I’m done.

I’ve been dithering about this for months now, but it’s finally come: I’m not having fun anymore, and I can’t do this if I’m not having fun. So, I’m quitting the blog. The site will remain up until one of my cobloggers can make arrangements to take over the payment schedule. Vaya con Dios. Moe … Read more

Rehnquist hospitalized

MSNBC is reporting that Supreme Court Chief Justice Rehnquist was hospitalized with thyroid cancer. No other details yet, but I suspect this might energize those who vote for the POTUS with an eye on who gets nominated for SCOTUS.

Guardian columnist steps over the line.

The relevant paragraph: On November 2, the entire civilised world will be praying, praying Bush loses. And Sod’s law dictates he’ll probably win, thereby disproving the existence of God once and for all. The world will endure four more years of idiocy, arrogance and unwarranted bloodshed, with no benevolent deity to watch over and save … Read more

This wasn’t just Plain terrible, this was… terrible with raisins in it

So the rumor mill is humming, and how, over whispered reports that the Cleveland Plain Dealer will endorse George W. Bush for re-election tomorrow despite their seven-member editorial board voting 5-2 to endorse Kerry. Reportedly, the paper’s publisher, Republican Alex Machaskee, overruled their vote for the first time in his history at the paper. This … Read more

It’s Kerry’s to Lose

While the Bush camp goes into overdrive—all pretense of optimism pushed aside—with an all-out charge aimed at scaring the nation (with wolves and suggestions that there won’t even be an economy or social security or environment or whatever to worry about if you don’t elect them [“All progress on every other issue depends on the … Read more

I’m not sure if I’d be touting all that, fellas.

Professor Reynolds has noted a couple times (including today) that the 12 to 17 set seems to prefer Bush to Kerry. I’ll freely admit that the young can have a kind of accidental wisdom — heck, I went for Reagan (twice)* and Bush Sr. (once) when I was a child and teenager, and I would’ve made the same choices again today at thirty.

I’m not sure, however, that “teenagers for Bush” is quite so effective a slogan this time around. Indeed, isn’t the ur-criticism of Bush that he’s executed his policies the way a teenager would? Long on hope and intent, short on skill and sobriety?

Frankly, I think “teenagers for Bush” literally “proves too much.”

UPDATE: The-always-calm-and-reserved Professor Leiter one-ups (or is it downs?) Reynolds! It turns out that, although kids 12-17 prefer Bush, kids 2-11 apparently prefer Kerry. So our choice is between the moody teenager who just wants to goof off and (maybe) blow something up, and the little kid who wants his ice cream and T.V. and a horsey NOW NOW NOW NOW!

Finally, everything is clear to me. I’m going to go get a drink. Wake me November 3rd (or whenever the Supreme Court issues its decision.)

(Via Professor Bainbridge.)

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And the commute wouldn’t be too bad, either.

Via Outside the Beltway we see this interesting rumor: Analysis: Clinton eyes U.N. post WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (UPI) — Former U.S. President Bill Clinton has set his sights on becoming U.N. secretary-general. A Clinton insider and a senior U.N. source have told United Press International the 56-year-old former president would like to be named leader … Read more

Shhh…Be vewy, vewy quiet. It’s Libewal Season.

Hunting for conservative votes, John Kerry got photographed in his autumn camouflage and carrying a 12-gauge shotgun outside of Youngstown, Ohio. Reportedly be bagged a goose, but let someone else carry it:

“I’m too lazy,” Kerry joked. “I’m still giddy over the Red Sox. It was hard to focus.”

The NRA is, as one might expect, mocking the Senator’s efforts to appeal to the hook-and-bullet set:

The National Rifle Association said it bought a full-page ad in Thursday’s Youngstown newspaper that says Kerry is posing as a sportsman while opposing gun-owners’ rights. Kerry has denied NRA claims that he wants to “take away” guns, but he supported the ban on assault-type weapons and requiring background checks at gun shows

“If John Kerry thinks the Second Amendment is about photo ops, he’s Daffy,” says the ad the NRA said would run in The Vindicator [ed’s note: I delivered this rag as a kid]. It features a large photo of Kerry with his finger on a shotgun trigger but looking in another direction.

Meanwhile, labor unions have been circulating fliers among workers that say Kerry won’t take away guns. “He likes his own gun too much,” says one of the fliers from the Building Trades Department of the AFL-CIO that features a picture of Kerry aiming a shotgun.

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Buchanan, Putin, and Now Iran

Via Kos ~~~~~~~ The endorsements for Bush keep pouring in: The head of Iran’s security council said Tuesday that the re-election of President Bush was in Tehran’s best interests, despite the administration’s axis of evil label, accusations that Iran harbors al-Qaida terrorists and threats of sanctions over the country’s nuclear ambitions. Historically, Democrats have harmed … Read more

Sudan

Sometimes you read something so perfectly correct that you just have to pass it on. From Oxblog: THE KILLING CONTINUES: In Darfur. Sadly, the coincidence of genocide in the Sudan with a presidential election in the United States has only benefitted the murderers. I expect that within a matter of months, both Republicans and Democrats … Read more

WWKD Take 2

A few days ago Edward asked a very interesting question, namely: why do people think that Bush would be a better Commander-in-Chief than Kerry? What do they imagine that Kerry would do that’s worse than what Bush has already done? Unfortunately, the thread spiraled into an endless discussion of the history of our relations with Iraq. Since I thought Edward’s question was very much worth answering, I thought I’d ask it again. To provide a slightly different framework for it:

Both Kerry and Bush agree that whatever the merits of our decision to go into Iraq, we are there now, and have to see it through. Some people may think that Kerry is more focussed on getting our troops out, but frankly, I haven’t seen much evidence of that. Moreover, Bush also famously planned to withdraw troops fairly dramatically shortly after the invasion, but reality wouldn’t let him; there is, as far as I can see, no reason to think that if Kerry wants to withdraw troops, he would not alter his views in the face of realities on the ground if he had to. (If anything, the opposite is true, since, unlike Bush, Kerry belongs to “the reality-based community”.)

Neither Bush nor Kerry is in a position to go fighting any other wars just now. Our army is badly overextended — we have sent our training unit into Iraq, which is, as Phil Carter says, like eating our seed corn. Our soldiers are under stop-loss orders to prevent them from leaving on schedule. The guard and reserves have missed their enrollment targets. We do not have the capability to start a third war absent some extremely compelling reason, like our being attacked. Both Bush and Kerry would go to war in that case; Bush is slightly more likely to embark on a new adventure absent some such reason, but that is not at all a good thing in our present circumstances.

For this reason I think that the broad contours of our military engagements would be the same under the two candidates: war in Iraq and Afghanistan until stable governments are in place there, at which point we withdraw. The differences between them, as far as defense and foreign policy are concerned, would probably be as follows: first, the competence with which they would run these wars; second, their diplomatic efforts, and third, their prosecution of the war on terror. I truly cannot see why anyone would think that Bush is likely to do a better job in any of these areas. Before going into specifics, however, I want to quote a very good point made by Kevin Drum:

“Obsessing over Kerry’s entire 30-year public history is probably unproductive. After all, before 9/11 George Bush and his advisors had little concern for terrorism and expressed frequent contempt for things like nation building and democracy promotion. Does that affect how we feel about Bush today?

It shouldn’t, because we accept that 9/11 fundamentally changed his view of the world. We judge Bush by how he’s reacted after 9/11, not by his advisors’ long records before taking office — and I’d argue that we should do the same with Kerry rather than raking over nuclear freeze minutiae and Gulf War votes from over a decade ago. Obviously Kerry’s past illuminates his character to some degree, but a lot changed on 9/11 and I suspect that ancient history is a poor guide to his view of how to react to the post-9/11 world.”

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Non-Presidential Election Politics

I was seraching the blogosphere for a topic that wasn’t directly tied to the presidential elections. I found it in another of Kevin Drum’s suggestions that there is no Social Security Crisis. I wish he were right. But he isn’t. I’m going to repost my thoughts from last time he said that: I’m not going … Read more

Crawl, Pat. Crawl.

I’m of two minds on this one. On the one hand, Pat Buchanan’s unlooked-for and generally undesired endorsement of President George W Bush’s re-election is personally distasteful to me. I’m one of the pro-Israel, pro-immigration, pro-globalization, fairly liberal-on-social-issues voting bloc that the Republicans kicked old Pat out to make room for, you see: I presume … Read more

WWKD?

The presidential endorsements from the nation’s newspapers are pouring in and, just like the electorate, the opinionmakers of the op-ed pages seem rather evenly divided.

On the pro-Kerry side, there is the now well-explored litany of complaints against Bush: rampant faithlessness, credibility problems, incompetence, cronyism, torture, fiscal irresponsibility, etc. etc.

On the pro-Bush side, there are two primary complaints against Kerry: he’s inconsistent and he’s too liberal.

I’ll gloss over the glaring paradox of how anyone can be both “too liberal” and “inconsistent” at the same time. Apparently, they’re not expecting the nation to use their heads in this election.

But if you look more closely at the endorsements you’ll find that, despite all the rhetoric, only one important issue seems to tilt the scale for the Bush supporters: the belief that only Bush can win the “war on terror.” They’re willng to admit Bush hasn’t exactly shined in other areas, but…

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I hate that damn bow tie, too.

I just watched the Crossfire clip. Constant Reader liberal japonicus [Oopsie edited out] was right: the transcript doesn’t do it justice. What comes across in print as being plausibly silly shows up in the flesh as something less amused and a whole lot more irate. Hell, my mostly apolitical fiancee only listened to the clip … Read more

NY Times Endorses Kerry

The New York Times has issued its endorsement in the Presidential race, and it is truly extraordinary. They come out clearly for Kerry: “We have been impressed with Mr. Kerry’s wide knowledge and clear thinking – something that became more apparent once he was reined in by that two-minute debate light. He is blessedly willing … Read more

Update: Voter Registration Fraud And Other Delightful Tactics

Via Josh Marshall: Six people recently resigned from the Republican Party operation in South Dakota over allegations of voter fraud, which are now the subject of an investigation by the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation. According to the Sioux Falls Argus Leader, “When South Dakota Republican Party Chairman Randy Frederick announced the resignations of … Read more

Right on Cue: Budget Trickery

You’d think they’d be embarrassed to even attempt it, but no-o-o-o-o. Back in early September, I posted on the widely criticized Bush Administration practice of issuing reports of overly low expectations with regards to the federal deficit, and then claiming the economy is actually improving when the true figure turns out slightly better. And, well, … Read more

Things I owe, and things I don’t

Among endless piles of motions, jury instructions, and related flotsam, a few items occur to me. In no particular order: 1. I scored last night’s debate as a narrow win for Kerry. So far, then, I have a “Kerry Blowout”; a “Cheney Snatches Defeat From the Jaws of Victory (by his misstatements)”; a “Bush Narrow … Read more

Is The Election Over Yet?

I didn’t watch the debates last night. I was invited to attend the San Diego Business Journal’s “Women Who Mean Business” awards dinner, so of course I went. It was an excellent celebration of the success of women in business. 25 women were especially honored, and it was nice to see such a diversity of … Read more

“It was allllll a dream… it was alllllll a dream!”

That’s what Fafnir says our soldiers should say, as they leap backwards and get pulled into the sky by the cords on their backs so that they can be airlifted to aircraft carriers cleverly disguised as banana boats, allowing us finally to make our getaway from Iraq. Treasury Secretary John Snow has obviously been reading … Read more

Health Finance Experts Speak Out

President Bush has repeatedly characterized Kerry’s health care plan as involving government taking over individual healthcare decisions. For instance, he recently said that : “My opponent’s proposal would be the largest expansion of government-run health care ever. And you know something, when the government pays the bills, it makes the rules. His plan would put … Read more

Just Asking

Put aside the ballooning deficit. Why, exactly, is it a bad thing for a tax cut to “[Give] Business More and More,” as the New York Times so “neutrally” put it? Who creates the jobs? Who does the research? Who builds the buildings? Who pays the pensions? What is in your retirement fund? We need … Read more

Oops! They Did It Again!

Our Congress, that model of prudence and fiscal discipline, passed yet another tax cut yesterday. This one is projected to cost the government $140 billion over the next ten years. It started as an attempt to repeal a subsidy that had been ruled illegal, and had resulted in tariffs on some US goods. That would … Read more

Silly Season

Actual quote from someone who knows better: “If Kerry’s not brave enough to be seen drinking French water, what kind of courage can we expect in the infinitely more vital position of commander-in-chief?”

The My County’s Elections Board Makes Me See Red Blues.

This is a gripe-and-moan session about the perfidies of Maryland local government; bear that in mind when deciding to click through.

[UPDATE] I have been informed, by people whose word I personally trust, that GOTV volunteers do not troll registration forms for voter information. My sense of personal oppression by the world has been thus lessened proportionately.

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Dred Scott: All Is Revealed

Silly me. I couldn’t understand why on earth Bush mentioned the Dred Scott decision last night. I put it on my list of three informative moments from the debate, but only because, as I said, it seemed to me to provide an answer to the question, does Bush not know what’s in the Constitution, or does he just not care? (My reasoning being that in both cases there is a fairly straightforward constitutional argument in support of the decisions he mentioned, whether you agree with it or not, and therefore neither is a remotely plausible candidate for the title ‘decision requiring judges to interject their personal opinions’.) The Dred Scott example raised some other minor questions — did Bush think that slavery was likely to be an issue in this race? If not, why mention Dred Scott? And why would someone who knew enough to be able to mention Dred Scott not also know that at the time the Constitution did allow slavery, which is why we needed the 13th Amendment? But at bottom I thought it was just another bizarre Bush moment, like his reference to medicines from ‘a third world’.

Boy, was I wrong. It turns out that ‘Dred Scott’ is actually code for ‘Roe v. Wade’. From Paperwight (the first link):

“Some people seem to be a bit boggled by Bush’s Dred Scott remark last night. It wasn’t about racism or slavery, or just Bush’s natural incoherence. Here’s what Bush actually said:

If elected to another term, I promise that I will nominate Supreme Court Justices who will overturn Roe v. Wade.

Bush couldn’t say that in plain language, because it would freak out every moderate swing voter in the country, but he can say it in code, to make sure that his base will turn out for him. Anti-choice advocates have been comparing Roe v. Wade with Dred Scott v. Sandford for some time now. There is a constant drumbeat on the religious right to compare the contemporary culture war over abortion with the 19th century fight over slavery, with the anti-choicers cast in the role of the abolitionists.”

And you know what? Paperwight is right. Here are a few quotes:

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Post-Debate Thread

So what did you think? Personally, I didn’t think it was a slam dunk like last time. But I did think that Kerry had the President on the defensive for most of the debate, and that the way the President kept trying to claim time for rebuttals when the rules said that whether there were … Read more

In a way, it’s impressive.

The way that Reuters managed to write an article about blogs and their effect on the campaign (“Blogs Abuzz with Gossip in Caustic U.S. Campaign”) without ever actually mentioning a single one by name. Except for Salon, which I wouldn’t say really counts as a blog, per se. No, really, this one was like a … Read more

Not a real concern. Yet.

While I am not blind to the problem mentioned here and here or here, right now what we have going on is sporadic anti-Republican and/or anti-Bush violence being done by a bunch of unconnected yahoos with no further connection except for the fact that they all made the decision to surrender to fear (and hate, … Read more

Anatomy of a Spinning Top

My opinion of the Cheney-Edwards debate, three seconds after it concluded: No knockout, no TKO, but Cheney won on points.

My opinion of the Cheney-Edwards debate today: No knockout, no TKO, but Cheney won on points.

My opinion of who’s winning the aftermath of the Cheney-Edwards debate: Edwards, clearly — and Cheney’s heading to a TKO.

Why?

Because, in the course of the debate, Cheney created too much grist for the Democratic mill. He made errors. His put-downs of Edwards, brilliant in the moment, became phantoms when put into factual context. And, worst for a Vice-President who’s been accused of having a strange and distant relationship with the truth: He lied. Mostly about small stuff, sure. But he lied. Repeatedly. As if he didn’t know any other way of operating.

My opinion of Cheney actually increased after the debate, and it’s still higher than it was pre-debate. I still think he won. I’m beginning to understand, however, why no Republican should be happy with his performance Tuesday night.

Bush needs to win big on Friday. And he needs to win in a way that doesn’t lose him the post-debate spin.

UPDATE: Citizen Smash and I seem to agree on this one: Cheney’s otherwise strong performance on Tuesday night was marred by his factual lapses. (I don’t think Smash is prepared to use the “lie” word, but I really don’t think you can escape the conclusion that at least Cheney’s dig on Edwards’ attendence record was a lie. See my comment, below, for why I’m prepared to go beyond “misstatement,” “embellishment,” or “misleading statement” on this one.) Smash also points out Edwards’ errors, including a pretty big one regarding military pay.

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Another note

This reader e-mail to TPM gets the litigation tactics right; not sure about debate crossover, however. Shorter TPM: If you’re so fortunate to catch someone in a lie, and you know you can prove it’s a lie without help from the witness, leave it be. Otherwise, you run the risk that the witness will try … Read more

Fact Check: Stem Cell Funding

The Bush campaign has put out a statement about his record on funding stem cell research. It reads, in part:

“The Facts Are:

President Bush delivered the first funding ever for embryonic stem cell research.  Prior to the President’s announcement of new funding, federal funding of embryonic stem cell research was $0.

The President’s announcement did not ban, limit or restrict stem cell research.

It is inaccurate to say the President “limited federal funding” of stem cell research, as such funding did not exist to limit.  This language misleads voters to believe that the President put restrictions on existing federal funding.

The President did announce the first ever federal funding of stem cell research with ethical requirements on which stem cell lines are funded.”

Since various claims and counterclaims are being made about this, I decided to provide some background against which to assess them. I am not doing this in a partisan spirit; I work on this stuff, and I just thought it would be good to have a clear account of the history.

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