Friday, February 29, 2008

Let's Hear It For Idiot Power!


Poor Pig. He never dreamed that he would be the energy-source for Rat's latest invention: the idiot-powered automobile. Talk about renewable energy and a limitless source of energy. Pig and Rat are both wearing intellectual eyeglasses in this LOL day in their world. If this is (fair & balanced) lunacy, so be it.


[x Pearls Before Swine]

Idiot Powered

Click on image to enlarge
Copyright © 2008 Stephan Pastis


[Stephan Pastis is an attorney-cum-cartoonist. His alternative world is inhabited by Rat, Pit, Goat, and others.]


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Thursday, February 28, 2008

Last Sunday, Doris Kearns Goodwin Rode "The Elephant In The Room"

Last Sunday, I switched channels from "Meet the Press" when Tim Russert brought a convicted plagiarist, Doris Kearns Goodwin, forward to comment on the Clintonista charge that Senator Barack Obama was a plagiarist. The hypocrisy was akin to hearing the most notorious election thief of this century, The Dubster, calling for "free and open elections" in Cuba in the fallout after Fidel Castro's departure from power. The Big Lie technique dictates that "people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it." So, Doris Kearns Goodwin and The Dubster are birds of a (dishonest) feather. If this is (fair & balanced) prevarication, so be it.

[x Slate]
Doris Goodwin on Obama's Borrowings
By Timothy Noah

Doris Kearns GoodwinDoris Kearns Goodwin, Plagiarist & Hypocrite on "Meet the Press"
Click on image to enlarge/Copyright © 2008 NBC


One of these two people has committed plagiarism, and it isn't Obama.

On the Feb. 26 (2008) "Meet the Press," Tim Russert invited panelist Doris Kearns Goodwin to comment on Hillary Clinton's attempt "to make an issue of Barack Obama borrowing words and phrases from [Massachusetts Gov.] Deval Patrick." Unbelievably, Russert failed to note (and Goodwin failed to remind him of) an important source of Goodwin's expertise on this topic: Six years ago, the Weekly Standard's Bo Crader revealed that Goodwin had plagiarized Lynne McTaggart's 1983 book Kathleen Kennedy: Her Life and Times and a few other sources in her own 1987 biography, The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys.

In posing the question, Russert was fairly dismissive of the plagiarism charge, and so was Goodwin. I happen to agree that the Clinton attack was much ado about nothing, and Goodwin's response approximated my own views:

You know, and I think what's going on here is that it's inevitable when candidates sit next to each other at debates, work with one another as Obama and, and Mr. Patrick had, you're going to pick up patterns from one another, you know, especially during these debates. They've all picked up language from one another. They're like an old couple that begins to look like each other at the end of their lives, and they've, they've probably listened to their colleagues on the debating trail more than they have their wives or their spouses. So in some ways it's good for the party to have the best lines that everybody in that party comes up with, the best ideas and patterns. Eventually one person will be the nominee. Let them evolve into each other as, as the time goes by, mush them all together.

A few moments further into the broadcast, Goodwin elaborated:

[J]ust as these politicians on the campaign trail are borrowing and absorbing patterns and evolving, so too speechwriters. They look at the best speeches in history. It's inevitable that those patterns are going to get in their heads. And you know, we can't make too much of this. This is the spoken word. It's different from the written word, and it becomes part of what's in there. As you said, there's not that much in their heads anymore that's coming in that's new. So all that's in there is what was there before.

I would take this argument even further and point out that speechwriters often win praise for lifting phrases from others. Michael Gerson made his name as a presidential speechwriter when he wrote these words for President Bush at the start of the Afghanistan war: "We will not waver, we will not tire, we will not falter, and we will not fail." This was conscious theft from Winston Churchill's "give us the tools" speech to the United States in February 1941. ("We shall not fail or falter; we shall not weaken or tire.") Commentators, in noting the borrowing, did so not to condemn Bush and his speechwriter but to congratulate them on their evocation of Churchillian resolve. Writing in the Daily Telegraph, Toby Harnden called it "stirring."

For this and other reasons, I think Obama's borrowings are a pretty trivial issue. But if I had ever been accused of plagiarism, or had accused someone else of plagiarism, I would hesitate to venture any opinion about Obama's recycling without first informing readers about my experience, so they could put my views into some context. As it happens, I haven't experienced plagiarism from either end. Goodwin has experienced it from both.

In a Boston Globe interview in July 1993, Goodwin essentially accused Joe McGinniss of plagiarizing The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys. She didn't use the p-word itself, but she left little doubt that on the general topic, she was a hanging judge. The offending text was McGinniss' The Last Brother, an interpretive biography of Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. McGinniss' book had no footnotes or index, but in an author's note, McGinniss stated, "[I]n almost every instance, the quotations and other facts that form the basis of my interpretations have been drawn from published sources that I believe to be reliable. ...The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys by Doris Kearns Goodwin ...[was] especially helpful." For Goodwin, this wasn't good enough:

"There are times when" McGinniss "quotes me directly, and that is perfectly fine," she said. "But there are times when he goes directly to a primary source that comes from my work, for example, my interviews with Lem Billings or Rose Kennedy. He just uses it flat out, without saying that it came from my work. Or he'll go to a letter I dug out of the Kennedy library and present it as if, perhaps, he had found it.

"There's nothing wrong with an author building on material from a previous book. That's the way history is built, as long as you credit the source, as long as you credit whoever does the legwork of finding old letters. … I just don't understand why that wasn't done. … If you know it was your work in digging out the material and bringing it to life, then you expect that another writer would acknowledge that. It's inexplicable why it wasn't done. …"

Goodwin was condemning McGinniss not for using particular sentences and phrases of her own without attribution, or even for using particular sentences and phrases of various Kennedys and Kennedy intimates without attribution to them. Rather, she was condemning McGinniss for failing to point out that particular sentences and phrases that McGinniss had emanating from various Kennedys and Kennedy intimates were the fruit of her interviews and her archival research. Goodwin, a Harvard-trained political scientist, was imposing a strict scholarly standard — author's note be damned — presumably because this was the standard she followed herself.

Only it wasn't. A decade later, Crader's Weekly Standard piece showed that in the very same book — The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys — Goodwin had borrowed language from both primary and secondary sources. Sometimes these were footnoted and sometimes not. On publication, McTaggart had cried foul, her publisher had threatened a lawsuit, and a quiet settlement had been reached. Additional footnotes had been added to subsequent editions, along with new language added to the preface acknowledging Goodwin's reliance on McTaggart's book, now described as "the definitive biography of Kathleen Kennedy." McTaggart had also received what she described to Crader as a "substantial monetary settlement, many times more than what is usually the case for this kind of thing." In return, McTaggart had agreed to keep her mouth shut. No effort had been made to put quotation marks around the borrowed language; in effect, a legal deal had been struck to reduce but not eliminate Goodwin's plagiarism.

Goodwin's response to the Weekly Standard piece was a modified limited hangout. She fessed up to the borrowings but refused to admit that they constituted plagiarism, even though they met the definition of plagiarism provided to Harvard freshmen. Awkwardly, Goodwin was a Harvard Overseer at the time—in effect, a university trustee. The plagiarism revelations cost Goodwin a regular gig on "The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer" and membership on the Pulitzer board. Goodwin stanched the bleeding (according to the New York Times) by enlisting the aid of political consultant Bob Shrum. Some prominent historians came to Goodwin's defense, arguing that because her borrowings were due to "inadvertence, not intent," it was neither fair nor accurate to call them "plagiarism." This statement contradicted not only Harvard's definition of the p-word, but also those of the American Historical Association, the Modern Language Association's MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers, and just about every other reputable institution of higher learning in the United States. ("We surveyed college plagiarism standards around the country," Rick Shenkman, editor of George Mason's History News Network (web site), told me in 2003. "[N]one of these standards provided an exemption for intent.") In 2005, Goodwin published Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. The book was favorably reviewed and contained no apparent lapses of proper attribution. Had any occurred, I presume that someone would have squawked. On the other hand, so many Harvard professors had by then been found guilty of committing plagiarism that it's possible the topic no longer interested anyone.

Granted, it would have been hard for Russert or Goodwin to cram all this information into a brief TV segment that was supposed to be about the sins of Barack Obama, not the sins of Doris Goodwin. But, as Liz Cox Barrett observed on the Columbia Journalism Review Web site, Russert could have said something like, "You're no stranger to charges of plagiarism, Doris. How does Obama battle this? Does this stick?" Instead, Russert guided Goodwin past "the elephant in the studio."

[Timothy Noah is an American journalist. He is a senior writer for Slate Magazine, where he writes the "Chatterbox" column. He is also a contributing editor to The Washington Monthly. Noah was previously an assistant managing editor at U.S. News & World Report and a Washington reporter for the Wall Street Journal. Before that, he was a staff writer at The New Republic and a congressional correspondent for Newsweek. He is a graduate of Harvard University, where he was an editor of the Harvard Advocate. He resides in the Takoma (MD) neighborhood of Washington, D.C.]

Copyright © 2008 Slate Magazine


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Wednesday, February 27, 2008

A Sign That The Apocalypse Is Nigh

At the risk of bad taste (never a problem for me), I wonder if William F. Buckley was reading Rich Lowry's take on the Clinton-Obama debate this week when Buckley dropped dead at his desk. Obamania in National Review? What a time, what a time. If this is (fair & balanced) astonishment, so be it.

[x National Review]
What an Amazing Turnabout
By Rich Lowry

Who would have guessed three months ago that Hillary would be the desperate out-of-sorts underdog nipping at the ankles of the cool, in-control frontrunner, Barack Obama, in what is probably the final Democratic debate? I certainly wouldn't have. Obama had an answer to everything and at times was amused at Hillary's haymakers. Is it possible to throw a picayune haymaker? If so, Hillary threw them tonight — over fliers, getting asked questions first, Obama's neglect of subcommittee oversight hearings, the difference between "denouncing and rejecting," etc. This is what a politician who simply can't find anything that works is reduced to. What Obama did all night was brush her off, without (for the most part) seeming arrogant. He was in command, his stature enhanced by his standing in the race and by Hillary's ineffectual attacks. It was entirely possible to imagine him on a stage with John McCain, and more than holding his own.

[Rich Lowry, a 1990 graduate of the University of Virginia, where he edited The Virginia Advocate (campus newspaper), is known as one of the youngest and most influential conservative commentators and analysts in the country. He joined William F. Buckley's brainchild, National Review, in 1992 and has been the magazine's editor since 1997.]

Copyright © 2008 National Review


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RIP: William F. Buckley, Jr.

In my romantic youth, I flirted with the conservatism espoused by William F. Buckley and Russell Kirk. In fact, I cast my first presidential vote for Barry Goldwater (R-AZ) in 1964. My tattered record as a political philosopher and a presidential voter are no credit to Buckley. However, in recent times, Buckley wanted no truck with The Dubster because Buckley was no lockstep supporter of a POTUS just because that officeholder was a Republican. In that animus for The Dubster, I was in good company. If this is a (fair & balanced) ave atque vale, so be it.

[x NPR]
William F. Buckley, Conservative Bulwark, Dies
By Scott Neuman

William F. Buckley Jr., the man regarded by many as the father of the modern conservative movement, died Wednesday morning at his home in Stamford, Conn. He was 82.

The leading commentator and author was famous for his erudite — some would say arrogant — style in writings in the magazine he founded, the National Review, as well as his PBS television show "Firing Line," which ran for more than two decades.

The cause of death was unknown, but his assistant Linda Bridges said he had been ill with emphysema.

Buckley founded National Review in 1955, declaring that he proposed to stand "athwart history, yelling 'Stop' at a time when no one is inclined to do so, or to have much patience with those who urge it."

He and his magazine are credited with revitalizing the American conservative movement, long in the political wilderness, and with the rise of right-wing thinkers, many of whom wrote for the National Review and eventually became key players in the Reagan revolution.

Buckley ended his tenure on "Firing Line" in 1999, telling the audience that he'd "just as soon not die onstage." Five years later, he relinquished control of the National Review, citing health concerns.

Despite his unassailable conservative credentials, Buckley never shied away from standing up to the right when he thought it was wrong. In 1965, he denounced the ultra-conservative John Birch Society as a lunatic fringe. As recently as 2006 in an interview with CBS News, Buckley said President Bush was not a true conservative and criticized his administration's focus on the war in Iraq.

"I think Mr. Bush faces a singular problem best defined, I think, as the absence of effective conservative ideology."

He said the Bush administration had become "engulfed by Iraq" in a way that prevented it from entertaining "perspectives … with respect to … other parts of the Middle East, with respect to Iran in particular."

Among Buckley's other interests were music, wine and sailing, which he extensively chronicled in his 2004 "literary autobiography" Miles Gone By.

His wife Pat Buckley died last year. They had been married since 1950. Their son, Christopher, is a satirist and author of Thank You for Smoking, which was made into a movie in 2006.

[Scott Neuman is with NPR, National Public Radio, in Washington DC.]

Copyright © 2008 National Public Radio


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The Cobra Bites The Hillster (And Mike Peters Ain't Far Behind)

The Hillster can't take much Mo. Maureen (Mo to her friends and The Cobra to her enemies) Dowd is on the hustings in OH. Never a Clintonista, Mo Dowd looks askance at The Hillster's current campaign. The Cobra isn't alone. Mike Peters of The Dayton (OH) Daily News has been having a field day at the expense of The Golden Couple.

Day OneClick on the image to enlarge/Copyright © 2008 Mike Peters

Click on the image to enlarge/Copyright © 2008 Mike Peters

[Mike Peters joined The Dayton Daily News in 1969 after service in the U. S. Army (1966-1968). He received the Pulitzer Prize for his political cartoons in 1981. He also started drawing the popular strip, "Mother Goose & Grimm" in 1984.]

If this is (fair & balanced) truth to power, so be it.


[x NY Fishwrap]
Begrudging His Bedazzling
By Maureen Dowd

A huge Ellen suddenly materialized behind Hillary on a giant screen, interrupting her speech Monday night at a fund-raiser at George Washington University in Washington.

What better way for a desperate Hillary to try and stop her rival from running off with all her women supporters than to have a cozy satellite chat with a famous daytime talk-show host who isn’t supporting Obama?

“Will you put a ban on glitter?” Ellen demanded.

Diplomatically, Hillary said that schoolchildren needed it for special projects, but maybe she could ban it for anyone over 12.

Certainly, Hillary understands the perils of glitter. The coda of her campaign has been a primal scream against the golden child of Chicago, a clanging and sometimes churlish warning that “all that glitters is not gold.”

David Brody, the Christian Broadcasting Network correspondent whose interview with Hillary aired Tuesday, said the senator seemed “dumbfounded” by the Obama sensation.

She has been so discombobulated that she has ignored some truisms of politics that her husband understands well: Sunny beats gloomy. Consistency beats flipping. Bedazzling beats begrudging. Confidence beats whining.

Experience does not beat excitement, though, or Nixon would have been president the first time around, Poppy Bush would have had a second term and President Gore would have stopped the earth from melting by now.

Voters gravitate toward the presidential candidates who seem more comfortable in their skin. J.F.K. and Reagan seemed exceptionally comfortable. So did Bill Clinton and W., who both showed that comfort can be an illusion of sorts, masking deep insecurities.

The fact that Obama is exceptionally easy in his skin has made Hillary almost jump out of hers. She can’t turn on her own charm and wit because she can’t get beyond what she sees as the deep injustice of Obama not waiting his turn. Her sunshine-colored jackets on the trail hardly disguise the fact that she’s pea-green with envy.

After saying she found her “voice” in New Hampshire, she has turned into Sybil. We’ve had Experienced Hillary, Soft Hillary, Hard Hillary, Misty Hillary, Sarcastic Hillary, Joined-at-the-Hip-to-Bill Hillary, Her-Own-Person-Who-Just-Happens-to-Be-Married-to-a-Former-President Hillary, It’s-My-Turn Hillary, Cuddly Hillary, Let’s-Get-Down-in-the-Dirt-and-Fight-Like-Dogs Hillary.

Just as in the White House, when her cascading images and hairstyles became dizzying and unsettling, suggesting that the first lady woke up every day struggling to create a persona, now she seems to think there is a political solution to her problem. If she can only change this or that about her persona, or tear down this or that about Obama’s. But the whirlwind of changes and charges gets wearing.

By threatening to throw the kitchen sink at Obama, the Clinton campaign simply confirmed the fact that they might be going down the drain.

Hillary and her aides urged reporters to learn from the “Saturday Night Live” skit about journalists having crushes on Obama.

“Maybe we should ask Barack if he’s comfortable and needs another pillow,” she said tartly in the debate here Tuesday night. She peevishly and pointlessly complained about getting the first question too often, implying that the moderators of MSNBC — a channel her campaign has complained has been sexist — are giving Obama an easy ride.

Beating on the press is the lamest thing you can do. It is only because of the utter open-mindedness of the press that Hillary can lose 11 contests in a row and still be treated as a contender.

Hillary and her top aides could not say categorically that her campaign had not been the source on the Drudge Report, as Matt Drudge claimed, for a picture of Obama in African native garb that the mean-spirited hope will conjure up a Muslim Manchurian candidate vibe.

At a rally on Sunday, she tried sarcasm about Obama, talking about how “celestial choirs” singing and magic wands waving won’t get everybody together to “do the right thing.”

With David Brody, Hillary evoked the specter of a scary Kool-Aid cult. “I think that there is a certain phenomenon associated with his candidacy, and I am really struck by that because it is very much about him and his personality and his presentation,” she said, adding that “it dangerously oversimplifies the complexity of the problems we face, the challenge of navigating our country through some difficult uncharted waters. We are a nation at war. That seems to be forgotten.”

Actually it’s not forgotten. It’s a hard sell for Hillary to say that she is the only one capable of leading this country in a war when she helped in leading the country into that war. Or to paraphrase Obama from the debate here, the one who drives the bus into the ditch can’t drive it out.

[Maureen Dowd, winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for distinguished commentary (about the Lewinsky Scandal and the Clinton impeachment), became a columnist on The New York Times Op-Ed page in 1995.]

Copyright © 2008 The New York Times Company


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Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Two Presidents For The Price Of One?

A long time ago, Texas elected a woman governor for the first time when James Ferguson (impeached and removed from the governor's office in 1917) was unable to run for office under his own name in 1924. Miriam Ferguson entered the race and assured Texans that if elected she would follow the advice of her husband and that Texas thus would gain "two governors for the price of one." Although denied reelection in 1926, Miriam Ferguson was elected to a second gubernatorial term in 1930. Texas again had "two governors for the price of one." Can history repeat itself (apologies for the canard)? Garry Wills rightly asserts that a dual presidency exists with The Dubster/Dickster axis of evil. Wills posits a righteous jeremiad with the nightmare of The Slickster and The Hillster in harness. If this is a (fair & balanced) attack on spousal politics, so be it.

[x NY Fishwrap]
Two Presidents Are Worse Than One
By Garry Wills

Senator Hillary Clinton has based her campaign on experience — 35 years of it by her count. That must include her eight years in the White House.

Some may debate whether those years count as executive experience. But there can be no doubt that her husband had the presidential experience, fully. He has shown during his wife’s campaign that he is a person of initiative and energy. Does anyone expect him not to use his experience in an energetic way if he re-enters the White House as the first spouse?

Mrs. Clinton claims that her time in that role was an active one. He can hardly be expected to show less involvement when he returns to the scene of his time in power as the resident expert. He is not the kind to be a potted plant in the White House.

Which raises an important matter. Do we really want a plural presidency?

This is not a new question. It was intensely debated in the convention that formulated our Constitution. The Virginia Plan for the new document submitted by Edmund Randolph and the New Jersey Plan submitted by William Paterson left open the number of officers to hold the executive power.

Some (like Hugh Williamson of North Carolina) argued for a three-person executive, each member coming from a different region of the country. More people argued (like George Mason of Virginia) for a multiple-member executive council.

The objection to giving executive power to a single person came from the framers’ experience with the British monarchy and the royal governors of the colonies. They did not want another monarch.

But as the debate went forward a consensus formed that republican rule would check the single initiative of a president. In fact, accountability to the legislature demanded that responsibility be lodged where it could be called to account. A plural presidency would leave it uncertain whom to check. How, for instance, would Congress decide which part of the executive should be impeached in case of high crimes and misdemeanors? One member of the plural executive could hide behind the other members.

James Wilson of Pennsylvania made the argument for a single officeholder with typical depth and precision: “To control the executive, you must unite it. One man will be more responsible than three. Three will contend among themselves till one becomes the master of his colleagues. In the triumvirates of Rome, first Caesar, then Augustus, are witnesses of this truth. The kings of Sparta and the consuls of Rome prove also the factious consequences of dividing the executive magistracy.”

Wilson and his allies carried the day; and their argument is as good now as when they embedded it in the Constitution.

One problem with the George W. Bush administration is that it has brought a kind of plural presidency in through the back door. Vice President Dick Cheney has run his own executive department, with its own intelligence and military operations, not open to scrutiny, as he hides behind the putative president.

No other vice president in our history has taken on so many presidential prerogatives, with so few checks. He is an example of the very thing James Wilson was trying to prevent by having one locus of authority in the executive. The attempt to escape single responsibility was perfectly exemplified when his counsel argued that Mr. Cheney was not subject to executive rules because he was also part of the legislature.

We have seen in this campaign how former President Clinton rushes to the defense of presidential candidate Clinton. Will that pattern of protection be continued into the new presidency, with not only his defending her but also her defending whatever he might do in his energetic way while she’s in office? It seems likely. And at a time when we should be trying to return to the single-executive system the Constitution prescribes, it does not seem to be a good idea to put another co-president in the White House.

[Garry Wills, a professor emeritus of history at Northwestern University, is the author, most recently, of Head and Heart: American Christianities.]

Copyright © 2008 The New York Times Company


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Monday, February 25, 2008

Stick & Stones....

Push is coming to shove in the Democrat hustings. Will Billary come back? One of The Hillster's most recent jibes at Obama was aimed at Texas voters when she accused Obama of being "all hat and no cattle." Unfortunately, The Hillster knows the words, but she doesn't know the tune. The Hillster becomes more shrill with each passing day and this isn't misogyny. Shrill is gender-free. As Leonard Pitts so aptly puts it, The Hillster cannot "...find the rock, broken bottle, or brickbat that will knock Obama offstride." If this is (fair & balanced) androgynist understatement, so be it. PS: At least Obama can pronounce "new-klee-er."

[Miami Fishwrap]
Obama's Success Tied To His Eloquence
By Leonard Pitts Jr.

A few words in defense of words.

This, in light of the latest knock on Sen. Barack Obama, which is that, while he's good with words, words are all he's got. He is eloquent and inspiring, this analysis goes, but eloquence and inspiration do not a president make.

It's a line of criticism that has been argued by pundits (David Brooks in The New York Times used the word ''vaporous''), by the presumptive GOP nominee for president (``eloquent but empty,'' said Sen. John McCain) and by Obama's rival for the Democratic nod (''Speeches don't put food on the table,'' said Sen. Hillary Clinton).

That last worthy must feel not unlike Wile E. Coyote did in trying to tag the Road Runner -- or like congressional Republicans did in trying to tag her husband. Nothing she throws sticks. Indeed, one senses a flailing desperation in Clinton's scramble to find the rock, broken bottle or brickbat that will knock Obama offstride.

She accused him of being afraid to debate her and never mind that there have been, like, 57 debates already.

She accused him of stealing lines from a speech by Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick. And never mind that Patrick, an Obama supporter, says he gave the lines to Obama and said, "Here, use this."

Knockout blows these are not.

And if those criticisms miss the mark, the argument that eloquence is somehow empty misses the point -- not simply of Obama's primary season success, but of the presidency itself. Don't get me wrong: To the degree Clinton or anyone else calls Obama out over a paucity of specifics in his proposals, the criticism is fair. But that's not the same as saying words don't matter. Or even that they matter less.

The chief executive's power does not derive solely from the authority vested in him by the Constitution. To the contrary, it derives also, and in some ways, more so, from his ability to rally the people, to inspire them in some great challenge or crusade.

We do not live — yet — in a dictatorship. Americans do not move because they are told to move; they move because they are inspired to. It is no accident that history's most successful presidents are the ones who were able to frame, with concision and grace, America's challenges and hopes, the ones who had greatest command over what Theodore Roosevelt famously called "the bully pulpit."

Think Ronald Reagan saying government is not the solution to the problem; government is the problem. Think Franklin Roosevelt declaring that the only thing we had to fear was fear itself. Think Abraham Lincoln at Gettysburg vowing a new birth of freedom.

Now, try to remember anything Millard Fillmore ever uttered. A hundred years from now, will anyone still be saying, "I'm the decider"?

What some of us don't understand is that Obama is not running a campaign; he is rallying a movement. After seven years of what may go down as the worst presidency ever, after the grime of the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal, after dreary years of internecine sniping where ideological purity has routinely trumped national interest, Americans want something else. Something higher.

Whether Obama can deliver that something else is a fair question. But the thing is, he recognizes and responds to the hunger for it. That's the reason Clinton can't lay a glove on him, the reason he's won 10 primaries in a row, the reason he's cracked her coalition and even inspired Republicans to switch parties.

Clinton and others seem to think all those people have been scammed, flim-flammed and razzle-dazzled. It's a condescending conclusion.

I suspect that if anybody bothered to ask them, they'd say that what they've been, at last, is heard.

[Miami Herald columnist Leonard Pitts, Jr. won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished commentary in 2004. A former writer for Casey Kasem's radio program "American Top 40," Leonard Pitts, Jr. was hired by the Herald as a pop music critic in 1991. By 1994 he was writing about race and current affairs in his own column. His column was syndicated nationally, and his 1999 book Becoming Dad: Black Men and the Journey to Fatherhood was a bestseller. After the attacks on New York and Washington, D.C. on 11 September 2001, Pitts wrote an impassioned column headlined "We'll Go Forward From This Moment" that was widely circulated on the Internet and frequently quoted in the press. In the column, Pitt bluntly expressed his anger, defiance and resolve to an unnamed evil terrorist: "You monster. You beast. You unspeakable bastard."]

Copyright © 2008 The Miami Herald Media Company


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Sunday, February 24, 2008

4 or 5 Things You Don't Know About Me

Nora Ephron is LOL (Nettalk for "laugh out loud.") funny. Her take brought me to realize that it was time for full(er) disclosure. Ephron did not disclose the fact that she knew the identity of Watergate's "Deep Throat" long before (retired FBI official) Mark Felt came out in the open. Ephron probably used her allotment of words before she could add that unknown feature about herself. Given her incredible life-journey, I imagine that Ephron could expand this self-revelation into a book. (Perhaps this Op-Ed piece is a trial balloon?) In any event, the thought that this blog has been droning on and on since June 2003 without any Ephron-like self disclosure caused my interior voice to say, "It's time, now." Here goes:

  1. Like "Our Gal Sunday," I grew up in a "little mining town in the West."

  2. I am a child of divorce (in a mixed-marriage) and I have divorced twice myself.

  3. After a failed college athletic career, I turned to officiating and I worked high school (mostly) and college football and basketball in CO, NM, IA, IL, and TX.

  4. I never wrote a book because I was lazy and lacked the sitzfleisch to accomplish that task.

If this is (fair & balanced) gut-spilling, so be it.

[x NY Fishwrap]
Four or Five Things You Don’t Know About Me
By Nora Ephron

The other day I was walking down the street and I realized that everyone was wearing earmuffs. I myself was wearing earmuffs at the time, but that wasn’t the reason I noticed all the other earmuffs — I noticed them because I happen to know that I personally started the trend of earmuffs. I began wearing them at the age of 21, when you could barely find a pair in a store, which doubtless was one reason no one wore them but me. The only ones for sale were made of felt, came in two separate bits and hooked over your upper ear and then snapped against your head. They were inadequate thermal protection compared to my current pair, which are made of fake fur; but they were far superior to being outdoors in winter without anything at all over your ears. I had serious fantasies that by wearing them, I would start something, fashion-wise, and now it seems I have. It’s true it’s taken a while, 45 years to be exact, but earmuffs are definitely catching on, and it’s because of me.

Seeing all those earmuffs reminded me that there are a number of things about me that people may not be aware of, and this may be the time to set the record straight. For instance, I am the only person who seems to know what Charles Dickens died of. In his biography of Dickens, Fred Kaplan writes that Dickens died of a brain hemorrhage after several years of somewhat puzzling symptoms; but it was clear to me from reading the Kaplan book that in fact Dickens had a case of multiple sclerosis and all his other illnesses were collateral to it. I almost called up Mr. Kaplan to tell him my diagnosis (which, by the way, I managed to make on the basis of no medical knowledge whatsoever), but then I thought about whether he wanted to hear this, from a total stranger, his book already being in print and all, and I decided, probably not.

I’ll tell you something else I know that no one else does: Joe Kennedy was not a bootlegger. When Prohibition was ending, he made a deal to import White Horse Scotch into the United States, but he had nothing whatsoever to do with the illegal liquor business before that. I can’t tell you how many people I have told this to, some of them very important, and yet the myth persists. All sorts of biographers and journalists casually insist that Kennedy was a partner of Frank Costello and Al Capone during Prohibition. It’s so not true! And I happen to be an expert on the subject — I spent several years of my life researching a book on the American liquor industry. I finally came to my senses and never wrote it and even returned the advance to the publisher (for which I deserve a plaque). But I’m left with a huge amount of information on the subject, most of it only moderately interesting, including this important fact about Joe Kennedy that no one seems to care about but me. Frankly, I’m not even sure his own family cares. How ironic is that?

One last thing about me I’d like you to know is that I invented the concept of authenticity. I did. I first began talking about it when Ed Koch was mayor of New York. For many years, Mr. Koch could do and say just about anything and still keep getting elected. Why? I’ll tell you why: he clearly believed what he said he believed. And that was all anyone cared about. In short, he had authenticity, and it trumped politics. Obviously I’m not saying that no one before me had ever said the word “authenticity,” but I promise you that no one had ever used it in connection with politicians, and no one was ever so repetitive on the subject: I have mentioned this theory to just about everyone I have had dinner with for the past 30 years, and it almost cost me my marriage because spouses can live through only so much repetition. Now, of course, it’s everywhere; you can barely get through an episode of “Hardball” without some talking head blathering about authenticity and I never get the credit.

Incidentally, I am at work on a weight-loss regimen that involves eating chili con carne twice a day, a theory about the Clinton marriage that is going to change the way everyone sees it, and a campaign to stamp out the fish fork. Stay tuned.

[Nora Ephron, the author, most recently, of I Feel Bad About My Neck: And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman, is a contributing columnist for The Times.]

Copyright © 2008 The New York Times Company


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Saturday, February 23, 2008

"Advancing Queen"

The Versus site (reached via the clickable link above) has a neat parody of the latest crisis in the beef industry, but my favorite is still the send-up of The Hillster that is all the more poignant as she enters the final week of her campaign. Click on the link above to enjoy Marcy Shaffer's satire that was created before The Hillster had to loan her own campaign $5M. Where's Bert Lance when a girl needs him? Marcy Shaffer has no sacred cows. Following the "debate" in Austin this week, the Austin fishwrap's resident deflater of pomposity, Ben Sargent, drew this verdict on The Hillster's chances in Texas:

[x Austin Fishwrap]


(Click on image to enlarge/Copyright © 2008 Ben Sargent)


The spirit of Tom Lehrer still lives. If this is (fair & balanced) raillery, so be it.


[X Versusplus.com]

"Advancing Queen"
(2008 Clinton Campaign)
To "Dancing Queen," from Mamma Mia!
(Words and Music by Benny Andersson,
Stig Anderson and Bjorn Ulvaeus)

Parody Lyrics by Marcy Shaffer

Oh, yeah.

She can lance.
Wear the pants.
Like a designer Marine.
See that girl.
Her machine.
She’s the Financing Queen.


Though the primaries seem remote.
May get settled without a vote.
This race is about money.
So it will be won
Even before it’s run.


That’s a tenet of HRC.
From the Senate to dynasty.
All those Hillraiser millions.
Stilling in advance
Thrillers who might entrance.
Killing her crowning chance.


She’s the Financing Queen.
Zero debt.
Which is not routine.
On her screen:
Internet.
And the Wall Street scene.
Oh, yeah.
She can dance
From a stance
To turn a Blue into green.
See that girl.
Her machine.
She’s the Financing Queen.


Once a Lady, it feels so blah
To retire to Chappaqua.
Or a townhouse in Georgetown.
Or to Arkansas.
Because she’s cast her glance
On the old family manse:


She’s the Financing Queen.
Zero debt.
Unlike Howard Dean.
On her screen:
Internet.
And the L.A. scene.
Oh, yeah.
She can dance
From a stance
To turn a Blue into green.
See that girl.
Her machine.
She’s the Financing Queen.


See that girl.
Her machine.
She’s the Financing Queen.

Janis Liebhart - lead vocal;
background vocals
Gary Stockdale - background vocals
Greg Hilfman - music Director

[VERSUS parodies are written by Marcy Shaffer, whose professional writing experience includes television, film, lyrics, verse and... musical parody. Shaffer also is an attorney.]

Lyrics © 2007 RMSWorks LLC.


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Thursday, February 21, 2008

The Dubster Lie-Detector Test

The latest savaging of The Dubster came when the POTUS was moving his lips (aka lying) about the dishonesty rampant in Cuban politics. This from the man who stole the presidency in both 2000 and 2004. Ben Sargent listed The Dubster's crimes: torture, wiretapping, secret military tribunals, but he omitted election fraud. When I heard The Trickster's comments for the press after the news that Fidel Castro was stepping down, I almost drove off the road at the effrontery of one election thief to call for "free and open elections" in Cuba. If this is (fair & balanced) hypocrisy, so be it.

[x Austin Fishwrap]
The Dubster's LegacyClick on image to enlarge

[Ben Sargent is a Texas treasure. The Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist is a native of Amarillo, but don't hold that against him. The Trickster had Herblock and The Dubster has Sargent.]

Copyright © 2008 Ben Sargent


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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

The Bumper Sticker The Dubster Really Deserves

Nothing these days aggravates me more on the road than to sit at a traffic light behind a vehicle sporting one of these bumper stickers:
Then, yesterday, the local daily fishwrap ran an editorial cartoon that made me smile. If this is (fair & balanced) political parody, so be it.


[x Boulder Camera]
This the bumpersticker that The Dubster deserves.

[John Sherffius was an editorial cartoonist for The Daily Bruin as a student at UCLA; he graduated in 1984 (psychology). After additional study at California State University at Northridge (BA, Graphic Arts, 1986), Sherffius joined the Orange Coast Daily Pilot as an editorial cartoonist. A few years later, he went to the Ventura County Star. In 1998, Sherffius became the editorial cartoonist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. In 2001, he won the Scripps-Howard National Journalism Award and in 2003, he won the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award for his cartoons. Later that year, Sherffius left the Post-Dispatch and relocated to Colorado and joined the Boulder Daily Camera as editorial cartoonist. His cartoons appear in a number of newspapers and magazines across the nation.]

Copyright © 2008 John Sherffius


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One Person, One Vote?

Throughout out history, elections have been controversial. The election of 1800 was thrown into the House of Representatives with the Adams Federalists crying foul; the election of 2000 was no less odious to the losing Gore Democrats. In between, there have been charges of "Corrupt Bargains" and the "Great Robbery of" (pick your year).

A good friend sent along a recent polemic written by a former professor at a small, state-supported college in Wichita Falls, TX. I cannot help but imagine that the professor's politics did not play well in the college that gave Senator John Tower (R-TX) to the nation. Paul Rockwell left North Texas and its rigid conservatism and moved on to Oakland, CA. He has found his voice in the Bay Area.

This column brought back memories: Texas was the battleground against the racial bias of Texas Democrats who employed the "white primary" for the first half of the 20th century to prevent African American voters from participating in the Democrat primaries when Texas was a one-party state. Ironically, John Tower's election to the U.S. Senate was the first rumble in the avalanche that resulted in the reversal to Texas as a Republican one-party state. The beginning of the disaffection of white Texans for the Democrats began with the Supreme Court rulings against the Texas white primary between 1944-1953. The alienation of whites was sealed with the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The Trickster's "Southern Strategy" and Ronald Reagan's choice of Philadelphia, MS to kick off his campaign in 1980 sent a message to whites in the South (including Texas) that the Republicans were their party.

Now, as Paul Rockwell reminds us, the political realities are not very attractive. If this is (fair & balanced) political protest, so be it.


[x CommonDreams.org]
Screw the Voters. Let Superdelegates Decide!
by Paul Rockwell

Millions of Americans, many of them first-time activists, voted for Barack Obama in the Democratic Party primary. They voted in good faith, expecting their votes to be counted and respected.

Now many young voters are discovering that there are two kinds of delegates at Democratic Party Conventions: real delegates (duly elected from the states) and fake delegates, delegates artificially created by the Democratic National Committee. These delegates, who lack direct support from primary voters, are called superdelegates.

With over 200,000 signatures, a Move-On petition to Democratic Party superdelegates reads: “The superdelegates should let the voters decide between Clinton and Obama. Then support the people’s choice.”

The seating of delegates at Democratic Party conventions has often been a source of conflict. In 1964, Fanny Lou Hamer led a sit-in on the convention floor. The Mississippi Freedom Democrats wanted nothing more than a few convention seats-seats to which they were entitled by open, fair elections in their home state. Walter Mondale, who was to become the architect of the current superdelgate system, refused to seat the elected delegates of color in 1964. Wait until 1968, Mondale insisted, as the representative of the Credentials Committee.

The non-violent mass movements of the ’60s, the passage of the Voting Rights Act, the rise of the feminist movement, the change in voting age, the anti-nuclear campaigns- all generated a groundswell of new voters in Democratic party politics. However, far from welcoming the newly enfranchised activists, party leaders were filled with fear-class and race fear. They never accepted the democratic reforms enacted in the 1970s, when youth and people of color participated for the first time in establishment politics.

The superdelegate system, as we know it, came from the backlash of the 1980s. In January 1982, supported by Mondale, the Hunt Commission and Democratic National Committee reversed grassroots reforms. They rewrote the rules, not to make elections open and fair, but to make sure that centrist (right-wing) candidates maintained hegemony over nominees and party affairs. It was out of fear of new uncontrollable voters that the Commission created a block of uncommitted delegates drawn from a primarily white, male establishment. Mondale, the same insider who prevented elected Mississipppians from taking their seats in 1964, played the pivotal role in creating hundreds of unelected delegates in 1984. Superdelegates comprised 14 percent of the convention in 1984, and eighty-five percent of the superdelegates picked Mondale. Not long after superdelegates picked “the sure winner,” Mondale was trounced in the presidential election. Nevertheless, the superdelgate number passed the 600 mark by 1988. The Jesse Jackson campaign, especially the massive victory over Dukakis on Super Tuesday, electrified the party and the country. Jackson won 7 million primary votes in 1988, more than Mondale won as the nominee in 1984. Many party regulars were gripped with panic, and some superdelegates organized a stop-Jackson movement within the party. Jackson protested the role of superdelegates, but his challenge went unheeded. Party leaders continued to look for ways to blunt the growing power of grassroots movements. While they could not stop voters from voting, they could dilute the impact of the reform movements by manufacturing added voters as a countervailing force.

Mondale was quite open about the undemocratic aims of the superdelegate system. In a number of talks, he acknowledged that superdelegates were created with the explicit aim of preventing voter insurgencies. He espoused his anti-democratic sentiments in the New York Times, February 2, 1992, where he called for expansion of superdelgate numbers:

“The election is the business of the people. But the nomination is more properly the business of the parties….The problem lies in the reforms that were supposed to open the nominating process….Party leaders have lost the power to screen candidates and select a nominee. The solution is to reduce the influence of the primaries and boost the influence of the party leaders….The superdelgate category established within the Democratic Party after 1984 allows some opportunity for this, but should be strengthened.”

Today, faced with enthusiastic, grassroots support for Barack Obama, Hilary Clinton now espouses the old Mondale position (in the guarded, euphemistic language of a candidate), pitting the party regulars against the danger of the popular vote. I do not intend here to compare the merits of the candidates. But there is a question of principle involved in the superdelgate controversy. The very integrity of our elections is at stake. No vote is safe when a self-appointed group can nullify the results of a primary election that displeases them.

When Obama recently told a reporter that he thinks superdelegates should respect the wishes of the primary voters, Clinton took exception. “Superdelegates are by design supposed to exercise independent judgment,” she said. She also claimed that Obama’s view is “contrary to what the definition of superdelegate has historically been.” Historically she is right, of course. Superdelegates were never expected to respect the integrity of elections. But are we compelled today to embrace a system that was corrupt in its very design? Should voters be supervised, and finally overruled, when the superdelegates disagree with their wishes?

All Democratic members of the House and Senate become superdelegates automatically. Let us not forget that George Bush led the vast majority of Democrats by the nose into pre-emptive war, implicating most of the current superdelegates in the biggest catastrophe of recent decades. What makes these individuals wiser than nurses, technicians, custodians, lawyers, teachers, athletes, fire fighters, proprietors-all who voted in good faith in the recent primary? Why don’t the superdelegates do the job they were elected to do-end the war-and let the voters do their job in the primaries-select the next nominee?

And finally, what is the difference between superdelegate intervention in the outcome of the primary and the right-wing intervention in Florida in 2000, when Republican judges stopped the counting of votes, and appointed Bush as President? How many times will the loser in an election be imposed on the electorate?

Superdelgate Intervention Unconstitutional

Even critics of superdelegate deals tend to underestimate the gravity of the issue. In its very essence, the superdelegate system is unconstitutional. It destroys the right of primary voters to choose their own nominee. It offends the principle of one person one vote. In three primary cases (Nixon v. Herndon, 1927, Nixon v. Condon, 1932, Smith v. Allwright, 1944) the Supreme Court affirmed that the right to vote in a primary (a right which includes the right to be counted and respected), is protected by the Constitution. Officials cannot legally circumvent the vote. These were discrimination cases, but the arguments apply directly to the superdelegate situation in the Democratic primary.

Up to a point, a political party is master of its own house. But no party, or group within a party, can legally tamper with primary results. In Terry v. Adams (1953), the Court ruled against the “Jay Bird Association,” a group of powerful white Democrats who tried to create a private enforcement process within the Democratic primary. Justice Clark ruled that “any part of the machinery for choosing officials becomes subject to the Constitution’s restraints.”

The superdelegate system flouts the very purpose for which primaries were conceived. “Fighting” Bob LaFollette, the Wisconsin progressive who organized the first primaries in 1903, hated boss-controlled conventions. The aim of the primaries is to remove the nominations from the hands of professionals and the wealthy donors whom professionals obey. The superdelegate issue should not be resolved through deals or negotiations. The integrity of elections is not negotiable. The superdelegate system deserves to be abolished.

Oh yes, there is one small practical consideration, an afterthought perhaps. If the superdelegates, in their arrogance, defy the majority will of the voters, the stain on the Democratic Party nominee-Obama or Clinton-would nearly destroy the chances for victory in November. The Party would be divided. Idealistic voters would be disillusioned. And McCain, who happens to be associated with electoral reform (McCain backed Arizona’s Clean Money system) could easily turn superdelegate meddling into a scandal. The Republican Party has no superdelegates.

Respecting the will of the voters is a precondition to unity in the Democratic Party and victory in November.

[Paul Rockwell, formerly assistant professor of philosophy at Midwestern University (Wichita Falls, TX), is a national columnist who lives in the Bay Area. His essays have appeared in the San Francisco Bay Guardian, San Francisco Chronicle, Sacramento Bee, Baltimore Sun, Utne Reader, The Nation, and a host of alternative weeklies. Currently, Rockwell writes regular columns for In Motion Magazine.]


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Saturday, February 16, 2008

Imus Is Right: The Dubster & The Dickster (And Their Minions) Are War Criminals!

"Taxi To The Darkside," Alex Gibney's documentary about U. S. interrogation techniques from Afghanistan to Iraq to Guantanamo doesn't have a happy ending. If it's not bad enough with waterboarding, our side practices cruel and unusual punishment in the form of sensory deprivation. Combine that with sleep deprivation and other kindnesses, the result is war crimes. Gibney's film introduced me to Professor Alfred McCoy and the history of torture by our military and CIA interrogators. If this is (fair & balanced) national shame, so be it.

[x HNN (History News Network)]
The U.S. Has a History of Using Torture
By Alfred W. McCoy

In April 2004, Americans were stunned when CBS broadcast those now-notorious photographs from Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, showing hooded Iraqis stripped naked while U.S. soldiers stood by smiling. As this scandal grabbed headlines around the globe, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld insisted that the abuses were "perpetrated by a small number of U.S. military," whom New York Times’ columnist William Safire soon branded "creeps"--a line that few in the press had reason to challenge.

When I looked at these photos, I did not see snapshots of simple brutality or a breakdown in military discipline. After more than a decade of studying the Philippine military’s torture techniques for a monograph published by Yale back 1999, I could see the tell-tale signs of the CIA’s psychological methods. For example, that iconic photo of a hooded Iraqi with fake electrical wires hanging from his extended arms shows, not the sadism of a few “creeps,” but instead the two key trademark’s of the CIA’s psychological torture. The hood was for sensory disorientation. The arms were extended for self-inflicted pain. It was that simple; it was that obvious.

After making that argument in an op-ed for the Boston Globe two weeks after CBS published the photos, I began exploring the historical continuity, the connections, between the CIA torture research back in the 1950s and Abu Ghraib in 2004. By using the past to interrogate the present, I published a book titled A Question of Torture last January that tracks the trail of an extraordinary historical and institutional continuity through countless pages of declassified documents. The findings are disturbing and bear directly upon the ongoing bitter debate over torture that culminated in the enactment of the Military Commissions law just last October.

From 1950 to 1962, the CIA led a secret research effort to crack the code of human consciousness, a veritable Manhattan project of the mind with costs that reached a billion dollars a year. Many have heard about the most outlandish and least successful aspect of this research -- the testing of LSD on unsuspecting subjects and the tragic death of a CIA employee, Dr. Frank Olson, who jumped to his death from a New York hotel after a dose of this drug. This Agency drug testing, the focus of countless sensational press accounts and a half-dozen major books, led nowhere.

But obscure CIA-funded behavioral experiments, outsourced to the country’s leading universities, produced two key findings, both duly and dully reported in scientific journals, that contributed to the discovery of a distinctly American form of torture: psychological torture. With funding from Canada’s Defense Research Board, famed Canadian psychologist Dr. Donald O. Hebb found that he could induce a state akin to psychosis in just 48 hours. What had the doctor done—drugs, hypnosis, electroshock? No, none of the above.

For two days, student volunteers at McGill University, where Dr. Hebb was chair of Psychology, simply sat in comfortable cubicles deprived of sensory stimulation by goggles, gloves, and ear muffs. One of Hebb’s subjects, University of California-Berkeley English professor Peter Dale Scott, has described the impact of this experience in his 1992 epic poem, “Listening to the Candle”:

nothing in those weeks added up
yet the very aimlessness

preconditioning my mind…

of sensory deprivation

as a paid volunteer

in the McGill experiment

for the US Air Force

(two CIA reps at the meeting)

my ears sore from their earphones’

amniotic hum my eyes

under two bulging halves of ping pong balls

arms covered to the tips with cardboard tubes

those familiar hallucination

I was the first to report

as for example the string

of cut-out paper men

emerging from a manhole

in the side of a snow-white hill

distinctly two-dimensional

Dr. Hebb himself reported that after just two to three days of such isolation “the subject’s very identity had begun to disintegrate.” If you compare a drawing of Dr. Hebb’s student volunteers published in “Scientific American” with later photos of Guantanamo detainees, the similarity is, for good reason, striking.

During the 1950s as well, two eminent neurologists at Cornell Medical Center working for the CIA found that the KGB’s most devastating torture technique involved, not crude physical beatings, but simply forcing the victim to stand for days at time—while the legs swelled, the skin erupted in suppurating lesions, the kidneys shut down, hallucinations began. Again, it you look at those hundreds of photos from Abu Ghraib you will see repeated use of this method, now called “stress positions.”

After codification in its 1963 KUBARK manual, the CIA spent the next thirty years propagating these torture techniques within the US intelligence community and among anti-communist allies across Asia and Latin America.

Although the Agency trained military interrogators from across Latin America, our knowledge of the actual torture techniques comes from a single handbook for a Honduran training session, the CIA’s “Human Resources Exploitation Manual — 1983.” To establish control at the outset the questioner should, the CIA instructor tells his Honduran trainees, “manipulate the subject’s environment, to create unpleasant or intolerable situations, to disrupt patterns of time, space, and sensory perception.” To effect this psychological disruption, this 1983 handbook specified techniques that seem strikingly similar to those outlined 20 years earlier in the Kubark Manual and those that would be used 20 years later at Abu Ghraib.

After the Cold War

When the Cold War came to a close, Washington resumed its advocacy of human rights, ratifying the UN Convention Against Torture in 1994 that banned the infliction of “severe” psychological and physical pain. On the surface, the United States had apparently resolved the tension between its anti-torture principles and its torture practices.

Yet when President William Clinton sent this UN Convention to Congress for ratification in 1994, he included language drafted six years earlier by the Reagan administration—with four detailed diplomatic “reservations” focused on just one word in the convention’s 26-printed pages. That word was “mental.”

Significantly, these intricately-constructed diplomatic reservations re-defined torture, as interpreted by the United States, to exclude sensory deprivation and self-inflicted pain—the very techniques the CIA had refined at such great cost. Of equal import, this definition was reproduced verbatim in domestic legislation enacted to give legal force to the UN Convention--first in Section 2340 of the US Federal Code and then in the War Crimes Act of 1996.

Remember that obscure number--Section 2340—for, as we will see, it is the key to unlocking the meaning of the controversial Military Commissions Law enacted by the US Congress just last September.

In effect, Washington had split the UN Convention down the middle, banning physical torture but exempting psychological abuse. By failing to repudiate the CIA’s use of torture, while adopting a UN convention that condemned its practice, the United States left this contradiction buried like a political land mine ready to detonate with such phenomenal force, just 10 years later, in the Abu Ghraib scandal.

War on Terror

Right after his public address to a shaken nation on September 11, 2001, President Bush gave his White House staff wide secret orders, saying, “I don’t care what the international lawyers say, we are going to kick some ass.”

In the months that followed, Administration attorneys translated their president’s otherwise unlawful orders into U.S. policy into three controversial, neo-conservative legal doctrines: (1.) the president is above the law, (2.) torture is legally acceptable, and (3.) the US Navy base at Guantanamo Bay is not US territory.

To focus on the single doctrine most germane to the history of psychological torture, Assistant Attorney General Jay Bybee found grounds, in his now notorious August 2002 memo, for exculpating any CIA interrogators who tortured, but later claimed their intention was information instead of pain. Moreover, by parsing the UN and US definitions of torture as “severe” physical or mental pain, Bybee concluded that pain equivalent to “organ failure” was legal—effectively allowing torture right up to the point of death.

Less visibly, the administration began building a global gulag for torture at Abu Ghraib, Bagram, Guantanamo, and a half-dozen additional sites worldwide. In February 2002, the White House assured the CIA that the administration’s public pledge to abide by spirit of the Geneva Conventions did not apply to its operatives; and, significantly, it allowed the Agency ten “enhanced” interrogation methods designed by Agency psychologists that included “water boarding.”

Waterboarding

Over the past three years, this term “water boarding” has surfaced periodically in press accounts of CIA interrogation without any real understanding of psychologically devastating impact of this seemingly benign method. It has a venerable lineage, first appearing in a 1541 French judicial handbook, where it was called “Torturae Gallicae Ordinariae” or “Standard Gallic Torture.” But it would now become, under the War on Terror, what CIA director Porter Goss called, in March 2005 congressional testimony, a “professional interrogation technique.”

There are several methods for achieving water boarding’s perverse effect of drowning in open air: most frequently, by making the victim lie prone and then constricting breathing with a wet cloth, a technique favored by both the French Inquisition and the CIA; or, alternatively, by forcing water directly and deeply into the lungs, as French paratroopers did during the Algerian War.

After French soldiers used the technique on Henri Alleg during the Battle for Algiers in 1957, this journalist wrote a moving description that turned the French people against both torture and the Algerian War. “I tried,” Alleg wrote, “by contracting my throat, to take in as little water as possible and to resist suffocation by keeping air in my lungs for as long as I could. But I couldn’t hold on for more than a few moments. I had the impression of drowning, and a terrible agony, that of death itself, took possession of me.”

Let us think about the deeper meaning of Alleg’s sparse words--“a terrible agony, that of death itself.” As the water blocks air to the lungs, the human organism’s powerful mammalian diving reflex kicks in, and the brain is wracked by horrifically painful panic signals--death, death, death. After a few endless minutes, the victim vomits out the water, the lungs suck air, and panic subsides. And then it happens again, and again, and again--each time inscribing the searing trauma of near death in human memory.

Guantanamo

In late 2002, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld appointed General Geoffrey Miller to command Guantanamo with wide latitude for interrogation, making this prison an ad hoc behavioral laboratory. Moving beyond the CIA’s original attack on sensory receptors universal to all humans, Guantanamo’s interrogators stiffened the psychological assault by exploring Arab “cultural sensitivity” to sexuality, gender identity, and fear of dogs. General Miller also formed Behavioral Science Consultation teams of military psychologists who probed each detainee for individual phobias, such as fear of dark or attachment to mother.

Through this total three-phase attack on sensory receptors, cultural identity, and individual psyche, Guantanamo perfected the CIA’s psychological paradigm. Significantly, after regular inspections of Guantanamo from 2002 the 2004, the Red Cross reported: “The construction of such a system…cannot be considered other than an intentional system of cruel, unusual and degrading treatment and a form of torture.”

Abu Ghraib

These enhanced interrogation policies, originally used only against top Al Qaeda operatives, soon proliferated to involve thousands of ordinary Iraqis when Baghdad erupted in a wave of terror bombings during mid 2003 that launched the resistance to the US occupation. After a visit from the Guantanamo chief General Miller in September 2003, the U.S. commander for Iraq, General Ricardo Sanchez, issued orders for sophisticated psychological torture.

As you read the following extract from those orders, please look for the defining attributes of psychological torture--specifically, sensory disorientation, self-inflicted pain, and that recent innovation, attacks on Arab cultural sensitivities.

U. Environmental Manipulation: Altering the environment to create moderate discomfort (e.g. adjusting temperatures or introducing an unpleasant smell)…

V. Sleep Adjustment: Adjusting the sleeping times of the detainee (e.g. reversing the sleeping cycles from night to day).

X. Isolation: Isolating the detainee from other detainees ... [for] 30 days.

Y. Presence of Military Working Dogs: Exploits Arab fear of dogs while maintaining security during interrogations…

AA. Yelling, Loud Music, and Light Control: Used to create fear, disorient detainee and prolong capture shock...

CC. Stress Positions: Use of physical posturing (sitting, standing, kneeling, prone, etc.

Indeed, my review of the hundreds of still-classified photos taken by soldiers at Abu Ghraib reveals, not random, idiosyncratic acts from separate, sadistic minds, but just three psychological torture techniques repeated over and over ad nauseum: hooding for sensory deprivation; short shackling, long shackling, and enforced standing for self inflicted pain; and dogs, total nudity, and sexual humiliation for that recent innovation, exploitation of Arab cultural sensitivity. It is no accident that Private Lynndie England was photographed leading an Iraqi detainee leashed like a dog.

After Abu Ghraib

Let’s look at the aftermath of the Abu Ghraib scandal, seeing how America moved by degrees to legalization of these CIA psychological torture techniques. Confronted by public anger over detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib, the Bush White House has fought back by defending torture as a presidential prerogative. By contrast, an ad hoc civil society coalition of courts, press, and human rights groups has mobilized to stop the abuse.

In a dramatic denouement of June 2006, the US Supreme Court decided in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld that Bush’s military commissions were illegal because they did not meet the requirement, under common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, that Guantanamo detainees be tried with “all the judicial guarantees…recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples.”

Then on September 6, in a dramatic bid to legalize his now-illegal policies in the aftermath of the Hamdan decision, President Bush announced he was transferring fourteen top Al Qaeda captives from secret CIA prisons to Guantanamo Bay. At once both repudiating and legitimating past abuses, Bush denied that he had authorized “torture” while simultaneously defending the CIA's use of a tough “alternative set of procedures” to extract “vital information.” To allow what he called the “CIA program” to go forward, President Bush announced that he was sending legislation to Congress that would legalize the same presidential prerogatives in treating detainees that had been challenged by the Supreme Court.

At first, Bush’s bill seemed to arouse strong opposition by three Republican veterans on the Senate Armed Services Committee--Senators Graham, McCain, and Warner. But after tense, daylong negotiations inside Vice President Cheney’s Senate office on September 21, these Republican partisans reached a compromise that sailed through Congress within a week, and without any amendments, to become the Military Commissions Law 2006.

Among its many objectionable features, this law strips detainees of their habeas corpus rights, sanctions endless detention without trial, and allows the use of tortured testimony before Guantanamo’s Military Commissions. Most significantly, this law allows future CIA interrogators ample latitude for use of psychological torture by using, verbatim, the narrow definition of “severe mental pain” the U.S. first adopted back in 1994 when it ratified the UN Convention Against Torture and enacted a complementary Federal law, Section 2340 of the US code, to give force to this treaty.

The current law’s elusive definition of “severe mental pain” is concealed under Para. 950 V, Part B, Sub-Section B on page 70 of the 96-page “Military Commissions Law 2006” that reads: “Severe Mental Pain or Suffering Defined: In this section, this term ‘severe mental pain…’ has the meaning given that term in Sect. 2340 (2) of Title 18 [of the Federal code].”

And what is that definition in section 2340? This is, of course, the same highly limiting definition the US first adopted back in 1994-95 when it ratified the UN Anti-Torture Convention.

Simply put, this legislation’s highly restricted standard for severe mental suffering does not prohibit any aspect of the sophisticated torture techniques that the CIA has refined, over the past half-century, into a total assault on the human psyche.

To make this point clear, let us compare the law’s very narrow, four-part standard for “severe mental suffering” with the CIA’s psychological techniques to see which, if any, of the agency’s actual methods are banned. Under this law, Section 2340, there are only four practices that constitute, in any way, “severe mental pain,” including: drug injection; death threats; threats against another; and extreme physical pain.

In actual practice, this definition does not ban any of the dozens of CIA psychological methods developed over five decades, which include:

--First, self-inflicted pain, via enforced standing and so-called “stress positions” which are cruel contortions enforced by shackling.

--Second, sensory disorientation through temporal and environmental manipulation exemplified sleep deprivation, protracted isolation, and extremes of heat and cold, light and dark, noise and silence, isolation and intensive interrogation.

--Third, attacks on cultural identity through sexual humiliation and use of dogs.

--Fourth, attacks on individual psyche by exploiting fears and phobias.

--Fifth, hybrid methods such as water boarding.

--Sixth and most importantly, creative combinations of all these methods which otherwise might seem, individually, banal if not benign.

If you wish an analogy to make the curious exclusionary logic of this legislation perfectly clear, it would be as if US homicide law had taken a leaf from the popular board game “Clue” and defined murder as only those killings “done by Mrs. White, in the Conservatory, with the Candlestick”—thus, by its omissions, legalizing all murders done by more conventional means such as poison, pistols, rifles, knives, ropes, clubs, or bombs.

To test my critical, perhaps overly cynical assessment of this new law, let us ask whether this new law bans the most extreme of the CIA’s “enhanced” methods--water boarding. While the White House has refused comment, Vice President Cheney stated recently that using “a dunk in water” to extract information was “a no-brainer for me.” As the administration’s leader on interrogation policy, Cheney’s words make clear, despite White House denials, that water boarding is legal under the new law.

By its omissions, this legislation has effectively legalized the CIA’s right to use methods that the international community, embodied in the Red Cross and the UN Human Rights Committee, considers psychological torture. For the first time in the 200 years since 1791 when United States ratified the Fifth Amendment banning self-incrimination, Congress has passed a law allowing coerced testimony into US courts.

The implications of this Military Commissions Law are profound and will most certainly face legal challenge. Indeed, just a few weeks ago seven retired Federal judges challenged this law before the US Court of Appeals in Washington, DC, saying that it has “one specific and fundamental flaw”: i.e., it allows the military tribunals to accept evidence obtained by torture. But when this case reaches the Supreme Court, we cannot expect that a more conservative Roberts court will overturn this law with the same ringing rhetoric that we have seen in two recent landmark decisions, Rasul v. Bush and Hamdan v. Rumsfeld.

Conclusion

If this law stands, with its provisions for torture and drumhead justice, then the United States will suffer continuing damage to its moral leadership in the international community. Looking through a glass darkly into the future, Washington may try to return to that convenient contradiction that marked US policy during the Cold War: public compliance with human rights treaties and secret torture in contravention of those same diplomatic conventions.

Yet the world is no longer blind to these once-clandestine CIA methods and this attempt at secrecy will likely produce another scandal similar to Abu Ghraib. But next time our protestations of innocence will ring hollow and the damage to US prestige will be even greater.

[Alfred McCoy is J.R.W. Smail Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the author of A Question of Torture: CIA Interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2006).]

Copyright © 2008 History News Network


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What Makes A Dittohead Tick?

The one element that defines Limbaugh, Hannity, Coulter, and their ilk is hate. They have raised hate to an art form. Their listeners (and readers) live to hate. They hate Hillary. They hate Obama. More incredibly, they hate McCain. As FDR said of their predecessors in the 1930s, "They hate me and I welcome their hatred." Jim Shea is right. It's not talk radio, it's hate radio. If today's merchants of hate knew this blog existed, they would target it for hatred too. If this is (fair & balanced) acrimony, so be it.

[x The Hartford Courant]
Who Will The Haters Love?
By Jim Shea

I'm worried about hate radio.

It could be losing its influence.

If hate radio loses its influence, it will lose its audience. If it loses its audience, it will lose its sponsors. If it loses its sponsors, well, I'm not sure I want to live in a country where people can disagree without hating. I mean, debate without hate is so, I don't know, so lily-livered, so PBS.

Of course, the maestros of hate radio — the Michael Savages, the Glenn Becks, the Big Kahuna of Hate his own self, Rush Limbaugh — have only themselves to blame for their predicament.

In the race for the Republican presidential nomination, they put all their hate in one basket and lost big time. You would think they would have been savvy enough to hedge their hate, just in case it became necessary to switch hatreds in midstream. But they weren't.

No, the boys gave all their man love to Mitt Romney, and when he dropped out of the race — after concluding that discretion was the better part of remaining wealthy — they were left at the altar.

The obvious thing for Rush and his supporting cast to do would be to back the presumptive GOP nominee, John McCain. That, however, is not as easy as it sounds.

What got McCain condemned to hate radio hell is his position on immigration. In hate radio's view, McCain doesn't hate the 12 million or so illegals in this country enough to be a real conservative, not to mention American.

So, for the mullahs of the microphones to start supporting McCain, they would have to ease up on their hatred of illegal immigrants, and that's just not going to happen. Life's too short.

Hate radio must not be allowed to fall silent.

If hate radio loses its voice, where will listeners go for their daily infusion of vitriol? "Prairie Home Companion"?

If hate radio fades to static, where will we turn for the half truth? Distortion? Mean-spirited humor?

And what would become of fear-mongering? Tell me life without fear-mongering isn't a frightening thought.

What to do?

Here is my suggestion:

I think all the hate-radio jocks, along with all the TV talking-head haters, should turn on each other.

Seriously, these people are not only accomplished haters but are themselves easy to hate.

We're not just talking Limbaugh and Savage here, we're also looking at the likes of Bill O'Reilly, Laura Ingraham, Sean Hannity and the undisputed Queen of All Hate, Ann Coulter. This group would push each other to new levels of viciousness, which would be very entertaining, which is the point of hate media, right?

The hatefest would attract not only the regular hate-radio audience but people from the other end of the political spectrum, who would tune in to see people they hate hate each other.

Like I said, I'm concerned about hate radio. I hope this helps.

[Jim Shea is a political humor columnist for the Hartford Courant.]

Copyright © 2008 The Hartford Courant


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Friday, February 15, 2008

Hack(neyed), Yes! Let's Hear It For Trite Epression

A cliché, according to Dictionary.com is "a trite, stereotyped expression; a sentence or phrase, usually expressing a popular or common thought or idea, that has lost originality, ingenuity, and impact by long overuse."

A nominee for the 2007 Cliché of the Year is "Take it to the next level." Other nominees were "Synergies," "Leverage," "Been there for me," and "The Bottom Line."

More Googling produced the 2004 Cliché of the Year: "It is what it is." One definition of what that means is in a song written by John Barlow, former lyricist for the Grateful Dead. His song is titled, "It Is What It Is." Some sample lyrics:


"If you need an explanation,
there's a quick and easy answer
Stop thinking for a moment and give this one a try
'Cause it is what it is, what it is, what it is, what it is."

If this is (fair & balanced) unoriginality, so be it.

[x (Peoria) Journal Star]
A trite and true column
By Kirk Wessler

My back was against the wall.

Super Bowl Sunday was coming at me like a runaway freight train. My mind was drawing the proverbial blank on a column in front of the big game. It was like fourth-and-20, deep in my own territory, and time was running out. Deadline stared me in the face. There was no tomorrow.

I called Dr. Cliché for help.

"I'm ready to give 110 percent," he said.
Dr. Cliché, a.k.a. licensed psychologist Dr. Don Powell, is America's go-to guy for cliches. In fact, he wrote the book on clichés, Best Sports Cliches Ever. It lists 1,771 of the little buggers we love to hate.

Especially during Super Bowl Week, which is like the world's biggest annual cliché convention.

Sports reporters every year tear their hair out, trying to get players and coaches to say something we haven't heard before. This is why Media Day, conducted on Tuesday of Super Bowl Week, has turned into the circus.

"Because of the media blitz, the players are up to their eyeballs in answering questions," Dr. Cliché explained. "So what comes off the top of their heads, without thinking, is the cliché."

Some media outlets will stop at nothing in the quest to elicit a fresh response. Take TV Azteca, which sent a woman in full bridal gown to propose marriage to Patriots quarterback Tom Brady.

"What did he say?" Dr. Cliché asked.

"He told her, 'I'm a one-woman man,' " I replied.

"Sounds like he's taking them one at a time," Dr. Cliché analyzed.

That's par for the course with the Patriots.

Topping the charts for cliché use is Pats head coach Bill Belichick, whom Dr. Cliché called "the Master of Take 'Em One At A Time."

"His team personifies his mantra," the doctor continued. "Everything they say, it's all pretty much cliché. 'We play within ourselves.' 'We're a blue-collar team.' 'We have the utmost respect for the Giants.' You can go on and on."

Every year at this time, Dr. Cliché compiles a list of the "tried, trite and true" phrases he predicts will be heard most frequently. Like clockwork, at the beginning of the week, he delivered the "Top 10 Clichés for Super Bowl XLII." Don't stop me if you've heard these before:

1. "In pursuit of perfection." (This was the doctor's Cliché of the Year.)

2. "Come game time, Brady will be good to go."

3. "There's a lot of love in our locker room."

4. "It's David vs. Goliath."

5. "Patriots are playing with a lot of swagger."

6. "We're a blue-collar team."

7. "They get contributions from a lot of people."

8. "Both teams need to keep their emotions in check."

9. "Belichick and (Giants coach Tom) Coughlin are X's and O's men."

10. "We need to avoid all the distractions this week."

Dr. Cliché explained clichés are not confined to sports, although sports clichés rule the world.

"We criticize their use, yet we use them ourselves," he said. "Fifty percent of everyday conversation, in the board room or on the field, is sports cliches. 'One on one.' 'Answer the bell.' 'Drop the ball.' 'Time to punt.' We'd have trouble communicating if we didn't have cliches. Cliches are the right word, at the right time, in the right place."

In other words, I guess, clichés are a necessary evil. Like picking a winner of the Super Bowl.

Dr. Cliché is a Giants fan. I asked him to pick with his head instead of his heart in this showdown between the ultimate juggernaut and the quintessential underdog.

"I'm actually going with the upset and picking the Giants by 3 points," Dr. Cliché said.

He went on to explain the Patriots might be uptight trying to become the first team since the 1972 Dolphins to go wire-to-wire without a loss, that this game is everything or nothing for the Pats and there's a lot of pressure on them, while the Giants are sure to play with intensity and they're not about to roll over and play dead, and ...

Well, you get the picture.

Editor's note: No clichés were harmed during the writing of this column, nor were any brain cells damaged. The English language might be another story.

[Kirk Wessler is Journal Star executive sports editor/columnist.]

Copyright © 2008 Journal Star


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Thursday, February 14, 2008

Torture? At Least We Didn't Waterboard Him!

Jimmy Breslin wrote a New Journalism novel in 1971 entitled, The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight. Breslin fictionalized the New York mob family headed by Joe Gallo. The Bushies are a present-day gang that can't shoot straight. Jimmy Breslin, the nation turns its longing eyes to you. In the meantime, Nick Kristof targets Bush administration torture. If this is (fair & balanced) national shame, so be it.

[x NY Fishwrap]
When We Torture
By Nicholas D. Kristof

The most famous journalist you may never have heard of is Sami al-Hajj, an Al Jazeera cameraman who is on a hunger strike to protest abuse during more than six years in a Kafkaesque prison system.

Mr. Hajj’s fortitude has turned him into a household name in the Arab world, and his story is sowing anger at the authorities holding him without trial.

That’s us. Mr. Hajj is one of our forgotten prisoners in Guantánamo Bay.

If the Bush administration appointed an Under Secretary of State for Antagonizing the Islamic World, with advice from a Blue Ribbon Commission for Sullying America’s Image, it couldn’t have done a more systematic job of discrediting our reputation around the globe. Instead of using American political capital to push for peace in the Middle East or Darfur, it is using it to force-feed Mr. Hajj.

President Bush is now moving forward with plans to try six Guantánamo prisoners before a military tribunal, rather than hold a regular trial. That will call new attention to abuses in Guantánamo and sow more anti-Americanism around the world.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice pushed last year to close Guantánamo because of its wretched impact on American foreign policy. But they lost the argument to Alberto Gonzales and Dick Cheney. So America spends millions of dollars bolstering public diplomacy and sponsoring chipper radio and television broadcasts to the Islamic world — and then undoes it all with Guantánamo.

Suppose the Iranian government arrested and beat Katie Couric, held her virtually incommunicado for six years and promised to release her only if she would spy for Iran. In such circumstances, Iranian investments in public diplomacy toward the United States wouldn’t get very far, either.

After Mr. Hajj was arrested in Afghanistan in December 2001, he was beaten, starved, frozen and subjected to anal searches in public to humiliate him, his lawyers say. The U.S. government initially seems to have confused him with another cameraman, and then offered vague accusations that he had been a financial courier and otherwise assisted extremist groups.

“There is a significant amount of information, both unclassified and classified, which supports continued detention of Sami al-Hajj by U.S. forces,” said Cmdr. Jeffrey Gordon, a Pentagon spokesman, adding that the detainees are humanely treated and “receive exceptional medical care.”

Military officials did acknowledge that Mr. Hajj was not considered a potential suicide bomber and probably would have been released long ago if he had just “come clean” by responding in greater detail to the allegations and showing remorse.

Mr. Hajj’s lawyers contend that he has already responded in great detail to every allegation. One indication that the government doesn’t take its own charges seriously, the lawyers say, is that the U.S. offered Mr. Hajj a deal: immediate freedom if he would spy on Al Jazeera. Mr. Hajj refused.

Most Americans, including myself, originally gave President Bush the benefit of the doubt and assumed that the inmates truly were “the worst of the worst.” But evidence has grown that many are simply the unluckiest of the unluckiest.

Some were aid workers who were kidnapped by armed Afghan groups and sold to the C.I.A. as extremists. One longtime Sudanese aid worker employed by an international charity, Adel Hamad, was just released by the U.S. in December after five years in captivity. A U.S. Army major reviewing his case called it “unconscionable.”

Mr. Hajj began his hunger strike more than a year ago, so twice daily he is strapped down and a tube is wound up his nose and down his throat to his stomach. Sometimes a lubricant is used, and sometimes it isn’t, so his throat and nose have been rubbed raw. Sometimes a tube still bloody from another hunger striker is used, his lawyers say.

“It’s really a regime to make it as painful and difficult as possible,” said one of his lawyers, Zachary Katznelson.

Mr. Hajj cannot bend his knees because of abuse he received soon after his arrest, yet the toilet chair he was prescribed was removed — making it excruciating for him to use the remaining squat toilet. He is allowed a Koran, but his glasses were confiscated so he cannot read it.

All this is inhumane, but also boneheaded. Guantánamo itself does far more damage to American interests than Mr. Hajj could ever do.

To stand against torture and arbitrary detention is not to be squeamish. It is to be civilized.

[Nicholas D. Kristof writes op-ed columns that appear twice each week in The New York Times. A two-time Pulitzer Prize winner (shared the 1990 prize for reportage on the democracy movement in China with his wife, Sheryl WuDunn, and again for his reportage about Darfur in 2006) he previously was associate managing editor of The Times, responsible for the Sunday Times.]

Copyright © 2008 The New York Times Company


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