Waldo’s Virginia Political Blogroll

A totally biased and unreasonable list of blogs that I think you might enjoy reading.

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The Buck Stops (Not) Here

Posted by Glade in December 3rd 2008  

In this interview with ABC’s Charlie Gibson, President George W. Bush blames the Iraq War on a failure of intelligence. For this president, it is always somebody else’s fault.

We all know now (and many of us argued then) that Bush had predetermined that he wanted to get Saddam and the talk of WMD was all designed to sell war to the American people. Now he blames it on faulty intelligence. I do too - on his. And the media’s. And ours.

A portion of the transcript:

Gibson: You’ve always said there’s no do-overs as president. If you had one –

Bush: The biggest regret of all the presidency has to have been the intelligence failure in Iraq. A lot of people put their reputations on the line and said, you know … the weapons of mass destruction is a reason to remove Saddam Hussein. It wasn’t just people in my administration, and um … You know, that’s not a do-over, but I wish the intelligence had been different, I guess.

Gibson: If the intelligence had been right, would there have been an Iraq war?

Bush: If he had had weapons of mass destruction, would there have been a war? Absolutely.

Gibson: No, if you had known he didn’t.

Bush: Oh, I see what you’re saying. Uh … You know, that’s an interesting question. That is a do-over I can’t do. It’s hard for me to speculate.

~~~

Oh hell, just watch it and listen to the weasel’s answers for yourself.

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Bill Richardson for Commerce

Posted by Glade in December 3rd 2008  

Today, President-elect Barack Obama tapped Bill Richardson as Secretary of Commerce. Richardson is currently Governor of New Mexico. An Hispanic, Richardson has also served in the House of Representatives, as Secretary of Energy, and as U.N. Ambassador.

In some administrations the Commerce Department is seen as second-tier, but Ron Brown, President Clinton’s first Secretary of Commerce, used it to promote American business around the globe. With his long resume, history of working across party lines, and the current recession, Bill Richardson will be a key player in the Obama Administration and our economic recovery. I thought he’d make a great VP candidate and am glad he is getting a prominent cabinet position.

A bristly footnote - Richardson had sported a beard which is now gone. In response to a reporter’s question, Obama said he thought it was a mistake for Richardson to get rid of it because it was part of his rugged western look. But, he then speculated that “it was scratchy when he kissed his wife, so he was forced to get rid of it.”

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Ideas for Change

Posted by Glade in December 3rd 2008  

“I will open the doors of government and ask you to be involved in your own democracy again.”  ~President-elect Barack Obama

Do you think the U.S. should have a single-payer health care system? What are your ideas for getting us out of this recession? Want to give the new administration your ideas on poverty, education, energy, Iraq, or anything else?

Click on VOTE NOW to support single payer health care. Once on the site you can post comments on that issue or go to other issues that you care deeply about.

We finally have a President who will listen. Are you talking?

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The Farm Team

Posted by Glade in December 3rd 2008  
Mary Sue Terry broke the mold (in both senses of the word) of Virginia politics when she was elected attorney general in 1985. The first female to hold that post in Virginia, Mary Sue was an important force in Virginia and Democratic politics during the 1980s and early 1990s. In politics timing can be everything - in 1993 she lost the Governor’s Mansion to George Allen during a time when Republicans and conservatives were surging in Virginia. After that loss (for her, for Democrats, and as it turned out, for the commonwealth), Mary Sue returned to her roots in rural Patrick County. She continued to make public appearances and spoke to many groups including a high school graduation here in the central Shenandoah Valley. But, her political involvement was very low key. The Roanoke Times has an interesting article on the political career and life of Mary Sue Terry.
Today, many Virginians would probably say “Mary Sue Who?” It has been 15 years since she left the bright lights of electoral politics. Virginia’s population has dramatically changed, too. I don’t have the numbers, but a significant portion of the voting age population is too young to remember her or they moved to Virginia in the years since Mary Sue was front page news.
Yes, timing is everything and lots has changed since 1993. Mary Sue Terry is today reemerging as a political force in Virginia. Many political observers thought her election in ‘85 signaled a new era of women in politics. Yes, some progress has been made as there are more women in local and state offices (see prior post). But, there have been limits - this year, for example, Virginia Democrats made gains in the House of Representatives and bumped off the one woman, Republican Thelma Drake, who had served there.
Mary Sue and a group of influential women have joined together to encourage and help aspiring Democratic women fulfill their political dreams. The Farm Team has a simple mission:

The goal of The Farm team is a simple one: recruit, develop and elect women to office. We hope this website will be a resource for women who aspire to hold elective office and for those who wish to support them.

Visit The Farm Team to learn about its origins, other women (and men) who are involved, upcoming regional meetings, and the resources they are bringing to the table. They are not just talk - as Mary Sue says:

This group is not in the business of tilting at windmills.

The Farm Team has picked one statewide candidate, Jody Wagner, as their first and most visible project. Wagner, a former Treasurer of Virginia and Secretary of Finance, is a candidate for Lt. Governor. Mary Sue might have cracked the glass ceiling in 1985, but Wagner would be just the second woman to hold statewide office. The Farm Team is also recruiting and nurturing candidates for school boards, boards of supervisors, and city councils. They are indeed serious about building a strong farm team that will change Virginia politics forever.

Cross-posted with permission from Coarse Cracked Corn.

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This ain’t your “average” recession

Posted by Glade in December 2nd 2008  

The National Bureau of Economic Research confirmed what most American already knew - the U.S. is, and has been, in a recession for nearly a year. History suggests that recessions typically last 3 to 12 months, so this one, which may not have hit bottom yet, is already far from typical.

From the New York Times Officials Vow to Act Amid Forecasts of Long Recession:

The United States economy officially sank into a recession last December, which means that the downturn is already longer than the average for all recessions since World War II, according to the committee of economists responsible for dating the nation’s business cycles.

In declaring that the economy has been in a downturn for almost 12 months, the National Bureau of Economic Research confirmed what many Americans had already been feeling in their bones.

But private forecasters warned that this downturn was likely to set a new postwar record for length and likely to be more painful than any recession since 1980 and 1981.

Read more of the grim story of markets sliding, credit crunching, consumers hitting the brakes, and the Fed Chairman Bernanke promising to use the “second arrow in our quiver…”

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President-elect Obama announces key members of his national security team

Posted by Glade in December 1st 2008  

PRESS RELEASE  ”President-elect Barack Obama and Vice President-elect Joe Biden officially announced key members of their national security team today: nominating Senator Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State, selecting Defense Secretary Robert Gates to remain as Secretary of Defense, nominating Eric Holder as Attorney General, nominating Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano as Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, nominating Susan Rice as Ambassador to the United Nations and selecting General Jim Jones, USMC (Ret) as National Security Adviser.”

Learn more about these appointments.

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Fiscal expansion vs deficits

Posted by Glade in December 1st 2008  

The numbers are indeed daunting. $700 billion to bail out financial institutions. A possible $25 billion package of aid to Detroit. President-elect Obama’s economic team is moving towards a huge public works spending project (that may finally get something done that the General Assembly couldn’t - build some Virginia roads.) Pretty soon these numbers add up to real money, all of it borrowed. Is the spending necessary to restart the economy worth the cost of debt to future generations?

In Deficits and the Future Paul Krugman argues that what is good in the short term is also good in the long haul. The greater danger lies in doing too little, not in doing too much.

The bottom line, then, is that people who think that fiscal expansion today is bad for future generations have got it exactly wrong. The best course of action, both for today’s workers and for their children, is to do whatever it takes to get this economy on the road to recovery.

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The incredible shrinking tent

Posted by Glade in November 30th 2008  

Eric Cantor (R-VA), the new Republican whip in the House of Representatives, clings to the notion that we are a “center-right” country. When asked about the GOP becoming an inclusive national party, he responds by talking about 401-Ks and tax cuts. It is hard to see how those issues build a party that has booted its own moderates and pushed everyone but WASPs out of the tent flaps. With Obama winning 62% of Asians, 67% of Hispanics, 95% of African-Americans, and 66% of the under 30 vote, simple demographics paint an ominous picture for the future of the GOP. Those, and other groups, demand a place at the table or they will be lost to the Republican Party for many election cycles.

Cantor wants to talk conservative economics (hypocrisy given government welfare for failing banks and companies), Below the fold, there is another group vying for the soul of the Republican Party. And it has little to do with Cantor’s vision.
In GOP Must Be a Christian Party, Rev. Buie states:

…religion has become the heart of conservatism and the Republican Party, while secularism has become the heart of liberalism and the Democratic Party.

Buie’s complete misread and misinterpretation of American history and government is appalling. For example, he clearly has ignored Article VI, Section 3 of the U.S. Constitution that states:

no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.

What Buie suggests is a Taliban mentality of government of, by, and for God. But, whose God? The good reverend gives us a few clues.

He tries to assert that the “full spread of Christianity” should want to be in the Republican Party. But, a close reading of the issues and Biblical interpretations Buie offers shows he’s really talking about an extremely fundamentalist and evangelical brand of Christianity. Buie would not consider most mainstream Protestant denominations “Christian.” Most who disagreed with his Biblical interpretations would likely be deemed “secularists” although they would believe themselves to the quite Christian.

Can Rep. Cantor and Rev. Buie both fit in this incredible shrinking pup tent?

I’m reminded of my Boy Scout days when we used “shelter halves” for backpacking. Shelter halves are exactly as they sound - half a tent roof that, when joined by buttons or snaps along the ridge line, forms a two-man pup tent. Shelter halves require cooperation and working together for a shared purpose.

It is easy to imagine the Cantor faction and the Buie faction each taking their own half and going separate ways. Perhaps if the rain and wind are hard enough they’ll find common ground and button the halves together. But, it is still a pup tent - with little room for others. Besides, it has no floor.

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Countdown: the myth of $70 per hour auto worker

Posted by Glade in November 28th 2008  

In his Worst Persons segment Keith takes on the stupidity of wsRadio.com and then the idiocy and hypocrisy of Glenn Beck who argues states should secede to protest the auto bailout. The Worst Person in the World is Andrew Ross Sorkin of the NYT who invented the myth of the $70/hour auto worker that is oft-repeated by the union bashing right wing talking heads. Keith gives Mr. Sorkin a lesson in truthiness in statistics.

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Will gutless Dems help repair the Bush legacy?

Posted by Glade in November 26th 2008  

Jonathan Turley doubts the Democrats have the balls to challenge the Bush Administration on torture. Rachel Maddow and Turley explore the possibility that the Bush Administration thinks Sweeping Pardons Are Unnecessary:

They [the Bush White House] know that the Democratic leadership will not allow criminal investigations or indictments. And in that way the Democrats will actually repair Bush’s legacy, because he will be able to say, “There was nothing stopping indictments or prosecutions, but a Democratic Congress and a Democratic White House didn’t think there was any basis for it.”

Turley:

its the indictment of all of us if we walk away from war crimes and just call for another commission.

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Cobalt6 Technical Notice

Posted by Glade in November 25th 2008  

Dear People and Nations of the World:

The United States of America, your quality supplier of ideals of liberty, equality, and democracy, would like to apologize for its 2001-2008 service outage.

The technical fault that led to this eight-year service interruption has been located, and the parts responsible for it were replaced Tuesday, November 4. Early tests of the newly-installed equipment indicate that it is functioning correctly, and we expect it to be fully functional by mid-January.

We apologize for any inconvenience caused by the outage, and we look forward to resuming full service - and hopefully even to improving it in years to come.

Thank you for your patience and understanding.

Sincerely,

The People of the United States of America

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From One Turkey to Another

Posted by Glade in November 25th 2008  

In this video from The Onion, President Bush pardons Scooter Libby in a giant turkey costume.

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Obama names his economic team

Posted by Glade in November 24th 2008  

President-elect Barack Obama named key members of his economic team today, totally upstaging comments made by President Bush and Treasury Secretary Paulson. The markets rose, in large part on Obama’s announcement.

Key members of the team include:

Tim Geithner - Secretary of the Treasury

Larry Summers - Director of the National Economic Council

Christine Romer - Chair of the Council of Economic Advisors

Melody Barnes- Director of the Domestic Policy Council

Below the fold, President-elect Obama’s prepared remarks as released.

Good morning.

The news this past week, including this morning’s news about Citigroup, has made it even more clear that we are facing an economic crisis of historic proportions. Our financial markets are under stress. New home purchases in October were the lowest in half a century. Recently, more than half a million jobless claims were filed, the highest in eighteen years - and if we do not act swiftly and boldly, most experts now believe that we could lose millions of jobs next year.

While we can’t underestimate the challenges we face, we also can’t underestimate our capacity to overcome them - to summon that spirit of determination and optimism that has always defined us, and move forward in a new direction to create new jobs, reform our financial system, and fuel long-term economic growth.

We know this won’t be easy, and it won’t happen overnight. We’ll need to bring together the best minds in America to guide us - and that is what I’ve sought to do in assembling my economic team. I’ve sought leaders who could offer both sound judgment and fresh thinking, both a depth of experience and a wealth of bold new ideas - and most of all, who share my fundamental belief that we cannot have a thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers; that in this country, we rise and fall as one nation, as one people.

Today, Vice President-Elect Biden and I are pleased to announce the nomination of four individuals who meet these criteria to lead our economic team: Timothy Geithner as Secretary of the Treasury; Lawrence Summers as the Director of our National Economic Council; Christina Romer as Chair of the Council of Economic Advisors; and Melody Barnes as Director of the Domestic Policy Council.

Having served in senior roles at Treasury, the IMF and the New York Fed, Tim Geithner offers not just extensive experience shaping economic policy and managing financial markets - but an unparalleled understanding of our current economic crisis, in all of its depth, complexity and urgency. Tim will waste no time getting up to speed. He will start his first day on the job with a unique insight into the failures of today’s markets - and a clear vision of the steps we must take to revive them.

The reality is that the economic crisis we face is no longer just an American crisis, it is a global crisis - and we will need to reach out to countries around the world to craft a global response. Tim’s extensive international experience makes him uniquely suited for this work. Growing up partly in Africa and having lived and worked throughout Asia; having served as Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs - one of many roles in the international arena; and having studied both Chinese and Japanese, Tim understands the language of today’s international markets in more ways than one.

Tim has served with distinction under both Democrats and Republicans and has a long history of working comfortably, and as an honest broker, on both sides of the aisle. With stellar performances and outstanding results at every stage of his career, Tim has earned the confidence and respect of business, financial and community leaders; members of Congress; and political leaders around the world - and I know he will do so once again as America’s next Treasury Secretary, the chief economic spokesman for my Administration.

Like Tim, Larry Summers also brings a singular combination of skill, intellect and experience to the role he will play in our Administration.

As undersecretary, deputy secretary, and then secretary of the Treasury, Larry helped guide us through several major international financial crises - and was a central architect of the policies that led to the longest economic expansion in American history, with record surpluses, rising family incomes and more than 20 million new jobs. He also championed a range of measures - from tax credits to enhanced lending programs to consumer financial protections - that greatly benefitted middle income families.

As a thought leader, Larry has urged us to confront the problems of income inequality and the middle class squeeze, consistently arguing that the key to a strong economy is a strong and growing middle class. This idea is the core of my own economic philosophy and will be the foundation for all of my economic policies.

And as one of the great economic minds of our time, Larry has earned a global reputation for being able to cut to the heart of the most complex and novel policy challenges. With respect to both our current financial crisis, and other pressing economic issues of our time, his thinking, writing and speaking have set the terms of the debate. I am glad he will be by my side, playing the critical role of coordinating my Administration’s economic policy in the White House - and I will rely heavily on his advice as we navigate the uncharted waters of this economic crisis.

As one of the foremost experts on economic crises - and how to solve them - my next nominee, Christina Romer, will bring a critically needed perspective to her work as Chair of my Council of Economic Advisors.

Christina is both a leading macroeconomist and a leading economic historian, perhaps best known for her work on America’s recovery from the Great Depression and the robust economic expansion that followed. Since 2003, she has been co-director of the National Bureau of Economic Research Monetary Economics program. She is also a member of the Bureau’s Business Cycle Dating Committee - the body charged with officially determining when a recession has started and ended - experience which will serve her well as she advises me on our current economic challenges.

Christina has also done groundbreaking research on many of the topics our Administration will confront - from tax policy to fighting recessions. And her clear-eyed, independent analyses have received praise from both conservative and liberal thinkers alike. I look forward to her wise counsel in the White House.

Finally, we know that rebuilding our economy will require action on a wide array of policy matters - from education and health care to energy and Social Security. Without sound policies in these areas, we can neither enjoy sustained economic growth nor realize our full potential as a people.

So I am pleased that Melody Barnes, one of the most respected policy experts in America, will be serving as Director of my Domestic Policy Council - and that she will be working hand-in-hand with my economic policy team to chart a course to economic recovery. An integral part of that course will be health care reform - and she will work closely with my Secretary of Health and Human Services on that issue.

As Executive Vice President for Policy at the Center for American Progress, Melody directed a network of policy experts dedicated to finding solutions for struggling middle class families. She also served as Chief Counsel to the great Senator Ted Kennedy on the Senate Judiciary Committee, working on issues ranging from crime to immigration to bankruptcy, and fighting tirelessly to protect civil rights, women’s rights and religious freedom.

Melody’s brilliant legal mind - and her long experience working to secure the liberties on which this nation was founded and secure opportunity for those left behind - make her a perfect fit for DPC Director.

I am grateful that Tim, Larry, Christina and Melody have accepted my nomination, and I look forward to working closely with them in the months ahead. And that work starts today, because the truth is, we don’t have a minute to waste.

Right now, our economy is trapped in a vicious cycle: the turmoil on Wall Street means a new round of belt-tightening for families and businesses on Main Street - and as folks produce less and consume less, that just deepens the problems in our financial markets. These extraordinary stresses on our financial system require extraordinary policy responses. And my Administration will honor the public commitments made by the current Administration to address this crisis.

Further, beyond any immediate actions we may take, we need a recovery plan for both Wall Street and Main Street - a plan that stabilizes our financial system and gets credit flowing again, while at the same time addressing our growing foreclosure crisis, helping our struggling auto industry, and creating and saving 2.5 million jobs - jobs rebuilding our crumbling roads and bridges, modernizing our schools, and creating the clean energy infrastructure of the twenty-first century. Because at this moment, we must both restore confidence in our markets - and restore the confidence of middle class families, who find themselves working harder, earning less, and falling further and further behind.

I have asked my economic team to develop recommendations for this plan, and to consult with Congress, the current Administration and the Federal Reserve on immediate economic developments over the next two months. I have requested that they brief me on these matters on a daily basis, and in the coming weeks, I will provide the American people and the incoming Congress with an overview of their initial recommendations. It is my hope that the new Congress will begin work on an aggressive economic recovery plan when they convene in early January so that our Administration can hit the ground running.

With our economy in distress, we cannot hesitate or delay. Our families cannot afford to keep on waiting and hoping for a solution. They cannot afford to watch another month of unpaid bills pile up, another semester of tuition slip out of reach, another month where instead of saving for retirement, they’re dipping into their savings just to get by.

Again, this won’t be easy. There are no shortcuts or quick fixes to this crisis, which has been many years in the making - and the economy is likely to get worse before it gets better. Full recovery won’t happen immediately. And to make the investments we need, we’ll have to scour our federal budget, line-by-line, and make meaningful cuts and sacrifices as well - something I’ll be discussing further tomorrow.

Despite all of this, I am hopeful about the future. I have full confidence in the wisdom and ingenuity of my economic team - and in the hard work, courage and sacrifice of the American people. And most of all, I believe deeply in the resilient spirit of this nation. I know we can work our way out of this crisis because we’ve done it before. And I know we will succeed once again if we put aside partisanship and politics and work together, and that is exactly what I intend to do as President.

Thank you, and I’m now happy to take questions.

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“…stop being a hater, big bro.”

Posted by Glade in November 23rd 2008  

Candice Gingrich takes on Newt’s hate rhetoric about “…a gay and secular fascism in this country that wants to impose its will on us…” in her open letter published on the Huffington Post: A Letter to My Brother Newt Gingrich:

Dear Newt,

I recently had the displeasure of watching you bash the protestors of the Prop 8 marriage ban to Bill O’Reilly on FOX News. I must say, after years of watching you build your career by stirring up the fears and prejudices of the far right, I feel compelled to use the words of your idol, Ronald Reagan, “There you go, again.”

However, I realize that you may have been a little preoccupied lately with planning your resurrection as the savior of your party, so I thought I would fill you in on a few important developments you might have overlooked.

The truth is that you’re living in a world that no longer exists. I, along with millions of Americans, clearly see the world the way it as — and we embrace what it can be. You, on the other hand, seem incapable of looking for new ideas or moving beyond what worked in the past.

Read the rest of Candice’s letter.

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Obama announces Economic Recovery Plan

Posted by Glade in November 23rd 2008  

President-elect Barack Obama’s announces an Economic Recovery Plan to create 2.5 million new jobs by Jan. 2011. There is more about the plan at change.gov.

From his weekly radio address:

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Pardon the Turkey?

Posted by Glade in November 20th 2008  

A classic clip from The West Wing as the president considers “pardoning the turkey.”

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No love for a bully

Posted by Glade in November 20th 2008  

I can’t add anything more to this…

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Terry McAuliffe to visit Waynesboro

Posted by Glade in November 20th 2008  

Terry McAuliffe has joined Creigh Deeds and Brian Moran in the race for the Democratic nomination for Governor. McAuliffe will be at Lynn’s Pancake House, 2105 W. Main Street, Waynesboro at 7:00 PM on Monday, November, 24.

A buffet will be served with your choice of meatloaf, baked chicken, or pork loin and gravy. $9.95 includes veggies, salad bar, and beverage. You may attend without dining. Please RSVP to waynesborodemocrats@gmail.com by Sunday at 8:00 PM if you plan to attend.

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News that didn’t make the news

Posted by Glade in November 19th 2008  

Project Censored, at Sonoma State University, conducts research on important national news stories that are underreported, ignored, misrepresented, or censored by the US corporate media. Visit Project Censored to nominate a story, buy Censored 2009, or to contribute. Below are the Top 25 Censored Stories for 2009:

  • #1. Over One Million Iraqi Deaths Caused by US Occupation
  • # 2 Security and Prosperity Partnership: Militarized NAFTA
  • # 3 InfraGard: The FBI Deputizes Business
  • # 4 ILEA: Is the US Restarting Dirty Wars in Latin America?
  • # 5 Seizing War Protesters’ Assets
  • # 6 The Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act
  • # 7 Guest Workers Inc.: Fraud and Human Trafficking
  • # 8 Executive Orders Can Be Changed Secretly
  • #9  Iraq and Afghanistan Vets Testify
  • # 10 APA Complicit in CIA Torture
  • # 11 El Salvador’s Water Privatization and the Global War on Terror
  • # 12 Bush Profiteers Collect Billions From No Child Left Behind
  • # 13 Tracking Billions of Dollars Lost in Iraq
  • # 14 Mainstreaming Nuclear Waste
  • # 15 Worldwide Slavery
  • # 16 Annual Survey on Trade Union Rights
  • # 17 UN’s Empty Declaration of Indigenous Rights
  • # 18 Cruelty and Death in Juvenile Detention Centers
  • # 19 Indigenous Herders and Small Farmers Fight Livestock Extinction
  • #  20 Marijuana Arrests Set New Record
  • # 21 NATO Considers “First Strike” Nuclear Option
  • # 22 CARE Rejects US Food Aid
  • # 23 FDA Complicit in Pushing Pharmaceutical Drugs
  • # 24 Japan Questions 9/11 and the Global War on Terror
  • # 25  Bush’s Real Problem with Eliot Spitzer
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    INDICTED: Dick Cheney, Alberto Gonzalez

    Posted by Glade in November 19th 2008  

    Vice President Dick Cheney and former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales have been indicted by a Willacy County, Texas grand jury. The presiding judge has not yet signed the indictment.

    The VP is charged with participating in an organized criminal activity related to his investment in the Vanguard Group. Vanguard holds financial interests in the private prison companies running the federal detention centers. The indictment alleges Cheney had a conflict of interest and “at least misdemeanor assaults” on detainees because of his link to companies.

    Gonzales is accused of using his position while in office to stop a 2006 investigation into abuses at one of the prisons run by a private group.

    As we anticipate a slew of pardons from the president over the next two months (I can almost see Scooter smiling from here) these indictments come too late… or do they? Remember President Ford pardoned Richard Nixon for offenses “he committed or may have committed…” before he could be indicted. One can picture Bush granting blank check pardons to Cheney, Gonzales, and others in his administration dating back to January of 2001.

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