January 24, 2006
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More ExtremismPosted by jbholston at 09:21 PM
IF you listened to Kennedy's comments on Alito this morning, you heard many quotes from the Federalist Society, which advocates the wierd 'unitary' theory of the executive which gives the Executive Branch unfettered power to determine or ignore the law as it pleases. Alito is, of course, a member, and...
Scalia was the only justice to miss the Sept. 29 White House ceremony welcoming Chief Justice John Roberts to the bench.
The network also quoted critics who raised questions about the propriety of what they characterized as "judicial junkets."
Leonard Leo, executive vice-president of the lawyers' group, The Federalist Society, said Tuesday that Scalia attended the group's meeting to teach ... ... the separation of powers under the U.S. Constitution.
The meeting was at the Ritz-Carlton Bachelor Creek in Avon, between the Vail and Beaver Creek ski resorts.
Leo said in a statement Tuesday that ABC wrongly characterized Scalia as playing tennis at the resort instead of attending Roberts' swearing-in.
That, or they were war-gaming the Supreme's role when the domestic spying case comes up...
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More IncompetencePosted by jbholston at 09:07 PM
LA Times:
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Iraqi oil production fell by 8 percent last year, with a sharp decline near year's end that left average daily production at half the 3 million barrels envisioned by U.S. officials at the outset of the war in 2003.
Prospects for improvement this year are slim, according to many experts, calling into question Iraq's ability to support itself and fund reconstruction efforts as U.S. assistance is scaled back. Reasons for the shortfall include the poor state of the nation's oil fields, a creaky infrastructure, poor management and ongoing insurgent attacks, particularly to pipelines in the north-central region meant to export oil through Turkey.
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IncompetentPosted by jbholston at 08:40 PM
USA. Today;
Andrew Krepinevich, a retired Army officer who wrote the report under a Pentagon contract, concluded that the Army cannot sustain the pace of troop deployments to Iraq long enough to break the back of the insurgency. He also suggested that the Pentagon's decision, announced in December, to begin reducing the force in Iraq this year was driven in part by a realization that the Army was overextended.
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January 23, 2006
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Lies and the lying...Posted by jbholston at 09:13 PM
I've said a bazillion times that the incompetence of the present administration is about as scary as their ideological extremism. Latest headlines to choose between:
Incompetence;
The first official history of the $25 billion American reconstruction effort in Iraq depicts a program hobbled from the outset by gross understaffing, a lack of technical expertise, bureaucratic infighting, secrecy and constantly increasing security costs, according to a preliminary draft.
...After years of shifting authority, agencies that have come into and out of existence and that experienced constant staff turnover, the rebuilding went through another permutation last month with almost no public notice. The Corps of Engineers (as in, levee system -- ed.) has been given command of the severely criticized office set up by President Bush to oversee some $13 billion of the reconstruction funds.
Extremism;
The Justice Department's voting section, a small and usually obscure unit that enforces the Voting Rights Act and other federal election laws, has been thrust into the center of a growing debate over recent departures and controversial decisions in the Civil Rights Division as a whole.
Many current and former lawyers in the section charge that senior officials have exerted undue political influence in many of the sensitive voting-rights cases the unit handles. Most of the department's major voting-related actions over the past five years have been beneficial to the GOP, they say, including two in Georgia, one in Mississippi and a Texas redistricting plan orchestrated by Rep. Tom DeLay (R) in 2003.
...The Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, which has enforced the nation's anti-discrimination laws for nearly half a century, is in the midst of an upheaval that has driven away dozens of veteran lawyers and has damaged morale for many of those who remain, according to former and current...
...A team of Justice Department lawyers and analysts who reviewed a Georgia voter-identification law recommended rejecting it because it was likely to discriminate against black voters, but they were overruled the next day by higher-ranking officials at Justice, according to department documents.
...The Justice Department has barred staff attorneys from offering recommendations in major Voting Rights Act cases, marking a significant change in the procedures meant to insulate such decisions from politics, congressional aides and current and former employees familiar with the issue said.
...This Aug. 25 Department of Justice memo shows that a review team decided 4-1 that Georgia's voter identification program should be halted. The next day Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales and his aides granted pre-clearance to the program, allowing the initiative to go forward before it was blocked by the courts.
...The section also has lost about a third of its three dozen lawyers over the past nine months. Those who remain have been barred from offering recommendations in major voting-rights cases and have little input in the section's decisions on hiring and policy.
Which banana republic is this?
Oh that's right; at least here we don't spy without legal authority on our own citizens...
BTW, wonder how all these Young Republicans' will respond when their daughters suffer from Roe overturned...

... and, why aren't they all serving now in Iraq, anyhow?? Oh that's right, they're too busy being paid by laundered GOP fundraising to protest choice...
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