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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (441592)8/12/2003 4:28:40 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 769667
 
Iran-Contra, Amplified

commondreams.org



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (441592)8/12/2003 7:14:53 AM
From: Tom Clarke  Respond to of 769667
 
The NY Times is not to be believed.

BY JAMES TARANTO
Monday, August 11, 2003 2:07 p.m. EDT

Inventing a Quagmire
We missed this last week, but it's so stunning that it's worth highlighting even a few days late. The corrections column of Thursday's New York Times carried the following "editor's note":

An article on Sunday about attacks on the American military in Iraq over the previous two days, attributed to military officials, included an erroneous account that quoted Pfc. Jose Belen of the First Armored Division. Private Belen, who is not a spokesman for the division, said that a homemade bomb exploded under a convoy on Saturday morning on the outskirts of Baghdad and killed two American soldiers and their interpreter. The American military's central command, which releases information on all American casualties in Iraq, said before the article was published that it could not confirm Private Belen's account. Later it said that no such attack had taken place and that no American soldiers were killed on Saturday.

Repeated efforts by The Times to reach Private Belen this week have been unsuccessful. The Times should not have attributed the account to "military officials," and should have reported that the command had not verified the attack.


Consider that: The New York Times is acknowledging that it published a fabricated account of American casualties in Iraq. There's no reason to doubt the Times' contention that its source, as opposed to its reporter, was behind the original fabrication, but it seems fair, based on the paper's account, to say that the Times "sexed up" its reporting by promoting a single private to "military officials" (plural) and by failing to note Centcom's doubts, much less wait for confirmation before running with the story. (The original article is no longer available free on the Times Web site, but here's a later version that appeared in the Tri-Valley Herald of Pleasanton, Calif.)

The Times, of course, used its news pages as well as its editorials to crusade against the liberation of Iraq, and it's hard not to interpret this latest foul-up as reflecting an unhealthy eagerness to believe Iraq is a quagmire producing large numbers of casualties. Anyway, remember this the next time some Times editorial or op-ed columnist raises troubling questions about the Bush administration's credibility.

opinionjournal.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (441592)8/12/2003 7:27:23 AM
From: Tom Clarke  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
When will the NY Times correct Krugman's errors?








August 11, 2003, 9:00 a.m.
Prove It or Correct It
It’s time for the Times to weigh in on its error-prone economist.



I hereby issue a public challenge to the New York Times.

When is the "newspaper of record" going to run a correction of Paul Krugman's egregious mathematical error in which he claimed, in his August 1 column, that growth in real per capita California state spending from $1,950 in 1990 to $2,211 in 2003 was "only 10%," when anyone with a pocket calculator can tell that it is really 13.4 percent? And when will it correct Krugman's flatly deceptive claim that this growth "was simply a matter of keeping up with the population and inflation," when calculations of real per capita growth, by definition, already take those factors into account?

I challenge the Times either to demonstrate that Krugman's calculation and his characterization are accurate, or to correct his errors. For a Princeton economics professor, this should be a simple matter to straighten out with the editors.

And when is the "newspaper of record" going to run a correction retracting the embarrassing quotation that Krugman attributed to the Bush administration's Treasury Department in his August 5 column, but which no one in the Bush administration or the Treasury Department ever actually said? Krugman wrote that Treasury provided NBC's Tim Russert with statistics on the effects of repealing the Bush tax cuts on six example families. Krugman mocked the Treasury for claiming an "example of a 'lower income' elderly household was one receiving $2,000 a year in dividend income." I have seen the documents that Treasury provided to Russert, and neither they nor similar documents published in January used the expression "lower income" in relation to this example household (nor to any other). More, Russert never even said it.

I challenge the Times either to show where the administration said "lower income," or to retract this invented quotation. Surely disclosing the source of the quote should be a simple matter for the Times, as no doubt — in a post-Jayson Blair world — all quotations are fact-checked before publication.

If the source cannot be produced, then Krugman himself would have to retract the invented quotation, too — because he repeated it Saturday in a posting on his personal website. The posting was Krugman's response to a stinging rebuttal published in the letters section of the Times that same day. The letter was from Andrew B. Lyon, the Treasury's former deputy assistant secretary for tax analysis, whose staff prepared the examples for Russert. (By the way, Krugman Truth Squad member Robert Musil wrote a good deconstruction of Krugman's rebuttal-of-the-rebuttal on his Man Without Qualities blog.)

Based on past experience, it's a safe bet that both the Times and Krugman will ignore these challenges, and there will be no corrections or retractions. The editorial pages still report directly to publisher Arthur Sulzberger, Jr. — as they always have — so the change from Howell Raines to Bill Keller as executive editor of the rest of the paper can't be expected to raise standards of integrity on the editorial pages. And publishing that letter from Lyon is no evidence of improvement. As I noted on my blog, The Conspiracy to Keep You Poor and Stupid, the full version of Lyon's letter on Krugman's site has a lot more teeth in it than the sanitized version the Times actually published. No, Krugman probably isn't aware the versions are different.

So what will happen now? At most, Krugman will post a lame self-defense on his website. He'll come up with some econobabble to wave away the "only 10%" spending growth that is really 13.4 percent. And maybe he'll claim that those quotation marks around "lower income" were just a gag — like in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, when Dr. Evil and Mini-Me pantomimed quotation marks around words like "laser" and "liquid hot magma." Hey ... maybe I'm onto something. The diminutive Krugman is an awful lot like Mini-Me. As Dr. Evil himself said, "He's evil, he wants to take over the world, and he fits easily into most overhead storage bins."

Now, let the Krugman Truth Squad briefly train its fire on Krugman's most recent column for the New York Times — the one from Friday in which he said (let me try to put this into just sixteen words): "Salon.com has learned Bush is being bribed by the energy industry to delay on global warming." Is there an imminent threat? But of course: "... the fate of past civilizations that destroyed their environments, and hence themselves."

That's right. The central point of his column is just a rehash of an article in Salon.com. The article asserted that the case for the threat of global warming is open-and-shut, and that anyone who questions it has been corrupted. As Krugman summarized it, any

appearance of uncertainty is "manufactured." Very few independent experts now dispute that manmade global warming is happening, and represents a serious threat. Almost all the skeptics are directly or indirectly on the payroll of the oil, coal and auto industries.
It never seems to occur to this Princeton professor who does his scientific research on Salon.com that the oil, coal, and auto industries have an entirely legitimate interest in being skeptical about something that threatens them. But Krugman quite literally doesn't care. His solution is — you guessed it! — to slap new taxes on industries that contribute to global warming. (As determined by whom? Salon.com?) He proposed his tax solution in a 1997 article for Slate, and while admitting that it would probably reduce GDP, he shrugged, "But so what?"

But maybe we can work with this. As Robert Musil pointed out, Krugman seems to have adopted a new policy of accepting ideas that "very few independent experts now dispute." Musil wondered whether this will apply to the economy?

Krugman has insisted that the economy is not recovering, thanks to Bush's tax cuts and Alan Greenspan's "destructive outbreak of optimism." Now that the Wall Street Journal reported that an "overwhelming 92% of economists ... believe the rise in profits will prompt companies to boost capital spending and investment" and Krugman's own New York Times reported that the "spring upturn has nearly every forecaster, even the pessimists among them, signing on to the proposition that the national economy is finally breaking out," won't Krugman have to admit that the Bush economic program is working?

— Donald Luskin is chief investment officer of Trend Macrolytics LLC, an independent economics and investment-research firm. He welcomes your comments at don@trendmacro.com.





nationalreview.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (441592)8/12/2003 9:37:57 AM
From: laura_bush  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Scheer: Take Him: He's Yours

from robertscheer.com
________________________________

REJECT THE RECALL, CALIFORNIA
Republicans are running it as a shell game to distract from their misdeeds -- don't play along

August 12, 2003 -- "Take him, he's yours."

That was my initial response to the California recall, aimed at a conservative Democratic governor
who often has betrayed the state's large progressive base of voters -- the same folks who held their
noses to elect and then reelect him.

But now I don't buy it. However you feel about Gray Davis, the fact is, this recall has become a shell
game, led and paid for by Republicans, that conveniently distracts from the alarming failures and
frauds of the White House. That includes the Bush administration's blind eye to the energy sting that
robbed the California government of a good chunk of its past budget surplus.

The giddy media spectacle of porn stars and action heroes seeking to lead the world's sixth-largest
economy should not divert us from the fact that the key black marks on Davis' resume -- the energy
crisis and the budget shortfall -- were both messes created by deregulating, tax-cutting Republicans.
In dealing with both, Davis has not pulled any rabbits out of his hat, but he has been a competent
leader who minimized the damage. The red ink in California is a mere needle prick compared with
the hemorrhaging of trillions in future debt thanks to President Bush's tax cuts for the rich, the
invasion of Iraq and other disasters.

In fact, despite the hysteria, California's current problems are no more serious than that of many
states, including New York and Texas, both run by Republican governors. The underlying problem
for all states is a national economy brought to its knees by the epic fall of a panoply of corrupt
companies, firms like Enron that used the Republican mantra of deregulation as a convenient cover
for looting consumers, stockholders and employees. It is true that California has paid a particularly
heavy price for the machinations of Enron and other energy companies.

How dare Arnold Schwarzenegger or any Republican now ignore the well-documented gaming of
the California energy market by Bush's Texas cronies, many of whom landed high posts in his
administration? Was Davis responsible for manufacturing spikes in energy prices that nearly
bankrupted the state? Of course not -- but he took the political hit when the lights went out. It's a
safe bet that Schwarzenegger and the other Republicans running will offer not a word of criticism of
Vice President Dick Cheney's infamous meetings with top energy executives that excluded consumer
representatives. The minutes of those meetings are still secret, yet we know that the policy that
emerged benefited the con artists who caused California's energy crisis in the first place.

Nor will the Republicans who bought this recall delve into the role of the Bush-dominated Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission. That's the agency that failed in its obligation to bring the energy
pirates to heel and force them to properly compensate California for creating artificial shortages.

Davis failed in paying too much to get the lights back on, but I dare any of the Republican
candidates for his job to step forward and tell us that they would not have bailed out PG&E and
Southern California Edison. They will not because they have no real solutions to the energy
problems or any other problems the state faces. Certainly they will not curtail the heavy influences of
the prison guards and other law enforcement unions that are milking the state budget and that form
Davis' most reliable base of support. Clearly Davis' fundraising is obscenely obsessive, but it's minor
compared with Bush's nonstop money machine.

Were the Republicans not hypocrites, they would applaud Davis for implementing so much of their
pro-big-business and harsh law-and-order agenda. Like other conservative Democrats, Davis
wanted to appear tough, but a party led by poll-watching chameleons will always make for an easy
target.

Ironically, Schwarzenegger is as "liberal" as Davis on the hot-button issues of abortion, gun control
and gay rights. And can anyone suggest that Hollywood bon vivant Schwarzenegger better typifies
Christian values than squeaky-clean Davis -- a decorated officer in Vietnam when his peers were
demonstrating in the streets, a guy who has never been known to indulge a moment of decadent
pleasure? Didn't the puritans of the right squirm just a bit when their new candidate told Jay Leno
that the toughest decision in his life prior to announcing his candidacy was whether or not to have a
bikini wax?

Suddenly the Republicans care not a whit about those social values they have been prattling about,
or anything else but defeating a prominent Democrat. They brook no opposition, even from a
conservative Democrat; their goal is a one-party system.

If you think politics is all a joke anyway, then vote for whichever opportunist makes you laugh the
most. But if you think that meaningful representative democracy requires the scrutiny of the serious
primary and election process that Davis has twice weathered, then for a small "d" democrat, a "no"
vote on the recall is an obligation.