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


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (20276)6/5/2005 1:47:59 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361082
 
*Ralph Nader Is On C-Span Again Right Now <eom>.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (20276)6/5/2005 1:49:25 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361082
 
Vaccines ARE our primary preventative treatment for flu. As with a lot of other things, Bush has let the whole system disintegrate.

sciencefriday.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (20276)6/5/2005 1:55:51 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361082
 
John Kerry Reportedly To Present "Downing Street Memo" To Congress

allheadlinenews.com
June 5, 2005 7:36 a.m. EST
Douglas Maher - All Headline News Staff Reporter

Washington,D.C. (AHN)- After remaining almost silent since losing the 2004 election by thirty four electoral votes, Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts is reportedly planning to to present Congress with The Downing Street Memo, reported last month by the London Times.

The memo purports to include minutes from a July 2002 meeting with Tony Blair, in which Blair allegedly said that President Bush's administration "fixed" intelligence on Iraq in order to justify the Iraqi war.

The Downing Street Memo is a leaked Top Secret document that details the minutes of a 2002 meeting between top-level British and American government officials.

The memo states that George Bush "was determined" to attack Iraq long before going to Congress with the matter, and that "the intelligence and facts were being fixed around the policy."

Rumblings across Washington and the Internet claim this is a step from Democrats towards impeachment of President Bush.

Fellow Democrat Rep. John Conyers of Michigan has issued a statement on the U.S. House of Representatives stating that he is seeking information regarding the meeting minutes.

"I am seeking information regarding the charges made in the so-called “Downing Street Minutes” that there was a secret agreement between the U.S. and the U..K to invade Iraq by the summer of 2002, well before the president sought congressional authority." Conyers said.

"Please provide us with any information or leads you might have regarding such a secret pre-war deal, or other efforts to manipulate intelligence or provoke a response to justify war. We will treat any information provided on this site as confidential. Thank you for your assistance in this important matter."


However, All Headline News has re-discovered that a bill signed by then President Clinton named "The Iraqi Liberation Act of 1998" gave President Bush all of the legal recourse necessary for the war.

Stating directly from the bill: "Iraq Liberation Act of 1998 - Declares that it should be the policy of the United States to seek to remove the Saddam Hussein regime from power in Iraq and to replace it with a democratic government. "

The H.R. 4655 law was signed into effect October 31,1998.

Republicans plan to issue a response to Senator Kerry by using his own words against him, a tactic used in the 2004 Election. Where Sen. Kerry was quoted as saying the war was justified and Saddam Hussein needed to be removed.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (20276)6/5/2005 4:58:03 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361082
 
It would be nice IF this was true...our democracy can use all the help it can get...

...COMMENT #60 [link]

bradblog.com

...Sandy D. said on 4/29/2005 @ 11:14am PT...

<<...I just read through this entire thread and am hopeful that Kerry is in prosecutor mode and marshalling the evidence of the largest RICO case (criminal racketeering statute) in history. (We have a brand new empty jail in Portland OR that we have no operating funds for .... just waiting for all the criminals involved in the 2004 election.)...>>




To: Raymond Duray who wrote (20276)6/5/2005 5:08:16 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 361082
 
Is the Bush Administration trying to "create their own reality"...?

Message 21389172



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (20276)6/5/2005 7:17:09 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361082
 
Nixon's revenge
________________________

The revelations about Deep Throat aren't as noteworthy as the continuing audacity of the former president's apologists.


- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Joe Conason
June 3, 2005 |
salon.com

Historical amnesia long ago leached away the meaning of Watergate for most Americans. With the revelation that former FBI official Mark Felt was the secret Washington Post source later known as "Deep Throat," an opportunity arises to examine the criminality that endangered the Constitution under the Nixon presidency and the role of the press in exposing that crisis -- as well as the continuing audacity of the Nixonian criminals, their enablers and their apologists in attempting to rewrite history.

Far beyond a "third-rate burglary" of the Democratic National Committee headquarters, Watergate came to stand for the wide-ranging gangsterism of the Nixon regime. At the bottom were fascist thugs like G. Gordon Liddy, who plotted the black-bag jobs, warrantless wiretaps, illegal spying and campaign dirty tricks, all in the cause of reelecting the president in 1972. In the middle were the Nixon operation's white-collar goons, those lawyers and bureaucrats who collected bundles of cash from corrupt corporations and then handed out the money for secret campaign slush funds and hush-money payoffs. And at the top sat Tricky Dick, along with his White House palace guard and his corrupted appointees at the Justice Department, the CIA and the FBI.

By the time Nixon was forced to resign or face impeachment in 1974, the great majority of citizens understood that this president and his mafia had perverted the electoral process, the law enforcement system and government itself in a manner the nation had not seen before. The breadth of the coverup conspiracy, which reached into the highest ranks of Washington's intelligence and law enforcement authorities, including then-FBI director Patrick Gray, helps explain why Felt decided that he should leak the information he had to the Washington Post's Bob Woodward.


It is certainly true, as Felt's critics now complain, that Nixon had passed him over in favor of Gray when appointing the latter to succeed J. Edgar Hoover as FBI director. Felt's motives may not have been pure, but many anonymous sources and whistleblowers have personal motives. It is also true that Felt was deeply troubled by the Nixon White House efforts to compromise the FBI investigation of Watergate, and that his choices, unless he decided to resign in protest, were limited. There was no trustworthy figure among the Nixon loyalists in the White House. His own boss, Gray, and then-Attorney General Richard Kleindienst were implicated in the coverup plot, too. And the Republicans in Congress, at that point, were still behind Nixon despite growing evidence of the president's guilt.

In Watergate, Felt was neither a hero nor a villain. He was a source.

There is a tendency to exaggerate the importance of Deep Throat that derives from the same mythology that lionizes the Post, Woodward and his former partner, Carl Bernstein. Without diminishing in any way the courage and enterprise they displayed, the truth is that their role in bringing down the Nixon gang has been exaggerated (in part because of "All the President's Men," the wonderful movie based on the reporters' book). Actually, the police, prosecutors, FBI agents and congressional investigators uncovered the key elements of the original crimes with little assistance from the press. But with Felt's guidance, Woodward and Bernstein played a critical role in keeping the story alive, maintaining pressure on the White House and alerting official Washington to the crimes being perpetrated in its midst. For that they still deserve our gratitude -- as do many others who played less celebrated but equally significant parts in the constitutional drama.

If the Post is now indulging in nostalgia and self-congratulation, that excess may only serve to remind us how little Washington's dominant daily -- which trumpeted the phony Whitewater scandals and buried its own stories debunking the case for war against Iraq -- now resembles the plucky paper that battled Nixon.

Of course, the Post currently operates in a very different political and media climate. The predominance of right-wing voices today represents a kind of vengeance for Nixon, who initiated the conservative crusade against the "liberal media" for both ideological and selfish reasons. (He once tried to persuade his ardent supporter, rightist billionaire Richard Mellon Scaife, to buy the Post from the Graham family.) And in the echo chambers of the right and on talk radio and cable television, the attempts to rewrite the sordid history of the Nixon regime will never cease.

The loudest barking and snarling emanates from the likes of Liddy, who served time for betraying his country and has since become a successful talk show host. It is a measure of morality among those who call themselves conservatives that a fascistic nutcase like Liddy became a movement icon (even after instructing his listeners on the finer points of shooting a federal law enforcement officer).

In his zeal to restore Nixon's reputation, Liddy stands with Patrick Buchanan, who scarcely requires further introduction. The ultra-right pundit and presidential loser has always insisted that the downfall of Nixon was in fact a "coup d'état" by liberals, who had supposedly committed all the same crimes that brought down their old enemy.

But now Buchanan, and Rush Limbaugh, have gone still further, claiming that those who forced Nixon to quit were directly responsible for the ensuing communist victory in Vietnam and the Cambodian genocide. That makes about as much sense as blaming those events on Buchanan and Limbaugh because they both dodged the draft.

But the cannier figures on the right no longer seek to expunge Nixon's crimes. Consider a certain politician who got his start back then as a young activist running the College Republicans.

That budding pol spent the summer of 1974 in Washington, according to historian David Greenberg, circulating pro-Nixon memos from a phony grass-roots group called Americans for the Presidency, and fighting what he thought of as "the lynch-mob atmosphere created in this city by the Washington Post and other parts of the Nixon-hating media." He had worked so closely with the Nixon campaign's dirty tricksters, and become so immersed in their style of politics, that he briefly drew the attention of the Watergate prosecutors. Indeed, his reputation was so grimy that George Herbert Walker Bush, then the chairman of the Republican National Committee, had him investigated -- and then dismissed the accusations despite strong taped evidence against him.

That man is named Karl Rove, and he is now the White House deputy chief of staff, the unofficial boss of the Republican Party and the most powerful political figure in the nation aside from the president himself. He may well agree with Liddy and Buchanan, but such stale polemics cannot engage his attention. He is too busy wreaking Nixon's revenge on the rest of us.


- - - - - - - - - - - -

About the writer:
Joe Conason writes a weekly column for Salon and the New York Observer. His book "Big Lies: The Right-Wing Propaganda Machine and How It Distorts the Truth" is available here...

powells.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (20276)6/6/2005 3:47:21 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361082
 
Grounding a Pandemic
_________________________________

Editorial
The New York Times
By BARACK OBAMA and RICHARD LUGAR
June 6, 2005
nytimes.com

Washington — When we think of the major threats to our national security, the first to come to mind are nuclear proliferation, rogue states and global terrorism. But another kind of threat lurks beyond our shores, one from nature, not humans - an avian flu pandemic. An outbreak could cause millions of deaths, destabilize Southeast Asia (its likely place of origin), and threaten the security of governments around the world.

Earlier this year, Dr. Julie L. Gerberding, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, called the possibility of avian flu spreading from Southeast Asia "a very ominous situation for the globe." A killer flu could spread around the world in days, crippling economies in Southeast Asia and elsewhere. From a public health standpoint, Dr. Gerberding said, an avian flu outbreak is "the most important threat that we are facing right now."

International health experts say that two of the three conditions for an avian flu pandemic in Southeast Asia have already been met. First, a new strain of the virus, called A(H5N1), has emerged, and humans have little or no immunity to it. Second, this strain can jump between species. The only remaining obstacle is that A(H5N1) has not yet mutated into a form that is easily transmitted from human to human.

However, there have been some alarming developments. In recent months, the virus has been detected in mammals that have never previously been infected, including tigers, leopards and domestic cats. This spread suggests that the virus is mutating and could eventually emerge in a form that is readily transmittable among humans, leading to a full-blown pandemic. In fact, according to government officials, a few cases of human-to-human spread of A(H5N1) have already occurred.

The precedent that experts fear is the 1918 flu pandemic, which began in the American Midwest and swept the planet in the era before air travel, killing 20 million to 40 million people. As John M. Barry, author of "The Great Influenza," has observed, "Influenza killed more people in a year than the Black Death of the Middle Ages killed in a century; it killed more people in 24 weeks than AIDS has killed in 24 years."

At the moment, effective responses to an avian flu pandemic are limited and will come far too late for many people in Southeast Asia. Indeed, so far more than 60 percent of those diagnosed with the avian flu have died. There is no proven vaccine for the A(H5N1) strain and it could take months to produce a fully effective one. Moreover, while some antiviral treatments may help flu sufferers, they are not widely available and must be administered to patients within 24 hours after the onset of symptoms.

It is essential for the international community, led by the United States, to take decisive action to prevent a pandemic.

So what should we do? Recently, the World Health Organization called for more money and attention to be devoted to effective preventive action, appealing for $100 million.

Congress responded promptly. A bipartisan group of senators obtained $25 million for prevention efforts (a quarter of the request, the traditional contribution of the United States), allowing the C.D.C., the Agency for International Development, the Health and Human Services Department and other agencies to improve their ability to act.

In addition, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously approved legislation directing President Bush to form a senior-level task force to put in place an international strategy to deal with the avian flu and coordinate policy among our government agencies. We urge the Bush administration to form this task force immediately without waiting for legislation to be passed.

But these are only modest first steps. International health experts believe that Southeast Asia will be an epicenter of influenza for decades. We recommend that this administration work with Congress, public health officials, the pharmaceutical industry, foreign governments and international organizations to create a permanent framework for curtailing the spread of future infectious diseases.

Among the parts of that framework could be these:

Increasing international disease surveillance, response capacity and public education and coordination, especially in Southeast Asia.

Stockpiling enough antiviral doses to cover high-risk populations and essential workers.

Ensuring that, here at home, Health and Human Services and state governments put in place plans that address issues of surveillance, medical care, drug and vaccine distribution, communication, protection of the work force and maintenance of core public functions in case of a pandemic.

Accelerating research into avian flu vaccines and antiviral drugs.

Establishing incentives to encourage nations to report flu outbreaks quickly and fully.

So far, A(H5N1) has not been found in the United States. But in an age when you can board planes in Bangkok or Hong Kong and arrive in Chicago, Indianapolis or New York in hours, we must face the reality that these exotic killer diseases are not isolated health problems half a world away, but direct and immediate threats to security and prosperity here at home.
______________________________

Barack Obama, Democrat of Illinois, is a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and Richard Lugar, Republican of Indiana, is its chairman.