Subscribe to RSS Feed

  • Register
  • Log in

    Wednesday
    15 October 2008

    Houses votes 238 to 180, including 9 Republicans voting yea, to move forward an impeachment resolution

    House of Representatives

    House of Representatives

    Yesterday the House voted 238 yea to 180 nay to move forward with impeachment hearings against President Bush.  9 Republicans broke ranks the party to put country first, voting to send Rep. Dennis Kucinich’s article of impeachment HR 1345 to the Judiciary, where Chairman John Conyers will hold a hearings on abuses of power by the Bush administration.  Ten Republicans abstained in this crucial juncture, while only 5 Democrats did.

    Those Republicans are:

    Congressman Kevin Brady (TX)
    Congressman Wayne Gilchrest  (MD)
    Congressman Walter B. Jones (NC)
    Representative Don Manzullo (IL)
    U.S. Congressman Tim Murphy(PA)
    Congressman Ron Paul (TX)
    Congressman Dave Reichert (WA)
    Congressman Christopher Shays (CT)
    Representative Mike Turner (OH)

    Of those Republican, Walter Jones, represents Camp LeJeune in North Carolina, which is one of the largest Marine bases in the country.  It also happens to be one that has made great sacrifices in the Iraq War.

    Chairman John Conyers Jr. said he will hold a broad hearing on the general topic of abuses of power by the Bush administration.

    “There’s never been one [hearing] that accumulated all the things that constitute an imperial presidency,” Conyers said, explaining that the anticipated hearing would review over a year of committee inquiry into such matters as the firing of U.S. attorneys, the leak of the identity of former CIA operative Valerie Plame and the information provided to Congress in the run-up to the Iraq War.

    There was little or no mention of this in mainstream media so here is a way to easily send a letter to the editor of you local paper.

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    Loyalty to the Truth or Loyalty to the GOP?

    Republican Party

    Republican Party

    If, as former White House counsel John Dean explained a few weeks ago in an interview, there is “no chance” the Republican house would impeach Bush for lying to the American people, the nation has transcended mere blind partisan politics and entered a time of living fiction. This is the same Republican Party whose members badgered and hounded President Clinton until he was caught in a lie. His prosecutors, the legions of right-wing radio listeners, organizations dedicated to unearthing damaging material on Clinton’s past, showed a disgust for immorality in the White House. But when Clinton’s impeachment came, the vast majority of Americans refused to march on Washington demanding his removal from office. In fact a few went so far to march in his support. Americans, both for and against President Clinton, knew in their hearts, if not minds, that the question he was asked should have never been asked because it involved his personal life; not his public life. Read the rest of this entry »

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    The price of “freedom”?

    Iraq War Casualties

    Iraq War Casualties

    Check out some of the results of our foreign policy: Iraq Body Count

    Really great stuff. I guess this is what a “benevolent global hegemony” looks like.

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    As if we didn’t know this

    Here’s a nice little article about how the US has plans to change and dominate the Mideast. Who cares if the locals have other plans or desires. Wouldn’t it be nice if the US could stay the hell out of other people’s business? Or if we have to be involved I imagine there are a thousand other solutions than domination.

    Here’s the article: Iraq first domino in Mideast plan.

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    Whoops! Sorry about all those lies we presented as fact…

    Basra, Iraq

    Basra, Iraq

    Washington Post tells a different story for the record. Turns out there was no uprising underway.

    People in Basra Contest Official View of Siege

    Life Was Mostly Normal, Residents Say; Doctors Report Many Civilians Killed

    By Keith B. Richburg

    Washington Post Foreign Service

    Tuesday, April 15, 2003; Page A13
    BASRA,
    Iraq — There was nothing resembling a popular uprising against the Iraqi militiamen who controlled this city during its 13-day siege by British forces. Life continued largely as normal in many neighborhoods, with police directing traffic and residents doing their best to avoid fighting.

    Doctors at local hospitals treated scores of civilians wounded by British artillery and U.S. bombs during the siege, despite briefing-room claims of pinpoint accuracy. Many others were killed.

    These conclusions about life under siege emerge from a week of interviews in Basra and they differ in many ways from accounts offered by military and other sources before the city’s fall. Reports of large numbers of Basra residents being forced to take up arms and militiamen firing from behind human shields were similarly not borne out in the interviews.

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    PNAC and The New Militarism

    Project for a New American Century

    Project for the New American Century

    Current policy, it seems, is being made by certain intellectuals and politicians who have been moving towards a new vision of American militarism for many years.

    One of the focal points for this movement has been the think-tank group “Project for the New American Century”. They have been openly calling for a renewed militaristic expansion of “American interests” around the world. Basically, they feel that the US military is the glue that holds the world together; or, rather, should be.

    But don’t take my word for it. Read their “Statement of Principles” on their own website, written in 1997.

    It clearly foreshadows the current “preemption” policy, and reliance on military might as a foreign policy tool. Note the names who signed this statement. You may recognize a few.

    Also see their 1998 letter to President Clinton, urging him to invade Iraq, where they conclude:

    “We believe the U.S. has the authority under existing UN resolutions to take the necessary steps, including military steps, to protect our vital interests in the Gulf. In any case, American policy cannot continue to be crippled by a misguided insistence on unanimity in the UN Security Council.”

    Sounds familiar. Again, notice the list of names at the bottom.

    These people finally have the stage, and are implementing strategies that they have long written about, but never had the opportunity to put into practice. Bush, and 9/11, have given them that opportunity.

    Again, don’t just take my word for it. For example, see this portrait of PNAC that goes over much of the same ground I do. It’s from a mainstream source: Were Neo-Conservatives’ 1998 Memos a Blueprint for Iraq War?

    Of course, you can always “Google it”, as they say.

    Try: “PNAC“, or “Project for the New American Century“, or even “neo-conservatives” (a moniker that some of these new century types go by).

    It is my belief, and the belief of others within the antiwar community, that this agenda needs to be opposed. It’s humanitarian price is too high, and it’s methodology severely misguided.

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    History Repeating Itself

    Lt. Gen. Stanley Maude

    Lt. Gen. Stanley Maude

    On March 8, 1917, Lt. Gen. Stanley Maude issued a “Proclamation to the People of the Wilayat of Baghdad“. Maude’s Anglo-Indian Army of the Tigres had invaded and occupied Iraq - after storming up the country from Basra - to “free” its people from their dictators. “Our armies do not come into your cities and lands as conquerors or enemies, but as liberators,” the British announced.

    Read the article - Liberate? For centuries we’ve been ‘liberating’ the Mideast. Why do we never learn?

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    Bush Sr. Warning Over Unilateral Action From The London Times

    Gulf War

    Gulf War

    March 10, 2003

    Bush Sr warning over unilateral action

    From Roland Watson in Washington

    THE first President Bush has told his son that hopes of peace in the Middle East would be ruined if a war with Iraq were not backed by international unity.

    Drawing on his own experiences before and after the 1991 Gulf War, Mr Bush Sr said that the brief flowering of hope for Arab-Israeli relations a decade ago would never have happened if America had ignored the will of the United Nations.

    He also urged the President to resist his tendency to bear grudges, advising his son to bridge the rift between the United States, France and Germany.

    “You’ve got to reach out to the other person. You’ve got to convince them that long-term friendship should trump short-term adversity,” he said.

    The former President’s comments reflect unease among the Bush family and its entourage at the way that George W. Bush is ignoring international opinion and overriding the institutions that his father sought to uphold. Mr Bush Sr is a former US Ambassador to the UN and comes from a family steeped in multi-lateralist traditions.

    Although not addressed to his son in person, the message, in a speech at Tufts University in Massachusetts, was unmistakeable. Mr Bush Sr even came close to conceding that opponents of his son’s case against President Saddam Hussein, who he himself is on record as loathing, have legitimate cause for concern.

    He said that the key question of how many weapons of mass destruction Iraq held “could be debated”. The case against Saddam was “less clear” than in 1991, when Mr Bush Sr led an international coalition to expel invading Iraqi troops from Kuwait. Objectives were “a little fuzzier today”, he added.

    After the Gulf War, Mr Bush Sr steered Israel and its Arab neighbours to the Madrid conference, a stepping stone to the historic Israeli-Palestinian Oslo accords, in much the same way that the present President has talked about the removal of Saddam as opening the way to a wider peace in the region.

    In an ominous warning for his son, Mr Bush Sr said that he would have been able to achieve nothing if he had jeopardised future relations by ignoring the UN. “The Madrid conference would never have happened if the international coalition that fought together in Desert Storm had exceeded the UN mandate and gone on its own into Baghdad after Saddam and his forces.”

    Also drawing on the lessons of 1991, he said that it was imperative to mend fences with allies immediately, rather than waiting until after a war. He had been infuriated with the decision of King Hussein of Jordan to side with Saddam rather than the US, but while criticising the Jordanian leader in public and freezing $41 million in US aid, he also passed word to King Hussein that he understood his domestic tensions.

    Mr Bush Jr, who is said never to forget even relatively minor slights, has alarmed analysts with the way in which he has allowed senior Administration figures such as Donald Rumsfeld, the Defence Secretary, aggressively to criticise France and Germany.

    There are, however, signs that Mr Bush Sr’s message may be getting through.

    Father and son talk regularly and it was, in part, pressure from Mr Bush Sr’s foreign policy coterie, that helped to persuade the President to go to the UN last September.

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    President Bush’s Comments at Camp David

    “However long it takes. However long it takes. That’s the answer to your question, and that’s what you got to know. This isn’t a matter of timetable, it’s a matter of victory. ” -President Bush at Camp David, Thursday, March 27, 2003 regarding the “war.”

    “However long it takes.” Unlike inspections or diplomacy which had definite timetables associated with them, right. Otherwise his term might run out without a war and he might not get elected again because the economy is in the trash heap and unemployment is at an all time high.

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    NYC Police Commissioner Ray Kelly Comments Regarding Protests

    Ray Kelly

    Ray Kelly

    “The anti-war demonstrations are costing the city millions of dollars in police overtime and drawing resources away from crime-fighting and anti-terrorism operations.” -NYC Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, March 26, 2003

    This is being repeated by police forces around the country. This is an attempt to equivocate protesting and dissent with being anti-American and un-patriotic. The people have the right to protest, to dissent to express their dissatisfaction with the government. It is in fact more than a right, in our forefathers eyes, it is our duty.

    Related posts

    No CommentsContinue Reading

    Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional
    Valid CSS!

    Performancing Metrics Blog Statistics
    Powered By WordPress