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Politics : GOPwinger Lies/Distortions/Omissions/Perversions of Truth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (78193)9/15/2006 9:35:48 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 173976
 
HIS TIME IS RUNNING OUT
QUAAAAAAACK



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (78193)9/15/2006 11:07:22 PM
From: 10K a day  Respond to of 173976
 
Lunacy



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (78193)9/15/2006 11:28:51 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 173976
 
lefties still unemployed: Price Index Moderated in August
By EDUARDO PORTER
What a difference a few weeks make.

A month ago the economy seemed to be in dire straits — wedged in by the inflationary pressures of soaring energy prices and rising labor costs while threatened by the prospect that the weak housing market would decimate consumer spending.

But yesterday, the government reported that consumer prices rose only 0.2 percent in August, pushing annual inflation to 3.8 percent, the lowest since April. Meanwhile, retail sales rose by a respectable rate of 0.2 percent in August. And in September, consumers’ confidence about the future increased sharply.

The changes largely reflected declining gasoline prices, which not only dragged down inflation but also left consumers with more money.

The data suggests pricing pressures may have peaked. To many economists, this means that the Federal Reserve will probably maintain its benchmark interest rate at 5.25 percent at the meeting of its rate-setting committee next week.

“The economy appears to be leveling off,” said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank in Chicago. “My sense is that we will dodge the bullet regarding inflation.”

There are potential pitfalls on the horizon. A steeper decline in housing prices could slam the brakes on consumer spending and curtail economic growth.

But, so far, while the pace of consumer spending has slowed, it is by no means plummeting.

“Supply and demand are more balanced now,” said Steven Wieting, an economist at Citigroup.

For months, the economy has been poised between competing forces pulling in different directions.

The economy has slackened, slowed by higher interest rates and a weakening housing market. Yet despite slower growth, energy prices continued to push inflation higher. Wages, which have inched up consistently over the last year, have threatened to put additional pressure on prices.

Indeed, the index of core prices, the gauge most closely watched by the Fed, which excludes the unstable prices of food and energy to provide an indication of underlying inflation, rose 2.8 percent in August compared with the year before, the fastest annual pace since November 2001.

The economic tug of war left the Fed and its chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, in a tight spot. Having increased interest rates by 0.25 percent at each of 17 consecutive meetings since June 2004, the Fed decided last month against tightening monetary policy more.

But with core price inflation still way above Mr. Bernanke’s stated “comfort zone” of 1 to 2 percent, many economists said they were worried that the Fed had stopped too soon.

If the 1 to 2 percent range “is a credible forecast, the Fed has to do something about it,” said Allan H. Meltzer, a professor of political economy and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University. “We are certainly not moving towards 1 to 2 percent inflation.”

Jeffrey M. Lacker, governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of Virginia, took the unusual step of dissenting, voting against the decision to stop increasing rates at the Fed meeting last month.

The more benign inflation figures in August appear to support the Fed’s stance. Mr. Wieting said energy prices in the price index should also fall steeply in September. That is because the August data referred to prices midmonth and thus missed most of the recent fall in the price of gas, which declined by 30 cents a gallon, to $2.67, from Aug. 21 to Sept. 11.

Falling gasoline prices are also affecting inflation expectations. According to the University of Michigan’s preliminary reading of consumer sentiment, reported yesterday, expectations of inflation one year ahead declined to 3.1 percent from 3.8 percent a month ago.

Core prices are not likely to follow energy prices down immediately. But they have been moderating. August was the second consecutive month in which core prices rose 0.2 percent, following three months of 0.3 percent inflation. And some prices that have perked up recently will probably abate. For instance, rising clothes prices, which also bolstered core inflation, are mostly a result of the arrival of more expensive fall fashions.

Rents have also played a big role pushing up prices. The National Association of Realtors expects apartment rents in urban complexes to rise 4.8 percent this year, up from 2.9 percent in 2005. The shelter component in the Consumer Price Index, which makes up more than 40 percent of the core, rose 0.2 percent in August, pushed mostly by higher rents.

Some economists argue, however, that rents should moderate eventually, because many condos that were built during the housing boom are now sitting unsold and will probably be converted into rental units.

And the moderating viewpoint is consistent with other data. Industrial production declined by 0.1 percent in August, according to another government report. Slowing output should ease inflation pressures.

“One of the components of inflation has been commodity prices across the board, from energy to metals,” said Thomas J. Duesterberg, president and chief executive of the Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI. “We are starting to see some moderation in these prices. That’s consistent with the moderation of industrial demand.”

The economic outlook could yet become bleaker. People who bought their homes using adjustable-rate mortgages to keep their monthly payments low are starting to see higher mortgage bills. Some are falling behind on their payments.

And many economists suspect that home prices are still likely to fall more steeply. This could decimate residential construction. And it could impair American consumers’ ability to borrow and, therefore, to spend.

“There’s a storm building there,” said Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic Policy Research in Washington.

But if so, it is further away on the horizon.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (78193)9/16/2006 9:59:35 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 173976
 
kennyboy still on knees praying for LANE hitting USA: Hurricane Lane Becomes Category 3
E-MailPrint Save

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: September 16, 2006
Filed at 8:52 a.m. ET

CABO SAN LUCAS, Mexico (AP) -- Hurricane Lane strengthened to a dangerous Category 3 on Saturday and took an unexpected turn toward Mexico's Pacific coast, with forecasters saying it could get stronger before hitting near the resort of Mazatlan.

A day earlier, rains lashed coastal towns further south, causing a landslide that killed a 7-year-old boy in Acapulco and flooding that forced hundreds of people to abandon their homes.

With top winds near 120 mph, the center of Lane was expected to slam into the Pacific coast later Saturday, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said.

Mexico issued hurricane warnings for the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula and for a stretch of mainland Pacific coastline between El Roblito to Altata.

Early Saturday, Lane was centered about 45 miles west of the mainland Pacific coast town of Mazatlan and about 185 miles east of the Baja



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (78193)9/17/2006 7:06:25 AM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 173976
 
September 17, 2006
Op-Ed Columnist
The Longer the War, the Larger the Lies
By FRANK RICH
RARELY has a television network presented a more perfectly matched double feature. President Bush’s 9/11 address on Monday night interrupted ABC’s “Path to 9/11” so seamlessly that a single network disclaimer served them both: “For dramatic and narrative purposes, the movie contains fictionalized scenes, composite and representative characters and dialogue, as well as time compression.”

No kidding: “The Path to 9/11” was false from the opening scene, when it put Mohamed Atta both in the wrong airport (Boston instead of Portland, Me.) and on the wrong airline (American instead of USAirways). It took Mr. Bush but a few paragraphs to warm up to his first fictionalization for dramatic purposes: his renewed pledge that “we would not distinguish between the terrorists and those who harbor or support them.” Only days earlier the White House sat idly by while our ally Pakistan surrendered to Islamic militants in its northwest frontier, signing a “truce” and releasing Al Qaeda prisoners. Not only will Pakistan continue to harbor terrorists, Osama bin Laden probably among them, but it will do so without a peep from Mr. Bush.

You’d think that after having been caught concocting the scenario that took the nation to war in Iraq, the White House would mind the facts now. But this administration understands our culture all too well. This is a country where a cable news network (MSNBC) offers in-depth journalism about one of its anchors (Tucker Carlson) losing a prime-time dance contest and where conspiracy nuts have created a cottage industry of books and DVD’s by arguing that hijacked jets did not cause 9/11 and that the 9/11 commission was a cover-up. (The fictionalized “Path to 9/11,” supposedly based on the commission’s report, only advanced the nuts’ case.) If you’re a White House stuck in a quagmire in an election year, what’s the percentage in starting to tell the truth now? It’s better to game the system.

The untruths are flying so fast that untangling them can be a full-time job. Maybe that’s why I am beginning to find Dick Cheney almost refreshing. As we saw on “Meet the Press” last Sunday, these days he helpfully signals when he’s about to lie. One dead giveaway is the word context, as in “the context in which I made that statement last year.” The vice president invoked “context” to try to explain away both his bogus predictions: that Americans would be greeted as liberators in Iraq and that the insurgency (some 15 months ago) was in its “last throes.”

The other instant tip-off to a Cheney lie is any variation on the phrase “I haven’t read the story.” He told Tim Russert he hadn’t read The Washington Post’s front-page report that the bin Laden trail had gone “stone cold” or the new Senate Intelligence Committee report(PDF) contradicting the White House’s prewar hype about nonexistent links between Al Qaeda and Saddam. Nor had he read a Times front-page article about his declining clout. Or the finding by Mohamed ElBaradei of the International Atomic Energy Agency just before the war that there was “no evidence of resumed nuclear activities” in Iraq. “I haven’t looked at it; I’d have to go back and look at it again,” he said, however nonsensically.

These verbal tics are so consistent that they amount to truth in packaging — albeit the packaging of evasions and falsehoods. By contrast, Condi Rice’s fictions, also offered in bulk to television viewers to memorialize 9/11, are as knotty as a David Lynch screenplay. Asked by Chris Wallace of Fox News last Sunday if she and the president had ignored prewar “intelligence that contradicted your case,” she refused to give up the ghost: “We know that Zarqawi was running a poisons network in Iraq,” she insisted, as she continued to state again that “there were ties between Iraq and Al Qaeda” before the war.

Ms. Rice may be a terrific amateur concert pianist, but she’s an even better amateur actress. The Senate Intelligence Committee report released only two days before she spoke dismissed all such ties. Saddam, who “issued a general order that Iraq should not deal with Al Qaeda,” saw both bin Laden and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi as threats and tried to hunt down Zarqawi when he passed through Baghdad in 2002. As for that Zarqawi “poisons network,” the Pentagon knew where it was and wanted to attack it in June 2002. But as Jim Miklaszewski of NBC News reported more than two years ago, the White House said no, fearing a successful strike against Zarqawi might “undercut its case for going to war against Saddam.” Zarqawi, meanwhile, escaped.

It was in an interview with Ted Koppel for the Discovery Channel, though, that Ms. Rice rose to a whole new level of fictionalizing by wrapping a fresh layer of untruth around her most notorious previous fiction. Asked about her dire prewar warning that a smoking gun might come in the form of a mushroom cloud, she said that “it wasn’t meant as hyperbole.” She also rewrote history to imply that she had been talking broadly about the nexus between “terrorism and a nuclear device” back then, not specifically Saddam — a rather deft verbal sleight-of-hand.

Ms. Rice sets a high bar, but Mr. Bush, competitive as always, was not to be outdone in his Oval Office address. Even the billing of his appearance was fiction. “It’s not going to be a political speech,” Tony Snow announced, knowing full well that the 17-minute text was largely Cuisinarted scraps from other recent political speeches, including those at campaign fund-raisers. Moldy canards of yore (Saddam “was a clear threat”) were interspersed with promising newcomers: Iraq will be “a strong ally in the war on terror.” As is often the case, the president was technically truthful. Iraq will be a strong ally in the war on terror — just not necessarily our ally. As Mr. Bush spoke, the Iraqi prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, was leaving for Iran to jolly up Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Perhaps the only way to strike back against this fresh deluge of fiction is to call the White House’s bluff. On Monday night, for instance, Mr. Bush flatly declared that “the safety of America depends on the outcome of the battle in the streets of Baghdad.” He once again invoked Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman, asking, “Do we have the confidence to do in the Middle East what our fathers and grandfathers accomplished in Europe and Asia?”

Rather than tune this bluster out, as the country now does, let’s try a thought experiment. Let’s pretend everything Mr. Bush said is actually true and then hold him to his word. If the safety of America really depends on the outcome of the battle in the streets of Baghdad, then our safety is in grave peril because we are losing that battle. The security crackdown announced with great fanfare by Mr. Bush and Mr. Maliki in June is failing. Rosy American claims of dramatically falling murder rates are being challenged by the Baghdad morgue. Perhaps most tellingly, the Pentagon has nowstopped including in its own tally the large numbers of victims killed by car bombings and mortar attacks in sectarian warfare.

And that’s the good news. Another large slice of Iraq, Anbar Province (almost a third of the country), is slipping away so fast that a senior military official told NBC News last week that 50,000 to 60,000 additional ground forces were needed to secure it, despite our huge sacrifice in two savage battles for Falluja. The Iraqi troops “standing up” in Anbar are deserting at a rate as high as 40 percent.

“Even the most sanguine optimist cannot yet conclude we are winning,” John Lehman, the former Reagan Navy secretary, wrote of the Iraq war last month. So what do we do next? Given that the current course is a fiasco, and that the White House demonizes any plan or timetable for eventual withdrawal as “cut and run,” there’s only one immediate alternative: add more manpower, and fast. Last week two conservative war supporters, William Kristol and Rich Lowry, called for exactly that — “substantially more troops.” These pundits at least have the courage of Mr. Bush’s convictions. Shouldn’t Republicans in Congress as well?

After all, if what the president says is true about the stakes in Baghdad, it’s tantamount to treason if Bill Frist, Rick Santorum and John Boehner fail to rally their party’s Congressional majority to stave off defeat there. We can’t emulate our fathers and grandfathers and whip today’s Nazis and Communists with 145,000 troops. Roosevelt and Truman would have regarded those troop levels as defeatism.

The trouble, of course, is that we don’t have any more troops, and supporters of the war, starting with Mr. Bush, don’t want to ask American voters to make any sacrifices to provide them. They don’t want to ask because they know the voters will tell them no. In the end, that is the hard truth the White House is determined to obscure, at least until Election Day, by carpet-bombing America with still more fictions about Iraq.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (78193)9/17/2006 8:05:49 AM
From: tonto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
Polls show that the democrats once again will not regain power...they are the party that is adrift and unable to get the support they seek.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (78193)9/18/2006 12:23:39 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
September 18, 2006
Op-Ed Columnist
King of Pain
By PAUL KRUGMAN
A lot has been written and said about President Bush’s demand that Congress “clarify” the part of the Geneva Conventions that, in effect, outlaws the use of torture under any circumstances.

We know that the world would see this action as a U.S. repudiation of the rules that bind civilized nations. We also know that an extraordinary lineup of former military and intelligence leaders, including Colin Powell, have spoken out against the Bush plan, warning that it would further damage America’s faltering moral standing, and end up endangering U.S. troops.

But I haven’t seen much discussion of the underlying question: why is Mr. Bush so determined to engage in torture?

Let’s be clear what we’re talking about here. According to an ABC News report from last fall, procedures used by C.I.A. interrogators have included forcing prisoners to “stand, handcuffed and with their feet shackled to an eye bolt in the floor for more than 40 hours”; the “cold cell,” in which prisoners are forced “to stand naked in a cell kept near 50 degrees,” while being doused with cold water; and, of course, water boarding, in which “the prisoner is bound to an inclined board, feet raised and head slightly below the feet,” then “cellophane is wrapped over the prisoner’s face and water is poured over him,” inducing “a terrifying fear of drowning.”

And bear in mind that the “few bad apples” excuse doesn’t apply; these were officially approved tactics — and Mr. Bush wants at least some of these tactics to remain in use.

I’m ashamed that my government does this sort of thing. I’d be ashamed even if I were sure that only genuine terrorists were being tortured — and I’m not. Remember that the Bush administration has imprisoned a number of innocent men at Guantánamo, and in some cases continues to imprison them even though it knows they are innocent.

Is torture a necessary evil in a post-9/11 world? No. People with actual knowledge of intelligence work tell us that reality isn’t like TV dramas, in which the good guys have to torture the bad guy to find out where he planted the ticking time bomb.

What torture produces in practice is misinformation, as its victims, desperate to end the pain, tell interrogators whatever they want to hear. Thus Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi — who ABC News says was subjected to both the cold cell and water boarding — told his questioners that Saddam Hussein’s regime had trained members of Al Qaeda in the use of biochemical weapons. This “confession” became a key part of the Bush administration’s case for invading Iraq — but it was pure invention.

So why is the Bush administration so determined to torture people?

To show that it can.

The central drive of the Bush administration — more fundamental than any particular policy — has been the effort to eliminate all limits on the president’s power. Torture, I believe, appeals to the president and the vice president precisely because it’s a violation of both law and tradition. By making an illegal and immoral practice a key element of U.S. policy, they’re asserting their right to do whatever they claim is necessary.

And many of our politicians are willing to go along. The Republican majority in the House of Representatives is poised to vote in favor of the administration’s plan to, in effect, declare torture legal. Most Republican senators are equally willing to go along, although a few, to their credit, have stood with the Democrats in opposing the administration.

Mr. Bush would have us believe that the difference between him and those opposing him on this issue is that he’s willing to do what’s necessary to protect America, and they aren’t. But the record says otherwise.

The fact is that for all his talk of being a “war president,” Mr. Bush has been conspicuously unwilling to ask Americans to make sacrifices on behalf of the cause — even when, in the days after 9/11, the nation longed to be called to a higher purpose. His admirers looked at him and thought they saw Winston Churchill. But instead of offering us blood, toil, tears and sweat, he told us to go shopping and promised tax cuts.

Only now, five years after 9/11, has Mr. Bush finally found some things he wants us to sacrifice. And those things turn out to be our principles and our self-respect.