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"Thanks, Honey. Now Shut Up."

Sometimes, it's better to just cop a plea and not put up a fight.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  31 January 2004
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Kerry: No Child Left Out Of The Back Seat Of A Car

Could President Bush have been setting up Sen. John Kerry for a debate on morality and kids when he delivered his State of the Union and said this:

To encourage right choices, we must be willing to confront the dangers young people face -- even when they're difficult to talk about. Each year, about 3 million teenagers contract sexually-transmitted diseases that can harm them, or kill them, or prevent them from ever becoming parents. In my budget, I propose a grassroots campaign to help inform families about these medical risks. We will double federal funding for abstinence programs, so schools can teach this fact of life: Abstinence for young people is the only certain way to avoid sexually-transmitted diseases. (Applause.)

A look at Kerry's voting record over at Project Vote Smart comes up with this. In 1996, he voted to turn thumbs down on so much as $75 million for abstinence education for kids.

But Kerry could counter with this: While he doesn't care if kids have sex, he absolutely, positively doesn't want them kicking back with a cigarette when they're done, according to this vote.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  31 January 2004
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NY Times Correction Du Jour

Gridlock in the thinking over at the Times' TV Weekend:

The TV Weekend column yesterday about the political comedian Dennis Miller and his new talk show referred incorrectly in some copies to the background of Adm. James Stockdale, whose performance as a vice-presidential candidate was a discussion topic. The admiral ran as an independent in 1992 with Ross Perot, not as a Republican in 1996 with John McCain, who was not a nominee.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  31 January 2004
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With Apologies To Jim Henson

What if Howard Dean was a Muppet?

By Ed Moltzen  ·  30 January 2004
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Another Democratic Congressman On Iraq

U.S. Rep Steve Israel of Long Island just returned from visiting Iraq, and sent this note to his constituents:

First, the morale, dedication and professionalism of our troops is extraordinary. As I have said often, in America we have the right to agree with policy to go to war, to disagree or to remain silent. But we have a profound obligation to support our troops when they are deployed overseas and when they return home.

Second, serious challenges remain. One general told me, "My job is to maintain security, but security is more than just military power. Maintaining security and stability involves governance, rebuilding infrastructure, democratization and economic development. All these things help us maintain security."

Later, while flying in a Blackhawk helicopter over Tikrit, the general told me how he spends most of his time promoting security by setting up town halls, building police forces, organizing women’s and school groups, and teaching people how to start small businesses. Combat was "hard power." The general now deploys "soft power.”

To truly accomplish our mission in Iraq, to demonstrate to the world
that the Middle East can engender democracy and not dictatorship,
prosperity and not poverty, education and not indoctrination, we will need to
provide our troops with the resources they need: hard power as well as
soft power.

It sounds less messy and more gritty than some have characterized it. And, in all honesty, it sounds like it took longer to reconstruct the South Bronx after the urban decay of the mid-to-late '70s than it's taking to reconstruct Iraq.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  30 January 2004
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The Gladiator Gets A Boo Boo

This just in:

UNIVERSAL CITY, Calif., Jan. 30 /PRNewswire/ -- Russell Crowe sustained a minor injury -- a dislocation with damage in his shoulder -- while being trained in boxing for his upcoming role in Universal Pictures/Miramax Films/Imagine Entertainment's "Cinderella Man." He will immediately undergo arthroscopic debridement and repair surgery in Australia, followed by intense physiotherapy.

Although this is the same shoulder that Mr. Crowe injured while training for "Flora Plum," the previous repairs are fully intact; this current injury has affected a different area of the shoulder.

Ron Howard is directing the movie, so it shouldn't be that bad. Still, it's the first time in recent memory when a shoulder dislocation has been cause for a statement to the media.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  30 January 2004
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Spring Offensive Or Not, State Says To Stay Away From Pakistan

There may or may not be a military spring offensive planned for the Pakistan-Afghanistan region - where Osama bin Laden is thought to be hiding - but the State Department is warning Americans to take cover if they go there:

The Department of State continues to warn U.S. citizens to defer non-essential travel to Pakistan due to ongoing concerns about the possibility of terrorist activity directed against American citizens and interests there.

The U.S. Embassy in Islamabad and the U.S. Consulates in Karachi , Lahore , and Peshawar continue to operate at reduced staffing levels. Family members of official Americans assigned to all four posts in Pakistan were ordered to leave the country in March 2002 and have not been allowed to return.

Al-Qaida and Taliban elements continue to operate inside Pakistan , particularly along the porous border region. Their presence, coupled with that of indigenous sectarian and militant groups in Pakistan , requires that all Americans in or traveling through Pakistan take appropriate security measures.

Continuing tensions in the Middle East also increase the possibility of violence. As security has tightened at official U.S. facilities, terrorists and their sympathizers have demonstrated the willingness and capability to attack more vulnerable targets, including facilities where Americans are generally known to congregate or visit, such as hotels, clubs, restaurants, places of worship, schools, or outdoor recreation events.

Most terror warnings are daunting things to read, but if this is a pre-cursor to any major action to get bin Laden, many people would consider that a good thing. Keep your fingers crossed.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  30 January 2004
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Comedy and Comedy Tonight on "Hardball?"

The daily newsletter that MSNBC's Hardball sends out, with show notes, tells us this is coming up tonight:

Tonight you'll want to tune in to the show just to see our exclusives with fmr. Dean campaign manager Joe Trippi and Saturday Night Live comedian Darrell Hammond (he's the guy who does all the Hardball spoofs!)...

Plus, we've got a political roundtable with fmr. Senator/New Zealand
ambassador/presidential candidate/current Dean surrogate Carol Mosely
Braun, USA Today's Walter Shapiro & Hardball Briefing subscriber/Batchelor
& Alexander fill-in/MSNBC analyst/another unnamed competitor network
political analyst/Congressional Quarterly columnist/Friend of Mortman/Fmr. top Hotliner/Did I miss anything? Craig Crawford....He's in Phoenix

Will Chris Matthews ask the tough question about whether Trippi personally profited from running Dean's ad campaign? He'll have the chance to ask, anyway.

What'll be funnier? Trippi's appearance, Darrell Hammond's impersonations, or Carol Mosely Braun explaining how she feels now that Howard Dean's camapaign tanked within days of her endorsing him?

By Ed Moltzen  ·  30 January 2004
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GDP Watch: Perspective

The growth of the Gross Domestic Product is slowing down, and that's bumming the market out. But if you put it into perspective, the economy is actually peforming better than it did when President Clinton handed it over to President Bush.

According to the Bureau of Economic Advisors, these are how the numbers compare between the two administrations: (Note: The BEA posts them online under a weird .BEA file that may not work with every browser.)

The last four quarterly GDP numbers under the Clinton Administration:

Q1 2000: 1 percent
Q2 2000: 6.4 percent
Q3 2000: -0.5 percent
Q4 2000: 2.1 percent

The last four quarterly GDP numbers under the current Bush Administration:

Q1 2003: 2 percent
Q2 2003: 3.1 percent
Q3 2003: 8.2 percent
Q4 2003: 4 percent

So, comparatively speaking, the economy is showing more strength than it did during President Clinton's last year. If that's the result of tax cuts, as opposed to tax increases, it may be hard to fight the president's tax policy for the time being.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  30 January 2004
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California Law and Order Deficit (Update)

From the LAPD, this story is weird and more than a bit creepy:

LOS ANGELES POLICE DEPARTMENT PRESS RELEASE Tuesday, January 27, 2004

"Detectives Seek Additional Sexual Assault Victims"

Los Angeles: On Tuesday, January 27, 2004, detectives from the Los Angeles Police Department, Robbery-Homicide Division, Rape Special Section, arrested Werner Heinrich Carpenter (A.K.A Henry Carpenter) for two drug-induced sexual assaults that occurred in 2003. The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office filed twelve felony counts against Carpenter for charges that include sexual assault of a drugged or unconscious person. A search warrant of Carpenter’s residence revealed digital photographs of nude, unconscious females, whose identities are still unknown.
carpenter.jpg

Werner Heinrich Carpenter is described as a 48 year-old male Caucasian, 5’11", 170 lbs, bald head, hazel eyes. He is a school teacher and a part-time stand-up comedian. He resides in the City of Tarzana, and is known to frequent bars in the West Valley Area of Los Angeles.

Part-time stand-up comedian? How many gigs will he get now? Look at the guy (photo at right). How many gigs did he get before this?

By Ed Moltzen  ·  30 January 2004
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NY Times Correction Du Jour, Special Edition

A minor - but noteworthy - change on today's New York Times' correction page online. The paper now includes hyperlinks to the stories it corrects, so you can read right away the original story with the correction at the end.

The paper still makes mistakes, though, like this one:

An article in Business Day on Wednesday about the scene at the courthouse where Martha Stewart is on trial referred incorrectly to the presence of Barbara Walters. She was there as a reporter for ABC, not as a supporter of Ms. Stewart.

(Article: The Fervor of the Faithful, the Silence in the Annex)

Barbara Walters and Martha Stewart appear to be at more of the same cocktail parties than vodka and tonic. The story actually said Babara was there as a "friend" of Martha Stewart. It seems not many celebrities are bragging about their friendship with the home economics diva these days.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  30 January 2004
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Spendaholic?

Commerce Secretary Don Evans did an online Q&A today at the White House web site, and tried to put President Bush's current spending strategy into perspective:

Jon, from Queens writes: Does the record deficit worry you? How will it be paid off and by whom? evans.jpg

Don Evans
Thanks for your question Jon. Budget deficits are appropriate and
understandable in war or recession and we've had both. The current deficit is
manageable and we are determined to bring it down. It is projected to peak in fy 004 at 4 1/2 percent of GDP. But it is something that we will continue to monitor losely. The President 's budget for the next year limits non-security increases to ess than one percent. Thanks to the economic growth fueled by the tax relief nd spending restraint America is on a solid path to cutting the deficit in half to bout 2 percent of GDP in the next five years.

Spending increases unrelated to the war on terror, in President Bush's budget for next year, is less than a percent, says Evans. Maybe it just seems like more.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  29 January 2004
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Looking Over Eisner's Shoulder

Roy Disney may be gone from Disney's Board of Director's, but he's ensuring that he's not forgotten. When Pixar Studios let word slip it would end its relationship with the entertainment conglomerate, Roy Disney was fast on the trigger with this news release:

Roy Disney and Stanley Gold Dismayed, But Not Surprised by Loss of Walt Disney Company's Relationship With Pixar

BURBANK, Calif., Jan. 29 /PRNewswire/ -- Roy E. Disney and Stanley P. Gold today issued the following statement regarding Pixar ending its relationship with The Walt Disney Company:

As significant shareholders of The Walt Disney Company, we are extremely
dismayed, but not surprised by the loss of Disney's Pixar relationship. More
than a year ago, we warned the Disney Board that we believed Michael Eisner
was mismanaging the Pixar partnership and expressed our concern that the
relationship was in jeopardy. In fact, Roy cited this in his letter of
resignations from the Board.

Michael Eisner's inability to manage and nurture crucial creative
relationships, like the one Disney had with Pixar, is one of the main reasons
we have maintained that we did not believe Disney's earnings were sustainable.

Roy Disney isn't going away, and Eisner will know about it every time there's another piece of bad news.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  29 January 2004
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Blog-i-versary

A Small Victory is three years old today.

Note to anyone contemplating a writing career: Read Michele's blog every day. Read The Command Post, which she helped develop and publish.

Then read every bit of advice which says you need to pay steep tuition fees, jump through the hoops that "industry experts" say you need to jump through, and, no matter, be prepared for lots of rejection before becoming "a writer."

And then laugh.

You need three things to be a good writer: passion, an open mind, and a keyboard.* Michele, obviously, has those things.

(If you're Jimi Hendrix, you can substitute "a guitar, three chords and the truth.")

By Ed Moltzen  ·  29 January 2004
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Unfortunate Headline Of The Day

"It's In The Can"

Long Island Newsday, on a story about accused child molester Michael Jackson allegedly providing wine to minors in cans of Coca-Cola.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  29 January 2004
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The Doctor Is Out

The doctor is out. No, not "that" doctor. This one (according to a news release posted on the New York Radio Message Board):

STATEMENT FROM POWER 105.1

New York, January 29, 2004 (NYSE: CCU) -- Clear Channel Radio New York's
Power 105.1 (WWPR-FM), New York's New #1 for Hip Hop & R&B, announced
today that Doctor Dre's contract with the station will not be renewed
when it expires at the end of the month. The statement was made today by
Regional Vice President Andrew Rosen and Power 105.1 Program Director
Michael Saunders.

All in all, not a good week to be in the limelight if you have "doctor" anywhere in your title.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  29 January 2004
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Have A Nice Trippi, See Ya Next Fall

Joe Trippi is out as Howard Dean's campaign manager. Roy Neel is in as CEO. "CEO?" Hasn't Dean been running a sort of "anti-CEO" campaign?

Anyway, Jeff Jarvis writes:

Here's another theory about what happened to Dean: Maybe the campaign became the star instead of the candidate. (And when people finally did see the candidate, they didn't like what they saw.)

That's probably close to being on the mark. But it was Dean, not Trippi, who made the campaign the star. (Remember, when Dean was deciding whether or not to take federal matching funds, he wouldn't even make a decision until he put the issue up for a vote among his supporters over the Web.)

By Ed Moltzen  ·  29 January 2004
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NY Times Correction Du Jour

At least The Times seems intent on judging them by the content of their character:

Because of an editing error, a report yesterday in the Arts Briefing column reversed the racial identifications of two members of the Dave Matthews Band, which is to receive a special N.A.A.C.P. award in March. The bassist, Stefan Lessard, is white; the violinist, Boyd Tinsley, is black.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  29 January 2004
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Upstate NY 1, PETA 0

If you're from the region of Upstate New York between Binghamton and Buffalo, or you know people who have lived there, you're probably familiar with the cult-like following Wegman's supermarkets has in that area.

Cult-like.

It's not just a grocery store. It's a way of life. And now it's a way of life that's going to last for a while. The company is investing in that region of New York, and flipping the bird to meat-haters at the same time:

GOVERNOR PATAKI: WEGMANS REAFFIRMS COMMITMENT TO ROCHESTER

Company To Invest $40 Million, Build New Facility, Retain and Create New Jobs

Governor George E. Pataki today announced that Wegmans Food Markets, Inc. will construct a 50,000 square foot, $40 million state-of-the-art meat cutting, processing, and packing plant on Wegmans Market Road in the town of Chili. This project will retain 329 jobs in the Rochester area and create 30 new jobs over three years.

Signs of economic growth during a Republican administration and investment in meat-eating at the same time. Think that might bother some people?

By Ed Moltzen  ·  28 January 2004
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Eye On Advocacy Advertising

CBS issued this statement today, in an effort to clarify its policy on not accepting "advocacy ads" during the Super Bowl:

CBS Statement on Advocacy Advertising

NEW YORK, Jan. 28 /PRNewswire/ -- Given the misleading and inaccurate statements offered to the media and the public in recent days, it is understandable why there is confusion over the CBS Television Network's longstanding policy against advocacy advertising.

The policy is decades old. It is designed to prevent those with means to produce and purchase network advertising from having undue influence on "controversial issues of public importance."

From the Network's perspective,we believe our viewers are better served by the balance and perspective such issues can be afforded within our news programming.

And, also, they have believed that viewers are better served by commercials with models wrestling in water fountains.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  28 January 2004
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Chaos in Boston?

First it was Dennis Kucinich fantasizing about a brokered Democratic National Convention in Boston this summer. Now, it's columnist William Safire:

The chair has lost control of the floor and delegates are snaking through the aisles, shouting, "We Want Hillary!" All deals are off; we have the politicians' nightmare and the pundits' dream — an open convention!

You can follow the daily delegate count totals over at The Command Post. It takes 2,162 delegates voting for your nomination on the first ballot at the convention to win. If there's no winner on the first ballot, all the delegates are "released" to vote for whomever they'd like.

Right now, former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean and Sen. John Kerry are neck-and-neck in delegate count. None of the other candidates seem ready to go away any time soon.

A brokered convention doesn't appear out of the question.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  28 January 2004
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The Race For The Grammys Is Over

Editor's Note: The best N.H. primary coverage is here.

This just in:

NEW YORK, Jan. 27 /PRNewswire/ -- On April 6, 2004 BMG will release Barry Manilow's 2NightsLIVE! two CD set and the two DVD set UltimateMANILOW!, both sets from the superstar named "a giant among entertainers...the showman of our generation" by Rolling Stone Magazine. These major releases follow on the heels of Manilow's platinum-plus smash album, 'Ultimate Manilow,' and heralds the start of BMG Strategic Marketing Group's multi-year strategy for Barry Manilow's music catalog.

If 50 is the new 30, is Barry Manilow the new Tony Bennett?

By Ed Moltzen  ·  27 January 2004
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New Anti-Terror, Anti-Ba'ath Demostrations in Iraq

From Central Command:

THOUSANDS TURN OUT TO DENOUNCE VIOLENCE, BA�ATH PARTY

MOSUL, Iraq (Jan. 26, 2004) � Over 2,000 members of the former Ba�ath party turned out at the Mosul Public Safety Academy to renounce their membership in the party, to denounce violence and to pledge support to a new, free and democratic Iraq.

The ceremony is the largest held in the Nineveh province to date.

Former officers in the Iraqi Army who were also Ba�ath party members filed into the academy and signed an agreement that disavowed their party affiliation and pledged to cooperate fully with the Coalition Provisional Authority in serving the people of Iraq.

So far, there has been scant - if any - coverage on this demonstration moving over the wires.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  27 January 2004
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Roy Disney Kicks Up A Storm

He sent this letter out to shareholders today.

This fight looks to get uglier before it gets prettier.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  27 January 2004
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What He Really Said About WMD

sotu.jpg
As the New York Times today admits it incorrectly portrayed President Bush’s words last year on Iraq and the threat of weapons of mass destruction, it seems clearer than ever that what the president did say is being ignored. The result is an inaccurate portrayal of what President Bush stood for in the run-up to the Iraqi war.

In taking a look at the President’s actual words, his arguments in the months before military conflict in Iraq still hold up. Here is the excerpt from his 2003 State of the Union that deals with Iraq:

Twelve years ago, Saddam Hussein faced the prospect of being the last casualty in a war he had started and lost. To spare himself, he agreed to disarm of all weapons of mass destruction. For the next 12 years, he systematically violated that agreement. He pursued chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, even while inspectors were in his country. Nothing to date has restrained him from his pursuit of these weapons -- not economic sanctions, not isolation from the civilized world, not even cruise missile strikes on his military facilities.

The “twelve years ago” point is often forgotten in today’s debate. Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait without provocation. He hit Israel with 39 scud missiles without provocation. (People forget about the attacks against innocent Israelis.) He threatened Saudi Arabia without provocation. He started a war, he lost, and he agreed to disarm, and prove to the world that he disarmed.

Almost three months ago, the United Nations Security Council gave Saddam Hussein his final chance to disarm. He has shown instead utter contempt for the United Nations, and for the opinion of the world. The 108 U.N. inspectors were sent to conduct -- were not sent to conduct a scavenger hunt for hidden materials across a country the size of California. The job of the inspectors is to verify that Iraq's regime is disarming. It is up to Iraq to show exactly where it is hiding its banned weapons, lay those weapons out for the world to see, and destroy them as directed. Nothing like this has happened.

But don’t take President Bush’s word for it. Let’s recall what Hans Blix, then-head of the U.N. weapons inspection team, told the U.N. Security Council about the full and complete WMD declaration Iraq was told it had no choice it had to make:

On 7 December 2002, Iraq submitted a declaration of some 12,000 pages in response to paragraph 3 of resolution 1441 (2002) and within the time stipulated by the Security Council. In the fields of missiles and biotechnology, the declaration contains a good deal of new material and information covering the period from 1998 and onward. This is welcome.

One might have expected that in preparing the Declaration, Iraq would have tried to respond to, clarify and submit supporting evidence regarding the many open disarmament issues, which the Iraqi side should be familiar with from the UNSCOM document S/1999/94 of January1999 and the so-called Amorim Report of March 1999 (S/1999/356). These are questions which UNMOVIC, governments and independent commentators have often cited.

While UNMOVIC has been preparing its own list of current "unresolved disarmament issues" and "key remaining disarmament tasks" in response to requirements in resolution 1284 (1999), we find the issues listed in the two reports as unresolved, professionally justified. These reports do not contend that weapons of mass destruction remain in Iraq, but nor do they exclude that possibility. They point to lack of evidence and inconsistencies, which raise question marks, which must be straightened out, if weapons dossiers are to be closed and confidence is to arise.

They deserve to be taken seriously by Iraq rather than being brushed aside as evil machinations of UNSCOM. Regrettably, the 12,000 page declaration, most of which is a reprint of earlier documents, does not seem to contain any new evidence that would eliminate the questions or reduce their number. Even Iraq's letter sent in response to our recent discussions in Baghdad to the President of the Security Council on 24 January does not lead us to the resolution of these issues.

Remember: Iraq had no choice but to come clean. And, according to Blix, they didn’t. Back to President Bush:

The United Nations concluded in 1999 that Saddam Hussein had biological weapons sufficient to produce over 25,000 liters of anthrax -- enough doses to kill several million people. He hasn't accounted for that material. He's given no evidence that he has destroyed it.

The United Nations concluded that Saddam Hussein had materials sufficient to produce more than 38,000 liters of botulinum toxin -- enough to subject millions of people to death by respiratory failure. He hadn't accounted for that material. He's given no evidence that he has destroyed it.

Our intelligence officials estimate that Saddam Hussein had the materials to produce as much as 500 tons of sarin, mustard and VX nerve agent. In such quantities, these chemical agents could also kill untold thousands. He's not accounted for these materials. He has given no evidence that he has destroyed them.

U.S. intelligence indicates that Saddam Hussein had upwards of 30,000 munitions capable of delivering chemical agents. Inspectors recently turned up 16 of them -- despite Iraq's recent declaration denying their existence. Saddam Hussein has not accounted for the remaining 29,984 of these prohibited munitions. He's given no evidence that he has destroyed them.

This was carefully worded, but clear nonetheless. President Bush made it plain that it wasn’t just good enough for Iraq to say it didn’t have weapons. They had to prove it. And they didn’t. (Remember those 39 scuds at Israel, and the Kuwaiti occupation. Nobody wanted to cross their fingers that it didn’t happen again. They wanted to be sure.)

From three Iraqi defectors we know that Iraq, in the late 1990s, had several mobile biological weapons labs. These are designed to produce germ warfare agents, and can be moved from place to a place to evade inspectors. Saddam Hussein has not disclosed these facilities. He's given no evidence that he has destroyed them.

The International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed in the 1990s that Saddam Hussein had an advanced nuclear weapons development program, had a design for a nuclear weapon and was working on five different methods of enriching uranium for a bomb. The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa. Our intelligence sources tell us that he has attempted to purchase high-strength aluminum tubes suitable for nuclear weapons production. Saddam Hussein has not credibly explained these activities. He clearly has much to hide.

So far, President Bush is going on a combination of facts reported by the U.N., and intelligence from both the U.S. and an ally. It wasn’t just a fact or two, in a vacuum, on which his remarks were hung. It was a mosaic of what was known – and what was not known.

The dictator of Iraq is not disarming. To the contrary; he is deceiving. From intelligence sources we know, for instance, that thousands of Iraqi security personnel are at work hiding documents and materials from the U.N. inspectors, sanitizing inspection sites and monitoring the inspectors themselves. Iraqi officials accompany the inspectors in order to intimidate witnesses.

Iraq is blocking U-2 surveillance flights requested by the United Nations.

Stop the tape. Remember the U-2 debacle? They clearly didn’t want U.S. intelligence overflights getting a birds-eye view of their activities – activities, perhaps, that included comings and goings over the Syrian border. Is this an activity of a country that wants transparency? Is this what a country does when it has nothing to hide? Is this the way Iraq was following U.N. Resolution 1441? It took weeks – precious weeks – for this controversy to be resolved. Weeks of lost time to a country with a track record of hiding and deception didn’t inspire confidence.

Iraqi intelligence officers are posing as the scientists inspectors are supposed to interview. Real scientists have been coached by Iraqi officials on what to say. Intelligence sources indicate that Saddam Hussein has ordered that scientists who cooperate with U.N. inspectors in disarming Iraq will be killed, along with their families.

See information about Saddam’s mass graves. This was a credible threat to the Iraqi people who considered assisting the U.N.

Year after year, Saddam Hussein has gone to elaborate lengths, spent enormous sums, taken great risks to build and keep weapons of mass destruction. But why? The only possible explanation, the only possible use he could have for those weapons, is to dominate, intimidate, or attack.

With nuclear arms or a full arsenal of chemical and biological weapons, Saddam Hussein could resume his ambitions of conquest in the Middle East and create deadly havoc in that region. And this Congress and the America people must recognize another threat. Evidence from intelligence sources, secret communications, and statements by people now in custody reveal that Saddam Hussein aids and protects terrorists, including members of al Qaeda. Secretly, and without fingerprints, he could provide one of his hidden weapons to terrorists, or help them develop their own.

Abu Nidal. Abu al-Zarqawi. Payoffs to the families of Palestinian suicide bombers. No one is challenging Saddam’s ties to terrorists. Remember, at the end of the first Gulf War, Saddam promised to stay away from these bad guys. He broke that promise, and he broke the cease-fire agreement.

Before September the 11th, many in the world believed that Saddam Hussein could be contained. But chemical agents, lethal viruses and shadowy terrorist networks are not easily contained. Imagine those 19 hijackers with other weapons and other plans -- this time armed by Saddam Hussein. It would take one vial, one canister, one crate slipped into this country to bring a day of horror like none we have ever known. We will do everything in our power to make sure that that day never comes. (Applause.)

Ah. Sept. 11. The only time some of President Bush’s critics mention Sept. 11, it’s to trump up – lie, actually – that the president linked Iraq to the Sept. 11 attacks. That never happened. But what the president does say is that the threats we could live with before Sept. 11, 2001, we could no longer tolerate. Saddam was given one last chance – remember Resolution 1441? – to prove he wasn’t a threat. He blew it.

Some have said we must not act until the threat is imminent. Since when have terrorists and tyrants announced their intentions, politely putting us on notice before they strike? If this threat is permitted to fully and suddenly emerge, all actions, all words, and all recriminations would come too late. Trusting in the sanity and restraint of Saddam Hussein is not a strategy, and it is not an option. (Applause.)

And that’s the difference between President Bush and many of his critics. The president didn’t want to trust someone who gassed his own people, threw hundreds of thousands into mass graves, invaded Kuwait without provocation, hit Israel with 39 scuds without provocation, and threatened Saudi Arabia with provocation. Others were perfectly willing to trust him.

The dictator who is assembling the world's most dangerous weapons has already used them on whole villages -- leaving thousands of his own citizens dead, blind, or disfigured. Iraqi refugees tell us how forced confessions are obtained -- by torturing children while their parents are made to watch. International human rights groups have catalogued other methods used in the torture chambers of Iraq: electric shock, burning with hot irons, dripping acid on the skin, mutilation with electric drills, cutting out tongues, and rape. If this is not evil, then evil has no meaning. (Applause.)

Little kids aren’t being thrown into Ba’athist prisons or tortured any more. Anybody want to criticize that?

And tonight I have a message for the brave and oppressed people of Iraq: Your enemy is not surrounding your country -- your enemy is ruling your country. (Applause.) And the day he and his regime are removed from power will be the day of your liberation. (Applause.)

Although, some prefer to look at it this way.

The world has waited 12 years for Iraq to disarm. America will not accept a serious and mounting threat to our country, and our friends and our allies. The United States will ask the U.N. Security Council to convene on February the 5th to consider the facts of Iraq's ongoing defiance of the world. Secretary of State Powell will present information and intelligence about Iraqi's legal -- Iraq's illegal weapons programs, its attempt to hide those weapons from inspectors, and its links to terrorist groups.

We will consult. But let there be no misunderstanding: If Saddam Hussein does not fully disarm, for the safety of our people and for the peace of the world, we will lead a coalition to disarm him. (Applause.)

Thirty-four countries, to be exact.

Perhaps this is why most Americans support the effort in Iraq.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  27 January 2004
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This Just Doesn't Seem Right

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This just in:

Krispy Kreme Opens First Store in Hawaii

KAHULUI, MAUI, Hawaii, Jan. 27 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Inc. (NYSE: KKD) today opens the doors to its first store in Hawaii, located in Kahului, Maui.

Does Hawaii really want their hula dancers downing malted-milk flavor Krispy Kremes on their down time? Shouldn't the national obesity problem stop at the main land?

By Ed Moltzen  ·  27 January 2004
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NY Times Correction Du Jour

He lied about Iraq trying to get nukes from Niger. He lied about Iraq trying to get nukes from Africa. He just lied

The truth is complicated. Just ask The New York Times:

A front-page news analysis article on Wednesday about the impact of electoral politics on President Bush's State of the Union address referred incorrectly to a statement in last year's address, about Iraqi efforts to acquire uranium. The president said Iraq had been seeking to buy uranium in Africa. He did not specifically mention the African country of Niger, though it was identified several weeks earlier — along with Somalia and Congo — in the National Intelligence Estimate provided to members of Congress on Iraqi purchase attempts.

Actually, the president said:

The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.

And, to this day, British intelligence stands behind the report. Why is it so hard to report the words the president actually used, rather than try to characterize them one way or another?

By Ed Moltzen  ·  27 January 2004
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The Longest Yardicah?

Out with Burt Reynolds. In with, um, Adam Sandler:

HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Jan. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- Adam Sandler will star in an update of the classic 1974 comedy "The Longest Yard" it was announced today by Sherry Lansing, Chairman, Motion Picture Group, Paramount Pictures and Donald De Line, Vice Chairman, Motion Picture Group and President, Paramount Pictures.

The film is set to go into production in June 2004. Paramount will partner and co-produce the film with Columbia Pictures.

"Adam is a brilliant actor and comedian. 'The Longest Yard' is the perfect
film to showcase his genius," said Ms. Lansing.

Sandler in "The Longest Yard." Next up: David Spade and Norm MacDonald in "All The President's Men?"

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 January 2004
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Fern For President

Polls show he is still a longshot to win tomorrow's New Hampshire presidential primary, but Kingston, N.Y.'s favorite son, Fern Penna, is still running hard for the Democratic presidential nomination. With 37 others on the ballot. Including John Kerry, Howard Dean, and Mildred Glover of Baltimore, Md.

Not only is New Hampshire home to the first presidential primary in the country, it's also perhaps the easiest state to get on the ballot. The qualifications: U.S. citizenship, meeting the presidential age requirement, and $1,000.

Here's the full list of those on tomorrow's ballot in New Hampshire, both Republican and Democrat (Yes, President Bush has opposition on the Republican side from, among others, Millie Howard of New Richmond, Ohio.)

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 January 2004
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Kucinich: Nominee Won't Be Decided During Primaries

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Rep. Dennis Kucinich, who has been struggling to break out of the 1-to-2 percent support range nationally in his bid for the Democratic nomination for president, has sent supporters an “audio postcard” telling them the race is far from over.

Referring to the strong fight between the top contenders for the nomination, Kucinich said none of his opponents has a chance to lock up the nomination during the primary season:

Not one of the candidates in this race has the ability to gain 50 percent of the delegates before we go to the convention, which means the nomination is going to be decided in Boston.

Under traditional party rules, the presidential nominee must win more than 50 percent of the delegates on the first ballot at the national convention. If additional ballots are needed, delegates, traditionally, would be “free” to vote for any candidate.

In the American Research Group's latest poll in New Hampshire, Kucinich registers support from about 1 percent of those who are likley to vote in the primary.

(Cross-posted at The Command Post.)

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 January 2004
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Unilateral War Update

A group of Finnish experts on genocide and mass graves is headed to Iraq, and will help in the search and sorting-through of several sites throughout the country. The group will include Helena Ranta, a dental expert and one of the country's leading experts on genocide, according to the Finnish News Agency:

“There are plenty of mass graves in Iraq, so there’s lots of work to be done,” she says.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 January 2004
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Baseball Quote Of The Day

"I definitely think I'm going to be here for a long time. I'm probably pretty sure it will work out for the best."

--Shortstop Alex Rodriguez, after being named captain of the Texas Rangers.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 January 2004
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Bad Hair Day

"You know what they say about a good toupee: It looks like a good toupee." - Homer Simpson.

Sally Beauty Company has released their list of best hair, worst hair and "tackiest toupee" among America's celebrities.

Best hair, female: Halle Berry.
Best hair, male: Mel Gibson.

The Tackiest Toupee list:
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1. Sam Donaldson


2. Elton John


3. William Shatner

Evidently, Sally Beauty felt pity on Ben Affleck for getting dumped, so they kept him off the toupee list.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 January 2004
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Scott Muni Has A Stroke

More information on Scott Muni's death can be found here.

09/29/04


A man with one of the deepest, smoothest voices in New York Radio history, Scott Muni, has had a stroke and can't talk, according to people over at the New York Radio Message Board.

Muni helped New York's WNEW-FM pioneer a style of "album-oriented" rock playlists starting in the early '70s, and had recently been heard on 104.3 FM in the city. According to the message board, the stroke has rendered him unable to speak.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 January 2004
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Ted Kennedy v. Howard Dean: "I Think It's A Little Desperate"

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This exchange happened today on CNN's Wolf Blitzer show:

BLITZER: Howard Dean, the former Vermont governor, in all the latest polls coming in second right now, at least in New Hampshire. He really went after John Kerry earlier in the week, in fact yesterday. Listen to what he said. He said this:

"Here is a gentleman who is running who votes no in 1991, when there are Iraqi troops in Kuwait and the oil wells are on fire, and then votes yes in 2002 and then there turns out not to be a threat. I would be deeply concerned about that kind of judgment in the White House."

That's Howard Dean, what he said yesterday.
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KENNEDY: Well, I think it's a little desperate, quite frankly. And I don't know, I didn't hear Governor Dean speak during that period of time about that particular involvement that we had over in the Gulf, but there's no question that John Kerry has the qualities of leadership. Although he had questions about going to Vietnam, he responded to the requirements of service. Served his country, led the veterans. He's never left anybody behind; honored for bravery and courage.

If Dean stays in the race all the way to the convention - in Boston - a Kerry-Dean battle has the makings of an ugly, ugly fight.

However, while using Ted Kennedy as a campaign surrogate might work well in Iowa and New England, once the campaign turns South, look for Kennedy to leave the picture and Max Cleland to take over that job.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  25 January 2004
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Does Halliburton Employ Cab Drivers?

The latest out of Central Command:

TASK FORCE “ALL AMERICAN” SEIZES BLACK MARKET FUEL

HIT, Iraq - Members of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, part of Task Force “All American” discovered a taxicab selling black market fuel in the city of Hit on Friday afternoon.

The driver of the vehicle fled as the patrol approached the taxi. The patrol confiscated the taxicab along with 250 gallons of black market fuel and turned them over to the local Iraqi Police.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  25 January 2004
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$64 Million

That's the jackpot for the next Powerball drawing on Wednesday.

Memo to whomever wins: Look both ways before crossing.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  25 January 2004
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Newsweek on Clark's "Character" Issues

If you read Newsweek's story this week on retired General Wesley Clark, Clark comes across as the office brown-noser, suck-up and weasly backstabber:

The problem may have been partly a matter of Clark's tone and manner. As an ambitious officer, Clark gained a reputation among his peers for telling different people what they wanted to hear, without seeming to realize that his listeners might later compare notes and accuse Clark of being two-faced. Clark might have done better if he had adopted a more straightforward manner, perhaps leavened with a spot of humor.

Clark's supporters note that one of their candidates' detractors, retired Gen. Hugh Shelton, the former chairman of the joint chiefs of staff who first starting raising the "character issues" about Clark, is now a consultant to the rival Democratic presidential campaign of Sen. John Edwards.

Still, anyone who has ever been stabbed in the back at their job can look at Clark's record and wince.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  25 January 2004
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Calendar

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Books - Hollywood Animal, by Joe Eszterhas. Available Jan. 27.

Books - The Second Chair, by John T. Lescroart. Available Jan. 26.

Politics - New Hampshire Democratic Presidential Primary. Jan. 27.

Music - Disneymania 2. Various artists. Available Jan. 27

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Music - Ultimate Yes: 35th Anniversary Collection. By Yes. Available Jan. 27.

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Crime and Punishment - Willie Hall, Georgia, scheduled for execution on Jan. 27 in connection with the 1988 murder of his wife.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  25 January 2004
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Dean Slips To 3rd In N.H., Edwards Nipping At Heels

The American Research Group's latest tracking numbers show retired Gen. Wesley Clark now ahead of former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean in second place, with Sen. John Edwards a point behind Dean.

The numbers:

Kerry - 38 percent support among likley voters in the Jan. 27 N.H. primary
Clark - 17
Dean - 16
Edwards - 15
Undecided - 8
Lieberman - 5
Kucinich - 1

Over at the Dean blog, supporters are trying to take solace from anywhere and anything. Writes one:

Clinton had only 3% from Iowa, then came in 2nd in NH.

If this campaign continues to make some serious changes, we do at least ok in NH, and come back strong on Feb. 3rd, we could do it.

The candidate and his supporters are certainly battle-ready for the Rove machine, right? No other campaign can claim that one!

;-)

Not to burst any bubbles, but Clinton only polled 3 percent in Iowa because Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin was running for president that year, and Clinton, like the other candidates, decided to put their resources into New Hampshire.

This year, Dean actually had the support of Harkin and his organization.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  25 January 2004
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NY Times Correction Du Jour

Whenever the correction column begins with an "Editor's Note," it's time to think, "Uh-oh:"

Editors' Note

An article in The Times Magazine on Dec. 7 portrayed the role of technology in drawing together Howard Dean's youthful campaign volunteers, using as its departure point the story of a consultant who joined up after his engagement plans fell apart.

Details of the romantic break-up, including the prospective fiancée's given name, were accurate; editors included them in the belief that she had been consulted and had confirmed the account. The Times had failed to reach her, however, and it regrets the publication of the identifying details.

Probably not as much as the ex-fiancee regrets it.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  25 January 2004
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Clark and the PATRIOT Act

Much of the attention on Wesley Clark's appearance in Thursday night's Democratic presidential candidates' debate has been focused on his defense of Michael Moore's free speech rights. But not a lot of attention has been paid to his sweeping promise to rescind portions of the PATRIOT Act - including some portions that don't even exist.

Here's what Clark said when asked about the act during the debate:

CLARK: Well, I'm very concerned about the Patriot Act. It was passed in haste. It's very long. It's got dozens and dozens and dozens of changes.

What we would do is suspend all the portions of the Patriot Act that have to do with search and seizure: sneak-and-peek searches; library records; and so on.

If they want to do a wiretap, they can do it the old-fashioned way, go to a judge with probable cause.

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And then, bring the whole act back into the Congress. Lay it out. Ask former Attorney General John Ashcroft to come and testify on his use and abuse of the Patriot Act.

(LAUGHTER)

Just lay it out. What provisions were used, for what, for what good? Why couldn't it have been done another way?

And then we're going to put together the right kind of authorities for law enforcement to keep us safe.

But, Tom, we cannot win the war on terror by giving up the very freedoms we're fighting to protect.

A better question, perhaps, would have been if Clark has actually read the PATRIOT Act. There isn't any section of the act that deals with "library records."

But Clark says he would turn back the clock to the days when FBI and CIA agents needed to jump through bureaucratic hoops, seek detailed legal analyses, and convince individual judges on a case-by-case basis before getting warrants to investigate terror threats. Clark would turn back the clock to the days to when, according to the congressional 9/11 report, foreign nationals like Zaccarias Moussaoui - the "20th hijacker" - could stop federal agents from seaching their property and, as terror threats were unfolding, connecting the dots:

As it turned out, according to the indictment, Moussaoui’s possessions included letters indicating that Moussaoui was a marketing consultant in the United States for Infocus Tech.

The letters had been signed by Yazid Sufaat, whom the Intelligence Community was aware was the owner of the Malaysian condominium in which the January 2000 al-Qa’ida meeting attended by hijackers al-Mihdhar and al-Hazmi had been held.

The indictment also alleges that Moussaoui possessed a notebook listing two German telephone numbers and the name “Ahad Sabet,” which, the indictment states, was used by Ramzi Bin al-Shibh to send funds to Moussaoui. Bin al-Shibh, who was apprehended in Pakistan in September 2002, is named in the indictment as a supporting conspirator].

Also, Thursday night, Clark said "I consider the statement that the attack at 9/11 could not have been prevented as an excuse to cover the fact that this administration didn't do everything they could have done."

Perhaps if FBI agents hadn't been waiting for a warrant to open Moussaoui's computer...

By Ed Moltzen  ·  24 January 2004
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After 19 Years, Pollard Is Still Pleading

Former U.S. Navy employee Jonathan Pollard and his friends haven't given up on their attempts to have him sprung from prison, 19 years after he was sentenced to life for spying on the U.S. on behalf of Israel.

At Pollard's official web site, his supporters are trying a new tactic. Not only will they continue to ask the government to release Pollard, and continue to seek redress in the courts, they will name names and take individuals to task for not speaking out strongly enough:

In an attempt to penetrate the wall of silence, J4JP is undertaking to publish Pollard's List. This is a compilation of the names of well respected writers, opinion makers and editors who routinely have a great deal to say about Israel and Jewish issues, about justice and fair play - and nothing about Jonathan Pollard. The more prominent names have, as a rule, studiously avoided writing anything at all on the case for the last 2 decades. A mere handful have written about the case - but that was years ago- and they have been silent ever since.

What do we hope to accomplish by compiling this list?

For nearly 2 decades we have been privately reaching out to prominent persons, journalists and opinion-makers, sharing information and new developments, desperately seeking their help. But to no avail. It is our hope that by raising consciousness about this conspiracy of silence and the damage it is doing to Jonathan Pollard and to the Jewish People that they will search their hearts, heed their consciences, and find their voice.

In the year 2004, all of the old excuses for refusal to speak out about the Pollard issue no longer exist.

Pollard's list includes dozens of writers - from Mort Zuckerman to William Safire to Nat Hentoff.

Pollard's supporters also point to what they say is new evidence in the case, including a memo written by then-Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger which they say undermines key points of the U.S. case against him.

Espionage remains one of the most serious offenses in the U.S., but at the same time Pollard's supporters don't seem to be going away.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  24 January 2004
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White House On Halliburton Charges: Talk To The Hand

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There may be another investigation into charges some employees at Halliburton overcharged the government for some work in Iraq. Here's how the White House responded yesterday to charges that the ordeal undermined the entire Iraqi reconstruction in spokesman Scott McClellan's daily briefing:

Q What does it say about the whole reconstruction of Iraq? Democrats are now saying that it casts a cloud over it. They would like to -- Democrats in Congress would like to see Congress regain oversight of the awarding of these contracts.

MR. McCLELLAN: You need to talk to the Department of Defense about specific contracts. But I think there is obviously a lot of election year politicking going on. I recognize that.

Q Can you just pass it off as politics?

MR. McCLELLAN: Go ahead.

And McClellan took a question on another topic.

So there's not a lot of hand-wringing in the White House over the charges against Halliburton, including accusations that President Bush's Mars strategy is an attempt to score under-handed oil opportunities for Halliburton on the red planet.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  24 January 2004
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NY Times Correction Du Jour

So the entire world isn't against this movie?

An article and a picture caption yesterday about speculation on whether Pope John Paul II had voiced an opinion after seeing the Mel Gibson film "The Passion of the Christ" referred imprecisely to expressions of worry about the film's depiction of Jews. They have come from many Jews and some Christians — not from Jews and Christians in general.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  24 January 2004
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