GOP Chair of House Ethics Committee Under Suspicion

Seattle Times:

Rep. Doc Hastings, already under fire as chairman of the stalled House ethics committee, accepted a $7,800 trip to England in 2000 from a company he championed for a multibillion-dollar contract at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, records released by an advocacy group yesterday show.

In addition, other records released yesterday by a political Web site show that Hastings, a Republican from Pasco, did not file a required travel report for a 2004 trip to a resort on Stuart Island, B.C. That was paid for by another company also working at Hanford.

Hastings has been under fire for not scheduling hearings on ethics allegations against House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. DeLay is accused of accepting a trip paid for by lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who is under investigation over allegations that he defrauded clients of millions of dollars.

For the past two weeks, Democrats have been trying to link Hastings to Abramoff and the lobbyist’s former employer, Preston Gates & Ellis, an influential law and lobbying firm based in Seattle.

Jacksonville Finally Justifies Its Existence

Did the Super Bowl being held in Jacksonville, my home base, make me proud? In a word, no.

Did Lynard Skynard or Limp Bizkit make me pround? Nah.

Do I drink Maxwell House? Not unless it’s on sale.

But I’m busting out about Jacksonville now, in light of the recent announcement by the newly formed Christian Alliance for Progress. The group speaks for the rest of us, the Christians who have been shouted out since being double-Bushed in Florida, the ones who understand the important thing about Jesus was love, and refuse to be lumped in with those red-faced people who use Jesus as a club on those they judge morally inferior.

The group introduced itself at a press conference yesterday.

WJXT-TV 4:

“This organization has been formed to mobilize and give voice to Christians who have been alienated by the extreme political agenda of certain elements of the religious right,” [Group Founder Patrick] Mrotek said. “The mission of the Christian Alliance for Progress is to reclaim Christianity and transform American politics through action based on our values.”

…”We’re here because we can no longer stand by and watch people speak hatred, division, war and greed in the name of our faith,” Mrotek said. “We’re here because Christianity is being used by radical leaders of the religious right as they seek to marginalize gay and lesbian people; to criminalize desperate, pregnant women; to suppress scientific information and honest information about human reproduction and replace them with ignorance.”

The site is packed with great stuff, including a declaration you can sign. Check it out.

Karl Rove Smears Anti-War Conservatives Too, But Don’t Expect Mainstream Media to Notice

There was nothing off the cuff or accidental about Karl Rove’s statement Wednesday night in which he smeared liberals as being supporters of terrorists because they do not support the war in Iraq.

The comments were intended to light the firestorm that has ensued. Rove knew how the reaction would play out: Liberals would be outraged, conservatives would smirk with satisfaction and the media would report it all pretending it doesn’t know a lie from the truth.

Rove also knew that there is an embedded false element to his bombast (of course) that could cause his whole statement to blow back in his face, in the unlikely even the media – or, God knows, the Democrats – were to notice it.

It is very simple: Liberals weren’t the only ones who opposed the war. In fact, many very well known Republicans oppopsed the war. Some even supsect the elder President Bush believed that taking out Saddam was ill advised. Speaking ostensibly for himself, Bush’s friend and factotum Brent Scrowcroft said as much publicly before the invasion.

Here is a quick round-up of the antiwar conservatives whom Karl Rove, speaking for President George W. Bush, smeared by inference with his invective against Americans who opposed the war in Iraq:

Pat Buchanan, writing in American Cause on Wednesday (June 22, 2005): “From President Bush’s Axis of Evil speech in January 2002 to the invasion in March 2003, some of us argued vehemently and ceaselessly against going to war. We saw no connection between Saddam Hussein and 9-11. We saw no threat from a nation unable even to shoot down a single U.S. plane during 40,000 sorties in the previous decade. We warned that an occupation of Iraq would create our own Lebanon. And so it has.”

William F. Buckley, writing in the New York Times on June 29, 2004,the “godfather of the conservative movement, said, “If I knew then what I know now about what kind of situation we would be in, I would have opposed the war.”

Bob Novak stated his position against the war several times on CNN’s Crossfire.

Brent Scowcroft, national security adviser under Presidents Gerald Ford and George Bush Sr., said “Don’t attack Saddam. An attack on Iraq at this time would seriously jeopardize, if not destroy, the global counter terrorist campaign we have undertaken.”

Rep. John J. Duncan, (R-TN), speaking on the floor of the House of Represenatives on May 19, 2005: “There never was anything conservative about the war in Iraq. I said from the start that it would mean massive foreign aid, huge deficit spending, and that it was not far to place almost all the entire burden of enforcing U.N. resolutions on our taxpayers and our military. Conservatives have traditionally been the biggest critics of the U.N., and the worst part of all, of course, is all the deaths.All to bring do not an evil man, but one whose military budget was 2/10ths of 1 percent of ours and who was no threat to us whatsoever.”

Dick Armey, former Majority Leader (R-TX) in the House of Representatives, quoted in the New York Times on August 9, 2002, said: “I don’t believe that America will justifiably make an unprovoked attack on another nation. It would not be consistent with what we have been as a nation or what we should be as a nation.”

Charley Reese, according Rep. Duncan, a staunch conservative… wrote that a U.S. attack on Iraq: “is a prescription for the decline and fall of the American empire. Overextension � urged on by a bunch of rabid intellectuals who wouldn’t know one end of a gun from another � has doomed many an empire. Just let the United States try to occupy the Middle East, which will be the practical result of a war against Iraq, and Americans will be bled dry by the costs in both blood and treasure.”

Paul Craig Roberts, according Rep. Duncan, who was one of the highest-ranking Treasury Department officials under President Reagan and now a nationally-syndicated conservative columnist, wrote: “an invasion of Iraq is likely the most thoughtless action in modern history.”

James Webb, according Rep. Duncan, a hero in Vietnam and President Reagan’s Secretary of the Navy, wrote: “The issue before us is not whether the United States should end the regime of Saddam Hussein, but whether we as a nation are prepared to occupy territory in the Middle East for the next 30 to 50 years.”

Tom Pauken, a Vietnam veteran who served as a Reagan Administration official and the chairman of the Republican Party of Texas, in a speech at the Foreign Policy Conference in Chicago,in the spring of 2005: “Have we seriously considered the human and material costs to our nation of the pursuit of a foreign policy that seeks to impose our values on the rest of the world? Have we really understood the long term consequences of the abandonment of our traditional view that American foreign policy should be guided by what is in our national interest..?”

Justin Raimondo, an anti-war conservative, who edits the site Antiwar.com, wrote on March 22, 2003, that he had been included in a derisive article about antiwar conservatives written by President Bush’s former bitch-boy, David Frum, an uber patriotic American who is Canadian, that was published on March 19, 2003, in the National Review Online (the article has been removed from the server):

[Frum wrote,] “You may know the names of these antiwar conservatives. Some are famous: Patrick Buchanan and Robert Novak. Others are not: Llewellyn Rockwell, Samuel Francis, Thomas Fleming, Scott McConnell, Justin Raimondo, Joe Sobran, Charley Reese, Jude Wanniski, Eric Margolis, and Taki Theodoracopulos.”

We are guilty, says Frum, of nothing less than sedition:

“They have made common cause with the left-wing and Islamist antiwar movements in this country and in Europe. They deny and excuse terror. They espouse a potentially self-fulfilling defeatism. They publicize wild conspiracy theories. And some of them explicitly yearn for the victory of their nation’s enemies.”

Conservative Christians Picketing Military Funerals for Heroes Killed in Iraq

Why do conservative Christians like Rev. Fred Phelps hate the U.S. military?

Six followers of the Baptist preacher from Topeka, Kansas, traveled to Iowa on Wednesday, June 22, 2005, to picket the funeral of a soldier who was killed in the line of duty in Iraq.

While 600 people mourned the loss of Army Spc. Casey Byers at the Iowa National Guard Armory in Denison, [about] 50 yards away…six protesters held signs that said such things as “God blew up the troops.” All six were relatives of the Rev. Fred Phelps of Westboro Baptist Church in Kansas. They contend that God is punishing the United States for bombing Phelps’ church a decade ago. The group has held similar protests at soldiers’ funerals in Idaho, New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Illinois. It plans to go next to Kentucky.”

Rev. Phelps – who made national headlines when he picketed the funeral of Matthew Shepherd, a young man who was viciously murdered in Wyoming because he was gay – told a local paper in Iowa:

“We’re going to picket it… We’re picketing to preach the true nature of what’s going on here, that these IEDs (Improvised Explosive Devices) are specific methods of the Almighty… because he’s punishing them (the United States military) for bombing the WBC [Westboro Baptist Church].

Phelps apparently sent a flyer to a local television station, KTIV, announcing his intention to picket at Byers’ funeral:

“When his body is returned from Iraq where he was killed … by an IED – like the IED fags used to bomb Westboro Baptist Church … attempting to stop WBC’s preaching.”

The local paper also said, “Westboro Baptist Church has gained a nationwide reputation for its stance on homosexuals, African-Americans and other religious groups.”

Phelps claims Byers’ death is directly linked to the bombing of their church 14 years ago.

“You can’t set a bomb off at the church of Jesus Christ and not expect any retaliation to happen. Each IED that kills a soldier is a direct intervention from God,” Phelps said.

“In other words, each (soldier) has died for this nation’s sins…”

Soldiers will continue to die because of the WBC bombing, and because they live in a country that is supportive of the homosexual lifestyle, Phelps and his daughter said.

Bartnett said Byers wasn’t homosexual, and doesn’t understand what WBC’s stance on homosexuality has to do with the fallen soldier.

“He was related to this bombing (of the WBC church), because he’s a part of this evil nation (that supports homosexuality),” Phelps said. “Anybody who doesn’t understand that is deaf, dumb and blind.

Compounding the tragedy for the Byers family, the Des Moines Register reports that Casey Byers’ brother, “Spc. Justin “Paul” Byers, 19, wrote a letter he was going to read at his older brother’s funeral. But he died before he could read the note. Officials say he committed suicide when he was hit and killed by a truck Monday night.”

Polls Are Down So Karl Rallies the Base

“Liberals saw the savagery of the 9/11 attacks and wanted to prepare indictments and offer therapy and understanding for our attackers. Conservatives saw the savagery of 9/11 and the attacks and prepared for war… Conservatives saw what happened to us on 9/11 and said we will defeat our enemies. Liberals saw what happened to us and said we must understand our enemies… No more needs to be said about the motives of liberals.”

Karl Rove, spokesman for George W. Bush, at the New York’s Conservative Party annual dinner, on Wednesday, June 22, 2005.

Big Cypress, Big Scam, Little Justice

According to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, or PEER, an official report from the Department of Interior’s Inspector General let stand a $120 million rip-off of the public over a land deal in Florida. In 2002, the Department of the Interior paid that sum to the Collier family (Collier County is named for the family patriarch, Baron Collier) for its gas and oil holdings in the Big Cypress National Preserve, located on the western edge of the Everglades.

Because the Collier clan are in tight with both Jeb and George, they qualified for a sum that was more than 12 times the amount the supposed energy holdings were actually worth. The BIG buyout was announced at a May 2002 White House ceremony intended to bolster the Bush bros’ environmental creds. It is notable that no significant oil or gas reserves have ever been found in Florida, mainly because it is formed primarily of oolitic limestone and spent most of the last hundred million years under water.

The nearly three-year investigation did find that Interior Secretary Gale Norton placed one of her top aides, Ann Klee (now the General Counsel for the EPA) in charge of closing the deal but made no other mention of Norton except to “commend” her for actions taken after another, similar land exchange scandal in Utah. Instead, Earl Devaney, the Interior Inspector General, repeatedly cited unnamed “political appointees” or vague forces. One key but typical passage of the IG report reads as follows:

“Exploiting a combination of public policy, politics, and environmentalism, which was being fueled by the demoralization of career DOI employees, at one extreme, and synchophantical enabling, at the other, [Collier Resources Company] took complete advantage of a negotiating environment weighted heavily in its favor.”

PEER noted that beside the enormous payout, the deal also ran counter to President Bush’s drive to increase energy production on public lands and the administration’s moratorium on parkland purchases.

Congress has yet to appropriate the dough, though, so the deal’s still in limbo.

Goodbye, PBS & NPR

Unfrickin’ believable.

They did it.

MSNBC:

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, already embroiled in controversy over allegations of a liberal-leaning bias in PBS programming, chose a former Republican Party co-chairman Thursday as its president and chief executive.

Patricia S. Harrison, the assistant secretary of state for educational and cultural affairs, was selected following three days of closed-door meetings by the corporation’s board of directors.

…In a letter to Tomlinson, Sens. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., and others expressed dismay at the expected appointment of Harrison.

“We find it astonishing that Ms. Harrison, given her former prominence as a partisan political figure, would even be considered as a candidate for a job that demands that the occupant be non-political,” the senators said in their letter.

Disney: “You Were Still Boycotting Us?”

If holding your breath until you’re red in the face and stamping your foot real hard doesn’t work – and you’re a Baptist – just pretend it did and find something else to be pissed off about.

Orlando Sentinel:

The Southern Baptist Convention voted to end its eight-year boycott of the Walt Disney Co. on Wednesday, an implicit acknowledgment that its “family values” campaign failed to bring the entertainment giant to its knees.

Officials of the nation’s largest Protestant denomination, completing its two-day annual gathering in Nashville, Tenn., put the best face they could on the vote.

…The convention, meeting in Dallas in 1997, voted to boycott all parts of the Disney empire, from theme parks to movies, television shows and networks, books and retail items. The resolution cited a departure from the company’s “family values” tradition, in particular, its support of gay days at Disney theme parks and its offer of health benefits to same-sex partners of employees.

However, throughout the boycott, no national financial analyst was able to say the effort had any impact on the company, and analysts were indifferent to Wednesday’s news. Some were unaware the boycott was still in effect.

The company didn’t even know the boycott was still on until the holy announced it was over. How embarrassing.

But not to be discouraged by the fizzled attack on Disney, the righteous quickly regrouped and decided to go after our beleaguered public schools. After all, there are just not enough people trying to stick their noses there.

Delegates also approved a compromise resolution dealing with homosexuality in public schools. Anti-gay resolutions are a staple of Southern Baptist Conventions, and one had been put forward before this year’s gathering calling on Baptists to withdraw their children from public schools.

Instead, the measure that passed Wednesday encourages parents to investigate their children’s public schools to determine whether they are too accepting of homosexuality.

“Homosexual activists and their allies are devoting substantial resources and using political power to promote the acceptance among schoolchildren of homosexuality as a morally legitimate lifestyle,” the resolution says.

Too bad that one about just removing Baptist children from public schools failed. If these folks want their children taught Baptist dogma, they should send them to Baptist schools, rather than try to make public schools conform to their various viewpoints. It seems like life would be more pleasant for everyone.

Das Guber Is Dissed During Commencement Speech at Alma Mater

Faculty members turned their backs on Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger while he gave the commencement speech last week at his alma mater, Santa Monica College. Marc Cooper from the LA Weekly was in the stands:

As I watched the governor give the commencement address at Santa Monica College, I started to wonder if Arnold, and his political handlers, have completely lost touch with reality.

I emphasize the word “watched” instead of listened because the jeering and hissing and booing and chanting were so overwhelming that neither I nor the couple of thousand graduating students and their families could actually hear much of what he said.

And, frankly, the catcalls (including the sewer-level sing-song Spanish jeer “culero” [asshole]) were more interesting than the text of the 15-minute address that Arnie struggled to finish. Here we were on the first campaign day of a five-month run-up to a November 8 special election that, according to the governor, is so crucial to our future it’s worth its $50 million to $80 million cost and worth holding a year before regularly scheduled balloting. But what was the governor’s chosen topic? Well, himself, silly!

Talk about girlie-men. Arnold plain didn’t have the walnuts to as much as broach any of the issues raised by the special election he decreed the day before: the state budget, redistricting or the dreaded e-word – education. Instead, Schwarzenegger clumsily droned out a canned Horatio Algerish homily about how he hard he worked to become a world-class bodybuilder, an internationally beloved movie star (and something far less of a politician). “I never lost sight of my goal,” was the tin-plated advice from the governor now threatening to further shrink state education spending.

He either chickened out completely on arguing his new crusade or he’s so detached from ground-level politics that he still believes he can skate by as a controversial governor plagued with plunging popularity ratings by rolling out one more vacuous celebrity-driven appearance. Pretty pathetic either way.