do no such thing. It would actually require that the News, be the News – while Equal Time for Commentary and Editorialism would be enforced.

2. Insure the success of the Mexican (and other Third World) invasion and conquest of White America.

By what – making them American too? I’d say that’s America conquering them.

3. Disarm all law-abiding citizens

Short 2nd Amendment Lesson, there’s nothing in there about law abiding citizens, law enforcement or even hunting. The 2nd Amendment is directed specifically at “a well regulated militia” being neccesary for the maintainance of freedom from tyranny. You in a Militia? No? Then it doesn’t apply to you.

4. Silence all speech of which they disaprove by expanding the definition of “Hate Speech”, and pass laws to make such speech punishable by imprisonment.

I do support enforcement and some moderate expansion of Hate Speech and FCC regulation of same. But not to stop such speech, simply to make it painful to be an asshole in public. If we can fine ABC for Janet Jackson’s titty we could fine Imus or Limbuagh, but they’d both still be on the air.

5. Immediately surrender to the enemy in the Islamic War.

Which Islamic War? – the one between the Sunni and the Shia in Iraq or the one in Afghanistan and Pakistan aginst Al Qaeda? In the former case, we’ve got no hunt in that fight. Do we side with the Sunni or the Shia? In the later case I’ve heard NO ONE suggest we should surrender to Al-Qeada or Hezbollah for that matter, in fact Democrats have been struggling to get Bush to send more troops to Afghanistan by taking them out of Iraq..

6. Establish Islam as a State-Protected Religion with assistance by CAIR and government schools.

Ok, that’s just ridiculous. Liberals and Progresses want protection from a state sponsored religion, y’know like the Pilgrims and the Quakers who were trying to escape the persecution of Henry VIII’s Anglican Church. Or for that matter – the Taliban.

Now I’d like to take my response a bit further, and rather than address the tit-for-tat points of Mr. Anonymous, consider exactly how anyone could come to believe such drivel. I understand of course, that these were merely boiler-plate cut-and-paste straw-man B.S. right-wing talking points. In understand that this person clearly hasn’t been reading my blog, or it’s crossposts on Dkos, Democratic Underground or OpedNews and hasn’t seen what I’ve already discussed concerning The I-Mess or Immigration or Hate Crimes Legislation. (Cuz y’know… Facts are for Pussies!) It’s clear that this just typical right-wing radio blather. I know that this is a form of Projection, making accusations of others that are simply fun-house mirror reflections of their own actual positions. (Liberlism is accused of being a “mental disorder”, when in all likelyhood it is Rabid Neo-Conservatism that is based on abnormal pathology),

I know he’s just a troll!.

I understand all this, but what I’ve always felt disturbing is how many people are more than willing to eat this stuff up and spew it right back out. Normally I wouldn’t care, except for one thing – I’m pretty sure all these deeply deluded people vote!

As I’ve written before on Hating the Enemy, (namely Liberals) the leaders of the right-wing movement are not at all shy about telling us how they feel and who we should be hating.

Let’s do a quick review (thanks to Media Matters) of some of the things that Republicans, including Hannity, regularly say about Democrats and Liberals.

Sean Hannity suggested that the DNC may have been behind the Abu Ghraib prison abuse photos, asking: “Was that a DNC plot too?” (The Sean Hannity Show, 9/10/04)

Laura Ingraham stated that Democratic Sens. John Kerry (MA), Joseph R. Biden Jr. (DE), and Barbara Boxer (CA) are “on the side of” North Korea leader Kim Jong Il because they were opposed to John R. Bolton’s nomination as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. (Hannity & Colmes, 4/11/05).

Ann Coulter on Bill Clinton, “he was a very good rapist” and “molested the help” and on Al Gore, “Before we knew he was clinically insane” – “He seemed kinda gay”

Bill O’Reilly says he doesn’t do “personal attacks”, except of course for when he does.

On The O’Reilly Factor, O’Reilly has referred to media writer and Fox News Watch panelist Neal Gabler as a “rabid dog” and said of New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, “How nuts is this guy?” O’Reilly also said guest Christopher Murray “sounds like a fascist” for saying that that public institutions should not display religious symbols and called former Public Broadcasting System host Bill Moyers a “totalitarian.” Students at the University of Connecticut who heckled right-wing pundit Ann Coulter during her campus appearance there earned the title of “far-left Nazis” from O’Reilly. He’s also called John Kerry a “sissy”, and claimed that Bill Clinton would be welcomed as president by Osama bin Laden.

Jonah Goldberg has distorted comments by Sen. John Kerry (D-MA), called syndicated columnist Helen Thomas a “thespian carbuncle of bile,” and accused former President Jimmy Carter of engaging in a “mildly ghoulish exploitation of Coretta Scott King’s funeral.”

Then of course there’s Michelle Malkin whose has claimed that “the vast majority of Hispanic politicians” believe that “the American Southwest belongs to Mexico;” has referred to certain Californian politicians as “Latino supremacists;” and characterized recent immigration protests as “militant racism” marked by “virulent anti-American hatred.”
All of these people, are playing The Fear Card. Fear the brown-skins and the darkies. Fear the muslims. Fear the fags. Fear the ACLU. And Fear the Liberals who somehow have this crazy idea that America is supposed to be somekind of “Land of the Free” where all kinds of weird and different and disgusting people are supposed to be able to “Seek the American Dream” or some such nonesense.

John Dean has written about this strategic re-writing of Americas History in his book “Conservatives without Conscience”

In their efforts to present conservatism as an American tradition, conservatives have also reinterpreted the U.S. Constitution. One of the key elements of the Constitution is the establishment of a unique republic, in that a federal system would coexist with state and local governments. Before it was ratified many opponents attacked its progressive and innovative nature, for far from representing teh status quo, the Constitution was dramatically liberal.

James Madison defended it in The Federalist Papers by explaining that the founders “have not suffered a blind veneration for antiquity, for custom” but rather employed “numerous innovations… in favor of private rights and public happiness.” Madison sid that “precedent could not be discovered,” for there was no other government” on the face of the globe” that provided a model. Madison, the father of the Constitution, clearly saw his work as the opposite of conseratism.

Yet conservatives today continue to exploit xenophobia and paranoia of all things “progressive” all tucked up in nice neat American Flag wrapper of gingoism. Dean also argued that what currently drives the conservative movement is nothing less than Totalitarian Authoritarism. From his appearance on the Daily Show with John Stewart.

Dean: In dealing with that, in the Milgram experiments, where he brought people in off the street, and indeed found that he could get them to administer high voltage — what they thought was high voltage, and it wasn’t. I deal with that to show how people can set their conscience aside. In other words, how do people go into the CIA every day and carry out some of the orders for torture? How do people go into NSA and turn that incredible apparatus against Americans? This is a typical Milgram situation. I actually go beyond that to find the nature of the authoritarian personality that will follow a leader who is an authoritarian.

In Milgram it was shown that otherwise normal people would submit their own conscience to the will of an authority figure and would, if continually pushed to do so, administer a lethal level electric shocks despite the screams and protests of the intended victim. Compare this with the definition of a Sociapath.

Sociopaths are very egocentric individuals that lack a sense of personal responsibility and morality. They may be impulsive, manipulative, reckless, quarrelsome, and consistent liars. Sociopaths are usually unable to sustain relationships and have a total lack of remorse for their actions. The sociopath may also be very prone to aggressive, hostile, and sometimes violent behavior. This aggression may or may not lead to criminal behavior and often takes the form of domestic violence. Along with these other actions, sociopaths often engage in self-destructive behavior such as alcoholism or addiction to drugs. This, of course, usually worsens many aspects of the sociopathic behavior. Despite these previous symptoms, the sociopath may be an excellent actor, always appearing charming, calm, and collected. They usually have a normal or above normal intelligence level and good verbal fluency. It is these qualities that sometimes place the sociopath in leadership positions within their social groups and often make it hard to spot their “black side”.

Essentially Sociopaths have no conscience, no morality as we would describe it. Whereas Dean discusses the ability for ones conscience to be selectively suppressed under specific situations and in regards to specifics types or groups of individuals when directed by a “trusted authority”. Clearly, a true sociopath doesn’t need to be directed by others – and frankly wouldn’t allow it – yet their behaviors remain markedly similar.

We can see it in the way the Bill O’Reilly can be so charming at one moment and then a raging lunatic the next. We can see it in Douglas Feith as smilingly twists reality and facts regarding Saddam and Al-Qaeda into logical linguini. We can see it with Bill Kriston, Michelle Malkin, Katie O’Beirn and Ann Coulter. These people are the standard bearers of the right-wing. The “Authorities” to which many for which many of our fellow citizens are willfully neutered their own conscience in aquiesence to. Here’s an example from Dr. Bob Altemeyer, one of Dean’s primary sources, intoducing his new book – The Authoritarians.

For example, take the following statement: “Once our government leaders and the authorities condemn the dangerous elements in our society, it will be the duty of every patriotic citizen to help stomp out the rot that is poisoning our country from within.” Sounds like something Hitler would say, right? Want to guess how many politicians, how many lawmakers in the United States agreed with it? Want to guess what they had in common?

Or how about a government program that persecutes political parties, or minorities, or journalists the authorities do not like, by putting them in jail, even torturing and killing them. Nobody would approve of that, right? Guess again.
The idea that “All Men are created equal, and are endowed by their creator with inalienable rights” is lost on these people. All rights become optional, based on whether that person passes the proper litmus test. Maintaining Habaes Corpus is “giving terrorists special rights.” Monica Goodling did “nothing wrong” when she attempted to achieve ideological purity within the Justice Dept, that’s the way it should be. Tim Griffin did nothing wrong by systematically caging the votes of African-American Troops while their were serving in Iraq. Who said their opinion and vote should matter? War Crimes and Torture are good for our intelligence, that is if we did do the torture. Karl Rove is just so misunderstood. I need my tax money for the down payment on my second condo. The poor are just lazy and deserve what they get. Iraq had it coming. The President has the “inherent power” to do any damn thing he feels like. That Vanity Fair Media Whore Valerie Plame-Wilson had it coming too. Good healthcare is for those who can afford it. Whose Bin Laden, that Obama guy running for President? Free Libby! Climate Change is just a hoax and even if it’s not we didn’t do it – it was sunspots, or volcanos, or maybe all the animals in the rain-forest farted – so there’s nothing we can do to stop it. Stop bugging me, I need to refill the tank on my new Cadillac Escrapade, anyone got change for $1000?

See, I can do The Running-Man (from the 80’s) and the “Straw-man” too. I’m like Ambidextrous and stuff.

All of these arguements are about shifting blame and responsibility for all the ills of the world – to someone else. Anyone but us. It’s Them, always Them!

The real truth about being liberal is simply that you realize that we are all connected. Economically. Bio-chemically. Thermo-dynamically. What happens at the bottom of the ocean can change weather patterns across half the globe. What happens in a cave in Afghanistan can change an entire National pathology on the other side of the world. The truth about Liberals isn’t that we “Hate America First”, we love America’s promise and potential and are angered and disgusted when we see her fail to live up to that promise – that All Men Really Are Created Equal and that preserving and protecting those rights from government overreach – beside being “Really Hard Work” – is the primary goal of our nation,

With that view in mind we don’t fear or even really hate conservatives, we only hate what they’ve done to regress this nation back toward the type of totalitarian and repressives states that predated the Great Elightenment and the truly progressive vision that birthed this nation. Those regressive forces will always be there, but the tide of history is not on their side – it’s on ours.

We are the True Sons of Liberty (oh, look a Punk Rock reference!) – not them.

I don’t hate conservatives. I for one, pity them. They need help. (Treatment, Rehab, Deprogramming, a Colonic – anything!) Even if they don’t deserve it, certainly won’t seek it and won’t return it. If they honestly and openly ask for it, Liberals will provide it.

Does anyone believe conservatives would do the same?

Vyan

Authors Website: http://www.truth2powerproject.com

Authors Bio:
Born and Bred in South Central LA. I spent 12 years working in the IT Dept. for federal contractor Northrop-Grumman on classified and high security projects such as the B2 Bomber. After Northrop I became an IT consultant with the state of California in Sacramento and worked on projects with the Dept of Consumer Affairs and CalTrans, as well as projects for Kaiser Permanente in Oakland. Now living in Los Angeles on my own independant web design company.

commentbutton.jpg

MICHAEL MOORE TELLS IT LIKE IT IS IN HIS FIRST LIVE INTERVIEW IN TWO YEARS

9/11, Bin Laden, Rove

 tullycast1.jpgThis is the first 17 minutes of the show including the opening video and monologue plus Bill gets the first interview with Michael Moore since his movie “Sicko” premiered at the Cannes Film Festival.

Tags include: Michael Moore Bill Maher Sicko health insurance pharmaceutical doctor hospital coverage corporate greed patient Slovenia
Fahrenheit 9/11 Bowling For Columbine Roger And Me

  commentbutton.jpg

BILL MAHER LETS RON PAUL SPEAK ON REAL TIME'S FINAL SHOW

9/11, Bin Laden, Giuliani

tullycast1.jpgBill asks Ron Paul why Americans are dumb. Paul says that Republicans have lost their way. Nation-building, Woodrow Wilson and interventionism are all touched upon.

commentbutton.jpg

BILL MAHER "NAILS" HIS LAST NEW RULES FOR THE SEASON

9/11, Bin Laden

tullycast1.jpgI’ve posted the entire Bill Maher Real Time show from tonight, May 25th featuring Michael Moore, Ron Paul, P.J. O’Rourke and Ben Affleck.
PLUS
Bill really nails it when it comes to his New Rules for Friday May 25th…
Enjoy
NEW RULES::

commentbutton.jpg


BILL MAHER ASKS RICHARD ENGEL IF IT CAN GET WORSE IN IRAQ

Stories

BILL MAHER MAY 11TH 2007 PART 1

Bill’s opening monologue touches on the L.A.P.D. beatings in MacArthur Park, the fires in Griffith Park, Dick Cheney’s involvement with the D.C. prostitution scandal (Hint:Dusty Foggo/Duke Cunningham), and Tony “The Peoples Poodle” Blair.

Richard Engel live via satellite from Beirut Lebanon tells Bill that Iraqis are not on the American political time line vis-a-vis “SEPTEMBER”