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Taj MahAlbany?
Someone's floating the rumor that Donald Trump will run for governor, and Baseball Crank seems less than impressed: I have neither the time nor the energy here to recount the downsides of Trump as a public official (or as a campaigner), but let's just say there's no shortage of those, either. And he'd be only the most nominal of Republicans, even compared to Weld. William Weld would obviously be a lot more liberal than many Republicans would like to see running on the ticket for New York governor in 2006. But so would Rudy Giuliani, arguably the strongest Republican politician the state has produced in a generation. (Giuliani would be hard to beat but he's not running.) There are only two problems with Trump running for governor: 1) He'd have no patience for state lawmakers and 2) state lawmakers (and special interest groups) would have no patience for him. And that's to say nothing about what would be a long list of potential conflicts of interest (real estate, gambling, for starters) that would keep Trump lawyers and publicists busy for years. Would Trump make a good governor? He'd be fun to watch, but it will never happen. By Ed Moltzen · 31 December 2005
"...The Anti-War Movement, That Is New York"
Eliot Spitzer, New York's Democratic attorney general and candidate for governor, said this in a recent speech (audio here): The political movements that have begun here - the labor movement, the environmental movement, the women's rights movement, the civil rights movements, the anti-war movement, that is New York. The New York Sun responds: There you have it, in a nutshell, every thing that's wrong with the modern Democratic Party, all in one Spitzerian sentence. His likely opponet for governor in 2006, William Weld, has yet to seize on Spitzer's remarks. But Weld has been, unlike many others in the state's Republican party, aggressively attacking Spitzer and Democrats. If Spitzer's remarks on New York as home to Democratic special interest groups don't raise eyebrows, perhaps this remark, from the same speech, will: We are, and we have been, the base of the intellectual and political creativity - and opportunity - for every person. Memo to Eliot Spitzer: You've got the Upper East Side Liberal Snob vote locked up; playing to them might be a bit of overkill. By Ed Moltzen · 28 December 2005
Fifty-Fifty
Friday December 23, 2005--Fifty percent (50%) of American adults approve of the way George W. Bush is performing his role as President. That's up six points since the President's speech on Sunday night. It's dangerous to read too much into the Rasmussen polls, because for the past few months it has shown Bush's approval has bumped up, bit by bit, for a few days, tops out, and then drops right back down to the 43-percent approval range. But this time Bush's gains have followed a steady month of progress in Iraq, a steady month of speeches and engagement with the American public on the war effort, and some self-inflicted wounds by his opponents. By Ed Moltzen · 23 December 2005
Free AM
New York's WABC-AM radio is going commercial-free from 5 a.m. to 7 a.m., according to this on the New York Radio Message Board. It's almost as if terrestrial radio has competition or something. By Ed Moltzen · 22 December 2005
Strike Update
Day Two of the New York City transit strike. No end in sight, but there appears to be less traffic today than yesterday.
(8:05 a.m. Via Alkemis.) Update At 11 a.m., the 4-person-to-a-car restrictions lift. And that leads to this:
(11:05 a.m. Via Alkemis.) By Ed Moltzen · 21 December 2005
Hairball
Wade Boggs. Dan Shaughnessy: "Johnny Damon is a Yankee and it looks like the Red Sox don't know what they are doing." Red at SurvivingGrady.com: "Mr. Damon, you are dead to me." Of course, the Red Sox still have David Ortiz in the lineup and will either have Manny Ramirez or a similar bat in their lineup (if Manny is traded.) But they've lost perhaps the best leadoff hitter in baseball, lost him to the 8-time reigning division champs. The Red Sox lost a 100-run-a-year player, and the Yankees gained a 100-run-a-year player. For teams that have been almost identically matched for the past three seasons, that's a 200-run swing that Red Sox Nation could do without. And, by the way, the Yankees will still probably save on salary in 2006 without Bernie Williams' 7-year contract, Kevin Brown's salary and with Robinson Cano at second base to start the year instead of Tony Womack. How many days until pitchers and catchers report? On Johnny Damon's web site, some Red Sox fans are beginning to voice their comments, including this: You represented EVERYTHING Red Sox, when you helped bring the World Series to us, the fans. By going to New York, that now means nothing to me. Disappointment doesn't adequately describe what I feel, and what your fans feel. By Ed Moltzen · 21 December 2005
Strike!
TWU Local 100 has begun to strike "MTA properties" in New York - meaning buses and subways shut down. Mayor Bloomberg is not pleased. Here's the city's plan for "alternative transportation." The union has an alternative plan too - it's going to blogger if its web site crashes again! Here's a site with some New York City traffic cams, so you can follow along with the fun today as it happens. MORE: Traffic on the Long Island Expressway and other highways was moving at a nice clip, although there were a higher ratio than normal of angry, psychotic tailgaters. Train station parking lots didn't appear to have any extra volume on Long Island, either. MORE: Amy Langfield has a lot more at AmyLangfield.com and NewYorkology.com. Gothamist posts union boss Roger Toussaint's statement, which includes this: "All Local 100 stewards are directed to report to their assigned strike locations, picket lines, or location nearest you immediately. To our riders, we ask for your understanding and forebarence." Well, one rider posted this on Gothamist: Way to go, Transit Union. For all those people without health insurance, who get paid hourly, who can't work and now don't get paid, I wish you luck getting your contract. That's probably not the understanding Toussaint was hoping for. MORE: Commuter Jeff Jarvis is in rare form.
MORE: If you follow conventional wisdom, and don't drive into the city, you'll avoid situations like the photo at right. (NYC DOT cam via Alkemis.) MORE: Gov. George Pataki is back from New Hampshire and Iowa and is on the case. MORE: CNN Pipeline, the new, Internet-based subscription service of CNN which provides four live news streams all day long, has been covering the strike and showing breathtaking aerial video of traffic backed up all throughout the city's five boroughs. But when a correspondent was prepping to shoot a live report for CNN, and was standing in front of the camera outside Penn Station, he began - apparently unaware the video was streaming all over the world - to jawbone with his camera man. The reporter (who looked unfamiliar and unhappy) laughed, shook his head, and said, on cam, "You know, it's funny. You and I have worked for this company for how long? And it's still..." It didn't appear he was going to say something flattering about his company, but just at the moment of truth someone spiked the live stream from CNN Pipeline. Rats. Tag: Transit Strike By Ed Moltzen · 20 December 2005
Regime Change Iran
Regime Change Iran, the blog, writes about an apparent attempt at regime change in Iran. By Ed Moltzen · 18 December 2005
Bugged
President Bush signed an executive order allowing the NSA to conduct eavesdropping activities on those suspected of having al Qaeda links, who were in the U.S. making overseas phone calls and writing emails to people in other countries. The New York Times, among others, is making serious accusations: (Bush) secretly and recklessly expanded the government's powers in dangerous and unnecessary ways that eroded civil liberties and may also have violated the law. James Joyner and Mark Levin each dismantle any notion that the eavesdropping violated the law. Joyner: The fact that there have been "three dozen" separate authorizations in a relatively short period would seem an indication that the administration was relying on their authority under § 1811: Levin: ...(T)he FISA permits the government to monitor foreign communications, even if they are with U.S. citizens. A FISA warrant is only needed if the subject communications are wholly contained in the United States and involve a foreign power or an agent of a foreign power. That leads to this question: If President Bush was legally permitted to take an action that could prevent another terrorist mass murder on U.S. soil, and he didn't take that action, would that be derelection of duty? And how does Bush's actions compare with those of liberal icon Robert F. Kennedy, as described by this piece in the Atlantic Monthly: On October 10, 1963, U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy committed what is widely viewed as one of the most ignominious acts in modern American history: he authorized the Federal Bureau of Investigation to begin wiretapping the telephones of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. Kennedy believed that one of King's closest advisers was a top-level member of the American Communist Party, and that King had repeatedly misled Administration officials about his ongoing close ties with the man. Kennedy acted reluctantly, and his order remained secret until May of 1968, just a few weeks after King's assassination and a few days before Kennedy's own. (Should those in glass houses throw bugging devices?) There are any number of questions that are still unanswered. Who was bugged? What was their background? Who were they talking to? What did they say? Were lives saved? Who leaked the information? What was the leaker's motivation? Here's how The Times described its sourcing: Nearly a dozen current and former officials, who were granted anonymity because of the classified nature of the program, discussed it with reporters for The New York Times because of their concerns about the operation's legality and oversight. Well, there are a number of "former officials" who actively campaigned against President Bush's re-election in 2004. Could the paper at least tell readers if any of its sources opposed President Bush's re-election? "Former officials" could include people who worked in the LBJ administration. Stay tuned. By Ed Moltzen · 18 December 2005
Giuliani
Former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani, on the failure of the U.S. Senate to reauthorize the Patriot Act: I support the extension of the Patriot Act for one simple reason: Americans must use every legal and constitutional tool in their arsenal to fight terrorism and protect their lives and liberties. By Ed Moltzen · 17 December 2005
General Agreement on WMD
(Ret.) Gen. Mike DeLong has held that Iraqi WMD may have been shipped across the border from Iraq into Syria in the days before the war was launched in 2003: Two days before March 19, 2003, we saw quite a number of vehicles going into Syria. We could not go after them because we said we'd give Saddam 48 hours. A lot of (Iraqi) leaders went into Syria, and a lot of WMD went into Syria. According to this New York Sun piece, an Israeli general believes the same thing, although the two accounts differ on timing. By Ed Moltzen · 15 December 2005
Iran + Hamas =
Iran's President Ahmadinejad met this week with the leader of Hamas, and both are talking in increasingly threatening tones toward the U.S. and Israel. According to Ahmadinejad's web site: Ahmadinejad emphasized, "Prestige of Islam needs to be preserved and we should all keep in mind that it is God that grants victory, therefore, we all need to have full trust in God, and remain pious, since piety is the secret of our victory against our enemies." The president meanwhile emphasized the need to preserve unity and asked for efforts made by all Palestinian resistance groups aimed at boosting solidarity and serving the Palestinian cause more effectively. Hamas leader Khalid Mashal, after meeting with Ahmadinjad, added this: "US policies have proved to fail in dealing with regional problems, and most obviously in Iraq, and today the regional nations are witnesses to the emergence of a wave of objections and opposition against the US policies pursued in the regions, in Asia, and Europe." Khalid Mashal added, "Hamas is committed to insistence on the need to restore the natural rights of the Palestinian nation and the liberation of the entire occupied lands, including the occupied Holy Qods." He said, "We do not recognize the legitimacy of Israel and are committed to continuation of resistance movement aimed at ending occupation and repatriation of all refugees." Meanwhile, RegimeChangeIran has reports that Iran has successfully tested Silkworm missiles. The rhetoric and military activity look to be heating up. By Ed Moltzen · 14 December 2005
Scriberoptics
If you've been jonesing for Michele Catalano blogging, jones no more! Her new photo blog, Scriberoptics, is now open for business. By Ed Moltzen · 14 December 2005
Levin v. Sullivan
There's quite a debate going back and forth between Mark Levin, the former Reagan-era Justice Department chief of staff, and Andrew Sullivan over the extent and implications of U.S. military torture. The contemptible acts committed by a handful of soldiers at Abu Ghraib resulted in their prosecution and punishment. It resulted in career-ending reassignments of senior military personnel. But the prisoners were not unlawful enemy combatants, they were not detainees of the sort we're debating, they were not interrogated for intelligence information, and the acts were not torture as understood under existing U.S. policy. Sullivan needs to follow the debate, U.S. policy, and U.S. law a little more carefully. Part of his problem is the sloppy use of terms and misdirection. Sullivan, one of the leading voices against alleged widespread torture by the U.S. military and intelligence services, points Levin and readers to a series of news reports and investigations that, he suggests, bolster his argument that widespread, institutional torture is a big concern. But they don't help make that case. If anything, Sullivan bolsters Levin's general argument: There hasn't been any presentation of serious evidence of officially sanctioned, widespread torture by the U.S. in the war on terror. Sullivan directs readers to The Schmidt Report. In his post, though, Sullivan doesn't actually link to the report. If he did, readers would be a click away from this information: Detention and interrogation operations at Joint Task Force Guantanamo (JTF-GTMO) cover a three-year period and over 24,000 interrogations. This AR 15-6 investigation found only three interrogation acts in violation of interrogation techniques authorized by Army Field Manual 34-52 and DoD guidance. Sullivan also points to the Taguba Report on abuses at Abu Ghraib. But he never seems to mention Gen. Antonio Taguba's statement to the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee in which he explains an important conclusion: We did not find any evidence of a policy or a direct order given to these soldiers to conduct what they did. I believe that they did it on their own volition and I believe that they collaborated with several MI [military intelligence] interrogators at the lower level. And in a separate post, Sullivan points readers to the Schlesinger Report. He doesn't give a link to the report. If he did, readers would be a click away from this information: Since the beginning of hostilities in Afghanistan and Iraq, U.S. military and security operations have apprehended about 50,000 individuals. From this number, about 300 allegations of abuse in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo have arisen. As of mid-August 2004, 155 investigations into the allegations have been completed, resulting in 66 substantiated cases. Approximately one-third of these cases occurred at the point of capture or tactical collection point, frequently under uncertain, dangerous and violent circumstances. Not insignificantly, the Schlesinger Report concluded: "No approved procedures called for or allowed the kinds of abuses that in fact occurred. There is no evidence of a policy of abuse promulgated by senior officials or military authorities." Sullivan's blog has turned into a de-facto, all-day, every day drumbeat of indictment - if not conviction - of the Bush Administration, CIA and Justice Department for widescale torture of innocents. And no doubt abuse and torture have occurred and have been reprehensible. But every major report Sullivan cites has investigated the potential of official U.S. sanctioning of torture, and every one of them has found that not to be the case. In fact, in many ways these reports are even less damning than, say, the Mollen Commission Report on corruption and brutality in the NYPD during the 1980s and 1990s. And even there, bad cops were a mere fraction of the overall army of NYPD that fought a 2,000-a-year homicide wave of violence when David Dinkins was mayor. A reading of the Mollen Commission report will show that brutality and torture in a zone of daily violence - by a few out of many - isn't new as of the Iraq War, the Bush Administration or this generation. And if the few are dealt with swiftly, severely and without indicting the many, those institutions get better. Democracies need voices like Sullivan's. Nobody wants American institutions to favor torture. But the evidence today is that, in spite of some bad cops, they don't. By Ed Moltzen · 13 December 2005
John Lennon
Today is the anniversary of John Lennon's death. Here's what was written here last year. By Ed Moltzen · 8 December 2005
On the Job
Some people think homeland security is a joke. It might be. But on more than one occasion the joke seems to have been on the right people. By Ed Moltzen · 7 December 2005
Bullet proof
There was a big stink made last week about a Long Island businessman who made a lot of money off his company that makes bullet-proof vests. Some families might not be making a big stink about it today. By Ed Moltzen · 7 December 2005
Trend?
From Rasmussen Reports' latest polling: Monday December 05, 2005--Forty-eight percent (48%) of American adults approve of the way George W. Bush is performing his role as President. That's the President's highest rating since October 8. Rasmussen has show a clear upward trend for the president's approval over the past two weeks, as Democratic attacks have subsided and the administration has begun strongly defending its strategy. Falling Polls Are News ... Rasmussen has always registered two or three points higher in Bush's approval than other polls, such as Gallup. Once the other polls start publishing similar trends, the headlines might follow. Bush futures have been paying off for some, though. By Ed Moltzen · 5 December 2005
The Blitz
The Howard Stern media blitz is beginning, as you can tell from this Newsweek story. The "60 Minutes" story on him will be later tonight. By Ed Moltzen · 4 December 2005
Sirius Initiation
Doc Searls has signed up for Sirius Satellite Radio, and offers a mostly positive albeit mixed review: Now, the downside. As opposed to say, the diverse nature of, er, Clear Channel radio's 1,200 stations? But, here are some observations gleaned from listenting to Sirius for one year: The selection of radios that are available to listen to Sirius absolutely stinks. It's just dreadful. Not only that, they are ridiculously expensive - unless you shop around. You can find some relatively older models of Sirius radios (such as the X-ACT Stream Jockey) for $50 or so at wholesale places like BJ's or Costco. But you have to look hard. And then the antenna and setup can be ridiculously difficult. But, if you're patient and/or willing to spend money on good hardware, satellite radio becomes a life-changing event. Before Sirius, listening to the radio on a one-hour commute to work meant listening to between 25 minutes and 35 minutes of commercials and mindless chatter. Executives at terrestrial radio stations knew they had a captive audience, and they abused it. With Sirius, a one-hour commute means one hour of music. And not just any music. The specific type of music that you want, or are in the mood for. Jazz, smooth jazz, hip hop, dance, 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, Elvis, Bruce, Reggae, soft rock, hard rock, coffee house rock. All gloriously commercial-free. No "Car Cash" commercials. No "ProFlowers.com" commercials. No ads for male enhancers. Sirius does have DJs on some of its jazz and rock stations. If you grew up in New York during the 70s and 80s, you might remember some of them: Pat St. John, Meg Griffin, Cousin Brucie, Vin Scelsa. They introduce songs. They don't introduce commercials. The content - even without Howard Stern - is absolutely top notch. (There's a ton of news and talk, although those stations do have commercials. But the Traffic & Weather stations for metropolitan areas provide non-stop reporting - no waiting for 10 minutes of news or talk to get updates.) It would be a good bet that many subscribers would gladly pay an extra dollar or two on top of the $12.95-per month fee if Sirius could make available good, reliable, radios that were $50 or less. Content may be king, but there will be no kingdom without good, affordable hardware. MORE: Stan shares an experience many will find with Sirius: Flashbacks to youth: When I was younger, I never understood the appeal of oldies radio. It seemed that they played stuff that was either so old it didn't mean anything to me, or it reminded me of times I would rather have forgotten. Most '70s music falls into this category for me. By Ed Moltzen · 3 December 2005
"200 Percent Confirmed"
There doesn't seem to be an awful lot of job security in the Number 3 position in Al Qaeda. Mohammed Atef: Dead. The death of Rabia this week, according to Pakistan's president, is now "200 Percent confirmed." By Ed Moltzen · 3 December 2005
15 Minutes and The Bronx Zoo
The bad news: New York City cops rig a traffic light at the Bronx zoo to ensnare honest drivers, write them tickets and make their quotas. You get caught. The good news: You become a media star! The bad news: Cops get angry, and you get arrested on a warrant for a 23-year old ticket. By Ed Moltzen · 2 December 2005
New York's Luddite Party
There's a new web log called Peter King Watch, which is aimed at following the moves and comments of Rep. Peter King, the Long Island Republican and chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee. Here, the blog mocks King's assessment of the Republican party's strength in Nassau County - once, without question, the strongest GOP organization in America. Now, the county executive is a Democrat, the county Legislature is run by Democrats and the district attorney-elect is a Democrat. There are many reasons the Republicans lost Nassau County, and have lost both U.S. Senate seats from New York. But one reason that is hard to understand is the state Republicans' utter cluelessness when it comes to the web. Democrats in the county - and throughout the state - seem to understand blogging and web dynamics, Republicans in New York apparently don't. Nassau County Executive Tom Suozzi, a potential Democratic candidate for Governor next year had a blog during the last campaign season. Eliot Spitzer, a Democrat who is running for governor, has a blog. Hillary Clinton doesn't have a blog, but she has a fairly interactive web site. Republicans? Jeanine Pirro, who is running for Senate: No blog, no interactivity on her site. William Weld, who is running for governor: Where's his web site? Thomas Golisano may be running for the Republican nomination for governor. He's got a nice billboard of a web site, but no interactivity. It seems New York Republicans slept through the entire 2004 election season. If they were even half-awake, they would have noticed President Bush's campaign web site, with a blog, with rapid response capability, with "TV ads." Imagine, for example, if Pirro could put together a 30-second video that picked through any noteworthy videotape of Clinton, and posted it on her web site? The viral nature of Internet video, as everyone learned last year, was extremely disruptive. And yet, the Republicans in New York offer nothing of the kind. Despite her inability to raise funds, it would cost almost nothing for Pirro to blog, vlog or podcast. There is still time for the Republicans to change their technology gap with Democrats in New York. But time isn't as endless as bandwidth. MORE: The Coffeehouse Soapbox is commenting on news that Gov. George Pataki's folks are asking Pirro to drop out of her bid for U.S. Senate. His remarks are fairly excoriating toward the state GOP. By Ed Moltzen · 1 December 2005
Following The Blueprint
It looks like U.S. and Iraqi troops continue to follow the blueprint, according to this report from CentCom: IRAQ, U.S. FORCES CAPTURE 33 TERROR SUSPECTS That makes 33 fewer terrorists who have to be caught on U.S. soil. By Ed Moltzen · 1 December 2005
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