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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (56373)9/19/2004 1:46:12 PM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
We're talking about real issues now, Iraq, economy, etc.

Kerry was a hero who was smeared because he wanted that terrible war to end after he got home. Bush dodged the draft, went AWOL and lied about it.

The rest of it, who cares?



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (56373)9/19/2004 2:58:00 PM
From: Kip518  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Published on Friday, September 17, 2004 by CommonDreams.org
Missing: A Media Focus on the Supreme Court
by Norman Solomon


The big media themes about the 2004 presidential campaign have reveled in vague rhetoric and flimsy controversies. But little attention has focused on a matter of profound importance: Whoever wins the race for the White House will be in a position to slant the direction of the U.S. Supreme Court for decades to come.

Justices on the top court tend to stick around for a long time. Seven of the current nine were there a dozen years ago. William Rehnquist, who was elevated to chief justice by President Reagan, originally got to the Supreme Court when President Nixon appointed him a third of a century ago. The last four justices to retire had been on the high court for an average of 28 years.

Vacancies are very likely during the next presidential term. Rehnquist, 79, is expected to step down. So is Sandra Day O'Connor, 74, a swing vote on abortion and other issues that divide the court in close votes. Also apt to retire soon is 84-year-old John Paul Stevens, who usually votes with the more liberal justices. "The names of possible Bush or Kerry appointees already are circulating in legal circles," the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported in August, "and there is virtually no overlap between the lists."

There should be no doubt about the kind of Supreme Court nominee that President Bush would want. "In general what he's going to look for is the most conservative Court of Appeals judge out there who is young," says David M. O'Brien, a professor of government who has written a book about the Supreme Court. "Those are the top two priorities."

Bush has made clear his intention to select replacements akin to hard-right Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas. Writing in the Washington Times on Sept. 14, conservative attorney Bruce Fein predicts that "the winner of the impending presidential sweepstakes will likely appoint from one to three new justices." He foresees that if Bush wins on Election Day and the seats held by O'Connor and Stevens become vacant, "constitutional decrees in pivotal areas concerning presidential war powers, church-state relations, freedom of speech, the death penalty, the powers of the police and prosecutors, racial, ethnic and gender discrimination and private property will display a markedly more conservative hue."

Some political agendas benefit from the claim that the Supreme Court's 1973 abortion-rights decision, Roe v. Wade, is not in jeopardy. But as Michael Dorf, a law professor at Columbia University, wrote this summer, "three justices -- Rehnquist, Antonin Scalia, and Clarence Thomas -- remain committed to overturning Roe. Meanwhile, two of the Court's three oldest members -- justices Stevens and O'Connor -- are part of the six-justice majority for recognizing a constitutional right to abortion. Should President Bush have the opportunity to name anti-Roe successors to these two justices -- or to any two or more of the six justices who oppose overturning Roe -- there is little reason to doubt that he would seize it. The result would be a Supreme Court majority for eliminating the constitutional right to abortion."

Though Bush and Kerry are inclined to understate the importance of potential new Supreme Court picks as they try to attract swing voters, Professor Dorf is unequivocal: "A Bush victory will greatly increase the likelihood that Congress and the state legislatures will be able to ban most abortions at some point in the next four years. In contrast, a Kerry victory will almost surely preserve the status quo of legal abortion prior to the third trimester of pregnancy."

Already, Bush's impacts on the judiciary have been appreciable. Like the members of the Supreme Court, the federal judges on appeals and district court benches are appointed for life -- and in less than four years, Bush has chosen almost a quarter of all those judges nationwide.

Dahlia Lithwick, a legal analyst with Slate, notes that "Bush has already had a chance to massively reshape the lower federal bench. He's now filled 200 seats" -- with judges who'll have far-reaching effects. "He has certainly put a lot of people onto the federal bench who have sort of litmus tests on issues like abortion, on issues like civil rights. And I think we are going to see -- in the far future, but not today -- the fallout of a massive, massive influx of quite conservative jurists who've been put on the bench in the last four years."

As opponents of abortion rights, civil liberties, gay rights and other such causes work to gain a second term for George W. Bush, they try not to stir up a mass-media ruckus that might light a fire under progressives about the future of the Supreme Court and the rest of the federal judiciary. Likewise, those on the left who don't want to back Kerry even in swing states are inclined to dodge, or fog over, what hangs in the balance. Kerry is hardly a champion of a progressive legal system, but the contrast between his centrist orientation and the right-wing extremism of the Bush-Cheney regime should be obvious. It's too easy to opt for imagined purity while others will predictably have to deal with very dire consequences.

"The popular constituency of the Bush people, a large part of it, is the extremist fundamentalist religious sector in the country, which is huge," Noam Chomsky said in a recent interview with David Barsamian. "There is nothing like it in any other industrial country. And they have to keep throwing them red meat to keep them in line. While they're shafting them in their economic and social policies, you've got to make them think you're doing something for them. And throwing red meat to that constituency is very dangerous for the world, because it means violence and aggression, but also for the country, because it means harming civil liberties in a serious way. The Kerry people don't have that constituency. They would like to have it, but they're never going to appeal to it much. They have to appeal somehow to working people, women, minorities, and others, and that makes a difference."

Chomsky added: "These may not look like huge differences, but they translate into quite big effects for the lives of people. Anyone who says 'I don't care if Bush gets elected' is basically telling poor and working people in the country, 'I don't care if your lives are destroyed. I don't care whether you are going to have a little money to help your disabled mother. I just don't care, because from my elevated point of view I don't see much difference between them.' That's a way of saying, 'Pay no attention to me, because I don't care about you.' Apart from its being wrong, it's a recipe for disaster if you're hoping to ever develop a popular movement and a political alternative."

Norman Solomon is co-author, with Reese Erlich, of "Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn't Tell You." His columns and other writings can be found at www.normansolomon.com.

commondreams.org



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (56373)9/19/2004 8:54:17 PM
From: NOW  Respond to of 89467
 
i remarked to my wife that it smelled of classic disinformation from the get go. My only question was: Was Rather a willing or unknowing participant?



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (56373)9/20/2004 12:30:51 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
<<...WAS THE BUSH NATIONAL GUARD DOCUMENT SCANDAL CREATED BY KARL ROVE?...>>

Ray: Mr. Rove plays gutter politics better than the late Lee Atwater...He knows how to destroy opponents and IF he has to confuse the masses to get his pathetic candidates elected then he will not hesitate to do it...Mr. Rove clearly KNOWS that if this election is a referendum on GW Bush and his track record then we will have a new president...Notice how we have seen the media getting very distracted -- this isn't happening by accident...ROVE IS THE MAESTRO OF AN ORCHESTRA OF DIRTY TRICKSTERS THAT KNOW HOW TO MISLEAD THE VOTERS...The Kerry Team will have to run harder and smarter or they will not win on November...They have NEVER faced anything like the Rove machine before...It's time to take the gloves off.

-s2@LetsPlayHardball.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (56373)9/23/2004 1:23:17 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Wellstone!: Documentary on Paul Wellstone Set to Premiere

by Frederic J. Frommer

Published on Thursday, September 23, 2004 by the Associated Press

WASHINGTON - A new documentary on the late Sen. Paul Wellstone offers this surprising fact about the proud Minnesotan: he didn't want to move to Minnesota.

After Carleton College offered the 25-year-old Wellstone a teaching job, the North Carolina resident was trying to find reasons not to accept, recalls friend Jim Stimson.

"He didn't want to live in Minnesota," says a laughing Stimson, after hesitating about whether to offer this information for public consumption.

But in the documentary, "Wellstone!," the future Democratic senator is shown throwing himself into Minnesota full-bore, from organizing on behalf of farmers and workers, to his 12 years in the United States Senate.

The 88-minute documentary will premiere Oct. 14 at the Heights Theater in Minneapolis as part of the Central Standard Film Festival. It was originally to be called "Carry it Forward," put producers decided to change the name to avoid confusion with the movie "Pay it Forward."

The film was produced by Hard Working Pictures, a St. Paul, Minn., production company at a cost of around $350,000. It covers the lives of Wellstone and his wife Sheila from the time they met in high school.

The Wellstones and their daughter, Marcia Wellstone Markuson, were killed, along with five others, in a plane crash just days before the 2002 Senate election. Wellstone's replacement on the ballot, former Vice President Walter Mondale, lost the Senate race to Republican Norm Coleman.

One theme is the Wellstones' ability to connect with regular people despite reaching the pinnacle of political power.

"They were just such ordinary people that they were like your best friend," says Jayne Marsnick, a supporter from the Iron Range.

"He'd be walking down the hallway and cross the hallway and come to you and shake your hand and talk to you," says an unnamed Capitol Hill maintenance worker. Adds another: "A lot of senators don't say nothing to you."

There is also footage of Sheila Wellstone's work on behalf of domestic abuse victims, including a "Silent Witness" exhibit she put together at the Capitol.

Paul Wellstone is portrayed as a serious, high-minded champion of progressive causes, but not without a sense of humor. In a serious tone, he tells a small group of elderly women that he will not accept any money from tobacco companies.

"On the other hand, they never have offered any," he says, laughing heartily. "That's not a big sacrifice for me ..."

Stimson says that Wellstone's political consciousness was raised as a graduate student at the University of North Carolina, after spending time with poor people living in Durham.

Wellstone "reached into their lives and empathized with the way they lived," says Stimson, recalling how Wellstone organized for poor university cafeteria workers.

Jeff Blodgett, who went on to become Wellstone's campaign manager, described Wellstone as a "pretty easy grader" at Carleton, and one who some suspected graded on ideology. Another student-turned-staffer, Kari Moe, described how students rallied to save Wellstone's job after the administration tired of his political activism.

The film is unabashedly pro-Wellstone, but it doesn't gloss over his missteps. It notes, for example, how he offended veterans by staging an anti-war news conference in front of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial soon after arriving in Washington.

"Paul was brash when he got here," says Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, one of Wellstone's closest friends in the Senate.

A major focus of "Wellstone!" is his willingness to take unpopular positions. In 1996, for example, Wellstone was the only senator up for re-election to vote against an overhaul of the nation's welfare system. In a Senate speech, he predicts children will be hurt by the law.

"They don't have the lobbyists, they don't have the PACs," Wellstone says.

Six years later, Wellstone faced another tough election-year challenge, voting down a resolution authorizing war with Iraq, which Coleman used against him in the campaign.

"He thought the vote on Iraq could cost him the election," recalls Colin McGinnis, Wellstone's chief of staff at the time.

© 2004 Knight Ridder

commondreams.org