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Campaign '06: Goodbye and Good Riddance

By Molly Ivins, AlterNet. Posted November 7, 2006.


Congress stands before us so hopelessly corrupt that the stench has washed all over the country.
Ivins

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Also by Molly Ivins

Molly Ivins AlterNet Archive
An archive of the great progressive columnist's writings.
Jun 21, 2007

Stand Up Against the "Surge"
We are the people who run this country. We are the deciders and we need to raise hell.
Jan 12, 2007

Now They're All For Bipartisanship
Apparently, the people of this country did not elect liberals to Congress last week. Nope, they elected populists!
Nov 15, 2006

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Right to the end, this insane conversation between reality and Not Reality... The president of the United States still says we are reducing terrorism by fighting in Iraq; still says we are creating democracy; still says we're preventing the spread of nuclear weapons and making Israel more secure; and, shoddiest of all, still not allowing that our fallen have died in vain.

The vice president, meanwhile, has announced that, all things considered in Iraq, "if you look at the general, overall situation, (the Iraqi government is) doing remarkably well." And now he's gone off to hunt in South Dakota, thus demonstrating a perfectly balanced sense of reality. South Dakota is so sparsely populated, it's really hard to hit another hunter.

Meanwhile, in case you hadn't noticed, Iraq is in a state of full collapse. And Afghanistan is not far from it. Baghdad is worse off for water, sewer, electricity and infrastructure than it was before the war. The R's have taken care of the whole problem with the brilliance we have come to expect from them -- they have decided to abolish the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (which has previously exposed bribery, contracts to cronies, shoddy work, lost billions of dollars, the failure to track hundreds of thousands of weapons shipped there and more). You must admit this is big, bold and brainy. This is Karl Rove problem-solving at its best.

This campaign has been like getting stuck in Alice's Wonderland for three months. "There is no use trying, " Alice said, "one can't believe impossible things."

"I daresay you haven't had much practice," replied the White Queen. "When I was your age, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast."

Every time you turn around, you run into the Jabberwocky or the Frumious Bandersnatch -- Richard Perle in penitence -- or some other equally fantastic sight. The great Skywriter in the Sky has positively run amok with irony and has been splashing it all over the campaign like Jackson Pollock. Fortunately, it is not my duty to lend dignity to the proceedings. I do make it a rule to skip talk of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll -- but when Mark Foley turns out to the chairman of House Committee on Missing and Exploited Children, you know you just have to sit down like a tired dog and scratch for a while.

While this perfectly insane dialogue has been taking place, Congress stands before us so hopelessly corrupt that the stench has washed all over the country. Perhaps my least favorite excuse for cheating is, "Everybody does it." NO, everybody DOESN'T do it. Nor does the system make you do it, or alcohol or drugs or Jack Abramoff. I do not want to hear one more excuse -- apologize and go.

On the other hand, I am really going to miss the stories this Congress provided. Remember Terri Schiavo? I mean, you wake up one morning and there it is, kind of like finding Fidel Castro in the refrigerator. And you listen to these people who do hold high elective office having this debate -- as though they know, as though they have any idea, as though they have any right. And then there are some of the troops, like Randy "Duke" Cunningham, semi-owner of the houseboat "The Duke-Stir." Some days you couldn't wait to get up to find out who'd been indicted. I miss watching Katherine Harris from Florida wear less and less blue eye-shadow as she went through her Senate race.

Well, it's been rank -- racist, sleazy, lying and full of insinuating scare tactics. Thank God it's over.

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Molly Ivins writes about politics, Texas and other bizarre happenings.

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Excuse me
Posted by: Ahimsa on Nov 7, 2006 10:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If I sound perhaps, a bit naive; but I feel strangely cheerful, and even, with a little bit of hope.
I'm taking a deep breath...

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» RE: xcuse me Posted by: willymack
bushie house
Posted by: rsaxto on Nov 8, 2006 12:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bye-bye Bushie House and Hello Nancy Pelosi House - what a difference a day makes!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» first thing out of the chute? Posted by: kellysgarden
» Moscow Posted by: derfb1
» RE: Moscow Posted by: Farragher
» RE: Moscow Posted by: willymack
» RE: Moscow Posted by: BillC
» RE: Moscow Posted by: Basenjis
The Lesson of Dubya
Posted by: NoPCZone on Nov 8, 2006 12:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lyndon Johnson from Texas= Vietnam
George H. W. Bush from Texas= Gulf War I
George 'Dubya' Bush from Texas= Gulf War II

Further observation- all had/have strong connections to Halliburton & KBR, which profit immensely.

Conclusion
No more Presidents from Texas with ties to the energy, construction or oil services business. Of any party or no party at all.

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» RE: The Lesson of Dubya Posted by: Byrodude
» RE: The Lesson of Dubya Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: The Lesson of Dubya Posted by: Basenjis
» RE: The Lesson of Dubya Posted by: eve6andahalf
» RE: Pleeease Posted by: NoPCZone
» Cheney is also from Texas Posted by: kellysgarden
Little cause for celebration
Posted by: Moonray on Nov 8, 2006 2:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After all the scandal, all the corruption, all the mismanagement of government, all the needless deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan . . . most Americans still chose to vote Republican in their local, state and federal races Tuesday. I find that very depressing. It means that the progressive movement in the U.S. is pretty well doomed. Obviously, most Americans are too ignorant, stupid or selfishly motivated to govern themselves effectively. No wonder people around the world look at our country and shake their heads in disbelief.

Sure, the Democrats picked up a majority in the House, but voters also elected or re-elected Republicans in other races at every level across the nation. It's unbelievable. Are they just insane? Or plain evil? I don't know, and increasingly I don't care.

This refusal by the American majority to repudiate the Republican Party and all it stands for bodes ill for the future. The forces of fascism and militarism in the U.S. government not only survive Tuesday's election, they emerged poised to wield even greater power in the years ahead.

Don't expect leadership by the Democrats on Iraq. They will bluster and posture, but already their leaders are back-pedaling away from their advocacy of prompt withdrawal. The powerful special interests who got us into Iraq control the Democrats as well as the Republicans. So happy Day After Election Day, Americans. Wake up and smell the future.

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» Sad But true... Posted by: Peyotino
The Bush Administration Is Dead
Posted by: Tom Degan on Nov 8, 2006 3:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is it, kiddies! The most corrupt, incompetent, disastraus administration in the history of the republic is as dead as a doornail. Watch in glee as the rats start fleeing from a sinking ship. At this writing (It is now 6:14 AM) it is unclear which way the Senate will go. This much is certain: If you thought 1974 was an interesting poltical year - fasten your seat belts!

Wow! It was just announced on Imus In The Morning that the bloviating gas bag from Arizona, J.D. Hayworth, has been defeated! This is too good to be true!

These evil bastards are going down. My message to the lower level people within the BULLSHIT White House: Come clean now before it's too late. What do they call it? Turning state's evidence? The sooner you come through with the goods, the more likely you'll get off with a slap on the wrist. Alot of people will be going to prison for a very long time - and that includes the president of the United States! Poor old POTUS is going to have a long time to contemplate the damage and destruction he inflictedd on our country and the planet - a hell of a long time.

Oh yes! Oh yes! Oh yes! I'm positively giddy! Some seriously nasty chickens are going to come home to roost! The Bush White Hous is dead, I tell you! Call the morticians! There is a place in my home town of Goshen, NY called Donovan Funeral Home. They are geniuses at making even the most emaciated bodies looking fantastic. The owner of the establishment is a gentleman called Marc Johnson. My advice to the Bush Mob: give Mark a call! Your disgusting, gnarled, cprpse of an administration is going to need all the help it can get! You'll still be as dead as twenty dead dogs but at least you'll look nice. Just a thought.

Pray for peace.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan

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» RE: xcellent rant, Tom Posted by: derfb1
» RE: xcellent rant, Tom Posted by: zipper696
» 3000 Posted by: derfb1
Commerce still regulates congress
Posted by: Bic Pentameter on Nov 8, 2006 3:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Despite the fact that our constitution clearly states that congress shall regulate commerce, we currently prefer to do it the other way around in complete disregard.

We'll blame it on congress and lobbyists, but they don't elect themselves. We do that for them. The vast majority of us shield ourselves from the entire mess, as well as we are able, and vote only for those who buy the biggest drum and appeal to our basest instincts, penetrating that shield through sheer noise or pandering. Some call it polish.

Or we wait til the last couple of months and diligently observe reports from a mainstream media that is little more than corporate interest eager to keep it just the way it is. One newscaster here in Indiana was barely able to hold back her tears as she announced republican losses in a statehouse which remains largely republican. Objective journalism at its finest!

Meanwhile - we should celebrate what changes were acheived. I say we SEND KARL ROVE A MATH BOOK. Lots of them! I only wish I had one entitled 'The New Math'.

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I am sad
Posted by: Intraspecto on Nov 8, 2006 4:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to see that all you are gloating... I mean couldnt you be at least talking about how the gov is going to fix the issues we have? Dont forget... kiss the 2nd Amendment goodbye because of soon to be speaker Pelosi. We are only going to see more and more bullshit, just not from the right...
America is still on the downhill spiral, and do not think for an instant that the new leaders are going to be any different or commit to their promises (except to take more freedoms like the neocons...) Look at it this way, believing the dilluted shit they have been saying (along with the right) is no different than listening to the campaigning of a high school kid who is there because of popularity...the system is hopelessly fucked...kiss America goodbye- cause what bush started, the Dems are sure to finish for their own gain, not mine nor yours.

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» RE: I am sad Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: I am sad Posted by: symcokid
» RE: I am sad Posted by: kmeyer
» RE: I am sad Posted by: albrechtkrausse
» RE: I am sad Posted by: larycham
» RE: I am sad Posted by: Basenjis
» RE: I am sad Posted by: kmeyer
» RE: I am sad Posted by: albrechtkrausse
What I'm feeling is dread
Posted by: hagwind on Nov 8, 2006 5:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now that the Democrats have taken control of the House and maybe the Senate, what next? Intelligence, courage, and leadership skills don't generally come out of nowhere, and these people have displayed precious little of any of it in the last six years. The Clinton administration wasn't much to write home about either.

We also can't blame the dismal performance of the mainstream press on Republican administrations and Republican legislatures. See Matt Taibbi's current column on this board for further comments on that.

This was an election we just had, not the last game of the World Series. The good guys, or at least the less-bad guys, may have won, but that doesn't mean we get to go home. What it means is that we've made it to the next round.

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Get ready for litigation in Virginia
Posted by: kww355 on Nov 8, 2006 5:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It may be months before we find out if we took the Senate. Karl Rove and his merry band of dirty tricksters will be working overtime to subvert the true will of the people.

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Ok let's not hit the snooze button again....
Posted by: MAT on Nov 8, 2006 6:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, let me congratulate you all for being active voices of reason and truth in this cacophonous political environment fogged with the misguided ignorance of a significant portion of the American population.

I also think that it’s time for Americans to start facing the reality that we have been far too complacent in the maintenance and evolution of our democratically elected constitutional republic. The first step in any recovery program is acceptance.

The big question now is, how do we start to inspire a more informed and active citizenry to really set in motion the fundamental societal changes that need to take place?

I’ve put quite a bit of thoughtful effort into attempting to answer this challenge over the past several years and I have come up with, what I’m sure is only one of, many good solutions out there. You tell me.

I’ve developed a website, MyAmericaToo.com, that has an evolving set of phased goals to:

1) capture the attention of the broad public to inform and educate them regarding the factual truth of our geopolitical history, current undertakings and responsibilities and then understanding the future consequences of our actions as individuals of a ‘high impact’ nation.

2) motivate people to become more enthusiastic and active in developing and setting an agenda of positive political/social/economic/environmental growth for our society.

3) aid in the creation, dissemination and activation of a peacefully benevolent agenda for the governing of our nation and more importantly ourselves with an honest acceptance and tolerance of human nature.

I believe that this website can serve as a launching pad for coordinated activities to utilize the numbers of the masses, whether they voted or not, to effect real change. The current plan for the MAT site is to develop a section called, "What If?", where actions would be set up and coordinated in specific locales or nationwide with appropriate timing. Putting these action in a context of a positive and hopeful query rather than an open confrontation may inspire many more people to participate in such actions.

An example might be, "What if the next time Hugo Chavez comes to the states, everyone goes out of their way to buy gas at Citgo, the Venezualan owned outlet for fuel?" the site would utilized the most comprehensive linked sources to publish a history of what Chavez has done by nationalizing their oil resources, how the bush administration reacts to him and then having an economic impact to bring home the message.

There are, no doubt, countless such actions which can be organized and undertaken to effect social awareness and action.

What if everyone across the nation took a moment to acknowledge each other on the commute to and from work or during lunch hours the week of x/x/06….etc…

My point is that, it’s up to people like us to get together to continue to develop these objectives and make then reality. I invite you to check out the website and let me know what you think of this initiative and if you would like to get involved in this and/or an even more fundamental project with a working title of ‘Universal Humane Needs Assessment’, which is currently being supported by some individual members of the UN.

peace,
sb

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Discretion
Posted by: JRLiberty on Nov 8, 2006 6:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please remember, the Dems now have to actually put their money where their mouths have been. I certainly hope they really DO have a "plan" and that it's not been a bunch of empty rhetoric. It's time to go to work.

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» RE: Discretion Posted by: Farragher
» Where their mouths have been Posted by: opeluboy
MORAL VALUES AND “GODLESSNESS”
Posted by: michaeltwatson on Nov 8, 2006 7:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It has been entertaining to watch Congressional leaders stumble over themselves to get to the back of the news line when a scandal erupts, but what about the sixteen-year olds whose parents’ joy over having their child selected as a Congressional Page has turned to anguish over that child’s emotional well-being.

We felt the grief of those whose loved ones fell on 9/11, but must now feel the grief for the military’s children, spouses and parents who have lost 2,800 loved ones in Iraq’ shell-shocked cities and towns.

No matter how proud we are of the gleaming skyscrapers and vibrance of the city we turned around after 9/11, with its record-setting Dow Jones Industrial Average, we must return to thoughts of those in families who once resided in New Orleans, but reside there no more.

We cheer that we have captured the Taliban from Afghanistan and rid that region of its oppressive ways, but what about innocent Middle Eastern peasant who are mistakenly held in a secret prison detainee camp, with no right to challenge their own imprisonment.

We are glad that we have rid the world of Saddam Hussein, but we must wonder whether that is worth the tens of thousands of wounded American soldiers, the bullet-ridden bodies in the nearly 3,000 body bags shipped home from Iraq, and over one-hundred thousand more dead Iraquis.

We applaud that our healthcare industry can now save the lives of tiny premature infants never before considered “viable.” Yet those same infants, who may later be afflicted with serious illnesses, have been deprived of medical wonders because of a blind President’s moralistic and inaccurate view of the meaning of the term “stem-cell research.”

We are proud that our hospitals are being infused with the brightest talent, energy and education that we can provide, but we mourn when our loved one become a statistic—one of 190,000 people who die every year as a result of hospital error; one of 90,000 people who die every year from hospital-acquired infections; one of 1.5 million people every year who is injured by a medication error. We should mourn that there is an irony here. The leaders in Congress were busy trying to take away from the victims of medical error the right to seek justice, at that same time that they were ignoring the plight of the sixteen-year old pages. Makes you wonder who they have been protecting. It’s not the youth, it’s not the sick and injured, it’s not the needy or the poor or the downtrodden. They don’t even protect the soldiers they send abroad to protect us. And who is it that we now read are the “Godless” ones? Oh, yes, it’s those crazy Godless liberals. By which God’s standards do we come to that conclusion?
Michael Townes Watson. www.AmericasTunnelVision.com

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So where is Conservasaurus?
Posted by: Ellie1 on Nov 8, 2006 7:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Licking his wounds? Looking for excuses and rationalizing his loss? Still drying his tears? Perhaps he is constructing an idealogical casket for his party and philosophy. He won't get a sympathy card from me. lol

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avianreader
Posted by: avianreader on Nov 8, 2006 7:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This morning, I feel strangely happy -- like someone who has been shot at and missed. Though breathing more easily this morning, I have a lot to ponder. I am thrilled for a greater balance of power in Washington; I have renewed hope that we can reclaim democracy; I even hope that the day will come when I can once again trust the news to inform me and the government to serve me. I am proud that the American public can still smell a stench, that we voted for change in spite of spin and media trivialisation. Still, I am wary. It has taken thousands of our dead sons and daughters and the most blatant abuse of power to wake us up just a little.

This campaign found me spending more than I ever have, more than I could afford, really, to support, not my ideals, but "the other". I voted "against" instead of "for" one more time and I long for better. My campaign contributions paid for a pile of trash -- a forest, if you will -- of noninformative hate mail; paid for sound bytes and commercials -- largely devoid of serious information. I guess it helped, my money, but it's not an investment I am proud of.

It is my hope that we will put down our differences in this country, and pick up our ideals. I truly believe that the American electorate has more in common than not, and that an informed American electorate can change this country and hold those elected to a high standard, demanding more than spin , hype, and the occasional photo op. Next time I donate, I hope to see my dollars fund a debate, a speech, a politician speaking out about trouble, not trying to stay out of it.

I love this quote from a book by the famous Unitarian minister, A. Powell Davies, because it expresses the high hope I hold for democracy in this country: "There are those who think of democracy as merely a system: that is to say, a piece of machinery. This is one of our most dangerous half truths. Democracy implies a system-- and one suited to its aims. But democracy is not itself a system. Democracy is a level of civilization: the highest yet attempted and the hardest to maintain."

These words were written in 1949. Clearly we've got to get ourselves back to the garden!

Many thanks to you, Molly Ivins, and to Jim Hightower and to all the columnists who dare to inform us, challenge us, keep us laughing and hoping. I have leaned heavily on your words, your facts, and your ability to laugh at it all through this desperate time...

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For Nancy's eyes & brain
Posted by: larry278 on Nov 8, 2006 7:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is to be hoped that Molly Ivans' words reach Nancy Pelosi's & the Democrat majority's eyes at once.

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» RE: For Nancy's eyes & brain Posted by: kellysgarden
» RE: For Nancy's eyes & brain Posted by: willymack
Fat Lady not singing in northern Rockies
Posted by: dewd on Nov 8, 2006 8:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Molly dear, it ain't quite over. There are no operatic arias emanating from the Fat Lady here in the footlights of Wyoming ( US House race still deadlocked 15 hours after polls closed; recount coming ) and next door in Montana...the Dethronement of Senator Conrad Burns is postponed due to voting machine breakdowns.

My heartfelt condolences to Kinky , when you next see him.

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The real winner? Our Constitution.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Nov 8, 2006 8:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On Nov. 8, after the rout of the Republican/neoCON machine, there is still work to be done and vigilance, the price of democracy, to be maintained. But the REALLY good news is that, at least to some degree, the system has been vindicated. It has self-corrected; the will of The People has put the brakes on the abuse of power and one-party rule, just as the Founding Fathers intended.

Now, the work needs to continue to return government to its rightfull place as the servant of The People – but at least we can all smile over our morning coffee that on Nov. 7, 2006, the system worked.

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Next Step
Posted by: Ian MacLeod on Nov 8, 2006 8:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well, so far, anyhow, we dodged the bullet. Remember though: Bush &tc still has the NSA (read blackmail source), LOTS of money and power as well as control over the military, and control over appointments - he still has power. The idiot could STILL push the button on Iran, for instance, and he just might.

I've been talking with Robert at the Lincoln Initiative, and the more I consider it, the more it looks like a good way to go. Whatever else they get, Congress needs VOTES first, or the door to everything else is shut. If enough of us TOGETHER tell them, "Look, you DINK - either address these issues or we'll take our ball and bat and go play with someone else", most will follow the power, and votes in a democracy are the foundation of power.

Ian

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Oh yeah - I forgot:
Posted by: Ian MacLeod on Nov 8, 2006 8:31 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the Republicans don't purge their party of the fanatics and demagogues, they're screwed as a party, period. Those people aren't conservatives like the classic Republicans, witness the spending and totalitarianism, for instance. They're nutso FANATICS, and they crawled out of the woodwork too soon and stood in the light where we could see 'em. I don't think what happened this last four years can happen again (I hope not, anyway) - they're like cockroaches: they know being seen for what they are isn't healthy, so until they thought they had it all in hand, they tended to avoid the light.

Now, if the REAL Republicans would just stand up, AND the Greens and others, so maybe we get a real choice for a change...

Ian

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» RE: Oh yeah - I forgot: Posted by: Liger
» RE: Oh yeah - I forgot: Posted by: Ian MacLeod
Too bad Norman can't listen to Molly
Posted by: DaBear on Nov 8, 2006 8:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Norman Solomon on KPFK this morning was already confirming that impeachment is off the table.

This was a reactive smackdown by pissed off folks (the middle that actually has a conscience) and not an endorsement of the Left. Pelosi is firmly on the right and even the "intellectual" left like Norman Solomon is calling for compromise.

The scum-running and slumming has just begun, folks. In the interest of national unity, justice will be the very first principle sacrificed by the Dem-controlled congress.

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Stolen Election
Posted by: Liger on Nov 8, 2006 12:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This election was stolen by the democrats! There must have been some election fraud! I am calling for an investigation! There's no way the democrats could have won the election! Cry, bitch, moan.. blah blah blah blah! Oh I am starting to sound like a crying sissy liberal!

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The corruption may be over for most, but
Posted by: MtnWolfGrl on Nov 8, 2006 1:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I live in a district that re-elected one of the most corrupt politicians in the house - doolittle. Charlie Brown, a retired lt. colonel (air force, i believe) was his opponent, and ran on getting the U.S. out of Iraq and some other things. I voted for him because of the stink of corruption that surrounds doolittle who is being investigated by the DOJ and the FBI. He has/had ties to Abramoff and DeLay and Nye. He has spent $50,000 in lawyer fees to date answering the investigators questions, and saying that he didn't do anything wrong. I am reasonably sure that Jack Abramoff "gave" him up in return for a reduced sentence. I am hoping that he will be investigated by the House Ethics Committee now that it will be under different leadership, but I am not holding my breath.

It is going to be interesting to see if he is going to resign when he is indicted or whether he will continue in office from his prison cell. I am also completely astounded by the constituents of this district that would re-elect someone with the stench of corruption all around him.

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is there a change
Posted by: john henry on Nov 8, 2006 6:26 PM   
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this is atime that there has been alot of things sayed to a lot of people now they had better come through or they may be going out on the next time around remember we are paying the bill now remember this its from the good book a just an upright an god fearing man on the road to town there was a noise is the weeds an the people cry out there was a lion in the weeds an all the eviel an wicked people ran the just an upright man he went on down road for he knew god is with him an that lion had better stay in the weeds but if if he donot that man with had a new lion cloth an shoes so let us good people keep it on them an make them come through with what they sayed they ars going to do or there are out next time

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wisegalah in sydney
Posted by: wisegalah on Nov 9, 2006 2:51 AM   
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It is difficult to convey the sense of relief I feel at the rise of the Democrats, and I am not even American.
I am sure that millions of non-Americans around the world are now glad that their fate is not solely in the hands of the thought-disordered, lying, psychopathic Bush government.
Thank you America for coming to your senses.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.

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» RE: wisegalah in sydney Posted by: Ian MacLeod
Cautiously optimistic
Posted by: opeluboy on Nov 9, 2006 3:43 PM   
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Oh yeah, happy. I remember that word. And I think that is what I am feeling.

I do, however, remember that many of these Dems voted for the Iraq war, and are onboard to attack Iran with nuclear fucking weapons, so that moderates my euphoria just a tad.

Again, none of these people will address the Israel/Palestine issue (the hinge calamity is turning on) with anything approaching balance (for fear of their careers), so we can expect that desperate situation to spiral further out of control and our prestige in the Muslim/Arab world to sink even deeper into disrepute. Most sane people in the world would not consider this a good thing.

But I am thankful that there appears to be an end to the present neocon-lead administration and that the power to hog tie it for 2 years is in the Dems hands. It remains to be seen how quickly these same neocons will adjust and work through them instead. My guess is they already are.

Hope I'm wrong. I have been before. Two nights ago, in fact.

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Maybe with Dems in -- we can protect our own children
Posted by: roberteggleton on Nov 9, 2006 4:10 PM   
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My state has the unfortunate status as the worst place in America to be a kid. WV has the highest number of deaths by child maltreatment. The only related issue that this Republican administration seems to have been interested in is curbing women's rights to choose -- so as to fake out the Christian right by pretending that it cares about babies.

I'm a therapist in a children's mental health program. Funding for child abuse prevention programs has been so badly needed that I wrote a science fiction novel with author proceeds donated to a nonprofit to raise funds. Following is an excerpt of a review by one of the most respected editors in the country.
*******
I Owe One to Robert Eggleton
by Evelyn Somers, The Missouri Review

Earlier this year I was contacted by a first-time novelist asking if I would review his forthcoming e-book . . . well, I ignored it.

Robert tried again. ... sent me the first chapter, which begins with two impoverished schoolgirls (from the Hollow of the title) studying together and spelling the word for an adult sex toy. It was quirky, profane, disturbing. I said I’d look at the book....

...subtitled “A Lacy Dawn Adventure,” after the girl protagonist, Lacy Dawn. I liked Lacy, who lives in a world of poverty, classmates with precocious sexual knowledge and/or experience, unemployed men, worn-down women and cruelty so casual that it’s more knee-jerk than intentional. ...

... there was something about the whole project in general. Robert is a social worker who has spent at least a portion of his career working with child-abuse victims in Appalachia. The book was partly about that, and mostly very strange. In the Hollow, Lacy takes up with an android named DotCom, from “out of state,” which really means out of this world. Under DotCom’s wing, she decides that she will “save” her family. Little does she know she will end up saving the universe. Robert was donating the proceeds from sales to help child-abuse victims. ...

...I’m ... giving Rarity From the Hollow a plug. Among its strengths are an ultra-convincing depiction of the lives, especially the inner lives, of the Appalachian protagonists. The grim details of their existence are delivered with such flat understatement that at times they almost become comic. And just when you think enough is enough, this world is just too ugly, Lacy’s father (who is being “fixed” with DotCom’s help) gets a job and Lacy, her mother and her dog take off for a trip to the mall “out of state” with Lacy’s android friend, now her “fiancé” (though as Lacy’s mother points out, he doesn’t have any private parts, not even “a bump.”) In the space between a few lines we go from hardscrabble realism to pure sci-fi/fantasy. It’s quite a trip.

Rarity is published by FatCat Press, which has other e-books for sale as well. You can find it at www.fatcatpress.com. The blurb on the website says in part:

Lacy Dawn is a true daughter of Appalachia, and then some. She lives in a hollow with her mom, her Vietnam Vet dad, and her mutt Brownie, a dog who's very skilled at laying fiber-optic cable. Lacy Dawn's android boyfriend, DotCom, has come to the hollow with a mission. His equipment includes infomercial videos of Earth's earliest proto-humans from millennia ago. DotCom has been sent by the Manager of the Mall on planet Shptiludrp: he must recruit Lacy Dawn to save Earth, and they must get a boatload of shopping done at the mall along the way. Saving Earth is important, but shopping – well, priorities are priorities.

Yes, priorities are. I should have had mine in order. Robert Eggleton's book deserves your attention. Check it out.

Evelyn Somers

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Double-U
Posted by: Skipper on Nov 10, 2006 8:59 PM   
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When I saw the double Bush skit at the press club, I thought, how Rovian. Two Bushes, Double you, W. Because it occured to me this was yet another joke, not unlike the pic of Bush displayed with the label "My Pet Goat" which made me muse, who's pet goat is he anyway? (If we knew who selected the book, it could be very telling). No doubt the same brain who thought it would be just too clever to have 9/11 happen on 9/11, our distress call number. Who do we know that has to show just how smart he is?

But back to Double-You. How appropriate. He has doubled the national debt, doubled the number of illegal immigrants, and there are so many more if you take time to check, but the obvious, painful one that hits the hardest, he has doubled the 3,000 American deaths on 9/11, now in Iraq.

Thank God it's over, and Thank God I'm a Democrat.

P.S. Please not Gates and Baker to keep a foot in the door in Iraq. It's not men coming to do the job the boy couldn't do; it's a last ditch effort to protect their (our) investment in Iraq. And thank you Evangelicals for showing us the difference between the goats and the sheep.

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