May
31
05.27.06 Hr 0.5
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Email from a listener: “Willy, I hope you lose a limb.”
May
31
05.27.06 Hr 1.0
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Nellie brings in notes/makes demands. We discuss exactly what her role is on the show and I explain the cough button to her. Plus, a somewhat depressed Brother Tom.
May
31
05.27.06 Hr 2.0
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Lesbians like Nellie, Bush apologizes (sort of), sex ed in public schools and our Senior Political Correspondent, the pleasant smelling Michael Winship.
May
31
5.27.06 Hour 3.0
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Paul Rieckhoff, who is a vocal and articulate champion of veteran’s issues, and has written a memoir about his time in Iraq, talks about the war.
Also, Former US Senator Max Clelland.
May
31
Shaking the Congressional Treehouse
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Michael Winship
“The prettiest sight in this fine, pretty world is the privileged class enjoying its privileges.” The words of cynical journalist Macaulay “Mike” Connor, as played by Jimmy Stewart and written by Philip Barry and Donald Ogden Stewart, in the classic comedy “The Philadelphia Story.”
All of which came to mind last week as various members of Congress, Democrat and Republican, behaved like violated vestal virgins when the FBI — armed with a warrant — entered the offices of Louisiana Democratic Congressman William Jefferson, aka “Dollar Bill,” searching for further evidence of bribe-taking from a high tech company seeking business in Africa.
Reportedly, agents already had videotaped the congressman accepting a briefcase filled with $100,000 in marked bills, $90,000 of which were later found in his home, rolled up, wrapped in foil and squirreled away in his freezer. Insert your favorite, already wilted one-liner about frozen assets or cold cash here.
Members cried that the Capitol Hill raid — the first in American history — violated the separation of powers between the executive and legislative branches. Mind, similar outrage hasn’t been heard over even more egregious recent trespasses — say, the White House’s leapfrogging over Congress to pursue its warrantless wiretapping. Or the 750 or more congressionally enacted laws the president has chosen to ignore by filing veto-proof “signing statements,” claiming his right to interpret legislation as he chooses.
But, after hours, the FBI climbed the ladder and broke down the door of the exclusive congressional treehouse, which suddenly reawakened the House of Representatives to that faded flap of foolscap called the United States Constitution. Article I, Section 6, Clause 1, to be precise — the “Speech or Debate Clause.”
The clause was intended to protect legislators from being arrested and prosecuted for unpopular political views, but over the years its interpretation has been bent, stretched and cracked with varying degrees of success. Former House Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski, also a Democrat, fell back on it in 1994 when he was caught in the congressional check kiting, post office scandal. The argument didn’t fly with the Federal Court of Appeals and Rosty spent more than a year in stir.
The House members up in arms do have a point or two — clearer guidelines must be established for Federal agents stepping onto their hallowed turf. But this suddenly chaste embrace of constitutional ideals smacks more of the country club seeking loopholes in its bylaws to keep out the riffraff than the halcyon days of the Federalist Papers.
Those of a more Machiavellian turn of mind smell a rat. By objecting now — and on behalf of a Democratic member — the Republicans may be hoping to establish ground rules and wiggle room for the further investigation and potential indictment of other representatives (largely members of the GOP) thought to be on the way.
In any case, it seems conduct unbecoming — with Congress’ approval ratings as low as or lower than the president’s — for members to be scrambling for special perks and advantages unavailable to the likes of you and me, especially when allegations of criminal acts are involved. But it’s part of a pattern of privilege the House and Senate — and their attendant bureaucracy — have enjoyed forever, from getting away with job discrimination practices deemed illegal anywhere else to unparalleled health care and pension plans. As upstate New York Democratic congressional candidate Eric Massa said to me recently, “I think we ought to put every member of Congress on Medicare. That would solve the problem in a day.”
Last Friday, on PBS’s “Newshour with Jim Lehrer,” commentator Mark Shields said of Congress, “These guys — honest to God, they ought to be ashamed of themselves… All you have to know is that the last time we raised the minimum wage in this country was nine years ago. We raised [it] to $5.15 an hour. Since then, the Congress has raised its own salary eight times… Talk about being out of contact. I just think it’s absolutely indefensible.”
Redemption could come in the shape of reform. Stop giggling. For example, how about New York Democratic Congresswoman Louise Slaughter’s proposal to ban insider trading by members of Congress and their staffs — yet another practice denied by law to the rest of us great unwashed?
In “The Philadelphia Story,” reporter Macaulay Connor quotes a Spanish peasant’s proverb: “With the rich and mighty, always a little patience.”
Too late. The public’s patience with the rich and mighty of Congress has run out.
copyright 2006 Messenger Post Newspapers
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May
26
Is the NSA Spying on YOU?
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Good luck finding out.
The NSA wrote to me to say they can neither confirm nor deny that they have tracked my phone calls. So I don’t know if they are after me or not, but I am pretty sure there is a woman at the checkout at Shaw’s who is reading my thoughts.
May
26
Haditha
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Maybe this is going to be a really big story: Pentagon officials have changed their story to say that it was not an improvised bomb that killed 15 Iraqi civilians but instead US Marines who may have killed as many as two dozen civilians in an unprovoked, unwarranted attack. And it doesn’t even seem to be a case of the fog of war or the heat of a battle clouding the Marines’ judgement: according to investigators there was no firefight, there was no attack. Murder charges may be brought against one or more of the Marines.
There is a lot that is unknown here but if you spend a little time listening to people like Paul Rieckhoff (see below) and reading about the failure of the Pentagon to pay attention to the mental health of the troops in Iraq, you have to wonder if somebody just snapped.
May
26
Andy Revkin @ the North Pole
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Here’s a link to a video with NYTimes science writer Andy Revkin at the North Pole as the ice cracks beneath him. Andy’s got a great book about global warming that is good for young people and adults alike–you can read the first chapter here.
Email the link of the video to as many people as you can–we want to push the video into the Google Top 100 to spread the word about Global Warming.
May
25
Paul Rieckhoff this weekend
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Paul Rieckhoff is one of the most articulate and informed critics of the way the war in Iraq has been handled as well as being one of the most dedicated champions for veterans returning from the war. He was first on the show over two years ago–since then he has written a new book and his organization has members in all fifty states.
May
24
Great Links from Listeners
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Want to see how many days it takes the average CEO in America to earn wat you make in a year? Check out Make Work Pay. (This, by the way, is from a great blog that Listener Mark writes.)
And what, exactly, are you prejudices? Do you really know what you think or how you feel? A listener from Kentucky (I guess I really should say “our only listener from Kentucky) turned me on to Implicit Association Tests. You’ll be amazed. I tried to get Nellie to take them but she says she already knows she doesn’t like most people.
keep looking »