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View Article  Update on New Mexico vote

 

In the most recent stifling of voters actually getting to see their votes counted accurately in New Mexico, ...   more »

View Article  More vote fraud in Ohio

Among the items in a growing list of anomalies, deceptions and strong intimations of vote fraud in Ohio come the ...   more »

View Article  More problems with the vote in New Mexico

New Mexico voting problems, continued

 

 

New Mexico is one of four states where the difference between the exit ...   more »

View Article  Counting votes matters in "safe" states, too

In response to an article about counting votes, I received an interesting analysis from a reader in North Carolina. ...   more »

View Article  Today's History Lesson: "Team B"

Back when George H. W. Bush was running for the White House, high-level Republicans were reportedly concerned about his perceived lack ...   more »

View Article  Urgent need for attorneys to help with Ohio Supreme Court Case contesting the election
[I am passing along the request below in hopes it will help:]
 
Greetings,
1. If you are an attorney, ...   more »
View Article  A 9/11 Aura for Incompetence and Worse

Sometimes it takes a youthful perspective to sum up a complex phenomenon.

 

Ever since September 11, 2001, there has been ample reason to wonder why then-New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani came out of 9/11 smelling like a rose.  Giuliani seems to have been given the benefit of every doubt, to put it nicely, about the lack of detection that could have spotted some of the skyjackers’ surveillance of buildings and sites before the attacks, about the lack of emergency response coordination on the day itself, and about his and his cronies’ exploitation of the attacks afterward. But that still leaves the big question of why engineers and scientists have been prevented, by the city and state authorities, from doing adequate forensic research into the WTC site.

 

All this is mystifying, as mentioned. But all that in turn still leaves an even bigger question unanswered, because it is never asked: The key question is why Giuliani should be getting kudos just because it was his watch on which 9/11 happened, in the first place. As one young person commented, it’s rather like having the principal of Columbine High School run for mayor, and campaign on the grounds that a bunch of people got shot while he was there.

 

Of course, the Columbine principal would never have done such a thing. He would have had, and did have, too much taste and judgment. But our personnel now in the White House are not being held to any standard of taste and judgment.

 

That puts it in a nutshell.

 

In fact, it’s such a good point that we have to wonder why, or how, the media got stampeded into failing to recognize it in the first place. In any previous administration, the highest-placed officials would have been held immediately responsible for anything even remotely like the events of that fateful day. Instead, we have an administration that has most recently awarded our highest civilian honors to officials in the most tainted sectors of GWBush policy: “intelligence,” the Iraq invasion, and war profiteering. We will be fortunate indeed if the medal itself is not tainted in future by this award.

 

Actually, of course, Giuliani didn’t come out smelling like a rose in New York City – any more than George W. Bush did. Giuliani and Bernard Kerik, NYC’s Police Commissioner at the time of the attacks, both left office much criticized by those in the know. It is mainly a certain stratum in the big media outlets that have treated them unthinkingly or for political motivation as “heroes.” The commentators who give them undeserved credit tend not to be expert in security or policing.

 

Speaking of that, Bush’s remarkable nomination of Bernard Kerik to head “homeland security” is a real giveaway. Space constraints prohibit even a brief run-through of Kerik’s track record here today, but stay tuned. The nomination at least unveils the extent of administration carelessness in the realm of protecting and defending.

 

View Article  Mercer County, Ohio

Mercer County, Ohio

 

 

The interesting information below was relayed to me.

 

Washington Journal ran an article, ...   more »

View Article  House Judiciary Committee must hold hearings on vote fraud

 

Representative John Conyers (D-Mich), the most senior member of the House Judiciary Committee, held public hearings yesterday on vote fraud ...   more »

View Article  Back and Forth between Conyers and Blackwell

On Dec. 3, Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), Ranking Member of Committee on the Judiciary, and Dean of the Congressional ...   more »

View Article  Problems voting in New Mexico

 

Good thing the third parties are pushing recounts in New Mexico:

http://www.votecobb.org/press/2004/nov/pr2004-11-29.php.

High time. 

 

Aside ...   more »

View Article  One country does not have the right to invade and remake another country

I RAN THIS COLUMN MORE THAN A YEAR AGO. REGRETTABLY, IT IS STILL CURRENT NOW.

 

      "International law.  ...   more »