Quote for the Day

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"They kidnap 10 Sunnis, they get ransom on five, and kill them all, in each big kidnap operation they make at least $50,000, it’s the best business in Baghdad," – a Shia man close to the Mahdi Army, in the Guardian.

Of course, it’s actually quite hopeful to think that the sectarian murders and kidnapping are motivated in part by financial gain. Better than religious zeal – because it can be bought off. But the enmeshment of the police and the militias in Baghdad is now complete. Their interaction with the Iraqi "national" army is routine but not universal. From a Mahdi Army warrior:

"We have specific units that we work with where members of the Mahdi Army are in command. We conduct operations together. We can’t ask any army unit to come with us, we just ask the units that are under the control of our men. The police are all under our control, we ask them to help or inform them that shooting will take place in a street and it involves the Mahdi Army, and that’s it."

(Photo: Mohammed Sawaf/AFP/Getty.)

You Can Say That Again

David Frum breaks with the official line over Maher Arar:

The Arar case should raise some belated red flags over the real value and true purposes of all this Syrian "co-operation."

You think? There’s some conflict between declaring Syria outside the diplomatic pale for negotiations but fine for outsourcing torture? Amazing insights these neocons have.

The Arrogance of Cheney

After his patently unhinged appearance with Wolf Blitzer last week, one wonders how much longer the vice-president’s increasingly bizarre assertions of secrecy and authority will be tolerated in Washington. Check out this post from David Kurtz. Money quote:

The Vice President of the United States refuses to divulge who works in his office. Rozen’s article provides an estimate of 88 persons on the VP’s staff, which I take to mean that the OVP won’t even say how many people are on staff. These are people on the public payroll. Wouldn’t you say the public is entitled to know?

Vive La Resistance

"Don’t take offense personally if I get mad at Congress. It’s important for us to realize we lost, and there are significant reasons that happened, but it isn’t because conservatives were rejected. But it’s because we rejected the conservative philosophy in this country … If the promise of pork and more programs is the way Republicans think they’ll regain the majority, then they’ve got a problem," – Jeb Bush, finally stating the obvious. Maybe he’ll let his brother in on this one of these days, as well.

“Cootie Vibes”

Not my most eloquent moment, I’m afraid, but it seems to have hit a nerve:

Your sentiments today regarding Hillary on the Chris Matthews Show match mine exactly. I’ve actually been considering voting for Hillary over the past few weeks given her hawkish foreign policy positions and her DLC-style fiscally prudent, socially tolerant domestic policy. I would support Rudy and McCain over her given the terror this decade-long GOP voter feels when envisioning complete Democratic control over Washington, but if a charlatan like Mitt Romney or a theocon like Sam Brownback were to win the GOP nomination, Hillary on paper would start to look pretty good.

Then I saw the clip in which she announced her exploratory committee, and you’re absolutely right: the "cooties" came back. In a rush of nostalgic animosity, the visceral distate for Hillary Rodham that I cultivated during the ’90s when coming of age politically as a libertarian-style conservative returned. If anyone could "get the band back together" on the right for just one more election, it’s her. She’d be the greatest gift the Dems could give to a collapsing GOP.