SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Just the Facts, Ma'am: A Compendium of Liberal Fiction -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (54713)1/28/2007 2:23:52 PM
From: jlallen  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 90947
 
In fact, we have so many examples of honest and truthful GOPers that we have to build new prisons to house them all:

Cunningham, Delay, Taft, West of Spokane, the ex governor of Connecticut, congressman Foley who likes pages; Libby.......the list is so long I can't remember them all.


lol

You think that sort of corruption is confined to the right?

How freakin' stupid are you?



To: tejek who wrote (54713)1/28/2007 2:34:53 PM
From: Ichy Smith  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
congressman Foley who likes pages

The Republican who wanted to sleep with pages resigned and was censured by his own party. The Democrats who slept with pages, were supported in Congress for many years AFTER they were found to be having sex with pages. The democrats have no room to talk about sexual improprieties, they have way too many loose zippers to talk.



To: tejek who wrote (54713)1/29/2007 10:42:49 AM
From: jlallen  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 90947
 
Is Reid a Repub?

LOL!!!

On the ethics front:

chicagotribune.com.

Reid land deal raises questions

By Chuck Neubauer and Tom Hamburger, Tribune Newspapers: Los Angeles Times
Published January 29, 2007

BULLHEAD CITY, Ariz. -- It's hard to buy undeveloped land in booming northern Arizona for $166 an acre. But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid effectively did just that when a longtime friend decided to sell property owned by the employee pension fund that he controlled.

In 2002, the Nevada Democrat paid $10,000 to a pension fund controlled by Clair Haycock, a Las Vegas lubricant dealer and his friend for 50 years. The payment gave the senator full control of a 160-acre parcel in Bullhead City that Reid and the pension fund had jointly owned. Reid's price for the equivalent of 60 acres of undeveloped desert was less than one-tenth of the assessed value at the time.

If Reid were to sell the property for any of the various estimates of its value, his gain on the $10,000 investment could range from $50,000 to $290,000.

Six months after the deal closed, Reid introduced legislation to address the plight of lubricant dealers who had their supplies disrupted by the decisions of big oil companies. It was an issue the Haycock family brought to Reid's attention in 1994, according to a source familiar with the events. Reid's legislation was unsuccessful.

<snip!>



To: tejek who wrote (54713)1/30/2007 4:04:11 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 90947
 
Actually, it's because of moonbats like you that I can say that. It's an accurate description of you & your peers.

Your reply is yet another perfect example. Libs like you recycle through every thoroughly discredited meme like it's going to make it true this time around. And every time you are exposed to facts & evidence that crushes those fraudulent memes, you simply ignore the facts & cling to the BS meme.



To: tejek who wrote (54713)1/30/2007 11:19:29 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 90947
 
Another Day, Another Corrupt Democrat

By Texas Rainmaker on Pelosi

Looks like Nancy Pelosi’s swamp has a clog in the drain.

From the party that brought you Alcee “Impeached Judge” Hastings and William “Dollars in the Freezer” Jefferson, now comes Diane Feinstein who’s been turning a nice profit using her position in Congress to appropriate money for her husband.

<<< In the November 2006 election, the voters demanded congressional ethics reform. And so, the newly appointed chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., is now duly in charge of regulating the ethical behavior of her colleagues. But for many years, Feinstein has been beset by her own ethical conflict of interest, say congressional ethics experts.

As chairperson and ranking member of the Military Construction Appropriations subcommittee (MILCON) from 2001 through the end of 2005, Feinstein supervised the appropriation of billions of dollars a year for specific military construction projects. Two defense contractors whose interests were largely controlled by her husband, financier Richard C. Blum, benefited from decisions made by Feinstein as leader of this powerful subcommittee. >>>

How convenient. I suspect the same “journalists” that keep harping on the non-existent conflict of interest with Dick Cheney will be quite silent on this clear conflict of interest.

Must be nice to have control over hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars that you can redirect at will to your spouse’s business ventures and investments…

<<< Each year, MILCON’s members decide which military construction projects will be funded from a roster proposed by the Department of Defense. Contracts to build these specific projects are subsequently awarded to such major defense contractors as Halliburton, Fluor, Parsons, Louis Berger, URS Corporation and Perini Corporation. From 1997 through the end of 2005, with Feinstein’s knowledge, Blum was a majority owner of both URS Corp. and Perini Corp.

While setting MILCON agendas for many years, Feinstein, 73, supervised her own staff of military construction experts as they carefully examined the details of each proposal. She lobbied Pentagon officials in public hearings to support defense projects that she favored, some of which already were or subsequently became URS or Perini contracts. From 2001 to 2005, URS earned $792 million from military construction and environmental cleanup projects approved by MILCON; Perini earned $759 million from such MILCON projects.

In her annual Public Financial Disclosure Reports, Feinstein records a sizeable family income from large investments in Perini, which is based in Framingham, Mass., and in URS, headquartered in San Francisco.
But she has not publicly acknowledged the conflict of interest between her job as a congressional appropriator and her husband’s longtime control of Perini and URS–and that omission has called her ethical standards into question, say the experts. >>>


…and that’s not even half of the corrupt story. Read the whole article and see that it gets worse… much worse.

Yoo hoo, Madame Speaker… I think there’s a clog in your drain. Got drano?

feeds.feedburner.com

washingtonpost.com

sourcewatch.org

cnn.com

metroactive.com

metroactive.com



To: tejek who wrote (54713)2/1/2007 1:54:57 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90947
 
    Despite Energetic Attempts to Connect President Bush With 
Scandals Concerning Enron, the Texas National Guard, Jack
Abramoff, Tom Delay and even Mark Foley.... This
beleaguered White House can take some comfort from the
fact that Scooter Libby remains the only prominent
administration official forced to stand trial.

Good Reasons to Scoff (and Yawn) at the Libby Trial

By Michael Medved
Townhall.com Columnist
Thursday, February 1, 2007

Despite rigorous efforts on the part of the media establishment, the public has so far reacted to the perjury trial of vice presidential aide I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby with a combination of weary, slightly annoyed disinterest and bemused boredom.

Though the complicated case contains cloak-and-dagger overtones (with its focus on the "outing" of CIA employee Valerie Plame), a prominent defendant with a colorful nickname ("Scooter" has been characterized as the most powerful aide to the most powerful vice president in history) and even a touch of glamour (Ms. Plame is a slender blonde who looks stylish in endlessly recycled video on cable news), I have yet to meet anyone outside the punditocracy who has closely followed the details of the trial.

There are three reasons that coverage of these legal proceedings produces mostly yawns or an irresistible urge to turn the page of your newspaper or punch a new channel on the remote control.

These include:

1. There's Nothing at Stake in the Verdict.
Scooter Libby has already resigned his lofty post as chief of staff to Dick Cheney, and no one believes he'd get it back if he's acquitted. Moreover, there's no longer any reason to believe that this case would "bring down the Bush administration" or lead to other high level resignations or prosecutions. Prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald has already passed on legal action against other figures prominently involved in the tangled case (like former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage or Presidential Counselor Karl Rove) and no one -- no one -- has been charged with a crime in identifying Ms. Plame as an employee of the CIA. Unlike Iran-Contra, or the various Clinton scandals that coalesced in impeachment proceedings, there is no sense of White House jeopardy or potential crisis. Regardless of the jury's decision, there won't be some further meltdown of the already unpopular Bush administration -- unpopular for more substantive reasons (particularly the painful course of events in Iraq) than the exposure of an insignificant desk-jockey at Langley.


2. There's No Wounded Victim.
The idea that the publicity surrounding Valerie Plame and her husband, Joe Wilson, has "ruined their lives" is preposterous on its face, given their apparent enjoyment of their newly minted celebrity status, a pending book contract for a lavish advance, and Wilson's previous high-profile, highly remunerative memoir with its accompanying book and lecture tour. If the Wilsons had intended to keep Ms. Plame/Mrs. Wilson out of the public eye, it would have made sense for Joe Wilson to have avoided using his own name in the famous New York Times column providing dubious exposure to his own back-channel mission to Africa -- a mission for which his wife had recommended him. In any event, when it comes to the media's instinctive desire to focus on some glamour girl who's suffering for no reason, there's a much better candidate in this case than Valerie Plame. How about Harriet Grant, Scooter Libby's wife and the mother of their two children -- a strikingly handsome woman (and prominent Democratic lawyer) who has seen her family's financial ruin and the total disruption of their lives due to this vindictive and utterly pointless prosecution?


3. There Was No Evil Conspiracy to "Destroy" Joe Wilson or Valerie Plame. Perhaps the most relevant revelation of the trial so far concerns the surprising number of government officials at every level in several departments who knew Ms. Plame worked at Langley before Bob Novak's notorious column, and talked about it with little hesitation or concern.
One can easily conclude that all of these federal employees should have been more careful about identifying a CIA operative but one can hardly impute to any of them the intent to "destroy" Joe Wilson or his wife. If Armitage, Rove, Libby, Cheney, former Cheney press aide Cathie Martin, CIA spokesman Bill Harlow and many others had wanted to "smear" the Wilsons they could have whispered details of Joe's two divorces, or the passionate, steamy Wilson-Plame romance (according to Wilson's own description) that brought the lovebirds together (during Ms. Plame's service for the CIA). Indicating to the media that someone works at the CIA hardly amounts to a "smear" or to "character assassination." By identifying the nepotistic basis for Wilson's trip to Africa (supposedly to bring information to Cheney's office) the administration operatives certainly attempted (very clumsily, it must be said) to call his credentials and conclusions into question, but this attempt hardly amounts to a vicious, personal attack.

The surprisingly casual nature of the whole "Plame-Gate" matter emerged indelibly in testimony on Thursday from Cathie Martin, former spokeswoman for Vice President Cheney. According to the New York Times, Ms. Martin "described how Mr. Libby had telephoned a senior Central Intelligence Agency official in her presence sometime in early July and asked about the Wilson trip. She said she was then put on the phone with Bill Harlow, the C.I.A. spokesman, who told her that Mr. Wilson went to Africa on behalf of the agency and that his wife worked there." Of course, the best evidence of the absence of conspiratorial or destructive intent on the part of Libby (or his colleagues) comes from the failure of the ferocious prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald to indict anyone at all for conspiracy or violation of secrecy laws when it came to the disclosure of Ms. Plame's employment.


4. The Administration's Desire to Defend Itself Looks Natural, not Criminal.
If a former diplomat (and partisan Democrat) breaches the confidentiality of an investigative mission to Africa, distorting some of the findings and writing a column attacking the president, does anyone expect that the administration will fail to respond? And the most natural focus for that response would be to make clear that he had not been chosen for this role by the vice president (as he claimed) but through the recommendation of his wife to her CIA superiors. The media actually demanded a response to Joe Wilson's charges and if White House officials (yes, including Scooter Libby) had offered only "no comment," they would have equated this reaction to some sort of admission of guilt. While some observers view the administration blowback to Joe Wilson as an example of political "hardball," the testimony about the limited and cautious nature of their conversations with reporters makes the game look more like slow-pitch whiffle ball.


5. In Short, No One Has Identified the Sleepy, Meaningless Proceedings Against Scooter Libby as "The Trial of the Century" and the Public Disinterest Seems Altogether Justified.
Republicans rightly grouse over Prosecutor Fitzgerald's investment of tens of millions of dollars and thousands of hours in wasted time to produce nothing more than charges that Scooter Libby gave inaccurate accounts to the FBI and grand jury about his conversations with reporters -- or at least that his recollections differed from those of the reporters. Democrats answer such concerns by citing the purported "100 million dollars" spent to investigate Bill Clinton "for lying about sex" -- while ignoring the fact that Whitewater special prosecutors did win several convictions of prominent public figures (including a former governor of Arkansas, Jim Guy Tucker).


6. In Retrospect, the Fierce Legal Attacks Against Both Democratic and Republican Administrations Look Wildly Overblown and Amount to a Serious Disservice to Our Democracy.
My friend and law school classmate Lanny Davis (former special counsel to President Clinton) has written persuasively about the devastating impact of this tit-for-tat indulgence in the politics of personal destruction in his recent book "SCANDAL: How Gotcha Politics Is Destroying America."


7. Despite Energetic Attempts to Connect President Bush With Scandals Concerning Enron, the Texas National Guard, Jack Abramoff, Tom Delay and even Mark Foley.... This beleaguered White House can take some comfort from the fact that Scooter Libby remains the only prominent administration official forced to stand trial. In this sense, the dreary, dull and pointless proceedings against the vice president's former aide may even provide the embattled Bushies with a rare bit of good news.


Michael Medved is a film critic, best-selling author and nationally syndicated radio talk show host.

townhall.com
to_scoff_and_yawn_at_the_libby_trial



To: tejek who wrote (54713)2/1/2007 3:00:00 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 90947
 
Another Page Sex Scandal

By Texas Rainmaker on Media Bias

But this time, the elected official:

1. Actually “sexually groped” a legislative aide,

2. Was re-elected after the story broke,

3. Remains in office today,

4. Is called an “honorable man” by those in his party,

5. Only received a censure,

6. Enjoyed the press originally sitting on the story,

7. Saw his party affiliation not mentioned until paragraph 28 of a 29 paragraph AP story (and not mentioned at all in another).

I’ll give you one guess which party he represents. *

feeds.feedburner.com

ktiv.com

legis.state.sd.us

zwire.com

ksfy.com

southdakotapolitics.blogs.com

siouxcityjournal.com
dakota/02aec064f8eb81fe8625726d0014f0ec.txt

boston.com

legis.state.sd.us

* Dan Sutton (D- SD)



To: tejek who wrote (54713)2/22/2007 4:49:56 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 90947
 
A Real Outing

L.A. Times "outs" actual CIA spooks! Where's the outrage?

Best of the Web
BY JAMES TARANTO
Wednesday, February 21

The Los Angeles Times boasts that it has identified three CIA pilots who are facing kidnapping charges in Germany over a 2003 counterterrorism operation there:


<<< The names they used were all aliases, but The Times confirmed their real identities from government databases and visited their homes this month after a German court in January ordered the arrest of the three "ghost pilots" and 10 other alleged members of the CIA's special renditions unit on charges of kidnapping and causing serious bodily harm to Khaled Masri, a German citizen of Lebanese descent, three years ago.

None of the pilots responded to repeated requests for comment left with family members and on their home telephones. The Times is not publishing their real names because they have been charged only under their aliases. >>>


But it does offer plenty of details about them:


<<< In real life, the chief pilot is 52, drives a Toyota Previa minivan and keeps a collection of model trains in a glass display case near a large bubbling aquarium in his living room. Federal aviation records show he is rated to fly seven kinds of aircraft as long as he wears his glasses. . . .

His copilot, who used the alias Fain, is a bearded man of 35 who lives with his father and two dogs in a separate subdivision. . . .

The third pilot, who used the alias Bird, is 46, drives a Ford Explorer and has a 17-foot aluminum fishing boat. Certified as a flight instructor, he keeps plastic models of his favorite planes mounted by the fireplace in his living room in a house that backs onto a private golf course here [in a town of 13,000 the Times identifies in its dateline]. >>>


Remember all the outrage when Robert Novak "outed" Valerie Plame, who apparently worked a desk job at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va.? Here the L.A. Times is publishing extensive personal details on three men who have actually done dangerous work defending the country. Where's the outrage?

opinionjournal.com

latimes.com