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Wednesday, May 24, 2006
Party of Ideas?
McCain has a plan! Unveils it at fat wallet get together. "One of the things I would do if I were President would be to sit the Shiites and the Sunnis down and say, ‘Stop the bullshit," said Mr. McCainWow! Next thing you know the Republicans will be responding to record deficits with $70 billion in tax cuts for billionaires. And political pundits say the Democratic Party is bankrupt of ideas?
Saturday, May 20, 2006
More Evidence of Georgie's Bumbling-Iraqi Police Training or "We Don't Need no Stinkn' Badges"
The lead paragraph from a New York Times article on Iraqi's "dysfunctional" police says it all. It lays out the initial state of affairs right after the invasion including the critical project of rebuilding the police forces, the Pentagon began its effort to rebuild the Iraqi police with a mere dozen advisers. Overmatched from the start, one was sent to train a 4,000-officer unit to guard power plants and other utilities. A second to advise 500 commanders in Baghdad. Another to organize a border patrol for the entire country.Yep, you read that correctly, "a dozen advisers" for a country that Rumsfeld et al kept reminding us when they couldn't find WMDs is the size of California. A dozen advisers for a country the size of California. Is it any surprise that chaos rules in Iraq? Keep in mind that in Kosovo, the UN sent 4,800 police and trainers. Keep in mind that the UN trained the new police recruits for six months, not ten weeks as in Iraq. The NYT goes on to detail how, Before the war, the Bush administration dismissed as unnecessary a plan backed by the Justice Department to rebuild the police force by deploying thousands of American civilian trainers.And then when the chaos, that Rumsfeld dismissed as just the messy bits of democracy taking hold, broke out and when the majority of Iraqi police officers abandoned their posts, a second proposal by a Justice Department team calling for 6,600 police trainers was reduced to 1,500, and then never carried out. During the first eight months of the occupation — as crime soared and the insurgency took hold — the United States deployed 50 police advisers in Iraq.Sure the Iraqi police were untrained, corrupt, and underpaid, but that doesn't excuse our lack of planning, our lack of judgment, the lack of oversight, and our own incompetence when it came to retraining them. During the first two years of the war, three different government groups developed three different plans to train Iraq's police, all without knowing of the existence of the other.A lack of planning; a lack of judgment prevailed on everything related to Iraq. The Bush White House failed to plan for the consequences of invading Iraq and then failed to respond to events on the ground. This is nothing short of a failure of leadership. Surprisingly Rumsfeld still has a job. Surprisingly George Bush still has a job. Revelations of the sort found in this NYT article as well as others shows why the Republicans are banging the drum that if the Democrats win control of Congress in the November mid-term elections there will be investigations and perhaps even an impeachment of President Bush. The Bush folks so mishandled everything related to 9/11 that they fear a Congress willing to ask questions. The Republicans in Congress that enabled Bush's crimes fear that people will start asking "how did this happen?" and hold those very same Republican enablers responsible. They have much to fear. Wednesday, May 17, 2006
Quick Someone Call FOXNews!
The Labor Department announced that the Consumer Price Index "rose 0.6 percent" in April, 2006. As a result the stock market fell nearly 200 points. Someone better call the folks over at FOXNews and let them know that Labor Department is "some puny, little traitor" that wants to "take down our market, take down our country." I mean how dare it publish bad news? Doesn't the Labor Department know that publishing bad economic news is unpatriotic? I think the Labor Department could use a few more political appointees.
Friday, May 05, 2006
That Bush Economy
Earlier this week the DowJones reached a new six year high, so that means the economy is doing just fine, right? Well, CNN reports Payroll growth last month was the weakest since shortly after last summer's hurricanes, the government said Friday [. . .].Though, there does seem to be some concern that if job growth were to be as robust as George Bush says it is, that would mean the Fed would have to raise rates to contain the economy. Can't have people getting jobs, can we? I mean the average hourly wage increased a whole nine cents! Nine cents, can you imagine it? Why that's almost a whole extra $4 a week!!! We better raise the interest rates so folks will spend those four bucks on credit card payments instead of food, or gas, or.... |