Thank You for Contacting Ford Motor Company

Posted by Stevious in General, ... | 12.31.2005 - 12:41 pm

A couple of updates on the Ford / AFA issue. I got an e-mail from Ford the other day, affirming their progressive stance on diversity:

Thank you for writing.

At Ford we value diversity among all of our constituents and pride ourselves on strong and clear values – respect for our customers, communities, employees, suppliers and dealers; acceptance of our differences; inclusion of different people with different perspectives; and integrity to always do the right thing. We value all people – regardless of their race, religion, gender, sexual orientation and cultural or physical differences. This is a strong commitment we intend to carry forward with no exception. We are pleased to clear up any misperceptions and get back to doing what we do best – building the best cars and trucks in America.

Thank you again for contacting Ford.

Respectfully,
Customer Relationship Center
Ford Motor Company

Also, AMERICAblog posted a link to a Detroit Free Press editorial lauding Ford’s move, and blasting the bigoted AFA.

Other companies facing boycotts over which groups they market their products to should learn to keep the bedroom and boardroom separate. It’s bad business, and just wrong, to shun customers because of their sexual orientation, race, creed, gender or culture.

That’s a lesson the American Family Association has yet to learn.


Undermining our country to save it

Posted by Stevious in General, General, ... | 12.31.2005 - 12:06 pm

Big Brother Bush
by Molly Ivins

The first time as tragedy, the second time as farce. Thirty-five years ago, Richard Milhous Nixon, who was crazy as a bullbat, and J. Edgar Hoover, who wore women’s underwear, decided some Americans had unacceptable political opinions. So they set our government to spying on its own citizens, basically those who were deemed insufficiently like Crazy Richard Milhous.

For those of you who have forgotten just what a stonewall paranoid Nixon was, the poor man used to stalk around the White House demanding that his political enemies be killed. Many still believe there was a certain Richard III grandeur to Nixon’s collapse because he was also a man of notable talents. There is neither grandeur nor tragedy in watching this president, the Testy Kid, violate his oath to uphold the laws and Constitution of our country.

The Testy Kid wants to do what he wants to do when he wants to do it because he is the president, and he considers that sufficient justification for whatever he wants. He even finds lawyers like John Yoo, who tell him that whatever he wants to do is legal.

The creepy part is the overlap. Damned if they aren’t still here, after all these years, the old Nixon hands — Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, the whole gang whose yearning for authoritarian government rose like a stink over the Nixon years. Imperial executive. Bring back those special White House guard uniforms. Cheney, like some malignancy that cannot be killed off, back at the same old stand, pushing the same old crap.

Of course, they tell us we have to be spied on for our own safety, so they can catch the terrorists who threaten us all. Thirty-five years ago, they nabbed a film star named Jean Seberg and a bunch of people running a free breakfast program for poor kids in Chicago. This time, they’re onto the Quakers. We are not safer.

More at Common Dreams

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Its not the leak, stupid.

Posted by Stevious in General, General, Ge... | 12.31.2005 - 11:40 am

From the New York Times:

The president last week denounced in strong language the leaking of information about the agency’s program, saying: “My personal opinion is it was a shameful act for someone to disclose this very important program in a time of war. The fact that we’re discussing this program is helping the enemy.”

Privacy advocates on Friday said the leak investigation should be set aside, at least for now, in favor of an investigation of the warrantless eavesdropping itself.

“President Bush broke the law and lied to the American people when he unilaterally authorized secret wiretaps of U.S. citizens,” said Anthony D. Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union. “But rather than focus on this constitutional crisis, Attorney General Gonzales is cracking down on critics of his friend and boss. Our nation is strengthened, not weakened, by those whistle-blowers who are courageous enough to speak out on violations of the law.”

Marc Rotenberg, the executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington, said his group believed “the priority at this point for the Department of Justice should be the appointment of an independent prosecutor to determine whether federal wiretap laws were violated” by the security agency program, not the leak inquiry.

The administration has been sensitive about leaks of closely held information, classified or not, and the Justice Department is also investigating the recent disclosure by The Washington Post that the Central Intelligence Agency operated secret prisons for terrorist suspects in Eastern Europe.

It’s the fact that you’re running secret torture prisons, and spying on Americans that’s the problem. If you were so concerned with leaks, why is Karl Rove still employed after the Plame leak?

wtf

Get a brain! morans.

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Oh, but I thought Tom DeLay said…

Posted by Stevious in General, General, Ge... | 12.31.2005 - 2:41 am

The DeLay-Abramoff Money Trail
Nonprofit Group Linked to Lawmaker Was Funded Mostly by Clients of Lobbyist

By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, December 31, 2005; Page A01

The U.S. Family Network, a public advocacy group that operated in the 1990s with close ties to Rep. Tom DeLay and claimed to be a nationwide grass-roots organization, was funded almost entirely by corporations linked to embattled lobbyist Jack Abramoff, according to tax records and former associates of the group.

During its five-year existence, the U.S. Family Network raised $2.5 million but kept its donor list secret. The list, obtained by The Washington Post, shows that $1 million of its revenue came in a single 1998 check from a now-defunct London law firm whose former partners would not identify the money’s origins.

Washington Post

Smells like maybe Tom is full of shit to me. shit

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US embassy in Malaysia closed after threat

Dec 30, 8:21 AM (ET)

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) – The U.S. embassy in Kuala Lumpur was closed on Friday due to a security threat, a spokeswoman in the Malaysian capital said.

“We got some information indicating there was a threat to the embassy and decided to close at 11.40 (0340 GMT) this morning,” Kathryn Taylor said. “I’m afraid I can’t be more specific.”

Reuters

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I told you so.

Posted by Stevious in General, General, Ge... | 12.30.2005 - 3:49 pm

ACLU Slams DOJ Investigation of NSA Whistleblower, Says Government Must Independently Investigate Violation of Wiretap Laws (12/30/2005)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Media@aclu.org

NEW YORK – The American Civil Liberties Union today sharply criticized a Justice Department investigation into the disclosure of an illegal National Security Agency domestic eavesdropping operation approved by President George W. Bush.

In a letter to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales as well as two full-page advertisements in the New York Times, the ACLU has called for the appointment of a special counsel to determine whether President Bush violated federal wiretapping laws by authorizing illegal surveillance of domestic targets.

ACLU

Glad I’m not alone in thinking that…

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Heck of a Job, Bushie

Posted by Stevious in General, General, Ge... | 12.30.2005 - 11:22 am

Heck of a Job, Bushie
by Paul Krugman
The New York Times
December 30, 2005

A year ago, everyone expected President Bush to get his way on Social Security. Pundits warned Democrats that they were making a big political mistake by opposing plans to divert payroll taxes into private accounts.

A year ago, everyone thought Congress would make Mr. Bush’s tax cuts permanent, in spite of projections showing that doing so would lead to budget deficits as far as the eye can see. But Congress hasn’t acted, and most of the cuts are still scheduled to expire by the end of 2010.

A year ago, Mr. Bush made many Americans feel safe, because they believed that he would be decisive and effective in an emergency. But Mr. Bush was apparently oblivious to the first major domestic emergency since 9/11. According to Newsweek, aides to Mr. Bush finally decided, days after Hurricane Katrina struck, that they had to show him a DVD of TV newscasts to get him to appreciate the seriousness of the situation.

A year ago, before “Brownie, you’re doing a heck of a job” became a national punch line, the rising tide of cronyism in government agencies and the rapid replacement of competent professionals with unqualified political appointees attracted hardly any national attention.

A year ago, hardly anyone outside Washington had heard of Jack Abramoff, and Tom DeLay’s position as House majority leader seemed unassailable.

A year ago, Dick Cheney, who repeatedly cited discredited evidence linking Saddam to 9/11, and promised that invading Americans would be welcomed as liberators – although he hadn’t yet declared that the Iraq insurgency was in its “last throes” – was widely admired for his “gravitas.”

A year ago, Howard Dean – who was among the very few prominent figures to question Colin Powell’s prewar presentation to the United Nations, and who warned, while hawks were still celebrating the fall of Baghdad, that the occupation of Iraq would be much more difficult than the initial invasion – was considered flaky and unsound.

A year ago, it was clear that before the Iraq war, the administration suppressed information suggesting that Iraq was not, in fact, trying to build nuclear weapons. Yet few people in Washington or in the news media were willing to say that the nation was deliberately misled into war until polls showed that most Americans already believed it.

A year ago, the Washington establishment treated Ayad Allawi as if he were Nelson Mandela. Mr. Allawi’s triumphant tour of Washington, back in September 2004, provided a crucial boost to the Bush-Cheney campaign. So did his claim that the insurgents were “desperate.” But Mr. Allawi turned out to be another Ahmad Chalabi, a hero of Washington conference rooms and cocktail parties who had few supporters where it mattered, in Iraq.

A year ago, when everyone respectable agreed that we must “stay the course,” only a handful of war critics suggested that the U.S. presence in Iraq might be making the violence worse, not better. It would have been hard to imagine the top U.S. commander in Iraq saying, as Gen. George Casey recently did, that a smaller foreign force is better “because it doesn’t feed the notion of occupation.”

A year ago, Mr. Bush hadn’t yet openly reneged on Scott McClellan’s 2003 pledge that “if anyone in this administration was involved” in the leaking of Valerie Plame’s identity, that person “would no longer be in this administration.” Of course, some suspect that Mr. Bush has always known who was involved.

A year ago, we didn’t know that Mr. Bush was lying, or at least being deceptive, when he said at an April 2004 event promoting the Patriot Act that “a wiretap requires a court order. …When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists, we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so. It’s important for our fellow citizens to understand, when you think Patriot Act, constitutional guarantees are in place when it comes to doing what is necessary to protect our homeland, because we value the Constitution.”

A year ago, most Americans thought Mr. Bush was honest.

A year ago, we didn’t know for sure that almost all the politicians and pundits who thundered, during the Lewinsky affair, that even the president isn’t above the law have changed their minds. But now we know when it comes to presidents who break the law, it’s O.K. if you’re a Republican.

The New York Times Company

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George W. Bush as the New Richard M. Nixon: Both Wiretapped Illegally, and Impeachably;

Posted by Stevious in General, General, Ge... | 12.30.2005 - 11:08 am

Both Claimed That a President May Violate Congress’ Laws to Protect National Security
By JOHN W. DEAN

On Friday, December 16, the New York Times published a major scoop by James Risen and Eric Lichtblau: They reported that Bush authorized the National Security Agency (NSA) to spy on Americans without warrants, ignoring the procedures of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).

It was a long story loaded with astonishing information of lawbreaking at the White House. It reported that sometime in 2002, Bush issued an executive order authorizing NSA to track and intercept international telephone and/or email exchanges coming into, or out of, the U.S. – when one party was believed to have direct or indirect ties with al Qaeda.

Initially, Bush and the White House stonewalled, neither confirming nor denying the president had ignored the law. Bush refused to discuss it in his interview with Jim Lehrer.

Then, on Saturday, December 17, in his radio broadcast, Bush admitted that the New York Times was correct – and thus conceded he had committed an impeachable offense.

There can be no serious question that warrantless wiretapping, in violation of the law, is impeachable. After all, Nixon was charged in Article II of his bill of impeachment with illegal wiretapping for what he, too, claimed were national security reasons.

Findlaw

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Gimme a break

Posted by Stevious in General, General, Ge... | 12.30.2005 - 10:50 am

Justice Dept. to probe leak of spy program
Bush had called disclosure a ‘shameful act’; NY Times reported NSA story

BREAKING NEWS
NBC, MSNBC and news services
Updated: 10:42 a.m. ET Dec. 30, 2005

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Justice Department has launched an investigation to see who disclosed a secret domestic eavesdropping operation, department officials said Friday.

“We are opening an investigation into the unauthorized disclosure of classified materials related to the NSA,” one official said, referring to the National Security Agency.

MSNBC

The DOJ should open an investigation into Bush’s illegal wiretapping. They’re saying its a criminal act to leak the White House’s involvement in criminal activity, so they’ll investigate the source of the leak, but they won’t do anything about the illegal and unconstitutional activity that gave rise to it. wtf


WordPress Upgrade

Posted by Stevious in General, General, Ge... | 12.28.2005 - 4:38 pm

Upgraded to WordPress 2.0 this afternoon, checking for breakage now…

so far, nothing seems to be broken
Update: it looks like Tracbacks were broken in 2.0: http://wordpress.org/support/topic/53669

Care to contibute here? Go register yourself…

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The War on Christmas hits home

Posted by Stevious in General, General, Ge... | 12.27.2005 - 3:49 pm

So, my mom calls me on Christmas eve, right before Nhut and I are scheduled to fly to LA to spend the holidays with his family. We had been out to Pennsylvania to visit my mom and stepfather two weeks before.

File this one under “making family guests feel welcome at your home”, my mom has one of those life-size cardboard cutouts of George W. Bush facing the door as you enter the house. And if that wasn’t enough, there are photos of George and Laura hanging up around the house, and a 2004 calendar open to November. Oh, and of course, the now infamous Bush White House “Holiday Card” is sitting on their desk. Add to that, the Fox News all-the-time on TV, and you can imagine how welcome two gay men (one of whom is her son) would feel in this house.

Anyway, so, back to the war on Christmas, as mom is saying goodbye, she starts to say that she hopes we have a Happy Holiday, then stops to correct herself, rephrasing that we should have a Merry Christmas, and that “Happy Holidays” are for the non-believers. Well, so now I’m wondering if she was making some kind of judgemental statement about Nhut’s family, or maybe I’m just reading too much into it. I mean, Nhut’s family are not Christians, but they do celebrate Christmas. So how is this about believers or non-believers? What do they have to beleive in to celebrate Christmas anyway? Christmas means different things to different people, so how come the exchanging of gifts has to be about a belief in something that someone else tells you?

wtf


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