Here’s a YouTube of Senate hearings on June 26, 2006, about the impact and importance of Doug Feith’s outfit in rigging the intelligence to mislead the American public about the war against Iraq. The Congress was misled as well. Who is ultimately responsible for this profound betrayal of trust? As Larry Wilkerson says: three words. The Vice President. Here’s a thought: is there any precedent for impeaching the vice-president?
Month: February 2007
The New Party of Lincoln?
As the Republicans base themselves in the heartland of Dixie, and exploit the current enclaves of cynical division and ugly bigotry, Obama coopts the greatest Republican president:
"The life of a tall, gangly, self-made Springfield lawyer tells us that a different future is possible. He tells us that there is power in words. He tells us that there is power in conviction. That beneath all the differences of race and region, faith and station, we are one people. He tells us that there is power in hope."
Yes there is. And, yes, Obama is helping.
All Right, Already
TaB still exists – barely.
Obama and the World
Mark Steyn makes a predictable jab at Barack Obama’s defense of his foreign policy credentials. Here’s what Obama said:
"My experience in foreign policy is probably more diverse than most others in the field. I mean, I’m somebody who has actually lived overseas, somebody who has studied overseas. You know, I majored in international relations."
There’s no question that Obama needs major work in foreign policy. But he is obviously better informed at this point than, say, George W. Bush was in February 1999. And Obama’s internationalist pedigree seems to me a golden opportunity for the United States.
I don’t think many Americans have fully absorbed yet what the Bush administration has done to America’s soft power abroad, to the moral reputation of America, to the respect that many around the world once had for America’s democratic institutions, even if they differed from U.S foreign policy. Bush’s torture and detention policies, his cringe-inducing diplomacy, his proud lack of interest in other cultures and societies has deeply weakened this country’s international clout. Electing a half-African president, with Hussein as a middle name, who attended school in a Muslim country: it’s almost a p.r. agent’s dream for America. It would instantly give this country a fresh start in the world after the disaster of the Bush-Cheney years. It isn’t enough: Obama will need skills and determination in the terror war. But soft power helps; and Obama would put it on steroids. As for youth, Tony Blair was 43 when he became prime minister; Obama would be 48. What’s the problem?
(Photo of Obama’s formal – and exhilarating – announcement today by Scott Olson/Getty.)
Yes, He Said It
The White House confirms Rove’s remark on immigration, one of the biggest gaffes in a long, long time. The MSM has nothing on it. Losers. Can you imagine if Pelosi had said it? Drudge would have a siren.
Rudy’s Solution
Giuliani is not, pace the NYT, gently shifting to the "right" on abortion and marriage. As best I can tell – and Ann Althouse has done more spadework here – he’s simply favoring a federalist answer to divisive, difficult, social and moral questions. As readers know, that’s what I’ve been favoring for quite a while as a small-c conservative truce in the culture wars. There truly is no need to forge a national consensus on issues like abortion and marriage. That’s why I’ve long opposed Roe and supported states’ rights on the issue of marriage equality. I don’t think Alabama is ready to have the same rights as California or Massachusetts. I feel sure they will one day, just as they eventually dropped slavery and bans on inter-racial marriage. The South is a very conservative place. Forcing them to move more quickly on issues of basic human dignity has historically led to even worse spasms of hatred, as Virginia has shown in the last decade in its vicious legal campaign against gay people.
It seems to me that if the conservative coalition is not going to fracture completely, then federalism is its only option. That way, centrists like McCain, Romney and Giuliani can actually become Republican presidents. Romney, of course, has tried to solve this problem by the most blatant, ugly and naked piece of political cynicism since Hillary focus-grouped her hair. But Giuliani is smarter. For him to adopt the anti-gay bigotry of the GOP base would not be smart politics. Ditto on abortion, where his position is mine: a personal abhorrence for abortion but a reluctant acceptance of its legality in the first trimester, combined with serious efforts to reduce its incidence. Opting to use federalism as the mechanism to allow the social conservatives to support him on other issues like national security and a more competent government, while personally supporting women’s freedom and gay dignity, is extremely smart politics.
I think Rudy is the best and most viable candidate the Republicans now have. Scandal may still derail him; but his tolerance, sense of fun, respect for alternative views on abortion, and connection with urban America should be regarded as assets, not liabilities for an increasingly marginalized GOP. Sure: appoint judges who think poorly of Roe. But let the states decide the substantive policy decisions on marriage and life.
And give McCain the Pentagon. They need him.
(Photo: Nicholas Roberts/AFP.)
Soda Nostalgia
I still haven’t quite recovered from losing Tab. But I’d forgotten all about Surge. Someone with too much time on their hands documents a love affair with defunct sodas. Pepsi Raging Razzberry? Yep, it existed.
The View From Your Window
The Constitution and Cheney
Sandy Levinson wonders whether there is anything to be done about the risk of Dick Cheney becoming president.
Should our defective Constitution be amended to allow the removal of a vice president whenever, in the opinion of Congress, (s)he has demonstrated good cause for doubt about the capacity to fill the Oval Office? Many persons have attacked my argument for bounding a President on a "no-confidence" vote because, among other things, it would be destabilizing. I disagree, but reasonable arguments can be found on both sides. Why would any serious person, though, believe that it would be destabilizing to bounce a demented, delusional, quasi-fascistic vice-president whose habitation of the White House and gain of the vast powers of the presidency with regard to foreign policy and military affairs would quite literally threaten us all?
A more salient question is: what would be the real difference in policy between Dick Cheney being vice-president as he now is and his formally occupying the Oval Office? We may have to wait for history to tell us.
Blacks vs Gays
African-Americans are far more homophobic than any other racial grouping in society. That goes for the young as well, according to this new survey, where hostility to gay people is almost double that of young whites and hispanics. Karl Rove was onto something.



