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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
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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
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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
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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
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Juxtaposition of the Day

Some observers are pointing this quote from John Kerry's acceptance speech...

You see that flag up there. We call her Old Glory. The stars and stripes forever. I fought under that flag, as did so many of you here and all across our country. That flag flew from the gun turret right behind my head. It was shot through and through and tattered, but it never ceased to wave in the wind. It draped the caskets of men I served with and friends I grew up with. For us, that flag is the most powerful symbol of who we are and what we believe in. Our strength. Our diversity. Our love of country. All that makes America both great and good.

That flag doesn't belong to any president. It doesn't belong to any ideology and it doesn't belong to any political party. It belongs to all the American people.

...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
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$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:

The new funds generated could be used to build a new rail link from Long Island and JFK airport into Lower Manhattan, increasing the global competitiveness of New York while helping hundreds of thousands commuters on Long Island and boosting the long-term job creation efforts in the City.

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
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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
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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:

When I came to the Senate, I broke with many in my own party to vote for a balanced budget, because I thought it was the right thing to do. I fought to put a100,000 (SIC) cops on the street.

And then I reached across the aisle to work with John McCain, to find the
truth about our POW's and missing in action, and to finally make peace with
Vietnam.

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
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Advice For Kerry

NY Daily News Columnist Michael Goodwin has this advice for Sen. John Kerry:

These are eight magic words and they are offered with the modest suggestion that John Kerry say them from the podium tonight when he is crowned King of all Democrats: "We must kill them before they kill us."

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:

But it's primarily an intelligence and law enforcement operation that requires cooperation around the world -- the very thing this administration is worst at. And most importantly, the war on terror is also an engagement in the Middle East economically, socially, culturally, in a way that we haven't embraced, because otherwise we're inviting a clash of civilizations.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  29 July 2004
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The Iraqization of Iraq

This news from Central Command:

IRAQ SECURITY FORCES LEAD OPERATION NEAR AS SUWAYRAH

CAMP BABYLON, Iraq - Two hundred eighty Iraqi National Guard soldiers and Iraqi police officers in the Wassit Province led an operation Wednesday that resulted in 35 anti-Iraqi insurgents killed, 45 insurgents detained and more than 50 mortar and artillery rounds and other munitions captured.

Eight Iraqi security force members were killed and nine wounded in the operation that began at 7 a.m. north of As Suwayrah.

It sounds like the clock is ticking on Michael Moore's Minutemen.

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

More, from New York's newspaper of record:

A picture caption yesterday with the obituary of the Tammany Hall leader Carmine G. De Sapio misstated the given name of a former New York mayor shown at a formal dinner in 1950 with him and Frank S. Hogan, the Manhattan district attorney. The mayor was William O'Dwyer; Paul was his brother, a politically active lawyer. The article also referred erroneously to Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., whom Mr. De Sapio persuaded to abandon a run for governor in 1954. Roosevelt was the third son of the former president, not the eldest.

"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
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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
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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:

Kerry's most alarming policy is his long-standing opposition to health-savings accounts, a new coverage option made available this year. Since January, tens of thousands of uninsured Americans have gained coverage with health-savings accounts, and millions more could do so soon. Kerry has voted against health-savings accounts in the past and today likens them to the tax relief he seeks to eliminate.

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
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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
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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
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How Cool Are They?

This is from a real email sent out by the staff of MSNBC's "Hardball":

Date: Tue, 27 Jul 2004 13:28:19 -0700

From: "Hardball with Chris Matthews"

Subject: More From The Cool Hardball Blog

To: HARDBALL@LISTS.MSNBC.COM

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
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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:

The indictment charges that the defendants were engaged in a criminal enterprise, denominated the "LOCAL 8 GROUP," for the purpose of making money for the Genovese Organized Crime Family and themselves by extorting cash bribes from roofing contractors who the corrupt union officials threatened with overly zealous enforcement of LOCAL 8's collective bargaining agreement.

The cash bribes paid to the union officials averaged between $1,500 and $2,000 per month, per contractor. Some of the contractors paid per job, while others paid what amounted to a "retainer" to cover all of their jobs.

Contractors who made the cash payments gained a competitive advantage because LOCAL 8 officials allowed them to use less expensive non-union roofers and labor saving equipment like power tools on their projects, while non payers could not.

The defendants also interrupted work on the projects of contractors who did not capitulate to their scheme and "loaded them up" with more costly union roofers on threat of shutting down their projects.

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
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Closing In

Looks like the world is getting smaller for bin Laden associate Abu Zarqawi and his gang:

KIRKUK, Iraq - A follower of alleged Al Qaeda leader in Iraq Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi was arrested in the northern oil city of Kirkuk, along with a suspected local kidnapping ring, the US military said on Tuesday.

The suspect was arrested on Monday night, Colonel Lloyd Miles of the 25th Infantry Division told reporters during a press conference at the US military base at Kirkuk’s airport.

There's also been this news regarding a significant set back for the bad guys:

TIKRIT, Iraq - 1st Infantry Division Soldiers detained 15 individuals during a raid near Mandeli around 5:30 a.m. July 25.

Soldiers conducted the raid to capture members of the Jihad Taheed terrorist cell.

The Soldiers confiscated four AK-47 assault rifles, one .22 caliber rifle, one SKS rifle, 1,000 rounds of ammunition and 16 AK-47 30-round magazines.

Looks like the Jihadists are stuck in a quagmire.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  27 July 2004
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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:

"Mitchell: Dems soften tone"

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 July 2004
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The Platform

Here is a copy of the 41-page, 2004 Democratic platform that will be adopted at the convention.

Among the declarations:

The North Koreans have made it clear to the world – and to the terrorists – that they are open for business and will sell to the highest bidder. But while this Administration has been fixated on Iraq, the nuclear dangers from North Korea have multiplied.

Maybe they missed this story last year in the L.A. Times:

Kay said his investigators discovered that Saddam's regime negotiated and signed a contract with Pyongyang in late 1999 and paid $10 million in advance to secretly purchase Nodong missile technology, as well as other prohibited military equipment, in violation of U.N. sanctions.

Late last year, Kay said, the Iraqis demanded, " 'Where is the stuff we paid for?' And the North Koreans said, 'Sorry, there's so much U.S. attention on us that we cannot deliver it.' And the Iraqis said, 'Well, we don't like this but give us our $10 million back.' "

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 July 2004
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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.
obama.jpg

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:

As some of you may be aware, I have a particular stake in an intelligent foreign policy. My father was an economist from Kenya, my mother, an international development specialist from Kansas. I was raised in Indonesia and Hawaii, before moving to the continental United States to attend college. In grade school, I was a Protestant child attending Catholic school in a majority Muslim country.

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?”

My own life experience has taught me the interconnectedness of our world, the common threads that link disparate nations and cultures.

So I speak from the heart as well as the head when I tell you that our nation is served by being part of the world, and not apart from it.

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.

American leadership has been a mighty force for human progress. The steady march of democracy and free enterprise across the globe speaks to the steadfastness of our leadership and the power of our ideals.

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.

Today, we face new and frightful challenges, especially the threat of terror.

Never has it been more important for America to lead wisely, to shrewdly project power and wield influence on behalf of liberty and security.

Unfortunately, I fear our once great influence is waning, a victim of misguided policies and impetuous actions. Never has the United States possessed so much power, and never has the United States had so little influence to lead.

Sadly, today, much of the world no longer listens to the United States.

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.

On September 12th, 2001, the banner headline in Le Monde read ‘We are all Americans.’

Just think about that – a French newspaper expressing such support less than three years ago. And think about how we have squandered that good will since then and what we could have done with it in building support of common goals.

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.

In forming a “coalition of the willing” in Iraq that failed to include the most capable and sophisticated of our allies—France, Germany, Turkey, among others—the United States increased exponentially the risks and costs of the war.

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.

The absence of international support not only weakened our credibility and moral authority; it also made the occupation more difficult and dangerous.

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.

Even worse, we undermined moderate Muslim leaders who were receptive to American ideals and leadership. Terrorists have had a recruiting bonanza with the images of slain children and civilians, the pictures of torture and sexual humiliation at Abu Gharib prison, the image of an oil-rich Arab state under U.S. occupation.

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.

As we know from last week’s Senate report on U.S. intelligence failures, the very reasons we presented to the world for going to war in Iraq were also wrong.

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 dictator of Iraq and his weapons of mass destruction are a threat to the security of free nations. He is a danger to his neighbors. He's a sponsor of terrorism. He's an obstacle to progress in the Middle East. For decades he has been the cruel, cruel oppressor of the Iraq people.

The war was never a WMD-only activity. Back to Obama:

The credibility of the United States, its most important asset in wielding influence and leadership in the world, has been damaged for generations to come.

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.

There is a well-known story from the beginning of the Cuban missile crisis when Dean Acheson, who was serving as special envoy to brief French President deGaulle, offered to document the American case by presenting satellite photos of Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba. The normally contentious deGaulle shrugged and replied, “No, the word of the President of the United States is good enough for me.”

That kind of confidence in American leadership will be difficult to restore. So will the willingness of our partners to join us in attacking a host of other global problems.

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.

The unilateralism of the Bush administration, in all aspects of American foreign policy, has added to the burden of restoring American prestige.

This Administration walked away from a host of efforts to promote international security, environmental protection, and human rights, including the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, the Biological Weapons Convention, the Kyoto Protocol on global warming, the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the International Criminal Court for war crimes and genocide.

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.

In fact, any international obligation that requires compromise, that in any way restricts our ability to act unilaterally, has been rejected.

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.

Some see this as conservative. In fact it is radical—the abandonment of 50 years of American principles practiced by Democratic and Republican presidents alike.

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?

I do not suggest that we cede any of our sovereign rights. Multilateralism is not an end in itself. We don’t pursue cooperation for the sake of cooperation alone. It is in our national interest to work with others to accomplish national goals.

As long as the French agree, or a Democrat is in the White House.

With American troops in more than 100 countries, it is in our national interest to observe the Geneva Convention so that we do not diminish the potential protection of our troops in those nations.

With the threat of terrorism on U.S. soil and abroad, it is in our national interest to work with others to strengthen the Biological Weapons Convention so that we protect our citizens from terrorism.

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?

With all that is at stake when we do not have stable nations and governments around the world, it is in our national interest to support democracy building.

But the top of the ticket doesn’t think it’s essential. Kerry, on Meet the Press, April 18:

I think that what is important is to have a pluralistic representation. It doesn't have to be, at least in the early days, the kind of democracy this administration has talked about, though that's our goal and we should remain there.

Back to Obama:

And, where the stakes are the highest—in the war on terror--we cannot possibly succeed without extraordinary international cooperation. Effective international police actions require the highest degree of intelligence sharing, planning and collaborative enforcement.

Been there, done that. To wit: the U.S. arrest of Khalid Sheik Mohammed in Pakistan.

The globalization of the economy also means our self-interest is tied to cooperation and the ability to effectively negotiate conflict. It is in our national interest to work to ensure that economies do not collapse and infant democracies do not fail as we have seen failed states become breeding grounds for belligerents, even terrorists.

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.

Robust and fair international commerce can increase living standards here and abroad, while buttressing new democratic institutions.

Finally, American leadership and international cooperation are critical to attacking systemic problems that span borders--whether it’s the growing threat of AIDS, nuclear proliferation or environmental degradation.

But just when the need for American influence and leadership is the greatest, the evidence of our new lack of influence is manifest.

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.”

The effort to rebuild Iraq has no new recruits among nations. NATO rejected our request for additional personnel and resources to secure free and fair elections in Afghanistan. And when the Bush administration rightly sought the collaboration of our allies to prevent the starvation and slaughter of innocents in the Darfur region of Sudan, we were largely ignored.

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.

None of us, as a citizen or an elected official, should just curse the darkness. So, let me tell you where I’d try and light some candles.

To begin with, we must confront the immediate challenge involved in returning sovereignty to the Iraqi people. Although I loudly and vigorously opposed the war in Iraq, I understand that it was an American commitment, not a Republican one.

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.

Now that we are there, all of us want to see the mission succeed. The stakes are enormous for the world and our own security.

If Iraq can find its way to a reasonable semblance of a modern, reformed and democratic state, it will reap benefits in the region for generations to come. If it disintegrates into chaos, it will plant the seeds of an even greater and more poisonous radicalism.

We must leave behind a government that has enough legitimacy and political support from all three factions—the Kurds, Sunnis and Shia - to survive on its own. The best path to that is through free and fair elections and a constitution that preserves minority rights. For these elections to take place next year, as scheduled, there must be sufficient security in the country and, therefore, we must maintain a strong military presence while encouraging the interim government to hold elections as soon as possible.

Nevertheless, we desperately need international assistance in Iraq in order to succeed.

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.

This will not be easy, but it is possible. It will require us not only to persuade other countries that we share a common interest in preventing failure, but also to give them a meaningful voice and role in Iraqi affairs. We should give them fair access to the multi-billion dollar reconstruction contracts.

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?

Let them be a part of putting Iraq's profitable oil industry back together again. In return, they must forgive Saddam's multi-billion dollar debts to their countries and help pay the reconstruction bill. We should also be giving other nations a leadership role in pursuing our wider strategic goals in the region. Restoring our influence, and our standing in the world, is thus a critical component of securing that cooperation.

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.

A second top global priority is the fight against the spread of weapons of mass destruction. The United States must build and lead an international consensus for early preventive action—before the necessity of force—to secure existing weapons of mass destruction and collateral nuclear material.

Doesn’t Resolution 1441 fit into this category?

I believe there is no better dollar for dollar national security investment than the Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction Program for the Soviet Union. More than a decade after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Russia still has nearly 20,000 nuclear weapons and enough nuclear material to produce 50,000 more. At the current pace of spending - a $450 million funding level - it will take 13 years to secure all the potential bomb material from the old Soviet Republic. With increased funding and focus, we can do it in four.

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.

At the same time, in order to ensure that these efforts are of real value, we must strengthen global rules against proliferation. The existing Non-Proliferation Treaty allows countries to develop all the building blocks of a nuclear program and then withdraw from the treaty without penalty-- once they are ready to create enriched uranium or produce plutonium for nuclear weapons. International nuclear powers, like the United States, should help non-nuclear countries develop nuclear energy by providing them with uranium, while maintaining control of the fuel cycle so that spent nuclear material can be taken back and stored securely.

This plan was tried in North Korea. That country signed on to the deal, and then secretly pursued a nuclear weapon program anyway.

This must occur so that it cannot be used to build weapons. Automatic UN sanctions should apply to any nation seeking to escape these controls.

Why stop at sanctions? Why don’t we throw in a “strongly worded message” too?

And, when there are countries that have been proven to have the capability to build weapons of mass destruction, the United States must lead in the efforts to deflect them from that dangerous path.

We have seen this in Iran, which the Bush administration has correctly targeted as a dangerous cheater in the nuclear game. According to a report released by the UN International Atomic Energy Agency last month, Iran is continuing to assemble parts and materials needed for building nuclear weapons—in violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, of which it is a signatory.

What better illustration is there of the importance of the United States to be able to lead and work with other nations than in Iran, where the United States can work together with Russia and European nations who supply the expertise and business connections there.

That’s assuming other countries aren’t supplying Iran with technology and materials.

A third issue crying for attention is North Korea. This Administration spent three and a half years refusing to negotiate directly with North Korea, in the name of a misguided sense of moral purity. The consequences of that delay are now evident. Because we refused to talk, experts believe North Korea may now be close to having six to eight nuclear weapons. Because we refused to talk, many more Koreans faced starvation by their own government. Because we refused to talk, China and South Korea are beginning to act on their own. That is not my conception of morality.

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.

While it is important to have backing from the partners in the Six-Party talks, bilateral talks are a key to progress. The United States must insist on complete and verifiable elimination of North Korea's nuclear capability, while facilitating a reform agenda that is broader than denuclearization. Only genuine negotiations will determine whether diplomacy can bring an end to Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions or whether economic pressure and possibly even more forceful measures will be necessary to convince Pyongyang that its nuclear weapons program poses an unacceptable risk.

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.

This brings us to a fourth challenge – our relationship with China. China’s role in the North Korean nuclear standoff illustrates its growing importance in both diplomatic and economic affairs. In the new China, we face both a threat and an opportunity.

The United States should be firm on issues that divide us—like Taiwan—while flexible on issues that could unite us. We should insist on labor standards and human rights, the opening of Chinese markets fully to American goods, and the fulfillment of legal contracts with American businesses—but without triggering a trade war that could prove disastrous.

China’s growth has been so explosive, it’s factories and people fueling such massive economic activity, that any downward spiral there would reverberate throughout the world. In the words of New York Times foreign affairs columnist Thomas Friedman, “the world cannot tolerate any sort of prolonged instability in China. If the China bubble bursts, it will be the mother of all burst bubbles.”

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.

Fifth, American influence and leadership is critically required with respect to the AIDS epidemic.

This week’s alarming report by the Joint United Nations Program on HIV-AIDS showed epidemic levels of new AIDS cases in certain provinces of China and India—the world’s two most populous nations. Although overall national infection rates are now low, if new infections grow at rates even close to those we saw in Africa, the world would not only be faced with another humanitarian crisis. There would also be a tremendous destabilizing effect for the world economy, and in a fragile region of the world.

Without American leadership and influence, how can we prevent this mounting epidemic from continuing its steady, destabilizing and destructive movement around the globe?

The United States must give its fair share to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. President Bush’s budget this year actually cuts the U.S. contribution to the Global Fund by 64%. As Senator, I will work to hold the president to his word and fully fund our commitment to the war on AIDS.

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.

I also recognize that fighting the war on AIDS will take more than money. American drug companies also hold the key to combating the scourge of AIDS. Today, our government requires FDA approval of all generic drug cocktails purchased with US funds-- despite the fact that a generic drug approval system is already in place under the auspices of the World Health Organization.

The United States must take a leadership role in making generic drugs accessible to AIDS victims around the world. There is strong evidence that this is needed. A breakthrough reported last week by the New England Journal of Medicine shows that a new two-drug treatment for pregnant women with AIDS prevents transmittal of the virus to the newborn infants in 98 percent of cases. U.S. policies which ensure the provision of generic or affordable drugs to stop the spread of AIDS to infants, and sustain the lives of mothers to care for their healthy babies, are critical to turning the tide.

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?

Sixth, America’s moral authority and credibility will be needed, now more than ever, in the quest for a Middle East peace.

Really? More than ten years ago, when Saddam began rewarding families of Palestinian homicide bombers?

Our first and immutable commitment must be to the security of Israel, our only true ally in the Middle East and the only democracy.

Iraq’s not an ally? Jordan? Saudi Arabia? Kuwait? He continues:

The Administration’s failure to be consistently involved in helping Israel achieve peace with the Palestinians has been both wrong for our friendship with Israel, as well as badly damaging to our standing in the Arab world.

I do not pretend to have all the answers to this vexing problem, and untangling the issues involved is an appropriate topic for a separate speech. What I can say is this – not only must we be consistent, but we will not succeed unless we have the cooperation of the European Union and the Arab States in pressing for reforms within the Palestinian community.

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.”

Seventh, and closer to home, the United States has a powerful interest in sustaining democratic reforms in Latin America. We must restore the United States’ reputation as a defender of democracy in this region.

I wonder how this sentiment goes over with the top of the ticket. From a Boston Globe bio on Kerry:
kerryortega.jpg

Within weeks of taking office in 1985, he was off to Nicaragua, accompanied by reporters on a 36-hour, self-appointed fact-finding mission with another freshman, Democratic Senator Tom Harkin of Iowa. Congressional Democrats had accused the White House of exaggerating the communist threat posed by the Sandinista regime. So the two senators were publicly castigated when -- just days after meeting with Daniel Ortega and other leaders of the regime -- the Sandinistas climbed aboard a plane to Moscow to cement their Soviet ties.

Looks like Kerry worked the ol’ charms there, convincing Ortega on the benefits of democracy.

The U.S. must continue to advocate, in word and action, multilateral action to support democracy. If the citizens of these countries do not see the economic benefits of democracy in their daily lives, their support for democratic governance can erode rapidly. That is when demagogues, like Hugo Chavez, will take advantage of those economic inequalities. We must work toward meaningful democracies, through fair labor standards and the bolstering of the rule of law, to bring about real economic justice.

And Obama took the first, bold step in this direction by opposing the ouster of Saddam Hussein.

And, in every region, we must remember that our armed forces cannot impose democracies. We must support those brave men and women fighting for democracy in their own countries – whether it is in China or Saudi Arabia or elsewhere.

Too bad Obama wasn’t around when John Kerry was fighting aid to the Contras.

Expanded trade, technical assistance, aid for infrastructure development—all these things can help build and sustain the broad middle classes necessary to secure democracy.

Now, while America has historically led by the force of its ideas and ideals, as well as by force of arms, our fundamental obligation must still be to maintain the best, most sophisticated military in the world. Our military must be able to meet the new threats of the 21st Century.

Operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and the war on terrorism have reduced the pace of military transformation and have revealed our lack of preparation for defensive and stability operations. This Administration has overextended our military - as evidenced by the recent decision to recall 5,600 ready reservists to Iraq for 18 months. And, by grossly underestimating the costs of war, the Bush Administration has been stealing from tomorrow’s budget to pay for today’s war costs.

But remember, Kerry voted for the $87 billion before he …Oh, never mind.
One could argue, though, that Afghanistan highlighted exactly how quickly our military could transform itself – on the fly, while engaging an enemy. Remember Johnny Apple’s famous comparisons of Afghanistan to Vietnam? Remember the fear that the harsh, Afghanistan winters would claim untold lives of American GIs? Remember retired Gen. Barry McAffrey estimating that door-to-door combat in Baghdad could claim 3,000 American lives? Never happened, never happened and never happened.

We must make sure we have enough troops and that those soldiers are given the best equipment and training available.

The foundation of the All-Volunteer force is that they will serve with honor, bravery, and integrity and that, in return, we will ensure they will be treated with the honor and respect they deserve. Since 9/11, the U.S. has embarked on the largest call-up of members of the Guard and Reserves since World War II. Forty percent of those serving in Iraq are members of the Guard and Reserves.

We must ensure that members of our National Guard and our reservists have access to affordable, quality health care. While active duty members receive free health care through TRICARE – the military health care service – reservists only have access to it for a limited time surrounding their active duty service. That is not honoring our troops.

We must also ensure that our activated troops do not have to worry about having enough money to take care of themselves and their families, that they do not have to forfeit a good education when they are called to active duty, and that our military families receive the support they need.

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.

Along with strengthening our military, we must strengthen our intelligence capabilities. In recent years, through international cooperation, our government has had some success in tracking the terrorists’ financial resources, arresting important terrorist leaders and, thus, making our people more secure. We should be thankful for that.

But, to succeed in the war on terror, we must have extraordinary international cooperation on all fronts, while reforming our domestic intelligence capabilities in a manner that balances the risks of impeding on the civil liberties of our citizens. We must make sure that our intelligence sharing capabilities are improved across agencies and between federal and local law enforcement. We must provide the needed resources to our first responders to ensure their access to critical information at the critical times.

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.

And we must give the Director of Intelligence the authority he or she needs over budget and personnel to be effective and accountable. I recognize that this is not an easy political move – there will remain turf battles within the Executive Branch and Congress. Such reforms will require a determined effort by the President, the congressional leadership, and members of the Senate, and I will be supportive of such efforts.

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.

Finally, our national security strategy must include a plan to free America from its dependence on foreign oil. In an increasingly more hostile and dangerous world, neither American security, nor our economic potential, can afford to be held hostage by those half a world away because our nation is too dependent on others for our energy. This requires concrete steps to move us toward energy independence including requiring that 20% of the nation’s power supply portfolio come from renewable sources like wind, solar, biomass and geothermal energy by 2020, and that a percentage of our nation’s fuel supply is provided by renewable fuels such as ethanol and biodiesel.

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
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NY Times Correction Du Jour

Ouch:

A front-page article on July 13 about Morgan Stanley's settlement of a sex discrimination lawsuit brought by the government misstated the age of Allison K. Schieffelin, a former employee whose complaint led to it. She is 43, not 42.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  26 July 2004
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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
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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.
sharptonkerry.jpg

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
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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:

The TV Watch column in Weekend yesterday gave an incorrect cable channel in some copies for "John Kerry: Bringing the War Home," on Sunday night. It will be on MSNBC, as shown in the program listing, not on ESPN.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  24 July 2004
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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
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Quote of the Day

The New York Times follows the Sandy Berger controversy, and gets right to the issue:

Mr. Breuer responded, "If there's a suggestion that he's shoving things down his pants, that is categorically false and ridiculous."

So there you have it.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  21 July 2004
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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:

Q Scott, any reaction to the Justice Department's investigation of Sandy Berger ?

MR. McCLELLAN: I think that those are -- that any questions relating to an investigation like that need to be directed to the Department of Justice.

Q Is the President concerned that any of the material that was allegedly taken somehow informed the Kerry campaign in some way that may be inappropriate?

MR. McCLELLAN: What we've seen is, and what we know is what has been reported in the news media. It is apparently an investigation that is underway, and the questions are best directed at Department of Justice. I don't think we'll have anything further to say about it.

Q Do you think it's appropriate for Halliburton to set up an off shore subsidiary and then have operations in Iran ? Do you think that's an appropriate thing for a company to do?

Actually, it would be incorrect to infer that the press corp just dropped the Berger story. Another question a few moments later:

Q Back to the Berger thing. Democrats, if they haven't already suggested it, might say that Berger's name in the investigation was leaked to distract attention from the release of the report on Thursday. How would you respond to that?

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
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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
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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:

Berger and his lawyer said Monday night he knowingly removed the handwritten notes by placing them in his jacket, pants and socks, and also inadvertently took copies of actual classified documents in a leather portfolio.

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
innocent than stuffing documents into his pants. Did Berger tell the 9/11
commissioners he was just glad to see them? "

By Ed Moltzen  ·  20 July 2004
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Hot Dogs Are Low-Carb, Right?

This disturbing note out of the Tampa Bay Devil Rays' front office:

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., July 19 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The Tampa Bay Devil Rays have entered into a multi-year sponsorship agreement with Largo, FL.-based GeoPharma, Inc. (Nasdaq: GORX). GeoPharma markets CarbSlim Bites through its wholly owned subsidiary, Breakthrough Engineered Nutrition. CarbSlim Bites is a nationally distributed line of patent-pending, net carb-free candy geared for health-conscious consumers and anyone following a low-carbohydrate lifestyle.

"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
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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
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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.

Here is his latest post.

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
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No More Breck Girl Bounce

According to the latest Rasmussen daily:

Saturday July 17, 2004--The latest Rasmussen Reports Presidential Tracking Polls shows Kerry with 47% of the vote while Bush attracts 46%. The Tracking Poll is updated daily by noon Eastern.

That's not all:

The number of voters with unfavorable opinions of both Vice Presidential candidates increased over the past week. The number who view John Edwards as a political moderate fell by nine points.

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
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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:

An obituary of the actress and acting teacher Phoebe Brand Carnovsky on Monday misstated the forum in which the director Elia Kazan named her and her husband, the actor Morris Carnovsky, as Communists. It was the House Committee on Un-American Activities, not hearings conducted by Senator Joseph R. McCarthy.

By Ed Moltzen  ·  17 July 2004
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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
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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:

I never claimed to have "debunked" the allegation that Iraq was seeking uranium from Africa. I claimed only that the transaction described in the documents that turned out to be forgeries could not have occurred and did not occur.

Wilson, in an interview July 7, 2003, with Bill Hemmer on CNN:

HEMMER: It's a wonderful day for us here at AMERICAN MORNING.

You went to Niger several years ago. You concluded essentially that Iraq could not buy this uranium from that country. Why not?

WILSON:...First of all, any official government transaction would have required the signatures of the minister of mines and the prime minister. Secondly, the consortium that ran the two mines up there was made up of highly respected consumers of uranium products in the world -- the French, the Spanish, the Germans and the Japanese. And thirdly, the managing partner of the consortium -- that is to say the organization that actually handled the product -- was the French uranium company.

And fourthly, frankly, Niger had been an ally of the United States, a close ally and a beneficiary of American largesse for 25 years, and Niger had actually sent troops to fight alongside Ameri