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Trade Deadline
Gone
The Red Sox traded Nomar Garciaparra and wound up with a couple of .246 hitters. The Yankees traded Jose Contreras, and got someone who doesn't stink as much. And the Arizona Diamondbacks, the worst team in baseball, will have to choke on Randy Johnson's salary for the rest of the season. This is probably the first story of many bad stories in the near future for Red Sox fans. But, then again, aren't they used to it? By Ed Moltzen · 31 July 2004
One-Point Bounce
On the opening day of the Democratic National Convention, Democratic nominee Sen. John Kerry was in a dead-heat with his opponent, President Bush: 46 percent of those polled favored Bush and the same amount favored Kerry. Today we found out, via Rasmussen, that Kerry's convention so far has netted him a one-point bounce in the polls. Through last night - a night after Kerry's acceptance speech - the Democratic candidate led Bush by a 47-46 margin. The poll still allowed for some hope for the Kerry camp. Because Rasmussen compiles a three-day tracking number, only one-third of the voter interviews for this result happened after Kerry's speech to close the convention. MORE: Newsweek is calling a two-point bounce for Kerry-Edwards. By contrast, Al Gore got an eight-point convention bounce in 2000; Bill Clinton had a 16-point bounce in 1992, Michael Dukakis received a 7-point bounce in '88 and Walter Mondale a 9-point bounce in '84. By Ed Moltzen · 31 July 2004
The Road To Nowhere
Anyone familiar with Newburgh, N.Y., just has to shake their head and laugh. The story being passed around the web today is this one: Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry and his running mate, Sen. John Edwards, stopped off at a Wendy's yesterday in Newburgh. On the surface, it's a nice enough story: Edwards and his wife celebrate their anniversary every year at Wendys. Yesterday was their 27th. But when Kerry stopped to make small talk with a couple of servicemen trying to eat a meal there, the Marines acted coolly. It made for a negative news story. The Kerry-Edwards advance folks obviously didn't factor in was the location. When it comes to patriotism, Newburgh is a company town. Stewart Airport is home to a major Air National Guard base and has been for years. Twenty miles up the road is the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. In 1981, when the American hostages were finally freed from Iran and were flown back home, their first stop on U.S. soil was Newburgh. The area - part rural, part suburban - gave their fellow Americans a ticker-tape parade that would make the New York Yankees blush. During the first Gulf War, Newburgh was pretty much the Yellow Ribbon headquarters of America. So on his first day as the official Democratic nominee, Kerry landed in Newburgh to start the first leg of his victory lap across the country. What did he get? He got a Marine who said this: "I'm 100 percent against him." Even though Newburgh is in New York - a state that will probably go 80 percent for Kerry in November - it's a town that looks like much of the country between New York City and San Francisco. American, hardworking and not very happy when you interrupt their meal. Maybe the Kerry advance team should have looked for a Wendy's fifty miles south - say in Soho, in between a couple of art galleries or something. For Kerry, it would have probably been safer than between a couple of Marines in Newburgh. By Ed Moltzen · 31 July 2004
The Latest from Air America Radio
Al Franken wanted a day off yesterday. So Air America Radio, his employer, apparently ran a "Best of Al Franken" program. Putting aside the various, easy, telegraphable jokes: there apparently were some listeners who wanted Franken's second-day take on the Kerry acceptance speech. If they wanted a next-day discussion, they had to turn to Rush Limbaugh or Sean Hannity. By Ed Moltzen · 31 July 2004
Juxtaposition of the Day
Some observers are pointing this quote from John Kerry's acceptance speech...
...Against the backdrop of the cover of John Kerry's book, in which Old Glory is being flown in a derisive, upside-down position. You can read more comment on this here and here. Flag issues helped due in Michael Dukakis in 1988, but since much of the support for the Democratic ticket is really an Anybody But Bush vote (i.e. New Jersey), it probably won't hurt Kerry. Still, don't expect any more flag references out of Kerry-Edwards. By Ed Moltzen · 30 July 2004
$2B More For Lower Manhattan 9/11 Reconstruction
The Bush administration has decided to give New York Gov. Pataki and Mayor Bloomberg what they wanted: the use of tax benefits to help with the continued reconstruction of lower Manhattan:
This followed the Bush Administration's decision to extend the Liberty Bonds program, which raised $8 billion for various projects in the city. By Ed Moltzen · 30 July 2004
What's Up With Jason Giambi?
Things are not looking good for Yankees' first baseman Jason Giambi. Now he's so sick, he can't even drive in to Yankee Stadium. Could he have picked up a parasite while in Japan? Does he have Lyme Disease? Regardless, it seems like his season is over, at the very least. Of course, there is speculation that his problems are steroid-related. A diagnosis was supposed to be available by last night. Last night came and went, and all Yankee officials seemed to say was, "we can't tell you what it is just yet." That's not exactly confidence-inspiring. By Ed Moltzen · 30 July 2004
The Missing 19 Years
Nineteen years in the U.S. Senate, and this is the sum of what Sen. John Kerry said about it during his hour-long acceptance speech last night:
This was undoubtedly Kerry's most important moment in the presidential campaign. Well, until debates one, two and three. (To wit: What do people remember more: Al Gore's acceptance speech, or his sighing during that debate with Bush?) By Ed Moltzen · 30 July 2004
Advice For Kerry
NY Daily News Columnist Michael Goodwin has this advice for Sen. John Kerry:
That might be wishful thinking. It's the same John Kerry, after all, who said this about the war on terror while he was campaigning during the Democratic primaries:
By Ed Moltzen · 29 July 2004
The Iraqization of Iraq
This news from Central Command:
It sounds like the clock is ticking on Michael Moore's Minutemen. By Ed Moltzen · 29 July 2004
NY Times Correction Du Jour
More, from New York's newspaper of record:
"Paul" wasn't just a "politically active lawyer." He eventually became New York City Council President and was a major force in city politics for years - well into the 1970s. By Ed Moltzen · 29 July 2004
Hannity v. Franken
Here's a clip of yesterday's radio debate between Al Franken and Sean Hannity, courtesy of The Talk Radio News Service. It's not exactly Jack Benny versus Fred Allen (or even Morton Downey Jr. versus Al Sharpton), but it's interesting radio nonetheless. By Ed Moltzen · 28 July 2004
Health Care
Via Sydney Smith, the Medpundit, here is a look at John Kerry's health care proposals offered up by Michael Cannon of the Cato Institute:
Come to think of it, at the Democratic National Convention there's been surprisingly little discussion of health care. By Ed Moltzen · 28 July 2004
Perspective
For those who are excited that Barack Obama's keynote address last night at the Democratic National Convention means a bright, limitless future, there are two words to remember: Mario Cuomo. By Ed Moltzen · 28 July 2004
Moving Right Along
Letterman's Top Ten Signs Your Convention Speech Is Boring includes this one: 5. Every other sentence begins with "So anyway..." By Ed Moltzen · 27 July 2004
How Cool Are They?
This is from a real email sent out by the staff of MSNBC's "Hardball":
Isn't it the law that if you refer to your own blog as "cool," it's automatically lame? If it's not the law, it should be. Ok. By now, everybody is aware that bloggers are covering both major party conventions this year. Even The New York Times is making a big deal of it. In all honesty, it shouldn't be such a big deal even though it's something new. The bloggers who are covering them have been writing about politics for much of the past two or three years - at least - and seem to know what they're doing. But what might need some attention are people like the folks at Hardball who view blogging as "cool" in and of itself and that, by blogging, they're instantly "cool." The real Hardball blog is OK. It's got permalinks. The blog's writers have gotten the whole link-to-other-sources-thing down. (Microsoft, after all, co-owns the organization and Bill Gates has been touting the benefits of RSS.) But it's hard to get past the sense that the MSNBC blog is really kind of forced. Example: a blog exchange between David Schuster and Willie Brown over expensive ties. Agree with him or not, what Atrios has been writing has a sense of sincerity (authenticity?) that the Hardball blog seems to lack. At least he's not referring to his own coverage as "cool." By Ed Moltzen · 27 July 2004
Tony Muscles and Johnny Sausage
A Manhattan grand jury has indicted a couple of organized crime figures on charges they shook down roofing contractors in a labor racketeering scheme: According to the D.A.'s office:
Two of the figures indicted were John (Johnny Sausage) Barbato, a Genovese family capo (according to the D.A.) and Michael Verdi, an associate and one of Barbato's drivers. Another, Anthony (Tony Muscles) Guardino, is business manager for the union involved, Local 8. By Ed Moltzen · 27 July 2004
Closing In
Looks like the world is getting smaller for bin Laden associate Abu Zarqawi and his gang:
There's also been this news regarding a significant set back for the bad guys:
Looks like the Jihadists are stuck in a quagmire. By Ed Moltzen · 27 July 2004
Juxtaposition of the Day
On MSNBC.com's front page, these two headlines are running one after the other: "Kerry's Wife To Editor: 'Shove It'" Followed by: By Ed Moltzen · 26 July 2004
The Platform
Here is a copy of the 41-page, 2004 Democratic platform that will be adopted at the convention. Among the declarations:
Maybe they missed this story last year in the L.A. Times:
By Ed Moltzen · 26 July 2004
Who Is Barack Obama?
Barack Obama will be John Kerry’s hand-picked keynote speaker during this week’s Democratic National Convention. Who is Barack Obama? Well, he’s running for U.S. Senate from Illinois, he’s gotten a lot of money from folks who do business with George Soros, and – according to James Taranto – he’s toned down a lot of his radical rhetoric over the past couple of years. But when he speaks to the convention, what can America expect to hear? Well, here’s a look at a speech he gave in Chicago last month, which might give a glimpse:
International pedigrees, in and of themselves, don’t mean a lot. Henry Kissenger had them. So did Madeleine Albright. Nobody would mistake their brands of foreign policy as similar. And, while we’re at it: Does anybody have a stake in an unintelligent foreign policy? Or is he playing a game of “our foreign policy is smarter than your foreign policy?”
It depends. Which part of the world? The part that allowed Saddam Hussein to fill mass graves with hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqis, or the part that helped get rid of him? Obama makes no distinction.
It also speaks to the utter incorrectness of those who believed the U.S. could co-exist with the U.S.S.R and communism forever – people including Ted Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, George McGovern and John Kerry.
Libya might not agree. Saudi Arabia, which has embarked on democratic reforms over the past year, might not agree, either. What about Great Britain? Italy? Poland? Australia? What might Africa say about American leadership in fighting AIDS? In Kenya – remember, his father was from Kenya – fifteen percent of the entire population is living with AIDS. Obama comes back to the AIDS issue later, with interesting results.
Obama has adopted Kerry’s perspective on 9/11: that it’s only to be discussed in terms of how we’ve “squandered (the) good will” of the French in its aftermath. The pain and suffering of Americans is a secondary mention – if a mention at all.
He doesn’t discuss how the “risks and costs” would have “increased exponentially” by giving Saddam more time to hide weapons, strengthen the already-existing relationship with al Qaeda or provide the Iraqi military more time to plan for an invasion. And, by the way, Obama fails to note his rationale for saying France, German and Turkey were more “capable and sophisticated” than Great Britain, an ally who joined the coalition.
Obama believes that, without the French stamp of approval, U.S. action had weaker “credibility and moral authority.” He may forget that while negotiations continued at the U.N. Security Council in 2003, French President Jacques Chirac famously proclaimed that his country would never support any military action - at all - against Iraq. Period.
Three days after Obama’s remarks, the president of Iraq’s Muslim-led government vowed to “annihilate” all terrorists in Iraq. So the pictures may be having an affect – just not the one that Obama suggested.
Obama’s speech came out before the 9/11 report, which confirmed that Iraq had ties to al Qaeda. It ignores, though, evidence that Iraq had, indeed, sought out Uranium from Africa and that it continued its WMD and long-range missile efforts in spite of a ban on those activities under U.N. resolutions. Importantly, Obama – like others who oppose the war – ignores the full set of reasons military action was launched. Here is what President Bush said during a news conference at the Azores summit before the war:
The war was never a WMD-only activity. Back to Obama:
That’s a broad statement, and ignores unanimous U.N. Security Council adoption, on June 8, of a U.S.-backed resolution supporting Iraq’s new sovereignty.
But it wasn’t good enough to keep France from bolting NATO in 1966 so it could go off on its own, unilateral nuclear program. And it wasn’t good enough to give the Reagan Administration clearance to use French air space to retaliate against Libya for terrorist activity. French-U.S. relations had gone downhill under both Republican and Democratic administrations since that deGaulle quote, but, for some reason, Obama chooses to ignore that history.
Treaties or conventions don’t guarantee anything. None of the anti-pollution treaties has been signed onto by any number of big-pollution creating countries; none of the anti-weapon treaties was signed onto by rogue nations (including Saddam’s Iraq) or rogue organizations (like al Qaeda.) He doesn’t mention that.
Obama finds this a problem when the U.S. is involved – even though it received unanimous approval for Resolution 1441 that authorized decisive action against Iraq. If he has a problem with Iraq ignoring its international obligations, he says nothing about it.
Is it any more of a departure than President Clinton’s decision to send troops to the Balkans without U.N. support or approval? Any more of a departure than LBJ’s escalation of military action in Vietnam?
As long as the French agree, or a Democrat is in the White House.
Would a treaty stop an AQ Khan? Would it stop al Qaeda? How are Iran and North Korea doing with the Nuclear non-proliferation treaties?
But the top of the ticket doesn’t think it’s essential. Kerry, on Meet the Press, April 18:
Back to Obama:
Been there, done that. To wit: the U.S. arrest of Khalid Sheik Mohammed in Pakistan.
Some strong states have become “breeding grounds” as well, including Great Britain (Richard Reid the “Shoe Bomber”), Mohammed Atta (who picked up his fundamentalist credentials in Germany – remember Germany, that “sophisticated” state?), and even the U.S. (Jose Padilla, John Walker Lindh, Timothy McVeigh.) With poor countries, the carrot is fine – but it’s worthless without the stick.
Here, Obama is wearing blinders to the Bush Administration’s efforts on fighting AIDS in Africa. Even Bono called the effort “a bold, long-term vision” and “paradigm shift.”
Two thoughts: First, this was exactly the same response the U.S. received when 800,000 people were slaughtered in Rwanda while Bill Clinton was president. But Obama forgets about that. Second, this just points out a U.N. track record that shows indifference, paralysis or corruption when it comes to heading off or fighting world catastrophes. It’s almost painful to say – since it’s almost cliché – but Obama’s rhetoric gives nothing but ammo to conservatives who point out the failings of the “Blame America First” wing of American politics.
If he uses this line in his keynote, it ought to score especially big points with the “not in our name” wing of the party.
Again, he ignores this resolution - approved unanimously, by the way – which provides a good measure of that assistance. But if he’s talking cash, he doesn’t specify how much, what percentage of total costs or what “compromises” would have to be made to get it.
He doesn’t define “fair.” Does “fair” mean providing billions of dollars in commerce to countries who would still – if they had their druthers – see Saddam still in power and commerce conducted solely under the province of the corrupt oil-for-food program?
So to restore its influence, the U.S. must give rewards and bonuses to countries that fought us? And, by the way, which nations? He doesn’t specify.
Doesn’t Resolution 1441 fit into this category?
It would be great to eliminate this threat immediately. Spending on Nunn-Lugar would be a big part. The Bush Administration’s first budget proposed $1 billion on Nunn-Lugar and related projects “the highest single-year request ever made for these projects.” Obama ignores this.
This plan was tried in North Korea. That country signed on to the deal, and then secretly pursued a nuclear weapon program anyway.
Why stop at sanctions? Why don’t we throw in a “strongly worded message” too?
That’s assuming other countries aren’t supplying Iran with technology and materials.
Here’s what Secretary of State Colin Powell said immediately after North Korea was caught cheating on its nuclear agreements: “We are going to be patient," Powell said on CBS's Face the Nation. "We are going to continue to apply pressure. We are going to consult with our friends and allies and we are going to hope that common sense will ultimately prevail. We are going to keep channels open in case that there are messages coming from North Korea. We want to communicate with North Korea and wait for an opening to solve this diplomatically." Substitute “North Korea” with “Iraq” and Obama sounds like he endorses the policy. Perhaps his morality varies according to the address of the tyrant.
If he’s talking about “negotiations” with North Korea, he doesn’t specify what he would give up in exchange for “verifiable” (whatever “verifiable” that means to the North Koreans) abandonment of its nuclear weapons program.
Fortunately, the track record of the Bush Administration here is noteworthy. From 2001 through 2003, the value of U.S. exports to China more than doubled the amount during the last three years of the Clinton Administration. And this occurred at a time when the world economy was enduring a global recession caused greatly by the dot.com bust.
Obama may actually want to start with Congress. The Bush Administration continues apace on its multi-year commitment to spend $15 billion fighting the AIDS epidemic globally, primarily in Africa. But the only cuts to his proposals have been made by Congress.
That, and abstinence. By the way: Is this the same World Health Organization that did such a bang-up job making sure SARS wasn’t transmitted from China to everywhere else around the globe?
Really? More than ten years ago, when Saddam began rewarding families of Palestinian homicide bombers?
Iraq’s not an ally? Jordan? Saudi Arabia? Kuwait? He continues:
Whew. What a relief. Because when President Bush unveiled his Roadmap for Peace, he said, “The United States has developed this plan over the last several months in close cooperation with Russia, the European Union, and the United Nations.”
I wonder how this sentiment goes over with the top of the ticket. From a Boston Globe bio on Kerry:
Looks like Kerry worked the ol’ charms there, convincing Ortega on the benefits of democracy.
And Obama took the first, bold step in this direction by opposing the ouster of Saddam Hussein.
Too bad Obama wasn’t around when John Kerry was fighting aid to the Contras.
But remember, Kerry voted for the $87 billion before he …Oh, never mind.
He doesn’t say how he would do it, how much he would spend, and how quickly he would roll it out. He doesn’t talk about that $87 billion that Kerry voted against, that would have accomplished much of that.
That’s like saying, “I favor peace and prosperity. Next topic.” No details. No examination of how this isn’t getting done under the Bush Administration.
Again, Obama should have been around in 1995, when Kerry’s CIA-cutting proposal flopped in the U.S. Senate and was sharply criticized by fellow Democrats like Sen. Dennis DConcini and Sen. Daniel Inouye.
Well, if Kerry loses the presidency, maybe Obama can ask him to bring the issue up if Kerry votes at the annual shareholder meetings of the Big Oil companies where his family owns a lot of stock. If it’s possible, the closing paragraphs of Obama’s speech were even vaguer and lighter on detail than the rest so we’ll close it out here. So who is he? He’s a man who we hear is well-spoken, sounds even more pro-France than even John Kerry, and would have been classified as a “right wing nut” to any Democrat from Massachusetts during the 1980s, as they fought a tough, Reagan-backed line on the Soviets and communism in Latin America. By Ed Moltzen · 26 July 2004
NY Times Correction Du Jour
By Ed Moltzen · 26 July 2004
The End of Blog Comments As We Know Them
There were more than 1,000 pieces of blog spam that were left to vandalize this site today. But that's nothing. Les Jones was just hit with a 3,000-blogspam attack. MT-Blacklist is a help, as Les notes, but it's moving into the "more than an annoyance" range. By Ed Moltzen · 25 July 2004
The Face Of Today's Democratic Leadership
Here are seven words guaranteed to spice up your afternoon: “This is Al Sharpton returning your call.” Sharpton, the reverend and national brand of racial unrest, returned my call one lazy afternoon more than a decade ago. It was a very short conversation. I was working as a reporter in upstate New York and asked him if he would comply with a judge’s ruling that he give pre-trial testimony in the slander lawsuit filed by Steven Pagones against him, Tawana Brawley and a couple of lawyers. The short answer: No. He wouldn’t cooperate. He wouldn’t apologize. He wouldn’t explain. He wouldn’t go into detail about why he helped spread a vicious hoax into headlines around the world. Steven Pagones had been a young prosecutor in Dutchess County, New York during the late 1980s, when Tawana Brawley, after conferring with Sharpton and a couple of lawyers, reportedly accused Pagones of an ugly racial and sexual assault. She did most of her talking back then through Sharpton. Long story short: police and prosecutors looked at the girl’s claims and presented them to a grand jury even without her cooperation. The grand jury said it was all a hoax. Pagones – by then ruined – sued. Sharpton ducked the lawsuit against him for as long as he could but was finally found liable for defamation. To this day he has never apologized. Fast-forward to this week in Boston. John Kerry, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, has agreed to give a plum, prime-time speaking engagement on Wednesday to Sharpton, the hoax-perpetuating defamer. (Speaking of hoax-perpetuating defamers, Joe Wilson isn’t on the official convention roster but is slated to appear at a campaign-related media event.) Kerry has put forward Sharpton and Wilson as faces of today’s Democratic leadership. He’s given them web sites and microphones. (Although, evidently, the "restorehonesty.com" web site Kerry's campaign gave Wilson has now been converted to a standard Kerry-Edwards 2004 site.) Kerry wants us to hear the words of leaders of his Democratic leadership. Don’t count on “I’m sorry” being two of them. MORE: Michelle Malkin: "The party of Al Sharpton, tonight's grand finale speaker, promises to give us a 'Stronger More Secure America.' Is Jon Stewart in charge of the convention schedule or what? " By Ed Moltzen · 25 July 2004
NY Times Correction Du Jour
Actually, it wouldn't be a big surprise if ESPN2 covered a Kerry para-sailing event, but this seemed just a little bit off:
By Ed Moltzen · 24 July 2004
Posting
FYI: Posting will be light or not at all until Friday night, due to a combination of technical issues (malicious adware hit our major PC, scrambling enough files to cause it to crash while booting up; it's now in "the shop"), and work on a Late Final project that should be appearing in this space within a few weeks. See you by week's end. By Ed Moltzen · 21 July 2004
Quote of the Day
The New York Times follows the Sandy Berger controversy, and gets right to the issue:
So there you have it. By Ed Moltzen · 21 July 2004
How To Stick With An Issue, By The White House Press Corp
Ok, to recap: A former National Security Advisor and current aide to the Democratic presidential nominee-in-waiting is accused of stuffing secret documents into his pants and socks and hiding them from 9/11 investigators. So, naturally, it leads to this line of questioning during today's press gaggle aboard Air Force One:
Actually, it would be incorrect to infer that the press corp just dropped the Berger story. Another question a few moments later:
First, the Berger issue was dropped after one question and a followup, in favor of a Halliburton question, and then the Berger issue returned in the form of an accusatory question against the Bush Administration. At least the press corp hasn't completely forgotten how to grab hold of a question and not let go. By Ed Moltzen · 20 July 2004
Finding Killers
Mark O'Brien lost his son to a couple of New York street killers last year. While cops have not found his killer, O'Brien isn't giving up. He has created this web site with information about the case. An active, unfaltering information campaign is one of the best ways to keep a case from being forgotten. Burke O'Brien was only 25. Months after he was killed, after a few missteps, police began to develop new leads and even sketches of the people who may have killed him. If possible, bookmark BurkObrien.org for information and updates on the case. Undoubtedly now, many will be keeping tuned and following up. (Via A Small Victory.) By Ed Moltzen · 20 July 2004
A Little Song, A Little Dance, A Few National Security Documents In Your Pants
The only remaining issue that hasn't been discussed in the Sandy Berger criminal investigation is this one:
This may be the first-ever recorded case of someone shoplifting national security documents. Pants? Socks? As National Security Advisor, Berger spent many sleepless nights - without doubt - trying to keep Americans from getting blown up. He's a smart man with good credentials. But pants and socks? MORE: James Taranto: "It's hard to think of anything that looks less By Ed Moltzen · 20 July 2004
Hot Dogs Are Low-Carb, Right?
This disturbing note out of the Tampa Bay Devil Rays' front office:
"Pass me some peanuts and net carb-free candy, if I never went back it would be just dandy." Nope. Just not the same. Sorry. By Ed Moltzen · 19 July 2004
Even Steven
The ever-addictive Rasmussen daily presidential polling numbers this weekend just about slipped under the radar of other news and distractions of a summer weekend. If you didn't see yesterday, it reported that of those polled 46 percent favor President Bush for re-election, 46 percent say they are likely to vote for Sen. John Kerry in November and four percent back another candidate. Four percent are "unsure." It also noted that "the number of people who believe the U.S. economy is in a recession has reached its lowest level since October 2001. Overall levels of economic confidence are near their highest levels of 2004." Not only is it clear that the Edwards Bounce wasn't, but President Bush's latest dropoff didn't last for long, either. The peaks aren't really peaks, and the valleys aren't really valleys. Going by what's happened so far, don't expect any convention bounces this year for either candidate. MORE: It wasn't even for long. Bush is now up 47-45 in the Rasmussen dailies. By Ed Moltzen · 19 July 2004
Really Sort of Sad
Josh Marshall keeps trying to prop up Joe Wilson's claim that President Bush based a good part of his decision to go to war on bogus reports - and forged documents - that said Iraq wanted uranium from Niger. According to the Marshall tally, the Bush Administration lied or mislead, the Butler Commission lied or mislead and the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence lied or mislead. The only one who he hasn't accused of lying or misleading is Joe Wilson. Does anyone still have TalkingPointsMemo.com bookmarked? By Ed Moltzen · 18 July 2004
No More Breck Girl Bounce
According to the latest Rasmussen daily:
That's not all:
Perhaps the Kerry-Edwards ticket will get a bigger bounce from those Howard Dean and Al Sharpton prime-time speeches at the forthcoming Democratic National Convention. By Ed Moltzen · 17 July 2004
NY Times Correction du Jour
Ann Coulter, in her book, Treason, writes at length about liberal intelligentsia's bad habit of confusing actions of the House Un-American Activities Committee with anti-Communist investigations by Sen. Joe McCarthy. Critics have called her book awful and overblown. Maybe some of them should read it:
By Ed Moltzen · 17 July 2004
Caught on Video
Martha Stewart is defiant, and captures it on video. Contrition appears to be a lost trait these days. By Ed Moltzen · 16 July 2004
The Digging Continues
A favorite stock line in Sen. John Kerry's campaign speeches this year refers to an old saying that, "if you find yourself in a hole, stop digging." Kerry should pass those words of wisdom onto his supporter Joseph Wilson, the discredited former diplomat who has criticized Bush Administration WMD claims against Iraq. Specifically, Wilson is now spinning in a letter to the Senate Intelligence Committee (published at Salon) that he actually never said he "debunked" President Bush's claim that Iraq sought uranium from Africa:
Wilson, in an interview July 7, 2003, with Bill Hemmer on CNN:
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