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


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (674627)3/9/2005 6:38:15 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
shames to claim american citizenship, lefty kennyboy !!! start your car and move to canada



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (674627)3/9/2005 6:39:16 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
Message 21119482



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (674627)3/9/2005 6:46:30 PM
From: tonto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
And the reason you are happy about this is...?
How is this good for our country?

OOPS! Looks like your guy spoke too soon. The Pro-Syrian prime minister has been reinstated.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (674627)3/15/2005 5:29:13 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
Syria Begins Packing Up Beirut Intel Office

By Bassem Mroue
The Associated Press
Tuesday, March 15, 2005; 1:48 PM

BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Syrian military intelligence started clearing out its headquarters for the Beirut area and vacated other offices in the Lebanese capital and the north Tuesday in line with key demands by the United States and Lebanese opposition.

The evacuation of the Syrian intelligence service, a widely resented arm through which Damascus controlled many aspects of Lebanese life, has been a key demand of the opposition, which orchestrated a gigantic demonstration Monday in central Beirut.

Syrian agents appeared to be preparing to leave their headquarters at Ramlet el-Baida on the edge of Beirut. Belongings and furniture were loaded into three trucks.

In the city's commercial Hamra district, about two dozen Syrian agents vacated an intelligence office during the afternoon, hours after trucks loaded furniture and belongings.

The agents, protected by Lebanese police, then drove off in the trucks. A short time later, a doorman hoisted two Lebanese flags at the entrance. A local resident said about 20 agents left in a van and a car.

The Syrians have been occupying the Hamra building's second, third and fourth floors since Syrian forces returned to Beirut in 1987 to stop Muslim militia fighting. It was targeted by a car bomb placed a block away in 1988 during the 1975-1990 civil war.

Despite Syria's troop withdrawal last week from northern and central Lebanon to eastern positions closer to their country's border, most intelligence offices remain. Intelligence agents did close offices in two northern towns and dismantled two checkpoints in the area.

Of all Syrian forces in Lebanon, the intelligence agents are those who deal most directly with Lebanese, setting up checkpoints and making arrests. People must go to them to get permits and licenses or even to resolve family disputes.

The agents worked in apartment buildings, plainly visible with armed officers outside. Syrian intelligence also have resolved disputes among Lebanese politicians.

Since the Syrian army withdrew from Beirut in 2000, the headquarters of Syrian military intelligence in Lebanon have been in Anjar, a few miles from the Lebanese-Syrian border.

The intelligence offices were the only remnants of Syria's military presence left in Beirut following the 2000 withdrawal of army positions from the capital. It was unclear if there were any remaining intelligence offices in Beirut, as the agents were known for their secretive nature.

In Lebanon's second-largest city, Tripoli, men were loading trucks outside the two main offices of Syrian intelligence. Syria already has closed intelligence offices in two other northern towns.

That means Syrian intelligence in northern Lebanon will be confined to three offices in the remote Akkar district.

Earlier, about 2,000 pro-Syria demonstrators marched toward the U.S. Embassy in a Beirut suburb, denouncing what they said was American interference in Lebanon. Scores of riot police and soldiers used barbed wire to block the approaches to the compound.

The protesters, waving Lebanese flags and chanting, "Ambassador get out! Leave my country free!" stopped at the barbed wire blocking the road about 500 yards from the fortified hilltop compound. The crowd did not try to break through.

Pro-Syrian groups have blamed the United States for pressuring Syria into deciding to withdraw its 14,000 troops from Lebanon. They also reject a U.S.-sponsored U.N. Security Council resolution demanding that Syria withdraw and dismantle militias, a reference to the militant Shiite Muslim group Hezbollah.

In Damascus, Syrian President Bashar Assad discussed Lebanon with his Egyptian counterpart, Hosni Mubarak, in a hilltop palace overlooking the capital, an Egyptian official said. Mubarak returned to Egypt shortly afterward, Syria's official news agency SANA reported.

Syria has been moving its troops from northern and central Lebanon to eastern positions closer to the border.

Syrian laborers have been attacked, and a bust of the late Syrian President Hafez Assad -- father of the current president -- was vandalized recently amid rising anti-Syrian sentiment sparked by the Feb. 14 assassination of former premier Rafik Hariri.

Pro-Syrian Prime Minister-designate Omar Karami began consultations Tuesday to form a Cabinet. He has been in caretaker capacity since Feb. 28 when he was forced to quit under popular pressure. But he was reappointed to the job by President Emile Lahoud 10 days later.

Karami hopes to form a national unity government, which he said is the only way to deal with Lebanon's political crisis.

Karami began his day by meeting former prime ministers before heading to the parliament building in downtown Beirut, where he met Speaker Nabih Berri and later began talks with legislators. He, as well as pro-government groups, have called for a national unity government while the opposition demands a neutral Cabinet that could oversee the investigation into Hariri's assassination and prepare for parliamentary elections in April and May.

"The only way to face these difficulties, complications and rescue the country is a national unity government. This is what we are seeking and this is what we will do. If we can, then that is good and if not we will deal with it later," Karami said before beginning his meetings with legislators.

Asked if he is optimistic, Karami said: "We have to continue our consultations to say whether we are optimistic or not."

On Monday, in the biggest demonstration in Lebanon's recent history, an estimated 1 million opposition supporters gathered in Beirut's Martyrs' Square in a show of anti-Syrian force. The opposition is demanding the withdrawal of Syrian troops, the ouster of Syrian-allied security chiefs and an international inquiry into Hariri's assassination.

The opposition blames Syria and its Lebanese allies for the killing of Hariri and 17 others in a bombing on a Beirut street. The opposition has rebuffed calls to join a new government until its demands are met.

Lahoud's reinstatement of Karami as prime minister last week was seen as a slap in the opposition's face because anti-Syrian protests had forced him to resign earlier.

Many in the crowd also demanded the removal of Lahoud as president. The Associated Press estimated turnout to be at least 800,000.

Karami's nomination came two days after a March 8 rally called by the Shiite Muslim militant group Hezbollah that drew a half-million people. He considered the rally a show of support for his re-nomination.

As Syria pulls its troops toward the border for an eventual withdrawal from the country it has controlled for decades, both the pro-Syrian government and the opposition have been whipping up crowds in a duel of rallies.

Syria has been Lebanon's main power broker since sending troops to its neighbor in 1976 to help quell a civil war. The troops, at times numbering more than 35,000, remained after the war ended in 1990



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (674627)3/17/2005 4:43:57 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
Benedict arnold kennyboy E Phillipps: OOPS! Looks like your guy spoke too soon. The Pro-Syrian prime minister has been reinstated.
First Phase of Syria Lebanon Pullout Roughly Over
By REUTERS

Filed at 4:02 a.m. ET

BEIRUT (Reuters) - The first phase of Syria's troop pullout from Lebanon is ``roughly'' complete, bringing Damascus closer to meeting U.S. demands that it totally quit its neighbor, a Lebanese security source said on Thursday.

The senior source told Reuters all Syrian troops and intelligence officers in Lebanon had pulled back either to the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon or had crossed back into Syria.

``It roughly ended,'' the source said. ``There are just some logistics left. But the people went, all of them.''

The source said that 8,000 to 10,000 Syrian troops remained in the Bekaa Valley while roughly 4,000 to 6,000 had left the country entirely.

Syria agreed to withdraw its troops under intense international pressure and also protests in Beirut. Washington wants all Syrian troops and intelligence personnel out of Lebanon to allow for free elections in May.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (674627)3/17/2005 4:44:28 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
First Phase of Syria Lebanon Pullout Roughly Over
By REUTERS

Filed at 4:02 a.m. ET

BEIRUT (Reuters) - The first phase of Syria's troop pullout from Lebanon is ``roughly'' complete, bringing Damascus closer to meeting U.S. demands that it totally quit its neighbor, a Lebanese security source said on Thursday.

The senior source told Reuters all Syrian troops and intelligence officers in Lebanon had pulled back either to the Bekaa Valley in eastern Lebanon or had crossed back into Syria.

``It roughly ended,'' the source said. ``There are just some logistics left. But the people went, all of them.''

The source said that 8,000 to 10,000 Syrian troops remained in the Bekaa Valley while roughly 4,000 to 6,000 had left the country entirely.

Syria agreed to withdraw its troops under intense international pressure and also protests in Beirut. Washington wants all Syrian troops and intelligence personnel out of Lebanon to allow for free elections in May.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (674627)3/17/2005 8:32:00 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 769670
 
Their Non-Reality Reality
Understanding the Democrats.

AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is a part II. Part I here.

The most popular political guru among Democrats today is a guy named George Lakoff, a professor of linguistics at Berkeley. Marc Cooper, a contributing editor to The Nation, describes Lakoff’s book, Don’t Think of an Elephant: Know Your Values and Frame the Debate, as a “feel-good self-help book for a stratum of despairing liberals who just can’t believe how their commonsense message has been misunderstood by the eternally deceived masses.”


Apparently this stratum includes Howard Dean, the new head of the Democratic party, who calls Lakoff “one of the most influential political thinkers of the progressive movement.” His book was distributed to hundreds of Democratic congressmen.

Lakoff’s argument boils down to this: Facts do not matter. “People think in frames,” he writes. “If the facts do not fit a frame, the frame stays and the facts bounce off.”

By frames, he means ideological blinders or emotional categories or familial roles. Or something. Whatever they are, Lakoff believes that Democrats need to change their language to appeal by exploiting “frames,” not dealing with facts. Much of his analysis stems from his belief that pretty much all conservatives act in bad faith. Conservatives, for example, “are not really pro-life.” No, conservatives see things through the “strict father” frame. Hence, “Pregnant teenagers have violated the commandments of the strict father. Career women challenge the power and authority of the strict father,” and therefore, he writes, “Both should be punished by bearing the child.”

Liberals can succeed not by changing their views, but by changing their words. This should be obvious, since reality doesn’t really matter anyway. All Democrats have to do is successfully change the name for trial lawyers to “public-protection attorneys” and re-label “environmental protection,” as an effort to maintain “poison-free communities.”

FDR, GANNON & LIBERAL MYTHOLOGY
Meanwhile, Democrats have taken the position that Social Security needs no reform whatsoever. Now, before the good-government liberal types scream at me that I’m being unfair, let me add that I understand this is mostly a tactical posture on the Democrats’ part. But in politics, tactics and principles are often confused for each other and for good reason. And that Democrats are acting like they think Social Security is just plain hunky-dory. That’s not my interpretation but James Carville’s, Stanley Greenberg’s, and Harold Ickes’s.

No remotely serious observer of reality believes that Social Security is just fine.

But what concerns liberals more is the supposedly outrageous contention that FDR might have supported private accounts. A quote from FDR offered by Brit Hume and others suggested that this might be the case, and the bloggers as well as Ellen Goodman, Jonathan Alter, and countless others went batty at the very idea.

Now, it’s fair game to object to what you consider misleading quotations read out of context. But the passion of these objections — even after you discount the rabid and irrational Brit Hume hatred — reveals how stuck in the past many liberals are. Conservatives were wrong about the quote, but they were right for thinking respect for FDR’s spirit is what motivates many liberals. But the thing is, who cares if FDR would have supported privatization or not? FDR was a brilliant politician, but very few historians believe he was a particularly brilliant policy maven. He liked to play with his stamp collection in his free time, not master actuarial arcana. The only thing we know for sure that FDR really favored was “bold experimentation,” which is the one thing these same Democrats adamantly oppose.

Meanwhile, Teresa Heinz Kerry thinks the election was “hacked.” Expanding on that theme, Juliet Schor of Boston College wrote in The Nation that Kerry lost the election because of strategic “software breakdowns” and selectively missing voting machines in Democratic precincts. “No amount of cultural repositioning will cure this problem,” she writes and which Cooper, in his excellent Atlantic essay, translates as liberals saying there’s “no need for us to change. The blame is all external.”

Another writer for the same issue of The Nation, a sociologist from NYU argues that liberals can only choose between living “two nightmares.” Nightmare #1: Sixty million Americans “knowingly” ratified Bush’s “right-wing ideology.” Or, nightmare #2: “We have just witnessed a second successive nonviolent coup d’état — a massive voter fraud that produced, among other anomalies, a gap between exit polls and paperless electronic voting tallies.” Oh, and this guy also thinks we shouldn’t discount the possibility we’re in analogous situation to 1930s Germany.

In (slightly) swampier waters, we hear that Jeff Gannon is the second gunman from every painful reality the Left has had a hard time accepting, including the Florida recount and Dan Rather’s downfall. One fellow took the time to pretend he was Gannon in order to send me an e-mail from Annoy.com. When you go to the site, you find a picture of Karl Rove’s head on a buff nude dude’s body with some even more pornographic text about the perfidy of various right-wing “whores.”

THE WORLD ACCORDING TO CHAIT
And at organs that pride themselves on their immunity to feverish impulses, we find instead a haughtiness not often seen outside 17th-century Versailles. Jonathan Chait of The New Republic imagines a hypothetical in which God descends to Earth for the purpose of “settling, once and for all, our disputes over economic policy.” If the Almighty declared conservative empirical claims were correct, the liberals, he writes, would respond:
[no] doubt by rethinking and abandoning nearly all their long-held positions. Liberalism, after all, claims to produce certain outcomes: more prosperity and security, especially for the poor and middle classes; a cleaner environment; safer foods and drugs; and so on. If it were proved beyond a doubt that liberal policies fail to produce those outcomes — or even, as conservatives often claim, that such policies hurt their intended beneficiaries — then their rationale would disappear.

But how would conservatives react if God affirmed liberal economic precepts?

Well, most of us would tell the Big Guy Upstairs to butt out, we know what we’re talking about and He doesn’t. Why, because “Economic conservatism, unlike liberalism, would survive having all its empirical underpinnings knocked out from beneath it,” since liberals are — get this — “fact finders.”

Forgetting all of the profound theological and psychological insults packed into this bizarre hypothetical, what on earth is Chait talking about? He goes on and on about how conservative economists are lacking in respect for empirical data and fact-finding while liberals are the Joe Fridays of economics. I worked in and around the American Enterprise Institute for quite a while. AEI remains the central hive of the sorts of economists Chait despises. I can tell you here and now that most of these guys spent their time talking endlessly about data, “random walks” in the data, the need for more data, the problems with data, and the reliability of that data. You’d think in the comfort of AEI, a few would have dropped the act and I would have heard a few of them say, “Who cares what the data says?” You’d think fewer free-market economists would receive Nobel Prizes since they don’t hand such things out for ideological polemic writing.

Chait’s theory boils down to a very shabby accusation of bad faith. When conservatives are right about reality, it’s by accident. It’s not that “conservatives don't believe their own empirical arguments,” Chait concedes. And it’s not “that ideologically driven thinking can't lead to empirically sound outcomes. In many cases — conservative opposition to tariffs, price controls, and farm subsidies — it does.” But the simple fact is that when it comes to conservatives, “empirical reasoning simply does not drive their thinking. What appears to be conservative economic reasoning is actually a kind of backward reasoning. It begins with the conclusion and marches back through the premises.”

“Liberalism,” Chait lectures, “is a more deeply pragmatic governing philosophy — more open to change, more receptive to empiricism, and ultimately better at producing policies that improve the human condition — than conservatism.”

And this is true not just of economics but everything. For example, Clinton was a great Pragmatist who “recognized the failure of welfare, previously a cherished liberal goal, to accomplish its stated purpose, and he enacted a sweeping overhaul.”

And here we can see the great flaw in Chait’s wishful thinking about liberal realism. Clinton agreed to welfare reform — over the objections of most liberals, including his own wife — because the Republicans forced him to and he’d have lost the 1996 election if he didn’t. That was the beginning and the ending of Bill Clinton’s fact-finding. The New York Times's editorial page — a better representative of elite liberalism’s worldview than The New Republic, alas — called welfare reform “atrocious” and an outrage. “This is not reform, it is punishment” they declared.

Last summer, the Times reported that welfare reform was one of the “acclaimed successes of the past decade” and its renewal is a “no-brainer.” Chait would no doubt salute the newspaper for its empiricism. But how would we have known they were empiricists in 1996? Real empiricists express skepticism toward their own predictions, not moral outrage and — often — charges of racism at those who doubt them.

Indeed, that’s the story writ small of liberalism’s alleged acceptance of “new realities.” It’s not that liberals have maturely adapted to new data, it’s that they’ve been proven wrong so often — either empirically or at the polls — that they’ve had to change, and each time they do it, it’s not with the empiricist’s joy of learning new things, it’s with grumbling through gnashed teeth and amidst much caterwauling about liberal “sellouts” and political opportunism. For more than three decades, liberals swore there was no evidence that there was anything wrong with welfare reform until even the public knew they were lying.

Chait’s version of liberals cheerfully accepting that they were wrong after decades of white-knuckled denial reminds me of that scene from Fletch where Chevy Chase is chatting up the doctor about an alleged mutual friend who died:

Doctor: You know, it's a shame about Ed.

Fletch: Oh, it was. Yeah, it was really a shame. To go so suddenly like that.

Doctor: He was dying for years.

Fletch: Sure, but... the end was very…very sudden.

Doctor: He was in intensive care for eight weeks.

Fletch: Yeah, but I mean the very end, when he died. That was extremely sudden.

Lastly there’s Chait’s solipsism. His version of reality cannot explain liberals who disagree with him. Are liberals who oppose free trade simply morons who can’t do the math? Was Hillary Clinton less of a liberal because she opposed welfare reform? What about Marian Wright Edelman? Are the Europeans who’ve refused to recognize that the economic rot of their welfare states really conservatives because they can’t face facts? Are liberals in America who envy Europe’s economic model incapable of recognizing its flaws? How does Chait explain anybody to his left — either ideologically or simply in the next office over from him — who disagrees with him? If liberals always go where the facts take them — you in the back, stop laughing — how is it that liberals ever disagree? He might say that only conservatives operate in ideologically blinkered bad faith and God-defying false-consciousness. But I think the real answer is that in Chait’s formulation the facts can only be what he finds them to be. And one senses that he really thinks God should come down and tell everyone that’s the case.

Now, I like Chait and I think he’s a smart guy. But I can only read all of this as the sort of defensive crouch one finds among the smarter campus activists who decide to hide underneath the cafeteria table while the sophomoric would-be revolutionaries tear the place apart. One can almost see Chait, Rain Man-like in a fetal position muttering, “The facts are on my side, the facts are on my side.”

On almost every significant area of public policy the Democrats are atrophied, rusty, and calcified. They're dependent upon old (condescending) notions about blacks, the patronage of teacher’s unions which care very little for the facts, and feminists who define liberation almost exclusively as the freedom to abort pregnancies despite all of the new, inconvenient facts science is bringing to bear. Liberals are not the “reality-based community,” they are the status-quo based community. They wish to stand athwart history yelling "Stop" — in some rare cases, even when history is advancing liberalism in tyrannical lands. The Buckleyite formulation of standing athwart history yelling "Stop" was aimed at a world where the rise of Communism abroad and soft-liberalism at home were seen as linked trends. Today, liberals yell "Stop" almost entirely because they don’t enjoy being in the backseat. If they cannot drive, no one can.

And — where was I going with this again? Oh yeah — I think this petulance explains the liberal obsession with the phrase “reality-based community.” It’s a form of transference or projection or whatever they call it. We can’t stand the new reality, so we’re going to insist that those who recognize it are the ones in denial.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (674627)3/17/2005 6:12:06 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769670
 
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