COMMENTS: 241
The Bushites Have Outsourced Our Government to Their Pals
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Government by corporation
A monumental shift has quietly and quickly been taking place in the way the public's business is done -- and We the People have not even been informed about it, much less been asked to discuss and okay it. Corporations are taking over our government. No longer is it just a matter of big business's lobbyists and campaign donations perverting public policy. Now, politically connected corporations are also seizing day-to-day governmental operations for their own profit.
Since the Carter years, Washington has drifted toward more and more outsourcing of public functions to private contractors, but Bush Incorporated has turned that gradual increase into a fullblown, jet-powered rush to privatization. The shadowy and highly lucrative world of government contracting has boomed under George W, rising 86% since he's been in office and now totaling nearly $400 billion a year. Get this: There are now more people doing federal jobs under corporate contracts than there are people employed directly by the government. In other words, in today's government, corporate servants outnumber civil servants.
Bush likes to claim that he has cut the federal bureaucracy. In fact, he's increased it, but most of the people working in his government wear corporate logos. The New York Times recently reported that contract employees are in practically every agency, not merely doing perfunctory chores, but sitting in on policy sessions and drawing up agency budgets. "Even government's online database for tracking contracts, the Federal Procurement Data System, has been outsourced," says the Times.
This phenomenal change is the product not of managerial rationality, but of nonsensical anti-government ideology. Like the Iraq invasion, which was on the international agenda of the rabid neocons from Day One of Bush's tenure, privatization has long been on the domestic agenda of the laissezfaire ideologues. A January 10, 2001, report from the right-wing Heritage Foundation provided the roadmap. Titled "Taking Charge of Federal Personnel," it showed the Bushites how to storm into office and seize control of every agency. It stressed that they "must make appointment decisions based on loyalty first and expertise second," that "the whole governmental apparatus must be managed from this perspective," and that they should use "contracting out as a management strategy."
The official rationale for this privatization surge is that corporations are inherently more efficient than government and save the taxpayer oodles of money. Nice theory, but they aren't ... and they haven't. Start with this ideological assertion's most obvious flaw: By their very nature, corporations are loyal to their own bottom line, not to the country or to the common good. Any "efficiency" that they produce is derived from paying workers less (hardly a morale booster) and by taking shortcuts on the services or products they deliver. These "savings" are more than eaten up by the high profits, extravagant executive salaries, and other compensation that corporations demand -- costs that are not incurred when government does the job.
Another flaw in this privatization push is that Bush & Company are unabashedly running it as a crony program. An analysis by the Times found that more than half of their outsourcing contracts are not open to competition. In essence, the Bushites choose the company and award the money without getting other bids. Prior to Bush, only 21% of federal contracts were awarded on a no-bid basis.
Also, if privatization is so good, why is there no ongoing analysis of the costs and quality of service being delivered? This is an administration that demands a cost-benefit analysis of even the smallest government regulation of business, yet it is throwing trillions of our tax dollars into the coffers of corporate contractors without monitoring whether the outsourcing is costing us more and producing less than if the work were done by government employees.
Meanwhile, as the number of contracts has skyrocketed, the number of contract supervisors in federal agencies has remained the same, which means that the supposed overseers can't keep an eye on the performance of the profiteers. Whenever agencies or members of Congress do try to probe, the corporations simply claim that their financial and performance records are proprietary. While agencies are accountable to the public and subject to the Freedom of Information Act, corporate contractors are not.
Even when it's known in advance that a privatization project will be a rip-off, ideology has trumped integrity. Last fall, for example, Congress rubberstamped a Bush initiative requiring the IRS to outsource the collection of certain taxes to three private debt collectors. The collection agencies will pocket about 24 cents of every dollar they recover. But if the IRS were simply allowed to hire more revenue agents, it could collect these same debts for only 3 cents of every dollar brought in. Over 10 years, the three companies expect to reap $330 million from this deal.
A corporatized war
As we've learned during the last four-plus years, George W's Iraq war is run by a bumbling triumvirate composed of the White House, the Pentagon, and the Department of Halliburton.
This massive military contractor has done awfully well the past few years, thanks to its old CEO, "Buckshot" Cheney. Since the BushCheney regime took office, Halliburton's government contracts have increased by a stunning 600%, including more than $10 billion in Pentagon contracts -- many of them awarded without the fuss and muss of competitive bidding.
In return, Halliburton has delivered gas-price gouging, contaminated food and water, and a consis- These are our "savings" from privatization A 2006 federal audit of $1.7 billion in Pentagon purchases found that taxpayers were soaked for excessive fees from contractors and for tens of millions of dollars in waste. One reason was "poor contracting practices." Such as? The audit reports that 92% of the contracts were awarded without verifying that the contractors provided accurate cost estimates, and 96% of the work was inadequately monitored. 2 Hightower Lowdown June 2007 tent pattern of overcharges. It has been caught hiring Third World laborers to do its grunt work in Iraq, paying them as little as $5 a day, and then billing Uncle Sam more than $50 a day for each worker. In a February analysis of $10 billion in waste and overcharges by various contractors in Iraq, federal investigators found Halliburton responsible for $2.7 billion.
The corporation's 2006 profits were $2,348,000,000, and its overall profits have increased over 368% since the Bushites have been in office. Meanwhile, Halliburton has now outsourced itself, announcing this year that its top executives will move from Houston to palatial new corporate headquarters in Dubai. But don't worry -- the executives are keeping enough of a corporate presence in the good ol' USA to qualify for more government contracts.
People see Halliburton as the face of the privatized war in Iraq, but that's hardly the whole story. Indeed, there's a dirty little fact that Washington's warmongers don't tout: Bush has put almost as many private contractors in the Iraq war as U.S. troops.
Prior to Bush's "surge," there were about 140,000 American troops in Iraq and about 100,000 contract employees there. Contrast this to only 9,200 privatized troops sent to the Gulf war by George's daddy in 1991. And the 100,000 number doesn't count subcontractors, which would add an estimated 20,000 to 40,000 more private troops (no one knows for sure, since the Pentagon doesn't keep track of them). In addition, while the surge will put another 22,000 military troops in Iraq, it will also increase the private forces by an untold number.
Outfits like Halliburton, DynCorp, Blackwater, L-3, Titan, Custer Battles, Triple Canopy, and Wackenhut are reaping billions of our tax dollars doing military work that the Bush-Cheney Pentagon has outsourced. Not coincidentally, nearly all of these corporations are big-dollar donors to Republicans and/or are run by executives with tight GOP ties.
In part, corporate Iraq assignments provide support services -- laundry, meals, delivery of water and gasoline, etc. But a huge part of the military function itself has been privatized in this war -- such things as interrogating prisoners (including in the infamous Abu Ghraib prison), training the Iraqi army, guarding the Green Zone and the Baghdad airport, protecting military convoys, analyzing intelligence, and providing paramilitary security forces.
The personnel performing these tasks are not soldiers but hired hands, most of whom lack the training needed to make proper combat judgments, and they operate independently of the military command. "They shoot people, and someone else has to deal with the aftermath," says a frustrated U.S. officer.
They also get shot, bombed, maimed, and killed. Yet the Bushites, wanting to downplay the negatives, don't count such people in casualty reports. The official number of 3,400 troops killed in Iraq doesn't include any from Bush's contract army. How many of them have died? No one knows the real number, but the Labor Department, which tracks workers compensation claims, has silently recorded 917 contractor deaths. More than 12,000 have been wounded in battle or on the job. These casualties are a hidden toll of this awful war, another measure of its deceit and immorality.
Contractors galore
Washington is under assault by hordes of corporations that are eagerly dicing up our government into digestible segments and then consuming them through either contracts or outright privatization.
Here are some examples:
- WALL STREET BANKING conglomerates leer lasciviously at our Social Security Fund, eager to grab the hundreds of billions of dollars in fees they could assess for "managing" our accounts in a privatized system.
- BUSH HAS REDUCED FEMA, a onceproud and strong government responder to natural disasters, to a haven for political hacks hurling billions of dollars in no-bid contracts to Halliburton and its ilk for the rescue and rehab of New Orleans -- only to see the money disappear and the wreckage remain.
- WHEN THE PENTAGON DECREED a few years ago that the esteemed Walter Reed Army Medical Center was to be substantially privatized, the treatment of wounded vets quickly deteriorated to scandalous levels. The politically connected IAP Worldwide Services company -- run by two former Halliburton executives and boasting of having Dan Quayle on its board -- was handed a $120 million contract to manage the place (even though IAP had previously botched the delivery of ice to the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina -- a job that it was contracted to do by FEMA).
- THE CURRENT COLLEGE-LOAN scandal is not merely a matter of some financial-aid offices at universities taking gifts, consulting fees, and stock from big private lenders. Rather, the entire system is scandalous -- it's an artificial, privatized lending structure that adds nothing of value to students but greatly increases the cost and complexity of getting student loans that could be made cheaply, simply, honestly, and directly by the Department of Education.
- FEDEX, UPS and the giant corporate mailers are trying to privatize the U.S. Postal Service piece by piece by deregulating the entire postal market, outsourcing the most lucrative postal functions, and abandoning America's principle of universal service for everyone.
Lurita's lurid tale
Lurita Doan, who ran a federal contracting company in Virginia and who has been a six-figure donor to Bush and the GOP, was chosen by George last year to head the General Services Administration (GSA). This agency doles out some $56 billion annually in federal contracts and is in charge of policing the contractors. At her confirmation hearing, Doan said she wanted to prove she can run a federal agency like a business -- and she has. She's run GSA like Enron.
Just two months after taking office, Doan made a robust attempt to hand a $20,000 no-bid contract to a friend and former business associate, even going so far as to sign the deal personally. Ultimately, GSA's general counsel had to step in and nix this obvious conflict-ofinterest gaffe.'
But Doan kept playing loose with the people's money. Last year, when a technology contract with Sun Microsystems was up for renewal, two GSA contract officers rejected it on the grounds that the corporation was overcharging taxpayers. Doan personally intervened, suggesting that one of the officers was "stressed." She brought in another officer, who promptly approved the renewal -- and got a long-coveted transfer to GSA's Denver office.
Then Doan got paranoid, apparently feeling that the agency's independent inspector general (IG) was foiling her enthusiastic efforts to "streamline" the contract-awarding process and to loosen up audits on corporations getting contracts. She chided the IG and, according to notes taken in a staff meeting, compared him and his staff to terrorists! Doan has now proposed cutting $5 million from the IG's audit budget, which is used to detect corporate fraud and waste, and shifting some of his duties to -- are you ready for this? -- private contractors.
Coalition of greed
Why is this happening? Paul Light, a New York University professor and expert on public service, points to a coalition of the greedy fueling the growth of what he calls "the hidden workforce of contractors." The contractors, of course, love privatization. Many corporations have been formed (often by former officials in the military or government) just to sup at the federal trough and many subsist wholly on government contracts. Pentagon contractors have grown especially fat on our tax dollars, with the largest, Lockheed-Martin, now receiving more federal funds than the Department of Justice.
At the same time, a huge lobbying force has been built to keep the cash flowing. Each corporation has its own lobbyists, and the contracting industry as a whole has an additional lobbying group, the Professional Services Council, which pushes for still more corporatization of government.
Then there are the politicos in both parties who're eager to show that they are reigning in big government. They shove public tasks into corporate hands in order to create what Light calls "the illusion that [government] is smaller than it actually is." And, of course, there are the political ideologues who push privatization simply as a matter of faith and political correctness, even though there's no evidence that it is cheaper -- much less better.
It's on this last point that corporatization ultimately founders. For contractors, the concept of "better" applies strictly to their bottom lines -- not to the country. They are out to get theirs, no matter what happens to the rest of us. This is why they've kept the size and scope of the corporate takeover hidden from us. It's also why there's no accountability, no public scrutiny, no analysis of public benefits built into the privatization push -- the contractors know that corporatization is not better for America.
Our government is not meant to be a marketplace. It is intended as a democratic forum where the needs and aspirations of ALL the people are addressed. The corporations' grab-all-you-can, survival-of-the-fattest ethos is about serving their interest, not the public's. This is why We the People must expose, challenge, stop, and reverse the corporatization of our public institutions.
Not only are corporations taking over government functions, they are also moving rapidly to take over our essential public assets -- from highways to airports. In next month's newsletter, we'll give you the lowdown on who's selling America to whom ... and why.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: CatDad on Jun 20, 2007 12:09 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
==========
This statement is an excellent summary for the ENTIRE US government under Bush...
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» To be more concise
Posted by: edith
» RE: To be more concise
Posted by: bifheart
» Purpose of Federal Govt for past many decades is to enrich cronys, donars, and corporations
Posted by: albrechtkrausse
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: Conservasaurus
» Free Market Fantasies- defense spending is a subsidy to high-tech industry
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: Conservasaurus
» Long Story.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: Doubtom
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: albrechtkrausse
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: sea4th
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Rune on Jun 20, 2007 1:37 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Quite simply, this is a government run by people who have always believed that all government is bad, and they have set out to prove how bad it can be on their way to destroying it. They are also destroying--and ending--countless innocent and once promising lives along the way.
Well, if this is the worst of government--enormous, out of touch, incompetent, violent, wasteful, corrupt, unaccountable, secretive, and generally out of control--that should give us some hints as to what makes for good government: pretty much the exact opposite of this administration.
Yes, contrary to the convictions of this administration and several frequent contributors on AlterNet, there is such a thing as good government, and most countries that are peaceful and populated by contented and healthy people have one. In contrast, most of the lawless hellholes of the world have either a government that shares many of the qualities of this administration, or have very little government at all, save, perhaps, a military and/or a brutish police force that is likely to look after businesses or officers in the government rather than protect the common people. That is the direction we are heading in. I hope we can remind ourselves of what good government looks like and insist on heading towards one before our government and our country is completely decimated and the last of hope and trust is lost for a very long time.
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» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this? crooks and conmen
Posted by: THIAHB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: Blade
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: kmart35
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: kmart35
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: kmart35
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: adp3d
» Conservatives believe in Magic
Posted by: ProgressiveManiac
» RE: Conservatives believe in Magic
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Conservatives believe in Magic
Posted by: ProgressiveManiac
» RE: Conservatives believe in Magic
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: BeTrue
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: aussidawg
» Lockheed Martin and new technology
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Lockheed Martin and new technology
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Lockheed Martin and new technology
Posted by: fanny666
» Publicly funded research
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: You need to do some research...
Posted by: EagleMB
» Tailfeathers
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Do you even read your citations?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Do you even read my citations?
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Allow me to prove you wrong by quoting your own source!!!
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Allow me to prove you wrong by quoting your own source!!!
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Allow me to prove you wrong by quoting your own source!!! [1 of 2]
Posted by: EagleMB
» Bristol-Myers Squibb has exclusive rights over Taxol research regardless of patent
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Bristol-Myers Squibb has exclusive rights over Taxol research regardless of patent [1]
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Bristol-Myers Squibb has exclusive rights over Taxol research regardless of patent [2]
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Allow me to prove you wrong by quoting your own source!!! [2 of 2]
Posted by: EagleMB
» Explanation!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: The greatest country in the world????? Misplaced pride.
Posted by: THIAHB
» RE: The greatest country in the world????? Misplaced pride.
Posted by: polyquat50
» Shut em down and shut em out
Posted by: edith
» RE:Good Government
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Good Government
Posted by: Krain61
» When we force them to - NT
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: A grand failure of both government and the will to govern
Posted by: fearlessmanateehunter
» RE: A grand failure of both government and the will to govern
Posted by: polyquat50
» RE: A grand failure of both government and the will to govern
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: A grand failure of both government and the will to govern
Posted by: tjg1984
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jun 20, 2007 1:54 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well I'll be diddily-dog-gone! We're there!
Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan
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» RE: Facist State
Posted by: JSquercia
» RE: Facist State
Posted by: fearless flower
» Americans are FACISTS
Posted by: kellysgarden
» NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: bouyant
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: Ghoulman
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: Americans are FACISTS
Posted by: Conservasaurus
» America is NOT fascist.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: America is NOT fascist.
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: Americans are FACISTS
Posted by: tjg1984
Comments are closed-
Posted by: packofwolves on Jun 20, 2007 5:21 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: We just sit and cry
Posted by: Sam I Am
» They are counting on you giving up
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: We just sit and watch
Posted by: scmp
» Call your House Rep 202-224-3121, tell them to support HR 333
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Call your House Rep 202-224-3121, tell them to support HR 333
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Call your House Rep 202-224-3121, tell them to support HR 333
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: We just sit and watch
Posted by: ninethgirl
» RE: While the Churches Here on the Bottom Just Keep Gathering Souls
Posted by: edgar_michel
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Artaraxl on Jun 20, 2007 5:30 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"George's daddy"
"Bushies"
They're unnecessary, and silly.
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» RE: Annoying rhetoric
Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: Good Golly Miss Molly, Annoying Rhetoric
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Annoying rhetoric
Posted by: headhunter
» RE: Annoying rhetoric{needed to make a point}
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: Annoying rhetoric
Posted by: Doubtom
» RE: Annoying rhetoric
Posted by: peacefullaim
» Hpw about George's "DEVIOUS" daddy and the "TREASONOUS" Bushies? Both "flourishes" are TRUE!
Posted by: HughScott
» RE: I Wholeheartedly Agree
Posted by: edgar_michel
Comments are closed-
Posted by: psyopswatcher on Jun 20, 2007 5:32 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
-- Lurita, Bush appointed head of the GSA
-- and her hubby, Douglas, a former military intelligence officer and business liaison official at the Department of Homeland Security.
The business she sold and 'retired' from in 2005 just happens to be in security and surveillance on the borders. Sounds like a whole alotta back-scratching going on.
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» RE: psyopswatcher
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: psyopswatcher
Posted by: edgar_michel
Comments are closed-
Posted by: LMNOP on Jun 20, 2007 5:43 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The citizens are naïve, credulous, and infinitely pliable. Cheating them is easier than stealing money from a baby. They are politically infantile. I mean this literally: America is in precisely the same shape it would be in if you took 300 million second graders, put them into adult bodies, and let them go about self-governance. They are not bad people, just unprepared to participate in the running of their own provincial and self-centered lives, just like second graders. Think about it. If it were literally true that the American people had suffered some sort of magical transformation like Tom Hanks’ character in “Big”, would it be any different than it is? Would you even know?
Their government is more corrupt than Americans know or acknowledge. No, not the worst government ever, but maybe the most dangerous, both because it is so powerful, and because the only check on its behavior, the citizens, are not up to the job any more.
Somebody mentioned that it is as if the government is trying to destroy the nation. It is. Maybe the world. You don’t know how sick the wealthiest and most powerful people in the world are, especially if they're religious zealots like half of these creeps are.
There is little other explanation for deliberately bankrupting a country just when it was beginning to pay its bills with obviously unsound tax cuts. And dragging that country into expensive, pointless wars without end, and not only keeping it there against its will, but adding new wars onto the old ones. And destroying all of its worldwide street cred and good will. And urinating on its Constitution and the rights its promises. What do they have to do to convince this nation, one third of which still think that they're doing a good job, that they are not merely incompetent and selfish, but fiercely anti-American? We'll see. I say never.
Here’s something that can be said until one is blue in the face, and it still isn’t believed: The single purpose of people like Bush, Chaney and the éminence grise behind them is to relieve you of as much of what you have as they want. That means your property and your rights and freedoms. If they have their way, you will all be impoverished slaves under the jackboot.
Too extreme? Go on believing that, and go on being surprised at what they do. And go on calling them stupid because nothing they do works. And go on believing that their lying is restrained, that there are limits. Because it’s hard to believe anybody, let alone an entire termites nest of conservatives, could be so antisocial and so flagrant in their lack of compassion. That’s why America keeps being surprised.
It’s a testimony to the intellectual softness of the American public that the Republicans have done this much damage to the nation and only just now is America questioning their ability to govern, not their intent, coming under question. These are corporate raiders on steroids, and their intention is to harm you. That’s not their purpose, but it is a necessary ramification of it: to control everything – all property and all people.
Look, I don't read minds, and I don't know for a demonstrable fact what goes on in any head other than my own. But I do know this: if you want to predict their response to any situation, ask yourself what you would choose if you were deliberately trying to punish America for something, and damned if that isn't what they do.
The terrorists hate us for our freedoms and for our possessions? Who told you that? The Republicans? LOL. I wonder why? They're lying as always, but also projecting.
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» RE: Wake up - vote solutions
Posted by: solrev
» RE: Wake up - vote solutions
Posted by: Krain61
» great post.
Posted by: WhatNow?
» You remind me of James bovant
Posted by: schokoprinz
» RE: Wake up
Posted by: aussidawg
» RE: Yup, and I see it every day here on Skid Row Los Angeles
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: Wake up -- WELL SAID!
Posted by: Cathyc
» ssegallmd
Posted by: Lincoln fan
Comments are closed-
Posted by: schnoggi on Jun 20, 2007 6:07 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Don't run away; get involved. Read the article on the turnaround in Kansas.
Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: Don't run away; get involved. Read the article on the turnaround in Kansas.
Posted by: clvngodess
» RE: yeah, bye..the corruption will just follow you
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: yeah, bye
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: yeah, bye
Posted by: ChsCarr4
Comments are closed-
Posted by: snowhound on Jun 20, 2007 6:18 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Vote Gravel or Kucinich
Posted by: WhatNow?
» Do some homework
Posted by: sausage
» RE: Do some homework
Posted by: dover23
» RE: Do some homework
Posted by: sausage
» RE: Looked it up...
Posted by: dover23
» RE: Do something not a choice
Posted by: solrev
» Ron Paul's lame answer to EVERY question about this:
Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
» RON PAUL IS RIGHT!
Posted by: Maggieb
» Did you bother to read the article? (rhetorical question)
Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
» RE: Did you bother to read the article? (rhetorical question)
Posted by: snowhound
» RE: Do something
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Do something
Posted by: snowhound
» RE: Do something
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Do something
Posted by: peacefullaim
Comments are closed-
Posted by: willymack on Jun 20, 2007 6:47 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Aw puhleese, Willy
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Aw puhleese, Willy
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: Aw puhleese, Willy
Posted by: LMNOP
» " THE FORCE IS STRONG WITH THIS ONE"
Posted by: pito516
» RE: " THE FORCE IS STRONG WITH THIS ONE"
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: " THE FORCE IS STRONG WITH THIS ONE"
Posted by: pito516
Comments are closed-
Posted by: sausage on Jun 20, 2007 6:52 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For example:
Postal service carriers say there are cases across the country where contract workers have shrugged off responsibility and stolen or thrown away mail.
Three weeks ago, a part-time contract carrier in Aspen, Colo., was sentenced to one year of probation after throwing away almost 1,500 pieces of mail from her route.
A few weeks earlier, a contract carrier from Paducah, Ky., was sentenced to three years of probation after admitting that he stole mail, some of which included cash and gift cards.
Seattle Post Intelligence.com, June 18, 2007
"In southern California, Charles Miller, president of Garden Grove Branch 1100, carries the story a step further.“In the city of Orange, there’s a 900-delivery complex of high-end condos. They awarded a CDS contract and the contractor went out and got two young people to do the deliveries. One of them decided the job was just too hard and took the mail home with him,” Miller related.
“When patrons complained, the postmaster said it was a problem with the contractor and there really wasn’t anything he could do,” said Miller[.]"
NALC.org, April, 2007 Postal Record, PDF
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» RE: Monopolized Postal privatization well underway...
Posted by: dover23
» What about the service of UPS and FedEx?
Posted by: sausage
» BTW, another thing
Posted by: sausage
» RE: Postal privatization well underway...
Posted by: Trazom
» You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: sausage
» RE: You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: Angry Blue Planet
» RE: You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: sausage
» RE: You should rely on your leaders...
Posted by: dover23
» RE: You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: Trazom
» It's not that simple
Posted by: zyxwvut
Comments are closed-
Posted by: WhatNow? on Jun 20, 2007 6:59 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'll bet most of the people participating in the pillaging of america are "free market" idealogues. What's so disgustingly humorous about these parasites is that, it is unlikely they would prosper much less survive if they had to truly participate in a free market instead of their cronyism subtly called capitalism.
Give me a good socialist anyday. The only way to get worse than these so called capitalists would be to support tyrants like hitler, stalin, or the khmer rouge.
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» RE: Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: dover23
» It's not a contradiction.
Posted by: zyxwvut
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: pito516
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: peacefullaim
» "Can you think of a procedure?"
Posted by: WhatNow?
» RE: "Can you think of a procedure?"
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: "Can you think of a procedure?"
Posted by: peacefullaim
Comments are closed-
Posted by: fearless flower on Jun 20, 2007 7:19 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would add some teeth to it, for instance, make it so that any politician found in violation would be banned from office for life. Any contracts signed in violation of it would become null and void.
Small business should be given preference in any contract bidding process. It can't be more costly to do so than having big corporations rip off the government to the tune of billions of dollars like Iraq contractors have done.
Anyone want to help with this? I'm not a lawyer or a constitutional scholar. The first step I think should be to draft a resolution for local governments to vote on.
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» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: Xynyx
» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: djnoll
» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: fearless flower
» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: gracefounddog
Comments are closed-
Posted by: kmart35 on Jun 20, 2007 7:27 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There should be some kind of selection or justification process to show that the contracting will actually benefit the government, improve services, or save money in some way, not just benefit the contractor's wallet!!!
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» RE: Another problem with contracting
Posted by: Trazom
Comments are closed-
Posted by: HughScott on Jun 20, 2007 7:22 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like Gecco, George W. is all about greed. His selfish obsession for wealth and power has propelled him through life, starting as a teenager when he learned to manipulate friends and foes for his own benefit.
One of the best descriptions of his youthful demeanor can be found in the 2002 family biography, George & Laura, by Christopher Andersen. On page 59 of the paperback edition, Andersen wrote about Bush in regards to meeting people, “Whenever possible, he would put his arm around someone’s shoulder or at the very least touch the other person’s arm as they talked. He also bestowed nicknames on just about everyone he met.”
That's exactly the way President Bush behaves today. However, Andersen, using testimony from family and friends, had described him when he was 13 years old -- proving what many critics suspect, that Shrub is a manipulative, glad-handing teenager trapped in a grown man’s body.
Charm and his family name got him into Yale, then the Texas Air National Guard and USAF flight school ahead of more qualified applicants. Not surprisingly, because of his Congressman daddy’s influence, Dub-ya was the only ANG pilot during the Vietnam War to be commissioned without any officer training whatsoever. He never attended a service academy like West Point, never took college ROTC, never went to Officers Candidate School and never served on active duty as an enlisted man.
So how did George W. learn to be an officer? He didn’t. The only military training he received prior to being commissioned happened during a six-week basic airman course, the equivalent of Army boot camp for privates. Even more absurd, while his fellow recruits marched, pulled KP and cleaned toilets, Airman Bush was given a week off to work for the GOP in Florida.
Since then, his personal and political life has been characterized by irresponsibility, incompetence, arrogance and recklessness, with self-serving dedication to the interests of rich and powerful people.
To win wealthy Americans to his side, Bush made tax breaks for upperclass citizens his first priority after taking office in 2001. Not coincidentally, the mainstream media became part of part of the wealthy elite, best described as “nonpartisan pigs at the trough.”
A close second on Bush’s 2001 to-do list was going to war against Iraq. Again, not coincidentally, the biggest blunder in U.S. foreign policy would benefit his main constituency -- rich and powerful Americans through their investments in businesses that receive government contracts.
Ominously for our future, those privileged citizens include EVERY candidate running for president this year with exception of Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich, who don’t have a prayer of winning.
For NEW AlterNet bloggers who want more information about Bush’s unpatriotic background and that of his father, Bush 41, visit my NONPROFIT website, King-George.biz.
Hugh E. Scott, investigative journalist, Vietnam veteran, ex-USAF pilot, lifelong registered Republican, John Kerry supporter in 2004 and the author of George Dub-ya Bush, THE PHONY FIGHTER PILOT.
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» yeah, but "Geko" was
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN
» Good point, BlueBerry.
Posted by: HughScott
» RE: It’s all about greed and the most manipulative, least qualified president in U.S. history
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: It’s all about greed and the most manipulative, least qualified president in U.S. history
Posted by: Doubtom
Comments are closed-
Posted by: shangrilalad on Jun 20, 2007 7:37 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Conservatives do vote but don’t think because they already know the answers to everything; the Bible and Pat Robertson tells them so. They are on a mission for God, and for their own self-interest. They are acutely concerned with who’s fornicating who, who’s collecting food stamps and welfare, and horrified by the abortions which result when nasty sex maniacs are allowed to screw themselves silly. Conservatives see themselves as the Conscience, Judge, Jury and Executioners for the nation, and by God they mean to stamp out wickedness with executions and abstinence. Of course they also oppose taxes, civil rights, health and safety laws, minimum wage, social security, public schools, pollution laws, Medicare, Medicaid, peace, and “darkies” voting. All that liberal stuff.
Conservatives know greed is good and war is good, but see smoking pot and fornicating as evil. They have finely tuned cultural values which allows them to discern which of the Ten Commandments to follow, or ignore.
Non-thinking, Non-voters are blissfully unaware of all of the all of the above, and just wanna have fun. Maybe we ought to be thankful they are Non-thinking, Non-voters. Who knows what Big Brother they might vote for to do their thinking for them.
.
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» RE: Non-thinking, Non-voters
Posted by: dover23
» RE: Non-thinking, Non-voters
Posted by: shangrilalad
» RE: Non-thinking, Non-voters
Posted by: dover23
» RE: Non-thinking, Non-voters
Posted by: peacefullaim
» You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: shangrilalad
» vote for the man or woman who best represents your values.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking. and the third
Posted by: solrev
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Non-thinkers also join fundamentalist religions,
Posted by: Ellie1
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jun 20, 2007 7:52 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I believe that the only way to cure this problem is for the voters to take the control of the leadership of both parties away from their corporate masters. Since this can't be done by an election, I believe that it must be done before the election. I believe it can be done before the next election by a massive grassroots movement, using the successful strategy of the labor unions.
Bob Reichenbach,
Director, The Lincoln Initiative.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: traynor on Jun 20, 2007 7:56 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The BIGGEST handout to political cronies and cousins in administrations from BOTH parties is the NO-BID CONTRACT ON THE PRODUCTION OF OUR MONEY.
The collusion in this article, while large and apparently "partisan," is petty compared to the MONOPOLY benefit belonging to the privately-owned FEDERAL RESERVE BANK that is destroying our Republic with DEBT.
FED Charimen are appointed by the president to serve 14 YEARS - Reagan appointed Greenspan (the world hung on his every word) and then he was RE-appointed by Clinton...
BOTH PARTIES OUTSOURCED OUR MONEY TO THE MONARCHY A LONG TIME AGO (and stole our grandparents gold in the confusion).
UNTIL WE HAVE REAL MONEY AGAIN, WE'RE SCREWING OUR CHILDREN AND OUR REPUBLIC.
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» RE: New Sound, Same as the Old Sound...
Posted by: Krain61
Comments are closed-
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Jun 20, 2007 9:15 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The World needs more TRUTHful, articulate activists & politicians...
but we're burning out fast...
Hightower is the sorta dude who keeps activists on our feet...
Spread Love...
... but wear the Glove!
BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian
"We, two, form a multitude" ~ Ovid
==
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: Trazom on Jun 20, 2007 9:52 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We must fight to protect the true historical definition of our language even as they continue this onslaught. From "free trade" (not free), to "Patriot Act" (what makes internal spying patriotic?), to the laughable "Clear Skies" initiative, to the very definition of terrorist itself, we are slowly losing our ability to discern the truth in words anymore.
This I view as a very dangerous development in recent times, as it becomes particularly difficult to have justice when we can't agree on the definition of the injustices. I blame some of this on the influence of the professional laywers association, as we all know how Clinton weasled out of his impeachment conviction by re-defining sexual relations.
My employer recently resourced away a few thousand employees. Do you see what I mean? That was the official word - not terminated, not fired, but resourced, a word which completely strips all the passion and feeling out of the very action. Last year, another thousand were "re-deployed". Which essentially means terminated, then given limited assistance to a lucky few in finding employment at another location within the company (most couldn't find another position). What gets me is that the company gets away with this, and the employees themselves adopt this new ridiculous terminology? You are almost left feeling guilty for using the words terminated or fired, because the corporate drones who constitute your co-workers have given in.
The color-coded terror alert scheme is another example of this, a poorly conceived system that serves only to leave the majority of the public more confused as to the true state of affairs. How many people knew orange was more severe than yellow? And what does orange mean? As one of my favorite comedians has stated, the terror scheme should be this (in order of most to least severe):
1. F* Me
2. God damnit
3. Jesus Christ
Now that's a system most people can understand. Obviously this is meant to be funny, but the point is that we didn't need this totally uncessary terror alert scheme in the first place. Anyone with half a brain knows to be suspicious of strangers, simply because they don't know them. Any parent is aware of what can happen to his/her child in the blink of an eye, and takes the necessary precations to safeguard their family. We didn't need this then and we don't need it now.
Some might say this is all to Orwellian/1984ish, and I would say to them if you haven't yet read the book then do it today. Another good one is Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. We are getting closer every day.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: reason on Jun 20, 2007 10:25 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That is not fair to families who live in Colorado. The families have to travel out of state to visit. It is probably happening in many other states too.
Sometimes they don't outsource, they raise prices so the business can make more money. The post office always had cheaper shipping and now they don't, so that allows more profit to the other shipping companies. Also watch how fast postage stamps are going up. There is probably some privatization going on there.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: Ellie1 on Jun 20, 2007 10:43 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: on Paul is a libertarian. I would never vote for him
Posted by: Illiteratilumen
» RE: on Paul is a libertarian. I would never vote for him
Posted by: jackyD
» RE: on Paul is a libertarian. I would never vote for him
Posted by: reason
» RE: on Paul is a libertarian. I would never vote for him
Posted by: peacefullaim
Comments are closed-
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Jun 20, 2007 10:58 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Imagine the same guy who fucked up Katrina will run our entire nation even our Industry under HSPD-20..!
We are at the verge of Dictatorship..with NSPD-51..!
The entire government is being run as one big criminal Soviet style enterprise..!
Bush and Rove and Gonzales, Chertoff, Alito, the swine Scalia are all totally unAmerican and traitors who are attempting to over throw our very system of government..!
The Federalist Society Tory scum control our Supreme Court so if Bush declares himself Dictator under NSPD-51 they will uphold it as the traitors that they are..5 of 9 are Federalist Society Tory Traitors..!
Is Nancy Pelosi a traitor too or just an idiot suspending the Constitution deciding Impeachment which is now ever more critical is off the Table..?
ImpeachPelosi if need be, but save the Republic from these criminals she is empowering and enabling..!
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» HSPD-20 and the end of Alternet
Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: HSPD-20 will make things even worse..it's Treason..!
Posted by: peacefullaim
Comments are closed-
Posted by: eosrk on Jun 20, 2007 11:08 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Step2=legalize drugs, cuts off lots of money from terrorists
Step3=Make use of renewable engery, make more fuel-efficent cars-I got that one covered-so the we can cut off almost rest of money, they go broke
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» No, Step1: get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush.
Posted by: Rune
» So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: HughScott
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: Lincoln fan
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Ghoulman on Jun 20, 2007 11:26 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How many security agencies does the USA have? The mass of letters and alphabet soup makes my head spin. There's one for Mexicans, one for Hippies, one for commies, one for... I could go on. Just keep up with my thinking here, mmK?
The largest burocracies in the US are security agencies (and military). There are other burocratic agencies (for food, agriculture, energy) though GOP freaks continually call for the dismantling of every other agency in government... no matter how needed the FDA or the AEC might be they are always put up as punching bags for polemic trash talk. I've never in my entire life heard a Republican call for the dismantleing of the ATF, for example. Note how no one in the FCC ever shot a family to death over a bag of weed.
Homeland Security follows the thinking of Dick Cheney and the Nixen cum neocon crowd. Discredit the billion dollar agencies that do exist (CIA after 9/11) and create a new one to "solve the problem". But it's like another layer on the burocratic cake. All it does is create another source of pork barrel $$$ and a way to suppress and jail "undesirables", like hippes and Mexicans.
Considering Homeland Security was in charge of Katrina (FEMA was folded into HS by the Bush Admin) and left bodies to float down streets while President Chimp and Chertoff smiled for the cameras... goes to show Americans have, indeed, been cowed as a people and live in an oppressive state. After all, do you think any agency in any other country would get away with that??? Buy a clue America.
The greatest danger to every American right now is the security industry created by their government. After all, if there are no bad guys to put into jail, they will have to create them.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: HughScott on Jun 20, 2007 12:11 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, join MoveOn.org like I did in 2003 and take part in its activities.
Second, write letters to your local newspaper about the corrupt Bush administrarion.
Third, send copies of the letters to your senators and House representative.
Those actions aren’t much in the grand scheme of things but they’re a start.
Now it’s your turn. The next time you comment on AlterNet, suggest other ways of taking back America from Shrub the Charlatan and his treasonous neocon cabal.
PS: I'm watching King George on CNN explain why he just vetoed stem cell research. For "moral" reasons, the hypocritical bastard said, adding, "It's wrong to destroy human life in order to save it." Obviously that ethic doesn't apply to Iraq. Pardon me while I puke.
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» Besides commenting on AlterNet, Rune, what have YOU done to protest Bush's unjust war of choice?
Posted by: HughScott
» Quite a lot, actually
Posted by: Rune
» You're hedging, Rune. Be specific. What "direct action" have you taken to help end the war?
Posted by: HughScott
» solutions!!!
Posted by: Krain61
» Fine, Krain61, but those are strategies, not real solutions. For example, how do we "stop traffic"?
Posted by: HughScott
» Offer solutions.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Offer solutions.
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Offer solutions.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Instead of critcism, AlterNeters, offer solutions.
Posted by: peacefullaim
Comments are closed-
Posted by: dealmeinfo2 on Jun 20, 2007 2:39 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
-Dale
------------------------- ---------------------------------------
Local Mortgage Companies
Shopping Mall of America
Minnesota Mortgage Companies
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» So how do we "all get together"?
Posted by: HughScott
» Write your House Rep, support House Resolution 333
Posted by: fanny666
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah on Jun 20, 2007 6:07 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
GOVERNMENT IS WASTEFUL.
THE BIGGER GOVERNMENT IS, THE WORSE OFF IT'S CITIZENRY.
THE MORE MONEY GOVERNMENT HAS TO SPEND, THE WORSE OFF IT'S CITIZENRY.
LETS CLOSE UP THIS LEFTIST BLOG AND GO HOME.
HIGHTOWER, YOU TURN THE LIGHTS OFF.
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» I'm curious, Jak. Why do you think AlterNet is a "leftist" blog?
Posted by: HughScott
» And they continually deride me for stating the obvious: leftists are brainwashed and clueless.
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
» RE: I'm curious, Jak. Why do you think AlterNet is a "leftist" blog?
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
» RE: HALLELUJAH!!! THE LEFT HAS FINALLY GOT IT!!!!!!
Posted by: kmart35
» RE: HALLELUJAH!!! THE LEFT HAS FINALLY GOT IT!!!!!!
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
» RE: HALLELUJAH!!! THE LEFT HAS FINALLY GOT IT!!!!!!
Posted by: kmart35
Comments are closed-
Posted by: liberalibrarian on Jun 20, 2007 8:29 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ratings: Why are we doing this, Alternet? To what purpose? An enquiring mind wants to know.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: liberalibrarian on Jun 20, 2007 8:35 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ratings: Alternet, why are these here? What statistical, empirical information do you want to know? At least let us know how to grade them. Grammar? Spelling? Rant value? Wordiness, maybe?
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Posted by: veive on Jun 21, 2007 3:21 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: So, Jack, here's a question for you
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
Comments are closed-
Posted by: spencerh on Jun 21, 2007 4:13 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: A logical result
Posted by: tjg1984
Comments are closed-
Posted by: commonsense on Jun 22, 2007 4:24 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: tjg1984 on Jun 24, 2007 9:48 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Interesting article...
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
Comments are closed-
Posted by: fanny666 on Jun 26, 2007 2:47 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Department of Defense has become the Department of Offense.
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Posted by: TWilliams on Jun 29, 2007 7:55 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: CatDad on Jun 20, 2007 12:09 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
==========
This statement is an excellent summary for the ENTIRE US government under Bush...
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» To be more concise
Posted by: edith
» RE: To be more concise
Posted by: bifheart
» Purpose of Federal Govt for past many decades is to enrich cronys, donars, and corporations
Posted by: albrechtkrausse
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: Conservasaurus
» Free Market Fantasies- defense spending is a subsidy to high-tech industry
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: Conservasaurus
» Long Story.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: Doubtom
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: albrechtkrausse
» RE: Not Just Homeland Security...
Posted by: sea4th
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Rune on Jun 20, 2007 1:37 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Quite simply, this is a government run by people who have always believed that all government is bad, and they have set out to prove how bad it can be on their way to destroying it. They are also destroying--and ending--countless innocent and once promising lives along the way.
Well, if this is the worst of government--enormous, out of touch, incompetent, violent, wasteful, corrupt, unaccountable, secretive, and generally out of control--that should give us some hints as to what makes for good government: pretty much the exact opposite of this administration.
Yes, contrary to the convictions of this administration and several frequent contributors on AlterNet, there is such a thing as good government, and most countries that are peaceful and populated by contented and healthy people have one. In contrast, most of the lawless hellholes of the world have either a government that shares many of the qualities of this administration, or have very little government at all, save, perhaps, a military and/or a brutish police force that is likely to look after businesses or officers in the government rather than protect the common people. That is the direction we are heading in. I hope we can remind ourselves of what good government looks like and insist on heading towards one before our government and our country is completely decimated and the last of hope and trust is lost for a very long time.
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» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this? crooks and conmen
Posted by: THIAHB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: Blade
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: kmart35
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: kmart35
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: kmart35
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: adp3d
» Conservatives believe in Magic
Posted by: ProgressiveManiac
» RE: Conservatives believe in Magic
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Conservatives believe in Magic
Posted by: ProgressiveManiac
» RE: Conservatives believe in Magic
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: BeTrue
» RE: Please explain this?
Posted by: aussidawg
» Lockheed Martin and new technology
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Lockheed Martin and new technology
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Lockheed Martin and new technology
Posted by: fanny666
» Publicly funded research
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: You need to do some research...
Posted by: EagleMB
» Tailfeathers
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Do you even read your citations?
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Do you even read my citations?
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Allow me to prove you wrong by quoting your own source!!!
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Allow me to prove you wrong by quoting your own source!!!
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Allow me to prove you wrong by quoting your own source!!! [1 of 2]
Posted by: EagleMB
» Bristol-Myers Squibb has exclusive rights over Taxol research regardless of patent
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Bristol-Myers Squibb has exclusive rights over Taxol research regardless of patent [1]
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Bristol-Myers Squibb has exclusive rights over Taxol research regardless of patent [2]
Posted by: EagleMB
» RE: Allow me to prove you wrong by quoting your own source!!! [2 of 2]
Posted by: EagleMB
» Explanation!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: The greatest country in the world????? Misplaced pride.
Posted by: THIAHB
» RE: The greatest country in the world????? Misplaced pride.
Posted by: polyquat50
» Shut em down and shut em out
Posted by: edith
» RE:Good Government
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Good Government
Posted by: Krain61
» When we force them to - NT
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: A grand failure of both government and the will to govern
Posted by: fearlessmanateehunter
» RE: A grand failure of both government and the will to govern
Posted by: polyquat50
» RE: A grand failure of both government and the will to govern
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: A grand failure of both government and the will to govern
Posted by: tjg1984
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Tom Degan on Jun 20, 2007 1:54 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well I'll be diddily-dog-gone! We're there!
Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
"The Rant" by Tom Degan
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» RE: Facist State
Posted by: JSquercia
» RE: Facist State
Posted by: fearless flower
» Americans are FACISTS
Posted by: kellysgarden
» NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: bouyant
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: Ghoulman
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: NO! America is not a fascist nation.....only portions are...stop dualistic thinking
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: Americans are FACISTS
Posted by: Conservasaurus
» America is NOT fascist.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: America is NOT fascist.
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: Americans are FACISTS
Posted by: tjg1984
Comments are closed-
Posted by: packofwolves on Jun 20, 2007 5:21 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: We just sit and cry
Posted by: Sam I Am
» They are counting on you giving up
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: We just sit and watch
Posted by: scmp
» Call your House Rep 202-224-3121, tell them to support HR 333
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: Call your House Rep 202-224-3121, tell them to support HR 333
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Call your House Rep 202-224-3121, tell them to support HR 333
Posted by: fanny666
» RE: We just sit and watch
Posted by: ninethgirl
» RE: While the Churches Here on the Bottom Just Keep Gathering Souls
Posted by: edgar_michel
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Artaraxl on Jun 20, 2007 5:30 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"George's daddy"
"Bushies"
They're unnecessary, and silly.
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» RE: Annoying rhetoric
Posted by: leafsong1
» RE: Good Golly Miss Molly, Annoying Rhetoric
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Annoying rhetoric
Posted by: headhunter
» RE: Annoying rhetoric{needed to make a point}
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: Annoying rhetoric
Posted by: Doubtom
» RE: Annoying rhetoric
Posted by: peacefullaim
» Hpw about George's "DEVIOUS" daddy and the "TREASONOUS" Bushies? Both "flourishes" are TRUE!
Posted by: HughScott
» RE: I Wholeheartedly Agree
Posted by: edgar_michel
Comments are closed-
Posted by: psyopswatcher on Jun 20, 2007 5:32 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
-- Lurita, Bush appointed head of the GSA
-- and her hubby, Douglas, a former military intelligence officer and business liaison official at the Department of Homeland Security.
The business she sold and 'retired' from in 2005 just happens to be in security and surveillance on the borders. Sounds like a whole alotta back-scratching going on.
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» RE: psyopswatcher
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: psyopswatcher
Posted by: edgar_michel
Comments are closed-
Posted by: LMNOP on Jun 20, 2007 5:43 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The citizens are naïve, credulous, and infinitely pliable. Cheating them is easier than stealing money from a baby. They are politically infantile. I mean this literally: America is in precisely the same shape it would be in if you took 300 million second graders, put them into adult bodies, and let them go about self-governance. They are not bad people, just unprepared to participate in the running of their own provincial and self-centered lives, just like second graders. Think about it. If it were literally true that the American people had suffered some sort of magical transformation like Tom Hanks’ character in “Big”, would it be any different than it is? Would you even know?
Their government is more corrupt than Americans know or acknowledge. No, not the worst government ever, but maybe the most dangerous, both because it is so powerful, and because the only check on its behavior, the citizens, are not up to the job any more.
Somebody mentioned that it is as if the government is trying to destroy the nation. It is. Maybe the world. You don’t know how sick the wealthiest and most powerful people in the world are, especially if they're religious zealots like half of these creeps are.
There is little other explanation for deliberately bankrupting a country just when it was beginning to pay its bills with obviously unsound tax cuts. And dragging that country into expensive, pointless wars without end, and not only keeping it there against its will, but adding new wars onto the old ones. And destroying all of its worldwide street cred and good will. And urinating on its Constitution and the rights its promises. What do they have to do to convince this nation, one third of which still think that they're doing a good job, that they are not merely incompetent and selfish, but fiercely anti-American? We'll see. I say never.
Here’s something that can be said until one is blue in the face, and it still isn’t believed: The single purpose of people like Bush, Chaney and the éminence grise behind them is to relieve you of as much of what you have as they want. That means your property and your rights and freedoms. If they have their way, you will all be impoverished slaves under the jackboot.
Too extreme? Go on believing that, and go on being surprised at what they do. And go on calling them stupid because nothing they do works. And go on believing that their lying is restrained, that there are limits. Because it’s hard to believe anybody, let alone an entire termites nest of conservatives, could be so antisocial and so flagrant in their lack of compassion. That’s why America keeps being surprised.
It’s a testimony to the intellectual softness of the American public that the Republicans have done this much damage to the nation and only just now is America questioning their ability to govern, not their intent, coming under question. These are corporate raiders on steroids, and their intention is to harm you. That’s not their purpose, but it is a necessary ramification of it: to control everything – all property and all people.
Look, I don't read minds, and I don't know for a demonstrable fact what goes on in any head other than my own. But I do know this: if you want to predict their response to any situation, ask yourself what you would choose if you were deliberately trying to punish America for something, and damned if that isn't what they do.
The terrorists hate us for our freedoms and for our possessions? Who told you that? The Republicans? LOL. I wonder why? They're lying as always, but also projecting.
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» RE: Wake up - vote solutions
Posted by: solrev
» RE: Wake up - vote solutions
Posted by: Krain61
» great post.
Posted by: WhatNow?
» You remind me of James bovant
Posted by: schokoprinz
» RE: Wake up
Posted by: aussidawg
» RE: Yup, and I see it every day here on Skid Row Los Angeles
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: Wake up -- WELL SAID!
Posted by: Cathyc
» ssegallmd
Posted by: Lincoln fan
Comments are closed-
Posted by: schnoggi on Jun 20, 2007 6:07 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Don't run away; get involved. Read the article on the turnaround in Kansas.
Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: Don't run away; get involved. Read the article on the turnaround in Kansas.
Posted by: clvngodess
» RE: yeah, bye..the corruption will just follow you
Posted by: psychochurch
» RE: yeah, bye
Posted by: Krain61
» RE: yeah, bye
Posted by: ChsCarr4
Comments are closed-
Posted by: snowhound on Jun 20, 2007 6:18 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» Vote Gravel or Kucinich
Posted by: WhatNow?
» Do some homework
Posted by: sausage
» RE: Do some homework
Posted by: dover23
» RE: Do some homework
Posted by: sausage
» RE: Looked it up...
Posted by: dover23
» RE: Do something not a choice
Posted by: solrev
» Ron Paul's lame answer to EVERY question about this:
Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
» RON PAUL IS RIGHT!
Posted by: Maggieb
» Did you bother to read the article? (rhetorical question)
Posted by: karma_ran_over_dogma
» RE: Did you bother to read the article? (rhetorical question)
Posted by: snowhound
» RE: Do something
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Do something
Posted by: snowhound
» RE: Do something
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Do something
Posted by: peacefullaim
Comments are closed-
Posted by: willymack on Jun 20, 2007 6:47 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: Aw puhleese, Willy
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Aw puhleese, Willy
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: Aw puhleese, Willy
Posted by: LMNOP
» " THE FORCE IS STRONG WITH THIS ONE"
Posted by: pito516
» RE: " THE FORCE IS STRONG WITH THIS ONE"
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: " THE FORCE IS STRONG WITH THIS ONE"
Posted by: pito516
Comments are closed-
Posted by: sausage on Jun 20, 2007 6:52 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For example:
Postal service carriers say there are cases across the country where contract workers have shrugged off responsibility and stolen or thrown away mail.
Three weeks ago, a part-time contract carrier in Aspen, Colo., was sentenced to one year of probation after throwing away almost 1,500 pieces of mail from her route.
A few weeks earlier, a contract carrier from Paducah, Ky., was sentenced to three years of probation after admitting that he stole mail, some of which included cash and gift cards.
Seattle Post Intelligence.com, June 18, 2007
"In southern California, Charles Miller, president of Garden Grove Branch 1100, carries the story a step further.“In the city of Orange, there’s a 900-delivery complex of high-end condos. They awarded a CDS contract and the contractor went out and got two young people to do the deliveries. One of them decided the job was just too hard and took the mail home with him,” Miller related.
“When patrons complained, the postmaster said it was a problem with the contractor and there really wasn’t anything he could do,” said Miller[.]"
NALC.org, April, 2007 Postal Record, PDF
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» RE: Monopolized Postal privatization well underway...
Posted by: dover23
» What about the service of UPS and FedEx?
Posted by: sausage
» BTW, another thing
Posted by: sausage
» RE: Postal privatization well underway...
Posted by: Trazom
» You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: sausage
» RE: You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: Angry Blue Planet
» RE: You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: sausage
» RE: You should rely on your leaders...
Posted by: dover23
» RE: You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: You should have taken personal responsibility...
Posted by: Trazom
» It's not that simple
Posted by: zyxwvut
Comments are closed-
Posted by: WhatNow? on Jun 20, 2007 6:59 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'll bet most of the people participating in the pillaging of america are "free market" idealogues. What's so disgustingly humorous about these parasites is that, it is unlikely they would prosper much less survive if they had to truly participate in a free market instead of their cronyism subtly called capitalism.
Give me a good socialist anyday. The only way to get worse than these so called capitalists would be to support tyrants like hitler, stalin, or the khmer rouge.
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» RE: Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: dover23
» It's not a contradiction.
Posted by: zyxwvut
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: pito516
» RE: Double Kudos to Mr. Hightower
Posted by: peacefullaim
» "Can you think of a procedure?"
Posted by: WhatNow?
» RE: "Can you think of a procedure?"
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: "Can you think of a procedure?"
Posted by: peacefullaim
Comments are closed-
Posted by: fearless flower on Jun 20, 2007 7:19 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would add some teeth to it, for instance, make it so that any politician found in violation would be banned from office for life. Any contracts signed in violation of it would become null and void.
Small business should be given preference in any contract bidding process. It can't be more costly to do so than having big corporations rip off the government to the tune of billions of dollars like Iraq contractors have done.
Anyone want to help with this? I'm not a lawyer or a constitutional scholar. The first step I think should be to draft a resolution for local governments to vote on.
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» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: Xynyx
» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: djnoll
» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: fearless flower
» RE: New Constitutional Amendment Overdue
Posted by: gracefounddog
Comments are closed-
Posted by: kmart35 on Jun 20, 2007 7:27 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There should be some kind of selection or justification process to show that the contracting will actually benefit the government, improve services, or save money in some way, not just benefit the contractor's wallet!!!
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» RE: Another problem with contracting
Posted by: Trazom
Comments are closed-
Posted by: HughScott on Jun 20, 2007 7:22 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Like Gecco, George W. is all about greed. His selfish obsession for wealth and power has propelled him through life, starting as a teenager when he learned to manipulate friends and foes for his own benefit.
One of the best descriptions of his youthful demeanor can be found in the 2002 family biography, George & Laura, by Christopher Andersen. On page 59 of the paperback edition, Andersen wrote about Bush in regards to meeting people, “Whenever possible, he would put his arm around someone’s shoulder or at the very least touch the other person’s arm as they talked. He also bestowed nicknames on just about everyone he met.”
That's exactly the way President Bush behaves today. However, Andersen, using testimony from family and friends, had described him when he was 13 years old -- proving what many critics suspect, that Shrub is a manipulative, glad-handing teenager trapped in a grown man’s body.
Charm and his family name got him into Yale, then the Texas Air National Guard and USAF flight school ahead of more qualified applicants. Not surprisingly, because of his Congressman daddy’s influence, Dub-ya was the only ANG pilot during the Vietnam War to be commissioned without any officer training whatsoever. He never attended a service academy like West Point, never took college ROTC, never went to Officers Candidate School and never served on active duty as an enlisted man.
So how did George W. learn to be an officer? He didn’t. The only military training he received prior to being commissioned happened during a six-week basic airman course, the equivalent of Army boot camp for privates. Even more absurd, while his fellow recruits marched, pulled KP and cleaned toilets, Airman Bush was given a week off to work for the GOP in Florida.
Since then, his personal and political life has been characterized by irresponsibility, incompetence, arrogance and recklessness, with self-serving dedication to the interests of rich and powerful people.
To win wealthy Americans to his side, Bush made tax breaks for upperclass citizens his first priority after taking office in 2001. Not coincidentally, the mainstream media became part of part of the wealthy elite, best described as “nonpartisan pigs at the trough.”
A close second on Bush’s 2001 to-do list was going to war against Iraq. Again, not coincidentally, the biggest blunder in U.S. foreign policy would benefit his main constituency -- rich and powerful Americans through their investments in businesses that receive government contracts.
Ominously for our future, those privileged citizens include EVERY candidate running for president this year with exception of Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich, who don’t have a prayer of winning.
For NEW AlterNet bloggers who want more information about Bush’s unpatriotic background and that of his father, Bush 41, visit my NONPROFIT website, King-George.biz.
Hugh E. Scott, investigative journalist, Vietnam veteran, ex-USAF pilot, lifelong registered Republican, John Kerry supporter in 2004 and the author of George Dub-ya Bush, THE PHONY FIGHTER PILOT.
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» yeah, but "Geko" was
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN
» Good point, BlueBerry.
Posted by: HughScott
» RE: It’s all about greed and the most manipulative, least qualified president in U.S. history
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: It’s all about greed and the most manipulative, least qualified president in U.S. history
Posted by: Doubtom
Comments are closed-
Posted by: shangrilalad on Jun 20, 2007 7:37 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Conservatives do vote but don’t think because they already know the answers to everything; the Bible and Pat Robertson tells them so. They are on a mission for God, and for their own self-interest. They are acutely concerned with who’s fornicating who, who’s collecting food stamps and welfare, and horrified by the abortions which result when nasty sex maniacs are allowed to screw themselves silly. Conservatives see themselves as the Conscience, Judge, Jury and Executioners for the nation, and by God they mean to stamp out wickedness with executions and abstinence. Of course they also oppose taxes, civil rights, health and safety laws, minimum wage, social security, public schools, pollution laws, Medicare, Medicaid, peace, and “darkies” voting. All that liberal stuff.
Conservatives know greed is good and war is good, but see smoking pot and fornicating as evil. They have finely tuned cultural values which allows them to discern which of the Ten Commandments to follow, or ignore.
Non-thinking, Non-voters are blissfully unaware of all of the all of the above, and just wanna have fun. Maybe we ought to be thankful they are Non-thinking, Non-voters. Who knows what Big Brother they might vote for to do their thinking for them.
.
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» RE: Non-thinking, Non-voters
Posted by: dover23
» RE: Non-thinking, Non-voters
Posted by: shangrilalad
» RE: Non-thinking, Non-voters
Posted by: dover23
» RE: Non-thinking, Non-voters
Posted by: peacefullaim
» You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: shangrilalad
» vote for the man or woman who best represents your values.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking. and the third
Posted by: solrev
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: Trazom
» RE: You asume that non-voters are non-thinking.
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Non-thinkers also join fundamentalist religions,
Posted by: Ellie1
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jun 20, 2007 7:52 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I believe that the only way to cure this problem is for the voters to take the control of the leadership of both parties away from their corporate masters. Since this can't be done by an election, I believe that it must be done before the election. I believe it can be done before the next election by a massive grassroots movement, using the successful strategy of the labor unions.
Bob Reichenbach,
Director, The Lincoln Initiative.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: traynor on Jun 20, 2007 7:56 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The BIGGEST handout to political cronies and cousins in administrations from BOTH parties is the NO-BID CONTRACT ON THE PRODUCTION OF OUR MONEY.
The collusion in this article, while large and apparently "partisan," is petty compared to the MONOPOLY benefit belonging to the privately-owned FEDERAL RESERVE BANK that is destroying our Republic with DEBT.
FED Charimen are appointed by the president to serve 14 YEARS - Reagan appointed Greenspan (the world hung on his every word) and then he was RE-appointed by Clinton...
BOTH PARTIES OUTSOURCED OUR MONEY TO THE MONARCHY A LONG TIME AGO (and stole our grandparents gold in the confusion).
UNTIL WE HAVE REAL MONEY AGAIN, WE'RE SCREWING OUR CHILDREN AND OUR REPUBLIC.
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» RE: New Sound, Same as the Old Sound...
Posted by: Krain61
Comments are closed-
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Jun 20, 2007 9:15 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The World needs more TRUTHful, articulate activists & politicians...
but we're burning out fast...
Hightower is the sorta dude who keeps activists on our feet...
Spread Love...
... but wear the Glove!
BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian
"We, two, form a multitude" ~ Ovid
==
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: Trazom on Jun 20, 2007 9:52 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We must fight to protect the true historical definition of our language even as they continue this onslaught. From "free trade" (not free), to "Patriot Act" (what makes internal spying patriotic?), to the laughable "Clear Skies" initiative, to the very definition of terrorist itself, we are slowly losing our ability to discern the truth in words anymore.
This I view as a very dangerous development in recent times, as it becomes particularly difficult to have justice when we can't agree on the definition of the injustices. I blame some of this on the influence of the professional laywers association, as we all know how Clinton weasled out of his impeachment conviction by re-defining sexual relations.
My employer recently resourced away a few thousand employees. Do you see what I mean? That was the official word - not terminated, not fired, but resourced, a word which completely strips all the passion and feeling out of the very action. Last year, another thousand were "re-deployed". Which essentially means terminated, then given limited assistance to a lucky few in finding employment at another location within the company (most couldn't find another position). What gets me is that the company gets away with this, and the employees themselves adopt this new ridiculous terminology? You are almost left feeling guilty for using the words terminated or fired, because the corporate drones who constitute your co-workers have given in.
The color-coded terror alert scheme is another example of this, a poorly conceived system that serves only to leave the majority of the public more confused as to the true state of affairs. How many people knew orange was more severe than yellow? And what does orange mean? As one of my favorite comedians has stated, the terror scheme should be this (in order of most to least severe):
1. F* Me
2. God damnit
3. Jesus Christ
Now that's a system most people can understand. Obviously this is meant to be funny, but the point is that we didn't need this totally uncessary terror alert scheme in the first place. Anyone with half a brain knows to be suspicious of strangers, simply because they don't know them. Any parent is aware of what can happen to his/her child in the blink of an eye, and takes the necessary precations to safeguard their family. We didn't need this then and we don't need it now.
Some might say this is all to Orwellian/1984ish, and I would say to them if you haven't yet read the book then do it today. Another good one is Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. We are getting closer every day.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: reason on Jun 20, 2007 10:25 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That is not fair to families who live in Colorado. The families have to travel out of state to visit. It is probably happening in many other states too.
Sometimes they don't outsource, they raise prices so the business can make more money. The post office always had cheaper shipping and now they don't, so that allows more profit to the other shipping companies. Also watch how fast postage stamps are going up. There is probably some privatization going on there.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: Ellie1 on Jun 20, 2007 10:43 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: on Paul is a libertarian. I would never vote for him
Posted by: Illiteratilumen
» RE: on Paul is a libertarian. I would never vote for him
Posted by: jackyD
» RE: on Paul is a libertarian. I would never vote for him
Posted by: reason
» RE: on Paul is a libertarian. I would never vote for him
Posted by: peacefullaim
Comments are closed-
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Jun 20, 2007 10:58 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Imagine the same guy who fucked up Katrina will run our entire nation even our Industry under HSPD-20..!
We are at the verge of Dictatorship..with NSPD-51..!
The entire government is being run as one big criminal Soviet style enterprise..!
Bush and Rove and Gonzales, Chertoff, Alito, the swine Scalia are all totally unAmerican and traitors who are attempting to over throw our very system of government..!
The Federalist Society Tory scum control our Supreme Court so if Bush declares himself Dictator under NSPD-51 they will uphold it as the traitors that they are..5 of 9 are Federalist Society Tory Traitors..!
Is Nancy Pelosi a traitor too or just an idiot suspending the Constitution deciding Impeachment which is now ever more critical is off the Table..?
ImpeachPelosi if need be, but save the Republic from these criminals she is empowering and enabling..!
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» HSPD-20 and the end of Alternet
Posted by: mrcentrist
» RE: HSPD-20 will make things even worse..it's Treason..!
Posted by: peacefullaim
Comments are closed-
Posted by: eosrk on Jun 20, 2007 11:08 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Step2=legalize drugs, cuts off lots of money from terrorists
Step3=Make use of renewable engery, make more fuel-efficent cars-I got that one covered-so the we can cut off almost rest of money, they go broke
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» No, Step1: get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush.
Posted by: Rune
» So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: HughScott
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: So tell me, Rune. How do we "get rid of Democrats who won't impeach Bush?"
Posted by: Lincoln fan
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Posted by: Ghoulman on Jun 20, 2007 11:26 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How many security agencies does the USA have? The mass of letters and alphabet soup makes my head spin. There's one for Mexicans, one for Hippies, one for commies, one for... I could go on. Just keep up with my thinking here, mmK?
The largest burocracies in the US are security agencies (and military). There are other burocratic agencies (for food, agriculture, energy) though GOP freaks continually call for the dismantling of every other agency in government... no matter how needed the FDA or the AEC might be they are always put up as punching bags for polemic trash talk. I've never in my entire life heard a Republican call for the dismantleing of the ATF, for example. Note how no one in the FCC ever shot a family to death over a bag of weed.
Homeland Security follows the thinking of Dick Cheney and the Nixen cum neocon crowd. Discredit the billion dollar agencies that do exist (CIA after 9/11) and create a new one to "solve the problem". But it's like another layer on the burocratic cake. All it does is create another source of pork barrel $$$ and a way to suppress and jail "undesirables", like hippes and Mexicans.
Considering Homeland Security was in charge of Katrina (FEMA was folded into HS by the Bush Admin) and left bodies to float down streets while President Chimp and Chertoff smiled for the cameras... goes to show Americans have, indeed, been cowed as a people and live in an oppressive state. After all, do you think any agency in any other country would get away with that??? Buy a clue America.
The greatest danger to every American right now is the security industry created by their government. After all, if there are no bad guys to put into jail, they will have to create them.
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Posted by: HughScott on Jun 20, 2007 12:11 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First, join MoveOn.org like I did in 2003 and take part in its activities.
Second, write letters to your local newspaper about the corrupt Bush administrarion.
Third, send copies of the letters to your senators and House representative.
Those actions aren’t much in the grand scheme of things but they’re a start.
Now it’s your turn. The next time you comment on AlterNet, suggest other ways of taking back America from Shrub the Charlatan and his treasonous neocon cabal.
PS: I'm watching King George on CNN explain why he just vetoed stem cell research. For "moral" reasons, the hypocritical bastard said, adding, "It's wrong to destroy human life in order to save it." Obviously that ethic doesn't apply to Iraq. Pardon me while I puke.
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» Besides commenting on AlterNet, Rune, what have YOU done to protest Bush's unjust war of choice?
Posted by: HughScott
» Quite a lot, actually
Posted by: Rune
» You're hedging, Rune. Be specific. What "direct action" have you taken to help end the war?
Posted by: HughScott
» solutions!!!
Posted by: Krain61
» Fine, Krain61, but those are strategies, not real solutions. For example, how do we "stop traffic"?
Posted by: HughScott
» Offer solutions.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Offer solutions.
Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: Offer solutions.
Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: Instead of critcism, AlterNeters, offer solutions.
Posted by: peacefullaim
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Posted by: dealmeinfo2 on Jun 20, 2007 2:39 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
-Dale
------------------------- ---------------------------------------
Local Mortgage Companies
Shopping Mall of America
Minnesota Mortgage Companies
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» So how do we "all get together"?
Posted by: HughScott
» Write your House Rep, support House Resolution 333
Posted by: fanny666
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Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah on Jun 20, 2007 6:07 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
GOVERNMENT IS WASTEFUL.
THE BIGGER GOVERNMENT IS, THE WORSE OFF IT'S CITIZENRY.
THE MORE MONEY GOVERNMENT HAS TO SPEND, THE WORSE OFF IT'S CITIZENRY.
LETS CLOSE UP THIS LEFTIST BLOG AND GO HOME.
HIGHTOWER, YOU TURN THE LIGHTS OFF.
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» I'm curious, Jak. Why do you think AlterNet is a "leftist" blog?
Posted by: HughScott
» And they continually deride me for stating the obvious: leftists are brainwashed and clueless.
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
» RE: I'm curious, Jak. Why do you think AlterNet is a "leftist" blog?
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
» RE: HALLELUJAH!!! THE LEFT HAS FINALLY GOT IT!!!!!!
Posted by: kmart35
» RE: HALLELUJAH!!! THE LEFT HAS FINALLY GOT IT!!!!!!
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
» RE: HALLELUJAH!!! THE LEFT HAS FINALLY GOT IT!!!!!!
Posted by: kmart35
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Posted by: liberalibrarian on Jun 20, 2007 8:29 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ratings: Why are we doing this, Alternet? To what purpose? An enquiring mind wants to know.
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Posted by: liberalibrarian on Jun 20, 2007 8:35 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ratings: Alternet, why are these here? What statistical, empirical information do you want to know? At least let us know how to grade them. Grammar? Spelling? Rant value? Wordiness, maybe?
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Posted by: veive on Jun 21, 2007 3:21 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: So, Jack, here's a question for you
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
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Posted by: spencerh on Jun 21, 2007 4:13 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: A logical result
Posted by: tjg1984
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Posted by: commonsense on Jun 22, 2007 4:24 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: tjg1984 on Jun 24, 2007 9:48 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Interesting article...
Posted by: Jak_dah_rippah
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Posted by: fanny666 on Jun 26, 2007 2:47 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Department of Defense has become the Department of Offense.
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Posted by: TWilliams on Jun 29, 2007 7:55 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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