Alberto Gonzales: “whacked like a piñata”

Syndicated columnist and member of the San Diego Union-Tribune editorial board Ruben Navarrette Jr. has been fluffing up Alberto Gonzales a lot recently (March 7, March 21), so it should come as no suprise that he’s continuing to shovel muck today in a special CNN commentary.  What’s shocking is the entirely new level to which he takes the insanity.

To be up front, there’s a halfway legitimate point in all of Navarrette’s mess, which is that accepting Gonzales as a scapegoat when it’s the White House and Karl Rove behind this whole mess, is not a victory.  I’m all for Rove paying for what he did as well.  But he frames his whole argument in disgusting racist terms and tries to marginalize anyone who would have a gripe against “an honorable public servant … [and] … a straight shooter” by assuming that there’s no way that criticism could be fair or justified.

He’s good enough to give us a rundown of the people who object to Gonzales’ performance as Attorney General and makes it pretty clear that the list at this point includes virtually everyone except President Bush.  But apparently that’s just because everyone is wrong, and most of them just hate a successful Hispanic.

Leading this lynch mob are white liberals who resent Gonzales because they can’t claim the credit for his life’s accomplishments and because they can’t get him to curtsy. Why should he? Gonzales doesn’t owe them a damn thing.

Yes, that’s right. It’s all those racist white liberals who insist on keeping minorities down and can’t stand it when one of them gets power,  It’s because he doesn’t genuflect at the altar of white people that he’s hated.  It can’t possibly have anything to do with his actual job performance.  Or his systematic evisceration of the Constitution of the United States.  Which is, ultimately, where the racial argument breaks down horribly.  Navarrette would have us believe that Gonzales can’t possibly be getting criticism that’s not infused with racist bitterness.  But the flipside of this argument is that, because of his race, he gets a free pass.  Well I’m sorry, but that isn’t how it works.  You do the job and you answer for your performance.

He also argues that Democrats just pose “with mariachis as they nibble chips and salsa on Cinco De Mayo” while the real uplifting of the Hispanic community, entirely and solely in the form of Alberto Gonzales, has been done by George W. Bush.  While absurdly simplistic and not particularly based in any reality that I’m familiar with, it doesn’t have anything to do with the firings of U.S. Attorneys.

It’s telling that a Gonzales apologist wants to talk about anything except the issue at hand.  Navarrette dispenses quickly and easily with the actual substance of the US Attorney issue by laying it all on Karl Rove, then whips up an emotional frenzy over non-issues, because he knows discussing the real complaints would be a losing proposition.  Gonzales is responsible for the Justice Department, and has a long history of doing a poor job in that position.  Perhaps Navarette has a point if his argument is that this incident, if isolated, would not be grounds for Gonzales’ departure.  But that dodges the crux of the problem.  Alberto Gonzales became Attorney General in August of 2005, and in that time, the Justice Department has delivered less and less justice by the day.  That is a failure of the job, and if this incident is the straw that breaks the camel’s back, so be it.

The commentary closes with an ominous, if absurdly condescending in every direction, prediction for Democrats in 2008:

Well, if they succeed in running him off without a fair hearing, many Hispanics won’t forget the shoddy treatment afforded this grandson of Mexican immigrants. You watch. Democrats will have to intensify their efforts to win Hispanic votes in the 2008 elections. And there’s not that much chips and salsa on the planet.

It sounds to me as though the lesson being pitched here is that the color of Gonzales’ skin is more important than the substance of his job performance whether you approve or disapprove of the job performance.  Hispanics will quit the Democratic party en masse, Navarrette imagines, because Democrats aren’t defending the country, they’re attacking skin color.

If Gonzales wants a fair hearing, guess what? He can have one.  In a revelatory change of course since January of this year (coincidence?), Congress will actually conduct legitimate investigations.  All Gonzales has to do is show up and solemnly swear.  Except, of course, that George Bush, the hero of racial equality in this story remember, doesn’t want the truth to come out.  Doesn’t sound particularly helpful to the Gonzales cause to me.  But then again, I see Gonzales as a man, not a color.  Ruben Navarrette Jr. may want to try it sometime.

Charlie Brown on John Doolittle Hating Our Troops

(blogswarm and I agree on something else that can be said:

Charlie Brown (CA-04) $



– promoted by Brian Leubitz)

Just passing along an email I got from the Brown campaign.  The Lt. Col. is not a happy camper:

Last week, the House Appropriations Committee passed the FY’07 Emergency Supplemental Spending Bill (H.R. 1591), which would fund military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, improved veterans healthcare services and military readiness, repairs to Walter Reed Army Medical Center, and restore a crucial stream of funding to rural schools across the Western United States.

Rep. John Doolittle voted against the measure, which ties future U.S. aid to Iraq to a series of benchmarks laid out in a January 10th speech by President Bush. He also voted to strike language that would restrict the deployment of U.S. troops who are wounded, not properly equipped, or un-trained—offered as an amendment by the Committee’s ranking minority member, and Doolittle’s fellow DOJ corruption probe target Rep. Jerry Lewis.

  edit by brian: More over the flip.

The vote comes amidst mounting sectarian violence in Iraq , a resurgent Al Qaeda organization in Afghanistan , recent government reports describing the U.S. military at its lowest state of readiness since Vietnam , a VA system that is being overwhelmed by the influx of 1.6 million new veterans, and revelations of substandard conditions at military health facilities serving wounded combat troops.

  “Time and again, John Doolittle votes to send young people into combat while denying them the tools they need to succeed in their mission and the quality aftercare they’ve been promised, commented Lt. Col. Charlie Brown.  “Leaving those who defend America exposed to preventable death, and our military unprepared to deal with future security threats is beyond irresponsible—it’s completely indefensible.”

The Supplemental bill would also restore $400 million through the Forest Service’s Secure Rural Schools Program, which provides rural counties a portion of the revenue generated by timber and land sales in national forests—funding up to 1/3 or more of public school operating budgets, as well as conservation and infrastructure projects in communities across the Western states, and California’s 4th Congressional District in particular.

When the current program expired in September of last year, the Bush Administration proposed a five year reauthorization.  Congress failed to act in 2006.

“By letting the GOP controlled Congress fail to pass the crucial measure last year and voting against it again this year, Doolittle has left many of his constituents bracing for layoffs, teacher shortages, classroom overcrowding, and other problems,” Brown added.  “He may have promised a new course, but he’s delivering the same old pattern of neglect and misguided priorities.”

What else is there to say?

“The campaign goes on, the campaign goes on strongly”

Elizabeth Edwards is an amazing woman, simply amazing. Such brilliance, such grace, such empathy.

I’m glad to hear John Edwards will continue his campaign, although part of me wishes that his wife was the candidate. He is blessed to have such a partner. In both America’s, Elizabeth is in our thoughts and prayers.

As we continue our discussion about reforming our broken health care system, imagine if all Americans could count on the medical care Elizabeth Edwards will receive.

Minuteman Follies!

The power struggle “has absolutely stalled the movement from coast to coast,” Gilchrist said.

That is, Jim Gilchrist said it to an Orange County judge as he sues to retake sole control over Minuteman, Inc. So what exactly happened in court yesterday? Follow me after the flip for more…

From The OC Register:

An effort by Minuteman Project co-founder Jim Gilchrist to regain authority over the group Wednesday prompted a Superior Court judge to encourage the bickering sides to work out their differences.

But Gilchrist called the differences among the leaders of the illegal-immigration opponent group “irreconcilable.” Judge Randell Wilkinson is expected to rule within a week on whether control should be returned to the Aliso Viejo resident until a full trial takes place later this year. He also indicated the possibility of placing the group in a neutral receivership until that time.

So what has this racist, anti-immigrant “movement” been stalled over? Oh, that’s right- Gilchrist thinks he’s the sole member of The Minuteman Project’s board of directors, and that the other three directors were simply “advisors” with no real decision-making power.

So what do the other “directors” think about Gilchrist and his claims of sole control over Minuteman, Inc.? The Register has more:

The three directors being sued by Gilchrist said they tried unsuccessfully to get him to address concerns in December, and after his removal still tried to make the peace with him.

“I pleaded with him,” said one director, Huntington Beach’s Barbara Coe, founder of the long-standing California Coalition for Immigration Reform.

The three directors said they were still open to reaching an agreement with Gilchrist. But he made it clear such a deal wasn’t going to happen, especially since a lawyer for the three has contacted two federal agencies to alert them to possible wrongdoing.

Yes, you heard it right… The Wicked Witch of the West pleaded with him! It’s just too bad that all those secret bank accounts, missing funds, sloppy accounting, and donations that had been collected without the full board’s knowledge got in the way. And oh yeah, I’m sure that the bounced checks didn’t help either.

The judge is expected to rule within a week on whether Gilchrist can retake sole control over Minuteman, Inc. However, I just have a strange feeling that this trial won’t quite end the feud. Can anyone say, “APPEAL“? Still, this would be so sad… If it weren’t so DAMN HILARIOUS that these gawd awful racists are destroying their own empire of hate! So who’s getting the last laugh now?

hehe ; )

Come Wish Mike Lawson a Happy Birthday!

This just in from The Liberal OC! Mike Lawson’s birthday is TODAY, and they want YOU to celebrate:

Thursday is the usual day for our weekly Drinking Liberally event. It is also the day that we at TheLiberalOC and Drinking Liberally OC have decided to Celebrate Mike Lawson’s 26th Birthday, which was on Monday. Raise your spirits while you raise your glass, and share ideas while you share a pitcher and Celebrate Mike Lawson’s 26th Birthday. We will have cake and some other refreshments from Memphis while they last. That and the political discussion will be at no charge, the drinks are on you. So Join us:
This Thursday, 8:30 pm onward

at Memphis Bar, 201 N Broadway, Santa Ana (Artists Village) (map)

Now can we count on you to make Mike Lawson’s birthday extra special? Come on now, all you SoCal people! Come to Memphis (in Downtown Santa Ana), and wish Mike the happy birthday that he deserves! : )

Writing Online 101; Does the LA Times get ethics?

The San Francisco Chronicle has figure it out, why not the paper of record? Why can’t newspapers learn to link to what is cited in the online version? There is a bright-line and if you purposefully don’t cite it is unethical (unless you despise the site so much that you state your unwillingness to link to it).

This is unethical:

From Nov. 16 to Dec. 7, there are only a handful of e-mail messages, a fact that Talking Points Memo, a Web site that has been following the furor with microscopic attention, pointed out Wednesday morning.

An ethical publication would post:

From Nov. 16 to Dec. 7, there are only a handful of e-mail messages, a fact that Talking Points Memo, a Web site that has been following the furor with microscopic attention, pointed out Wednesday morning.

Will the LA Times follow the lead of Sfgate or of NYT?

(CA-45) Mary Bono-“undecided on climate change”

(No, she really isn’t… So what HAS she decided upon, other than supporting Bush and the wingnuts whenever they need her?-adtleft. Mary Bono is a shining case in point of the Human Rights Campaign’s myopic views. They refused to endorse Ron Oden in 2000, an openly gay black man, and have since endorsed Bono several times. She must go. – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

I’ve had nothing to say about Mary Bono since the election as she does precious little.  But today, her website proudly sports her CSPAN footage:  Mary Bono on climate change.  After the requisite meangirl sneer at Al Gore, Bono states she’s undecided on climate change.  Addressing the climate crisis may involve price hikes, which will cause people in her district to die of the heat.  Ergo, it’s just too hot to change our energy policy. 

She voted against strengthening FOIA this past week, still supports Bush on Iraq.  This is the real Mary Bono, and she is not an asset to the CA-45th.

Bono is allegedly a big GOP environmentalist, meaning she photo-ops with local green advocates, then votes with Bush/Cheney back in DC. 

Today, Mary Bono claimed that addressing our global climate crisis will mean certain death to the poor and weak in Palm Springs.  Republican social darwinism couldn’t be a factor?  It seems to escape Rep. Bono that energy policy costs can be offset by social welfare programs.  In fact, the seniors and the thousands of working poor in the CA-45th could use a break on their utility bills right now, never mind waiting to offset potential costs of a sane energy program.  Is it possible that California’s energy crisis was caused by Enron, and not by Al Gore? 

I doubt she has thought about it beyond verifying her current talking points with the leadership.  Bono does not expose herself to unscreened questioning.  Someone might ask her why Mary Bono’s one of the worst elected officials towards children and seniors.  But she does that compassionate conservative lipservice thing with the best of them.  Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

At the hearing’s end, Bono embraced the perspective of The Skeptical Environmentalist author, Dr. Bjørn Lomborg.  Apparently he was there as an advocate for the  “jury’s still out”  perspective.  Lomborg is not an environmentalist, nor a natural scientist of any kind.  He is a social scientist who writes about cost/benefit analysis.  His environmental policy book has been refuted, rebutted, and otherwise debunked by Nature, the Union of Concerned Scientists, and Grist.  This probably explains why Bono made her bizarre remarks to a near empty chamber.  None of the Democrats and few of the Republicans bothered to stay. 

WIth all of the joy of our new Congress, I can’t believe I still have to put up with this obedient GOP hack for my representative.  Mary Bono is the well paid person who actually complained about her son’s college costs on the floor of the House while slashing federal college aid by more than $14 billion.  Howie Klein explored her obtuse comments on that at DownWithTyranny, back when I still held out hope that we could replace her with a good Democrat.

Don’t yet know if Roth is running again yet, but please, netroots all, know that the CA-45th is worth a shot no matter what.  Despite the 45th’s heavy slant towards the GOP, Bono is a lightweight on policy and politics.  She puts the nothing in Do Nothing.  She gets reelected thanks to a 3 to 1 funding advantage, and because Sonny Bono was dearly loved, and the district only knows her as this:

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

These are serious times, made worse by Bush and his followers like Mary Bono.  2008 could be the year that Riverside County wakes up and demands a legislator equipped to serve the district and the country.  If you can give Bono any help out the door, please note it in the comments.  The Democrats of the Desert and other Dem clubs are suiting up for 2008.

Will a labor dispute disrupt Democrat’s party?

X-posted from California Notes

by Randy Bayne

Even on vacation in San Diego I can’t seem to keep away from labor and politics. The weather hasn’t been great. Today started out cool and windy, so we decided it would be a good day to travel into San Diego from where we have been staying in Del Mar and do some shopping and pre-convention reconnaissance. Marcie and I are both delegates to the State Democratic Convention in April.

Our first stop was at the hotel we will be staying at. We arrived to see a big sign being held by two members of Carpenters Local 1506. The sign read, “Shame on Hilton” and “labor dispute.” I would have pictures except that I had forgotten my camera back at the condo.

One of the carpenters has been with the union for 36 years, the other 4 years.

They said they were doing roving informational pickets at area hotels which subcontract with Morgan Development, a company they call a “rat.” According to a flyer they were handing out,

“A rat is a contractor that does not pay all of its employees prevailing wages, including either providing or making payments for family health care and pension benefits.”

  Some have criticized Local 1506 for their tactics, but there is nothing wrong with demanding fairness and equity in the workplace, especially when it comes to paying a fair wage that meets community standards. They do this by pressuring those who subcontract with offending employers. Not unlike consumers protesting against offensive TV shows by pressuring advertisers. Placing pressure on the one paying the bills can be a very effective tool.

Carpenters Local 1506 sees these protests as an obligation.

“Carpenters Local 1506 objects to substandard wage employers like Morgan Development working in the community,” says their flyer. “In our opinion the community ends up paying the tab for employee health care and low wages paid tend to lower general community standards… believes that Hilton has an obligation to the community to do all it can to see that area labor standards are met for construction of their resort.”

  This particular Hilton is a union employer. That’s one of the reasons the CDP chose it to house delegates. As a union employer, they should be committed to using subcontractors that are also union, or at the very least pay union scale or prevailing wages, health care, and pensions. So yes, “Shame on Hilton”.

Local 1506 is asking people to “tell Hilton that you want them to do all they can to change this situation and see that area labor standards are met for construction of their resort.”

Local 1506 has been doing this across the state. It is not likely that it will cause any disruption to the State Democratic Convention, but maybe it should. At the very least the CDP should express their concerns about a union hotel subcontracting with employers who do not pay prevailing wages. After all, the block of rooms the CDP reserved is sold out, and believe me, its no small amount of money.

Vote for Jerry!

(The voting ends on Sunday, March 25 at 9PM our time. – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

To the right, you’ll see an ad for John Kerry’s “March Madness”.  He’s having a vote for who he’s going to give money to.  So, go vote for our very own Jerry McNerney! As we all know, the GOP will be gunning for Jerry big-time, so he could use all the support he can get come November 2008. Go click on the ad and get your vote on!