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To: JohnM who wrote (104493)7/10/2003 5:38:48 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 281500
 
Not so silly IMO. As I stated it is from observing it occur
with a fair amount of frequency. SI has allowed for a good
amount of such observations over the last few years.

In fact you fall rather nicely into that group of folks I
regularly observe acting within the parameters I discussed.
And yes, I have observed certain conservatives acting
similarly. However, I have noted that the frequency &
extremes they go to are notably lower from them as compared
to certain liberals. Perhaps it's due to their overall
conservative nature. Perhaps not.

It's just something I've observed enough to warrant
mentioning when someone is acting precisely in the manner
of said observations (as I did in ShilohCat's case).

No doubt you will perceive it otherwise.



To: JohnM who wrote (104493)7/11/2003 11:25:21 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
<<..."If the American people conclude that American soldiers have died because the administration has lied, it will be extremely serious," according to Joseph Cirincione, an arms control specialist at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "American public opinion is clearly shifting on this issue." He said that he didn't see how the Republicans and the administration could avert a major investigation...>>

atimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (104493)7/14/2003 8:12:15 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
Resources about the ultra-hawkish conservatives who are reshaping US foreign policy into an explicit doctrine of global military, political, economic and cultural supremacy (can you say "empire"?):

faculty.maxwell.syr.edu



To: JohnM who wrote (104493)7/14/2003 8:17:15 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Look what The New Yorker's Seymour Hersch wrote in late March...

WHO LIED TO WHOM?
by SEYMOUR M. HERSH
Why did the Administration endorse a forgery about Iraq’s nuclear program?
Issue of 2003-03-31

newyorker.com

Last September 24th, as Congress prepared to vote on the resolution authorizing President George W. Bush to wage war in Iraq, a group of senior intelligence officials, including George Tenet, the Director of Central Intelligence, briefed the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Iraq’s weapons capability. It was an important presentation for the Bush Administration. Some Democrats were publicly questioning the President’s claim that Iraq still possessed weapons of mass destruction which posed an immediate threat to the United States. Just the day before, former Vice-President Al Gore had sharply criticized the Administration’s advocacy of preëmptive war, calling it a doctrine that would replace “a world in which states consider themselves subject to law” with “the notion that there is no law but the discretion of the President of the United States.” A few Democrats were also considering putting an alternative resolution before Congress.

According to two of those present at the briefing, which was highly classified and took place in the committee’s secure hearing room, Tenet declared, as he had done before, that a shipment of high-strength aluminum tubes that was intercepted on its way to Iraq had been meant for the construction of centrifuges that could be used to produce enriched uranium. The suitability of the tubes for that purpose had been disputed, but this time the argument that Iraq had a nuclear program under way was buttressed by a new and striking fact: the C.I.A. had recently received intelligence showing that, between 1999 and 2001, Iraq had attempted to buy five hundred tons of uranium oxide from Niger, one of the world’s largest producers. The uranium, known as “yellow cake,” can be used to make fuel for nuclear reactors; if processed differently, it can also be enriched to make weapons. Five tons can produce enough weapon-grade uranium for a bomb. (When the C.I.A. spokesman William Harlow was asked for comment, he denied that Tenet had briefed the senators on Niger.)

On the same day, in London, Tony Blair’s government made public a dossier containing much of the information that the Senate committee was being given in secret—that Iraq had sought to buy “significant quantities of uranium” from an unnamed African country, “despite having no active civil nuclear power programme that could require it.” The allegation attracted immediate attention; a headline in the London Guardian declared, “african gangs offer route to uranium.”

Two days later, Secretary of State Colin Powell, appearing before a closed hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, also cited Iraq’s attempt to obtain uranium from Niger as evidence of its persistent nuclear ambitions. The testimony from Tenet and Powell helped to mollify the Democrats, and two weeks later the resolution passed overwhelmingly, giving the President a congressional mandate for a military assault on Iraq.

On December 19th, Washington, for the first time, publicly identified Niger as the alleged seller of the nuclear materials, in a State Department position paper that rhetorically asked, “Why is the Iraqi regime hiding their uranium procurement?” (The charge was denied by both Iraq and Niger.) A former high-level intelligence official told me that the information on Niger was judged serious enough to include in the President’s Daily Brief, known as the P.D.B., one of the most sensitive intelligence documents in the American system. Its information is supposed to be carefully analyzed, or “scrubbed.” Distribution of the two- or three-page early-morning report, which is prepared by the C.I.A., is limited to the President and a few other senior officials. The P.D.B. is not made available, for example, to any members of the Senate or House Intelligence Committees. “I don’t think anybody here sees that thing,” a State Department analyst told me. “You only know what’s in the P.D.B. because it echoes—people talk about it.”

President Bush cited the uranium deal, along with the aluminum tubes, in his State of the Union Message, on January 28th, while crediting Britain as the source of the information: “The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa.” He commented, “Saddam Hussein has not credibly explained these activities. He clearly has much to hide.”

Then the story fell apart. On March 7th, Mohamed ElBaradei, the director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, in Vienna, told the U.N. Security Council that the documents involving the Niger-Iraq uranium sale were fakes. “The I.A.E.A. has concluded, with the concurrence of outside experts, that these documents . . . are in fact not authentic,” ElBaradei said.

One senior I.A.E.A. official went further. He told me, “These documents are so bad that I cannot imagine that they came from a serious intelligence agency. It depresses me, given the low quality of the documents, that it was not stopped. At the level it reached, I would have expected more checking.”

The I.A.E.A. had first sought the documents last fall, shortly after the British government released its dossier. After months of pleading by the I.A.E.A., the United States turned them over to Jacques Baute, who is the director of the agency’s Iraq Nuclear Verification Office.

It took Baute’s team only a few hours to determine that the documents were fake. The agency had been given about a half-dozen letters and other communications between officials in Niger and Iraq, many of them written on letterheads of the Niger government. The problems were glaring. One letter, dated October 10, 2000, was signed with the name of Allele Habibou, a Niger Minister of Foreign Affairs and Coöperation, who had been out of office since 1989. Another letter, allegedly from Tandja Mamadou, the President of Niger, had a signature that had obviously been faked and a text with inaccuracies so egregious, the senior I.A.E.A. official said, that “they could be spotted by someone using Google on the Internet.”

The large quantity of uranium involved should have been another warning sign. Niger’s “yellow cake” comes from two uranium mines controlled by a French company, with its entire output presold to nuclear power companies in France, Japan, and Spain. “Five hundred tons can’t be siphoned off without anyone noticing,” another I.A.E.A. official told me.

This official told me that the I.A.E.A. has not been able to determine who actually prepared the documents. “It could be someone who intercepted faxes in Israel, or someone at the headquarters of the Niger Foreign Ministry, in Niamey. We just don’t know,” the official said. “Somebody got old letterheads and signatures, and cut and pasted.” Some I.A.E.A. investigators suspected that the inspiration for the documents was a trip that the Iraqi Ambassador to Italy took to several African countries, including Niger, in February, 1999. They also speculated that MI6—the branch of British intelligence responsible for foreign operations—had become involved, perhaps through contacts in Italy, after the Ambassador’s return to Rome.

Baute, according to the I.A.E.A. official, “confronted the United States with the forgery: ‘What do you have to say?’ They had nothing to say.”

ElBaradei’s disclosure has not been disputed by any government or intelligence official in Washington or London. Colin Powell, asked about the forgery during a television interview two days after ElBaradei’s report, dismissed the subject by saying, “If that issue is resolved, that issue is resolved.” A few days later, at a House hearing, he denied that anyone in the United States government had anything to do with the forgery. “It came from other sources,” Powell testified. “It was provided in good faith to the inspectors.”

The forgery became the object of widespread, and bitter, questions in Europe about the credibility of the United States. But it initially provoked only a few news stories in America, and little sustained questioning about how the White House could endorse such an obvious fake. On March 8th, an American official who had reviewed the documents was quoted in the Washington Post as explaining, simply, “We fell for it.”

The Bush Administration’s reliance on the Niger documents may, however, have stemmed from more than bureaucratic carelessness or political overreaching. Forged documents and false accusations have been an element in U.S. and British policy toward Iraq at least since the fall of 1997, after an impasse over U.N. inspections. Then as now, the Security Council was divided, with the French, the Russians, and the Chinese telling the United States and the United Kingdom that they were being too tough on the Iraqis. President Bill Clinton, weakened by the impeachment proceedings, hinted of renewed bombing, but, then as now, the British and the Americans were losing the battle for international public opinion. A former Clinton Administration official told me that London had resorted to, among other things, spreading false information about Iraq. The British propaganda program—part of its Information Operations, or I/Ops—was known to a few senior officials in Washington. “I knew that was going on,” the former Clinton Administration official said of the British efforts. “We were getting ready for action in Iraq, and we wanted the Brits to prepare.”

Over the next year, a former American intelligence officer told me, at least one member of the U.N. inspection team who supported the American and British position arranged for dozens of unverified and unverifiable intelligence reports and tips—data known as inactionable intelligence—to be funnelled to MI6 operatives and quietly passed along to newspapers in London and elsewhere. “It was intelligence that was crap, and that we couldn’t move on, but the Brits wanted to plant stories in England and around the world,” the former officer said. There was a series of clandestine meetings with MI6, at which documents were provided, as well as quiet meetings, usually at safe houses in the Washington area. The British propaganda scheme eventually became known to some members of the U.N. inspection team. “I knew a bit,” one official still on duty at U.N. headquarters acknowledged last week, “but I was never officially told about it.”

None of the past and present officials I spoke with were able to categorically state that the fake Niger documents were created or instigated by the same propaganda office in MI6 that had been part of the anti-Iraq propaganda wars in the late nineteen-nineties. (An MI6 intelligence source declined to comment.) Press reports in the United States and elsewhere have suggested other possible sources: the Iraqi exile community, the Italians, the French. What is generally agreed upon, a congressional intelligence-committee staff member told me, is that the Niger documents were initially circulated by the British—President Bush said as much in his State of the Union speech—and that “the Brits placed more stock in them than we did.” It is also clear, as the former high-level intelligence official told me, that “something as bizarre as Niger raises suspicions everywhere.”

What went wrong? Did a poorly conceived propaganda effort by British intelligence, whose practices had been known for years to senior American officials, manage to move, without significant challenge, through the top layers of the American intelligence community and into the most sacrosanct of Presidential briefings? Who permitted it to go into the President’s State of the Union speech? Was the message—the threat posed by Iraq—more important than the integrity of the intelligence-vetting process? Was the Administration lying to itself? Or did it deliberately give Congress and the public what it knew to be bad information?

Asked to respond, Harlow, the C.I.A. spokesman, said that the agency had not obtained the actual documents until early this year, after the President’s State of the Union speech and after the congressional briefings, and therefore had been unable to evaluate them in a timely manner. Harlow refused to respond to questions about the role of Britain’s MI6. Harlow’s statement does not, of course, explain why the agency left the job of exposing the embarrassing forgery to the I.A.E.A. It puts the C.I.A. in an unfortunate position: it is, essentially, copping a plea of incompetence.

The chance for American intelligence to challenge the documents came as the Administration debated whether to pass them on to ElBaradei. The former high-level intelligence official told me that some senior C.I.A. officials were aware that the documents weren’t trustworthy. “It’s not a question as to whether they were marginal. They can’t be ‘sort of’ bad, or ‘sort of’ ambiguous. They knew it was a fraud—it was useless. Everybody bit their tongue and said, ‘Wouldn’t it be great if the Secretary of State said this?’ The Secretary of State never saw the documents.” He added, “He’s absolutely apoplectic about it.” (A State Department spokesman was unable to comment.) A former intelligence officer told me that some questions about the authenticity of the Niger documents were raised inside the government by analysts at the Department of Energy and the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research. However, these warnings were not heeded.

“Somebody deliberately let something false get in there,” the former high-level intelligence official added. “It could not have gotten into the system without the agency being involved. Therefore it was an internal intention. Someone set someone up.” (The White House declined to comment.)

Washington’s case that the Iraqi regime had failed to meet its obligation to give up weapons of mass destruction was, of course, based on much more than a few documents of questionable provenance from a small African nation. But George W. Bush’s war against Iraq has created enormous anxiety throughout the world—in part because one side is a superpower and the other is not. It can’t help the President’s case, or his international standing, when his advisers brief him with falsehoods, whether by design or by mistake.

On March 14th, Senator Jay Rockefeller, of West Virginia, the senior Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, formally asked Robert Mueller, the F.B.I. director, to investigate the forged documents. Rockefeller had voted for the resolution authorizing force last fall. Now he wrote to Mueller, “There is a possibility that the fabrication of these documents may be part of a larger deception campaign aimed at manipulating public opinion and foreign policy regarding Iraq.” He urged the F.B.I. to ascertain the source of the documents, the skill-level of the forgery, the motives of those responsible, and “why the intelligence community did not recognize the documents were fabricated.” A Rockefeller aide told me that the F.B.I. had promised to look into it.



To: JohnM who wrote (104493)7/15/2003 7:15:13 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
Bill Keller, Columnist, Is Selected as The Times's Executive Editor

By JACQUES STEINBERG
The New York Times
July 15, 2003

Bill Keller, a columnist for The New York Times who previously served as its managing editor and foreign editor and as a foreign correspondent, has been chosen as its executive editor.

Mr. Keller's appointment to the highest-ranking position in the newsroom, effective July 30, was announced yesterday by Arthur Sulzberger Jr., publisher of The Times and chairman of The New York Times Company.

Mr. Keller, 54, succeeds Joseph Lelyveld, who retired as executive editor in September 2001 but who agreed to step back into that role temporarily beginning on June 5. Mr. Lelyveld returned on the day that Howell Raines, 60, stepped down after 21 months in the position.

Mr. Raines's departure, along with that of the paper's managing editor, Gerald Boyd, capped five tumultuous weeks at The Times. After the disclosure of extensive journalistic fraud and plagiarism by a reporter, Jayson Blair, other reporters and editors came forward to describe to Mr. Sulzberger (and to other publications) their discontent with Mr. Raines's management style. That style was so pressure-driven, they said, that it had helped foster the atmosphere that allowed Mr. Blair to flourish.

For a 151-year-old newspaper that has won 89 Pulitzer Prizes, the appointment of Mr. Keller was portrayed by the company's management yesterday as a reaffirmation of The Times's core journalistic values. It also provided an antidote to weeks of criticism and speculation about The Times in competing publications, on the Internet and on the cable news networks.

Wearing a necktie and rolled-up shirt sleeves and standing in the same spot in the newsroom where Mr. Raines had announced he was leaving, Mr. Keller yesterday invoked a stated aim of one of the paper's first publishers, Adolph Ochs — to report the news "without fear or favor" — applying it not just to the paper's journalism but to the mood of the staff itself.

Alluding to Mr. Raines's repeated admonitions to staff members to raise their "competitive metabolism," Mr. Keller, who won a Pulitzer Prize in 1989 for his coverage of the Soviet Union, said yesterday that he did not view journalism as "an endless combat mission." While saying it was not his intention to "play defense," he nonetheless encouraged reporters and editors to do "a little more savoring" of life, whether with their families or viewing art, and suggested, "That will enrich you and your work, as much as a competitive pulse rate will."

Mr. Raines, in a television interview with Charlie Rose on PBS on Friday, said he had been dispatched to the newsroom by Mr. Sulzberger to rally a staff that had "settled into a kind of lethargic culture of complacency." But yesterday, as Mr. Keller stood nearby, Mr. Sulzberger challenged that characterization, saying: "There's no complacency here. Never has been. Never will be."

Mr. Keller announced no immediate successor to Mr. Boyd as managing editor. But he said that in the next few weeks he would evaluate the organization of the newsroom's top management and name additional members of his team.

In a statement released earlier yesterday, Mr. Keller, said: "This news organization is a national treasure. I will do everything in my power to uphold its high standards, preserve its integrity and build on its achievements."

Mr. Sulzberger described Mr. Keller as "a talented journalist, an accomplished manager and a trusted leader."

He also recalled that Mr. Keller "was a close contender for this job last time around." Indeed, in announcing Mr. Raines's appointment as executive editor on May 21, 2001, Mr. Sulzberger singled out Mr. Keller, who for four years was managing editor, the No. 2 executive on the paper's 1,200-member newsroom staff. Mr. Keller joined the newspaper as a correspondent in its Washington bureau in 1984, and was a correspondent in Moscow from 1986 to 1991. During those last two years, he was the newspaper's Moscow bureau chief. He then worked as bureau chief in South Africa from 1992 to 1995, the year Mr. Lelyveld appointed him foreign editor.

(Page 2 of 2)

After Mr. Raines was selected for the top position, Mr. Keller took an office in the fall of 2001 on the 10th floor of the paper's headquarters on West 43rd Street — seven floors above the main newsroom — and assumed a dual role, as a columnist whose work appeared on alternate Saturdays on the Op-Ed page and as a senior writer for The Times Magazine. In his column, which Mr. Keller will now give up, he wrote widely about disparate subjects like workplace smoking bans (he was generally for them), the build-up to the Iraq war ("an ugly display of American opportunism and bullying") and, in his final column on June 28, affirmative action (The Times, for example, can better explain the world "if our reporting and editing staff does not consist entirely of Ivy League white guys").

Mr. Sulzberger said yesterday, "We've all gotten to know Bill in a more personal way during the past two years, through his writing."

Before joining The Times, Mr. Keller worked as a reporter for The Dallas Times Herald, The Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report and The Oregonian in Portland. He received a bachelor's degree in 1970 from Pomona College (he is a trustee of the college) and completed the advanced management program at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in 2000.

In winning the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting in 1989 — a prize he shared with reporters from The Washington Post and The Philadelphia Inquirer — Mr. Keller was honored for his "resourceful and detailed coverage of events in the U.S.S.R.," which included his extensive reporting on an earthquake in Armenia that killed tens of thousands.

Philip Taubman, Mr. Keller's predecessor as Moscow bureau chief, later wrote in the paper's in-house magazine, Times Talk, that "Bill's journey across a devastated Armenia" had resulted in "some of the finest reportage The Times has ever published."

In that same article, Mr. Taubman sought to give a sense of Mr. Keller's management style. He told of how Mr. Keller had turned over the bureau's bookkeeping "to Oleg, the bureau's Russian driver," in part so he could have more time for reporting and writing but also because "while Oleg hated to change the oil, he had a knack for finances."

"The idea was quintessential Keller," Mr. Taubman wrote, "unconventional, even a bit reckless, but inspired."

As managing editor, Mr. Keller played a prominent role in several areas, including the expansion of the news delivered by The Times through its Web site, its coverage of the media and the creation of a cluster of reporters that works with beat reporters on investigative articles.

The new investigative focus led to one of the paper's triumphs: a Pulitzer Prize for international reporting in 1998 for coverage of Mexican drug corruption. But another investigative effort resulted in a controversial episode: a public re-examination of its coverage of the scientist Wen Ho Lee, whom federal investigators accused of giving nuclear secrets to the Chinese, but who ultimately pleaded guilty only to one felony count of illegally gathering and retaining national security data.

The paper published a lengthy note "from the editors" in September 2000, saying that despite "careful reporting that included extensive cross-checking," there were "some things we wish we had done differently in the course of the coverage to give Dr. Lee the full benefit of the doubt."

Later, in a memo to the staff on the paper's reporting on Dr. Lee, Mr. Keller wrote that he and Mr. Lelyveld "laid our hands on these articles, and we overlooked some opportunities in our own direction of the coverage."

Mr. Keller's soft-spoken public bearing — he sought at one point in yesterday morning's ceremony to quiet the sustained applause for him, and later said, "this job is not about me" — stood in contrast to the public style of Mr. Raines.

At a "town hall" meeting with several hundred members of The Times's staff on May 14, three days after The Times published a front-page report that detailed Mr. Blair's deceptions, Mr. Raines acknowledged that many at the paper "view me as inaccessible and arrogant."

In the wake of the Blair affair, a committee of staff members of The Times and three prominent outside journalists is investigating newsroom practices and policies and is expected to report its findings to the publisher later this month.

Mr. Keller said in an interview that his "main audience" yesterday was the newsroom, and his remarks were widely praised there.

Gretchen Morgenson, a financial news columnist who has worked at The Times since 1998, said she was struck by Mr. Keller's admonition that people not neglect their home lives for sake of the newspaper.

"When was the last time someone said spend more time with your family around here?" said Ms. Morgenson, who is married and has an 8-year-old son.

David W. Chen, a reporter on the paper's metropolitan staff since 1995, said he saw evidence in Mr. Keller of "a sense of purpose, but also decency."

"It was pretty evident in the town hall meeting," Mr. Chen said of the May 14 staff meeting, at which several reporters openly criticized Mr. Raines's management of the newsroom, "that a sense of decency was either taken for granted or lost in the rush to pursue news with that high competitive metabolism rate."

After Mr. Raines and Mr. Boyd left The Times last month, Mr. Sulzberger said in an interview that although he and the two editors had a "meeting of the minds" on the night before they tendered their resignations, the decision to leave was theirs. But last Friday night, in the Charlie Rose interview, Mr. Raines said that he had left because Mr. Sulzberger "asked" that he "step aside."

In an interview yesterday, Mr. Sulzberger declined to comment further, other than to say, "It was an amicable parting under trying and sad circumstances."

Neither Mr. Raines nor Mr. Boyd returned telephone calls seeking comment.

nytimes.com



To: JohnM who wrote (104493)7/18/2003 2:32:39 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Moving Right Along
________________________

By E. J. Dionne Jr.
Columnist
The Washington Post
Friday, July 18, 2003

What has finally caught up with the Bush administration is its habit of tossing out politically convenient arguments and then walking away from them after they have done their work. That's what President Bush's questionable statements on Iraq and the new estimates putting this year's federal deficit at $455 billion have in common.

The Iraq story is spinning at such a furious pace that it's hard to keep track of what the administration wants the public to believe. Former White House spokesman Ari Fleischer came right out last week and said the president should never have cited that British government claim that "Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa." CIA Director George Tenet said he should have kept the words out of the president's State of the Union address but told a Senate committee on Wednesday that his staff didn't even tell him that the questionable claim was in the speech until after it was given.

And the administration has opened a second, contradictory front. Led by Condoleezza Rice, the president's national security adviser, the president's defenders are also insisting that what Bush said was technically true because he was reporting only on what the British government had "learned." Besides, Rice has noted, the British still insist their uranium report was, as Prime Minister Tony Blair put it yesterday, "genuine."

Which means exactly what for Bush? That he was right all along? That Fleischer's statement is now inoperative? That the president believes British intelligence more than he believes his own CIA director?

The real story here is that the administration knew perfectly well that the two arguments most likely to persuade Americans who had doubts about going to war were (1) that Saddam Hussein had some link to 9/11 and (2) that this mad dictator had nukes. The administration pushed the 9/11 connection as hard as it could, despite highly questionable evidence, and used the nuclear claim as an effective closing punch. Whatever works.

The administration's past is also catching up with it on the deficit. A year ago the administration said the 2003 deficit would be $109 billion and the 2004 deficit would be $48 billion. Oops. This week, the president's Office of Management and Budget said the deficit for 2003 would be $455 billion and for 2004 would be $475 billion. And this second estimate doesn't even include the full costs of military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The administration argues that it is unfair to say that Bush blew the $5.6 trillion, 10-year surplus he inherited. These "good faith estimates" of the size of the surplus, says the OMB's mid-session review, took into account "no subsequent spending or tax changes, no recession, no collapse of the stock market, no September 11th terrorist attacks, no revelation of corporate scandals, no additional homeland security spending, and no war on terror."

But all those factors were known a year ago, when the administration offered its rosy picture of the fiscal future. Yes, budget projections are difficult, and Josh Bolten, the new head of the OMB, is an honest soul. But Rep. Jack Spratt of South Carolina, the ranking Democrat on the Budget Committee, notes that the administration has substantially underestimated the deficit every year.

He also notes that the administration was warning of an economic downturn even before it took office. Bush thus offered two arguments for his 2001 tax cut that effectively contradicted each other: that the big surplus, guaranteed by good times, meant the tax cut wouldn't cause deficits; and that the good times were in danger of ending, so his tax cut was essential to spur the economy. Whatever works.

The other big contradiction is the Bush administration's claim that its tax cuts were designed to stimulate the economy now, when many of the reductions don't even kick in until much later in the decade. But while the administration was certain enough about the future to offer a 10-year tax cut plan, its Office of Management and Budget offers only five-year deficit projections, neatly burying debate about the long term.

Deficits lack the drama of wars, and economic arguments are easy to muddy up. But the accountability that's being imposed on the administration over Iraq will eventually extend to other spheres. Our victory in Iraq against a genuinely evil dictator was supposed to create a euphoria that would sweep aside inconvenient questions. If the aftermath of the war had gone better, the strategy might have worked. But the Bush spin machine now has sand in its gears because one question inevitably leads to another, and another.

Once it's lost, credibility is very hard to earn back.

© 2003 The Washington Post Company

washingtonpost.com



To: JohnM who wrote (104493)7/18/2003 8:14:55 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 281500
 
A Princeton Professor Writes A Powerful Editorial In Newsday...
____________________________

A Kind of Fascism Is Replacing Our Democracy

by Sheldon S. Wolin

Published on Friday, July 18, 2003 by Long Island NY Newsday

Sept. 11, 2001, hastened a significant shift in our nation's self-understanding. It became commonplace to refer to an "American empire" and to the United States as "the world's only superpower."

Instead of those formulations, try to conceive of ones like "superpower democracy" or "imperial democracy," and they seem not only contradictory but opposed to basic assumptions that Americans hold about their political system and their place within it. Supposedly ours is a government of constitutionally limited powers in which equal citizens can take part in power. But one can no more assume that a superpower welcomes legal limits than believe that an empire finds democratic participation congenial.

No administration before George W. Bush's ever claimed such sweeping powers for an enterprise as vaguely defined as the "war against terrorism" and the "axis of evil." Nor has one begun to consume such an enormous amount of the nation's resources for a mission whose end would be difficult to recognize even if achieved.

Like previous forms of totalitarianism, the Bush administration boasts a reckless unilateralism that believes the United States can demand unquestioning support, on terms it dictates; ignores treaties and violates international law at will; invades other countries without provocation; and incarcerates persons indefinitely without charging them with a crime or allowing access to counsel.

The drive toward total power can take different forms, as Mussolini's Italy, Hitler's Germany and Stalin's Soviet Union suggest.

The American system is evolving its own form: "inverted totalitarianism." This has no official doctrine of racism or extermination camps but, as described above, it displays similar contempt for restraints.

It also has an upside-down character. For instance, the Nazis focused upon mobilizing and unifying the society, maintaining a continuous state of war preparations and demanding enthusiastic participation from the populace. In contrast, inverted totalitarianism exploits political apathy and encourages divisiveness. The turnout for a Nazi plebiscite was typically 90 percent or higher; in a good election year in the United States, participation is about 50 percent.

Another example: The Nazis abolished the parliamentary system, instituted single-party rule and controlled all forms of public communication. It is possible, however, to reach a similar result without seeming to suppress. An elected legislature is retained but a system of corruption (lobbyists, campaign contributions, payoffs to powerful interests) short-circuits the connection between voters and their representatives. The system responds primarily to corporate interests; voters become cynical, resigned; and opposition seems futile.

While Nazi control of the media meant that only the "official story" was communicated, that result is approximated by encouraging concentrated ownership of the media and thereby narrowing the range of permissible opinions.

This can be augmented by having "homeland security" envelop the entire nation with a maze of restrictions and by instilling fear among the general population by periodic alerts raised against a background of economic uncertainty, unemployment, downsizing and cutbacks in basic services.

Further, instead of outlawing all but one party, transform the two-party system. Have one, the Republican, radically change its identity:

From a moderately conservative party to a radically conservative one.

From a party of isolationism, skeptical of foreign adventures and viscerally opposed to deficit spending, to a party zealous for foreign wars.

From a party skeptical of ideologies and eggheads into an ideologically driven party nurturing its own intellectuals and supporting a network that transforms the national ideology from mildly liberal to predominantly conservative, while forcing the Democrats to the right and and enfeebling opposition.

From one that maintains space between business and government to one that merges governmental and corporate power and exploits the power-potential of scientific advances and technological innovation. (This would differ from the Nazi warfare organization, which subordinated "big business" to party leadership.)

The resulting dynamic unfolded spectacularly in the technology unleashed against Iraq and predictably in the corporate feeding frenzy over postwar contracts for Iraq's reconstruction.

In institutionalizing the "war on terrorism" the Bush administration acquired a rationale for expanding its powers and furthering its domestic agenda. While the nation's resources are directed toward endless war, the White House promoted tax cuts in the midst of recession, leaving scant resources available for domestic programs. The effect is to render the citizenry more dependent on government, and to empty the cash-box in case a reformist administration comes to power.

Americans are now facing a grim situation with no easy solution. Perhaps the just-passed anniversary of the Declaration of Independence might remind us that "whenever any form of Government becomes destructive ..." it must be challenged.
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Sheldon S. Wolin is emeritus professor of politics at Princeton University and the author of "Politics and Vision: The Presence of the Past" and "Alexis de Tocqueville: Between Two Worlds."

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