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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (19181)5/27/2005 2:30:17 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361214
 
We MUST find a way to fully expose what Diebold and other private electronic voting machine firms are actually doing...this is what George Soros should be spending millions on right now -- public education.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (19181)5/27/2005 2:39:30 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361214
 
A little more from Congressman Conyers & The Daily Kos blog...

dailykos.com

Why Aren't More Acting? (4.00 / 8)

More is being done.

Rep. Miller is introducing a bill calling for an investigation, and I have joined him. Others are working on this. Rep. Waxman introduced a similar bill last congress, again with my support. Others have joined me in calling for hearings before. The letter I sent today was individual from me to the Chairman, so I did not seek additional signatories.

by Congressman John Conyers on Thu May 26th, 2005 at 19:42:49 PDT
[ Parent ]

_________________

Speaking of Capitol Letters... (none / 0)

Over 700 Kos members have voted for our letter to the Washington Post, "Countdown to Memorial Day: A Open Letter to Insiders."

The letter urges insiders to come forward with information about the Bush Administration's deceptions that led to the invasion and occupation of Iraq. It was sent to the Post last night. The Post hasn't published it yet. We've posted an update here urging Kos members to urge the Post to publish.

Rep. Conyers, you are so respected, so dedicated, could you give us any guidance at all about what it would take to get some kind of broad public statement "out there" encouraging insiders to come out with the documents that must surely be there? No one needs to explain to you what an unmitigated disaster the war has been and continues to be. Many of us see no end in sight.

Thank you for all you do for all the people of America.

Urge insiders to blow the whistle on Bush. Sign here...

dailykos.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (19181)5/27/2005 3:17:25 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361214
 
Assault On the Media
________________________

By E. J. Dionne Jr.
Columnist
The Washington Post
Friday, May 27, 2005
washingtonpost.com

So it turns out that the FBI has documents showing that detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, complained about the mistreatment of the Koran and that many said they were severely beaten.

The documents specifically include an allegation from a prisoner that guards had "flushed a Koran in the toilet."


And yesterday, Pentagon officials said investigators have identified five incidents of "mishandling" the Koran by military guards and investigators. It was the first time Pentagon officials had acknowledged mistreatment of the Muslim holy book, though they insisted that the episodes were minor and occurred in the Guantanamo facility's early days.

What, then, is one to make of the Bush administration's furious assault against Newsweek magazine for bringing allegations about the abuse of the Koran to popular attention?

Let's be clear: Newsweek originally reported that an internal military investigation had "confirmed" infractions alleged in "internal FBI e-mails." The documents made public Wednesday include only an allegation from a prisoner about the flushing of the Koran, and the Pentagon insisted that the same prisoner, reinterviewed on May 14, couldn't corroborate his earlier claim.

But it's also clear, to be charitable, that not all was well in Guantanamo. That's why the administration and its apologists -- more about that word in a moment -- went bonkers over the Newsweek story.

The war on Newsweek shifted attention away from how the Guantanamo prisoners have been treated, how that treatment has affected the battle against terrorism and what American policies should be. Newsweek-bashing also furthered a long-term and so far successful campaign by the administration and the conservative movement to dismiss all negative reports about their side as the product of some entity they call "the liberal media."

At this point, it is customary to offer a disclaimer to the effect that my column runs in The Post, is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group and that The Washington Post Co. owns Newsweek. I resisted writing about this subject precisely because I do not want anyone to confuse my own views with Newsweek's or The Post's.

I write about it now because of the new reports and because I fear that too many people in traditional journalism are becoming dangerously defensive in the face of a brilliantly conceived conservative attack on the independent media.

Conservative academics have long attacked "postmodernist" philosophies for questioning whether "truth" exists at all and claiming that what we take as "truths" are merely "narratives" woven around some ideological predisposition. Today's conservative activists have become the new postmodernists. They shift attention away from the truth or falsity of specific facts and allegations -- and move the discussion to the motives of the journalists and media organizations putting them forward. Just a modest number of failures can be used to discredit an entire enterprise.

Of course journalists make mistakes, sometimes stupid ones. Dan Rather should not have used those wacky documents in reporting on President Bush's Air National Guard service. Newsweek has been admirably self-critical about what it sees as its own mistakes on the Guantanamo story. Anonymous sources are overused. Why quote a nameless conservative saying a particular columnist is "an idiot liberal" when many loyal right-wingers could be found to say the same thing even more colorfully on the record? If the current controversies lead to better journalism, three cheers.

But this particular anti-press campaign is not about Journalism 101. It is about Power 101. It is a sophisticated effort to demolish the idea of a press independent of political parties by way of discouraging scrutiny of conservative politicians in power. By using bad documents, Dan Rather helped Bush, not John Kerry, because Rather gave Bush's skilled lieutenants the chance to use the CBS mistake to close off an entire line of inquiry about the president. In the case of Guantanamo, the administration, for a while, cast its actions as less important than Newsweek's.

Back when the press was investigating Bill Clinton, conservatives were eager to believe every negative report about the incumbent. Some even pushed totally false claims, including the loony allegation that Clinton aide Vince Foster was somehow murdered by Clinton's apparatchiks when, in fact, Foster committed suicide. Every journalist who went after Clinton was "courageous." Anyone who opposed his impeachment or questioned even false allegations was "an apologist."

We now know that the conservatives' admiration for a crusading and investigative press carried an expiration date of Jan. 20, 2001.

When the press fails, it should be called on the carpet. But when the press confronts a politically motivated campaign of intimidation, its obligation is to resist -- and to keep reporting.