Categories
Election 2008 Iraq McCain Obama Politics The War on Terrorism

Steve King: Obama will be a savior to Al Qaeda

[digg-reddit-me] Representative Steve King, Republican from Iowa, yesterday stated:

Obama will certainly be viewed as a savior for them [referring to Al Qaeda]…

I will tell you that, if he is elected president, then the radical Islamists, the al-Qaeda, the radical Islamists and their supporters, will be dancing in the streets in greater numbers than they did on September 11 because they will declare victory in this War on Terror.

Despite a rebuke from Mr. McCain, Mr. King is standing by his remarks.

Mr. King did promise later that if

…we elect Obama to the presidency and he declares defeat, if they don’t dance in the streets, I will come and apologize to you and everybody in America.

We’ll have to remember in November –  after Mr. King loses his seat in Congress as he deserves to –  to rub this trash in his face.

Mr. Obama, of course, retained on the high road but rightly pointed out that our intelligence agencies have reported that in fact the Iraq war has played into Al Qaeda’s hands.  He then scoffed:

But I have to say that Mr. King and individuals like him thrive on offensive or controversial statements as a way to get in the papers, so I don’t take it too seriously. I would hope Sen. McCain would want to distance himself from that kind of inflammatory and offensive remarks.

I’m sure we’ll see much more of this in the coming campaign – no matter how much Mr. McCain condemns it.  This is sure to be one of the right wing propaganda machine’s main talking points against Mr. Obama (or Ms. Clinton).  Although Mr. Obama’s response was adequate, I’d like to see a stronger response from him, and for him to pivot to his forward-looking strategy.  Something like this:

I applaud Senator McCain for condemning these attacks.  As I have said many times before, the Senator has a distinguished record of public service and he has, as I have, committed himself to running a clean and issue-based campaign.  I have many disagreements with Senator McCain – one of which is about the strategy America must pursue in the War on Terrorism.  Men like Representative King degrade our politics by trying to turn disagreements about strategy into virtual treason.  I believe the best way to attack Al Qaeda is to focus our military and intelligence resources on Afghanistan and Pakistan, where Al Qaeda and Bin Laden are still hiding nearly seven years after they attacked America on September 11.  Senator McCain disagrees, and I respect that.  But both of us want to protect American lives and interests – and whichever of us wins the coming election, we will do whatever we must to protect the United States – and Al Qaeda knows that.  Congressman King should be ashamed that he is trying to play politics with national security.  Republicans are not the only people who are fighting to protect American lives – there are intelligence officers, soldiers, diplomats, and politicians who are Democrats, Republicans, and independents.  As Americans, we must unite in the face of the evil of organizations like Al Qaeda – and those who seek to divide us against ourselves, to portray our political opponents as friends of terrorists – they only serve to distract us from the real challenges we face.  I would call on any Democratic office holder to withdraw from the Democratic party for comments like that.  But I am thankful that Senator McCain has condemned these remarks as he has.

Categories
New York City Politics

Eliot Spitzer: Client #9?

[digg-reddit-me]I managed to get through the heavy traffic at The New York Times to get some information on their apparent exclusive scoop on Governor Eliot Spitzer’s “involvement” in a prostitution ring.

Some titillating details…

Emperors Club VIP apparently charged between $1,000 and $5,500 an hour for the services of it’s ladies of the night. It had offices in New York, Washington, London, Paris, and Miami.

The Web site [of the Emperors Club], which was disabled shortly after the arrests were announced, ranked the prostitutes on a scale of one to seven “diamonds.” A three-diamond woman, for example, could command a fee of $1,000 per hour. A seven-diamond woman cost more than $3,000 an hour.

From the Criminal Complaint – with the Times article identifying Spitzer as Client #9 – a record of a telephone conversation between “Rachelle” and “Kristen”, Kristen just having left Client #9’s hotel room:

Client #9 “would ask you to do things that, like, you might not think were safe – you know? I mean that…very basic things.”

No more details are given.

It is also suggested that Mr. Spitzer was a regular client. Shortly before he is about to meet “Kristen”, Mr. Spitzer asks “Rachelle” to remind him what “Kristen” looked like. “Rachelle” described “Kristen” as “an America, petite, very pretty brunette, 5 feet 5 inches, and 105 poinds.”

At the start of the incident described in the complaint February 11, 2008, Mr. Spitzer had an outstanding balance of $2,600 with the Emperor’s Club. This led to quite a number of phone calls and text messages back and forth trying to determine how he could pay appropriately. Eventually, he paid “Kristen” $4,100 according to the complaint.

Additional suggestive information: Mr. Spitzer’s liaison with “Kristen” was only revealed in the Complaint because he was soliciting across state lines – asking “Kristen” to travel from Manhattan down to Washington, where he was scheduled to appear before Congress the next day. This was how the Federal government got involved with the “interstate commerce”.

Possibly relevant information: the Lieutenant Governor of New York is David Paterson. Despite the fact that Mr. Spitzer did not choose to resign in his minute-and-a-half-long press conference – it’s hard to see how he avoids it if the Times is right about Mr. Spitzer being “Client #9”.

Update: I’m not that outraged by this. As a matter of public policy, it’s hard to see why high end prostitution should be illegal. (I differentiate between high end and normal prostitution, because normal prostitutes – because they are valued less – are at increased risk of drug dependence, physical abuse, exploitation, and sexually transmitted diseases. Normal prostitutes even suffer extremely high rates of post-traumatic stress disorder, comparable to soldiers in a war zone.) It does seem typical that Mr. Spitzer prosecuted a number of prostitution rings as attorney general – and now finds himself labeled as the client of one.

Update II: ((Post time edited to reflect this update.)) I don’t think there is anything wrong with going over the salacious details of the lives of public officials – especially if they come out in a criminal investigation. There is a natural interest – at least for me – in the celebrity-style gossip. I generally have little to no interest in news about celebrities. But the same type of news about politicians does interest me, although I am almost and sometimes ashamed to admit it.

But some disturbing questions are beginning to be raised about how Mr. Spitzer came to be the target of this investigation – questions which my interest in the salacious details distracted me from. Jane Hamsher at Firedoglake follows up the ABC New revelation that the operation to take down the prostitution ring apparently began when investigators noticed suspicious money transfers in Mr. Spitzer’s private accounts. Ms. Hamsher asks the logical question: Why was the federal government snooping around in Mr. Spitzer’s private financial records? How did this come to the government’s attention? Ms. Hamsher concludes:

There are all kinds of things about this that just don’t pass the smell test.

Scott Horton of Harper’s points out that this prosecution was under the little-used White-Slave Traffic Act of 1910.

Glenn Greenwald asks why it is only Mr. Spitzer’s name that has been leaked, suggesting that this entire prosecution might have been politically motivated.

Such a thought would not have occurred to most reasonable people just a few years ago – but the numerous revelations about directives to U.S. Attorneys to investigate Democratic officials that came out of the U.S. Attorneys’ scandal makes this seem plausible. There are certainly unanswered questions about how this investigation got started – and why.

ka1igu1a of the Freedom Democrats points out the similarities of this incident to HBO’s The Wire.  He shares a similar distaste for Mr. Spitzer that I have had.  I have always considered him to be somewhat of a bully – even if he shares a significant part of the agenda I espouse.  I am happy to have him as a governor – but the thought of him as president would concern me.

Emily Bazelton over at Slate gives probably the best public policy model and argument for making prostitution illegal, in contrast to my point above.

Categories
Excerpts from my Journals Politics The Clintons

Clinton and the Mummy

Excerpts from my Journals

[digg-reddit-me][Early June 1998.]

…the president made a crack about a five-hundred-year-old Inca mummy that had just been discovered at the summit of a Peruvian volcano. “You know, if I were a single man, I might just ask that mummy out,” Clinton said. “That’s a good-looking mummy.”

Afterward, McCurry [Clinton’s press secretary] told the president this had not been a wise comment for a man with his reputation for philandering. Clinton snapped at him…

On the ensuing flight to Milwalkee that night…McCurry had a drink, and he was shooting the breeze with a dozen reporters clogging the aisle. One scribe asked about Clinton’s appraisal of the mummy.

“Probably does look good compared to the mummy he’s been fucking,” McCurry said.

Had one of the reporters published the remark, even with the expletive deleted, McCurry’s tenure at the White House probably would have been over.

From Spin Cycle by Howard Kurtz, pages 48-49.

Categories
Election 2008 McCain Obama Politics The Clintons

Political cartoons

“Sir, I have an unnamed source…”

Categories
Election 2008 Morality Obama Politics

Dr. Jeremiah A. Wright, Jr. and Trinity United Church of Christ

Michelle Obama was interviewed by Lauren Collins for the Style Issue of New Yorker magazine last week.  Ms. Obama had a disarming answer to the question of how the controversial views of the Obamas’ pastor at Trinity United Church of Christ, Dr. Jeremiah A. Wright, Jr. reflect on Mr. Obama:

“You know, your pastor is like your grandfather, right?” she said. “There are plenty of things he says that I don’t agree with, that Barack doesn’t agree with.” When it comes to absolute doctrinal adherence, she said, “I don’t know that there would be a church in this country that I would be involved in. So, you know, you make choices, and you sort of—you can’t disown yourself from your family because they’ve got things wrong. You try to be a part of expanding the conversation.”

I don’t this is an answer doctrinaire religious folk will like.  But it has the virtue of not sounding like boilerplate political hedging; instead, it demonstrates a reflective faith and an clear-eyed candor that our national conversation about faith is generally missing.

Categories
Excerpts from my Journals Politics

Don’t you sell America to me.

Excerpts from my Journals

[Dated December 2001.]

Phil Green:

For Christ’s sakes, Henry, don’t you understand? It’s people like us, people in the middle that made this country work. And an…when people like ourselves get into this…this kind of thing, it takes it all down. That’s what’s ripping our country apart.

Harry Stoner:

You son of a bitch! Don’t you sell America to me. I’ve got friends over there sitting under the sand with bikinis on their heads…I used to get goosebumps every time I look at that flag. Don’t sell me America!

From Save the Tiger, a 1973 film for which Jack Lemmon won an Oscar playing Harry Stoner, a staid businessman whose personal and professional misconduct over the course of two days is supposed to reflect the societal disorder unleashed by the 1960s.

Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics Videos

Old guy singing…about Barack Obama

[digg-reddit-me]John S. is a retired district attorney and musician with a Dylan-esque voice. For those who are turned off by the will.i.am video or the other hyped musical Obama tributes, but are still looking for a musical Obama fix, this folksy endorsement of the candidate might be what you’re looking for.

Categories
Life Politics Prose

Quote of the Day

Smooth seas do not make skillful sailors.

African proverb.

Categories
Election 2008 Foreign Policy Obama Politics The Clintons

A Hypothetical Question of Judgment

JFK alone at his desk in the Oval Office

[digg-reddit-me]It’s early spring 2012. The most recent National Intelligence Estimate and the intelligence communities agree that Iran is less than a year away from obtaining a nuclear weapon. Daily leaks to the press from the national security apparatus provide the now familiar drumbeat of fear as a prelude to a war. Karl Rove – retired in Texas but being consulted by those planning a Republican comeback – begins to ask the question: “Who let Iran go nuclear?” He makes it clear – as does the Republican presidential nominee – that it was the job of the current president to prevent Iran from going nuclear. “Do you feel safer now than you did four years ago?” they ask.

Every morning, the first two items on the president’s agenda are:

  1. A status report on the Iranian situation;
  2. An update on how the election campaign is progressing.

The pressure to take dramatic action is building, as much from domestic political pressures as foreign actions. Military action could be catastrophic, although it still might be the best of available options. Although it is never discussed, it is understood that a war would practically guarantee the president’s victory in November – despite a shaky economy that the Republicans have largely been able to blame on the current president.

Every morning, the president must balance the options and calibrate American strategy. There are no black and white issues – and in the end, the decision is on his or her shoulders alone.

It’s 2012 – whose judgment do you trust to make the right decision?

Updated: Let me be clear – as far as I’m concerned, the correct answer is, to borrow a line from Fox Mulder, “Trust no one.”  Which is why I think it is important to support a candidate who seeks to reduce executive power and allow the traditional checks and balances to reassert themselves.

Categories
Election 2008 Obama Politics The Clintons

Hope Wins the Night

I haven’t any posted anything today because I’ve been busy – not being I’m moping over the fact that after throwing “the kitchen sink” and everything else she could think of against Mr. Obama, Ms. Clinton managed to gain only ONE (1) delegate last night.

Obviously it would have been better in many ways if Ms. Clinton were shut out last night and forced to withdraw her candidacy.  But Mr. Obama has now weathered another full-force attack of the Clintons and keeps consolidating his ground.  He is in a better strategic position today than he was yesterday.

Here’s some bracing words from Andrew Sullivan.

The New York Times, in an article full of Clinton spin, still had to conclude that: “But for all the millions of votes Mrs. Clinton has now won, simple math is still her enemy.”

Of course, I still see a significant advantage in the fact that one of the most hated politicians in America will continue to stay in the race