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Apostasy Now!

Yes, we know stupid is also usually good politics in the United States. Which is why Sen. Obama is unquestionably on his way to becoming our President, as he has shown the ruthlessness to adopt the evidently expedient (“tough sounding”) position on three troubling issues of the day, damn how I feel about them…: (1) FISA telecom immunity, (2) the Supreme Court child rape caseand (3) the Supreme Court gun ban case. The point… if there is one… is that no one who can get themselves elected to any office in this country (let alone Senator… or President) can divorce...

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Read it and weep (or… bleep)

“It” is the Grey Lady’s account of the resurgence of al Qaeda strength in the form of training camps and evident operational capacity now located in the tribal areas of Pakistan (a distance of perhaps 100 miles or so from their previous epicenter in Afghanistan) as a direct and inevitable result of the Bush Administration’s diversion of assets from The Hunt for bin Laden (TM) to The Excellent Iraq Adventure (TM). The conspiratorial among us will say things like “oil is thicker than blood…” or, well, things like that. The more realistic will simply point out what Sen. Obama has...

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Vox parvi populi

Daddy’s breaking all the rules and letting me do a mid-week V.P.P., since tomorrow is the last day of school (and only a half day at that!) Today was pajama day, which sounds more fun than it is, since mostly, we all lie down on the floor with our blankets and pillows and stuffed animals and read to ourselves, because by this time of the school year, the teacher has had it. Oh yes… that’s Demi Lovato up there, from “Camp Rock,” as if I’ve seen it, which I haven’t. Anyway, Daddy (supernatural? alien? just plain mean?) cut off the...

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Arresting questions

It seems like its going to be a big week for U.S. District Court Judge John Bates in Washington, D.C. Bruce the Veep sends us this from TPM in which Judge Bates, handling the litigation from the House of Representatives to enforce its subpoena against Harriet Miers and Josh Bolten, asks the logical question “why are you running to court to enforce your subpoena by litigation when you already have the power to arrest?” Judge Bates, appointed by George W. Bush, who has already ruled in favor of the Administration in the lawsuit brought over disclosure of records of the...

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National treasure lost

It’s hard to put enough superlatives on comedian George Carlin, who passed away at 71 of heart failure. He took “edgy” comedy all the way to mainstream. Most famous for “the seven dirty words” that was just one bit of an infinite variety that basically came down to the theme of how absurdly hypocritical our entire social order is, and how, when it is called out, the only rational response is laughter (albeit often uncomfortable laughter). One bit, for example, concerned a suggestion “by the government” that Mohammed Ali “change jobs”. The government said “we want you to kill people...

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TD Blog Interview with Rebecca Dick

Rebecca Dick is Counsel to the Washington, D.C. office of the law firm of Dechert, LLP. Ms. Dick represents four Afghan nationals currently detained at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, two more previously detained there but transferred to a prison in Afghanistan, and two more released home to Afghanistan. On June 20, 2008, I had the privilege of interviewing her, by e-mail exchange. The Talking Dog Where were you on September 11th? Rebecca Dick: I was at work in law offices on the banks of the Potomac River. We could see the smoke rising from the Pentagon, and I remember thinking, “this...

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Media legend passes away

That would be the incomparable Cyd Charisse, who passed away at 86. IMHO, she was the fireballer of American cinematic dance… just wham, down the middle, often at 100 m.p.h. or more. While one can understand NBC’s interests in touting the late Tim Russert, who untimely (and most unfortunately) passed away at 58, one does wonder why other media outlets are in full hagiography mode. Danny Schechter comes pretty close to mirroring my own thoughts on Russert. I will just say that Russert had the most intimidating wind-up in the game, after which the ball would invariably cross the middle...

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Why does Ben Bernanke hate our troops?

It’s pretty much the only question one can ask of that sell-out of a G.W. Bush appointed Fed chairman, given that Bernanke had the audacity to tell a Senate panel that improving the nation’s health care delivery was one of the most serious challenges facing the nation. Hasn’t Bernanke figured out that if the 47 million Americans without health insurance want it, they should just pay for it themselves? That Republican ideology dictates that the most sensible health plan of all comes down to just three words: don’t get sick, and that affirmation of American rugged individualism is, by definition...

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Recurring nightmares

While fear of terrorism has, mostly thanks to the political needs of our current ruling party , become a national obsession, the reality is that Americans have much more sensible reasons to fear natural disasters, and of such disasters, the only ones I am aware of that consistently inflict death and destruction in all fifty states… are floods. And currently, there is a doozy of a flood that has resulted in the evacuation of much of Cedar Rapids, Iowa (Mahablog’s Barb has more.) Cedar Rapids was the venue of the first trial I handled as an attorney, back in 1987,...

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Halle-(freaking)-lujah

I have said before that the future viability of our republic rests perilously in the pen-wielding hand of Justice Anthony Kennedy. Thus far, at least, Kennedy has, as he did two years ago in Hamdan, held fast… as he did again in today’s (naturally, 5-4) decision in Boumediene, holding that the Constitution’s express prohibition against suspension of habeas corpus means exactly that, and hence, Guantanamo detainees have a Constitutional right to habeas corpus relief in American federal courts. Much more will be written about this in terms of “rebuke” to the Bush Administration, though this is arguably the third such...

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