Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Monday, November 06, 2006

20061106 A last minute reading list for political junkies


A last minute reading list for political junkies

November 6th, 2006

A colleague of mine has passed along the following last-minute reading list for peripatetic political junkies in need of a fix. Me, I’m in full metal Maalox mode.

Happy reading. Remember to breathe - - put the coffee down and eat something. Whichever side of the aisle you reside, we need you after the election to help figure all this out.

Parties in final push for voters

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.turnout06nov06,0,7286328.story?coll=bal-mdpolitics-headlines

Black ministers with clout back Ehrlich

http://www.washingtontimes.com/metro/20061104-112722-6888r.htm

GOP has hope Md. can buck trend

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.elections05nov05,0,4615449.story?coll=bal-mdpolitics-headlines

Candidates bank on national stars

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/elections/bal-md.trail06nov06,0,1179818.story?coll=bal-local-headlines

Ehrlich and O'Malley to bask in light of Giuliani and Clinton

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.trail05nov05,0,1217882.story?coll=bal-mdpolitics-headlines

Cummings leads Democrats in getting vote out

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.cummings06nov06,0,2763243.story?coll=bal-mdpolitics-headlines

Battle for control of Md. legislature tightens

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.assembly05nov05,0,4157830.story?coll=bal-mdpolitics-headlines

Care urged when voting

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-md.voting04nov04,0,5883627.story?coll=bal-mdpolitics-headlines

Emphasis on turnout

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.trail04nov04,0,759165.story?coll=bal-mdpolitics-headlines

Fierce races, more spending

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.md.ads04nov04,0,6575707.story?coll=bal-mdpolitics-headlines

Leaders Say They Endorsed Republican to Wake Democrats

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/05/AR2006110500986.html

Ehrlich, O'Malley Likely to Set Different Tones in Annapolis

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/04/AR2006110400951.html

Familiar Steps at the End of Campaign Trail

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/04/AR2006110400950.html

Democrats on edge as governor's race narrows

http://www.washingtontimes.com/metro/20061103-105605-5264r.htm

Politics from the pulpits

http://www.washingtontimes.com/metro/20061106-123546-4159r.htm

Ehrlich, O'Malley bring out the big guns

http://www.washingtontimes.com/metro/20061106-123115-1490r.htm

Suit eyes extended absentee voting

http://www.washingtontimes.com/metro/

Mfume son joins Steele to rally Baltimore voters

http://www.washingtontimes.com/metro/20061104-112723-3354r.htm

Elections chief says voting system has no proven flaws

http://www.examiner.com/a-380755~Elections_chief_says_voting_system_has_no_proven_flaws.html

Giuliani, first responders rally for Governor Ehrlich

http://www.examiner.com/a-381546~Giuliani__first_responders_rally_for_Governor_Ehrlich.html

Governor's race in a dead heat to the finish

http://www.examiner.com/a-381585~Governor_s_race_in_a_dead_heat_to_the_finish.html

Ehrlich raises eminent domain as polling issue

http://www.examiner.com/a-378930~Ehrlich_raises_eminent_domain_as_polling_issue.html

Governor makes first visit to gallery walk

http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/display.htm?storyid=53723

1 day to E-Day: High turnout expected

http://www.cecilwhig.com/articles/2006/11/06/news/01.txt

'I don't feel like my vote counts'

http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061106/NEWS01/611060301/1002

####

20061106 Four Statewide Ballot Questions

Four Statewide Ballot Questions

For those in a hurry my view is: 1 (NO); 2 and 3 (Yes) and 4 (NO).

The official ballot language and background is located on the State Board of Elections website:

http://www.elections.state.md.us/elections/2006/questions/index.html

I’ve been getting quite a few last minute questions and commentary on the four statewide Maryland ballot questions.

I’m not aware if any of the Maryland Blogger Alliance members did anything on this – if they have, call it my attention and I’ll link it…

On Thursday, October 20th, 2006, the Washington Post (WaPo) did an editorial about the four questions – and a colleague also did an analysis…

- there appears to be some varying views on question number 1(WaPo – Yes; Me – NO; and my constitution-scholar colleague – NO). I’ve been told that Governor Ehrlich supports – says Yes to question No.1. The Governor supports this amendment because it memorializes the statutory requirements that already exist. I guess my suggestion to vote NO comes from being a former elected Chief Executive Officer who grew tired of legislative bodies that have enough votes to usurp and/or intrude upon executive function. It is already statute…;

;

And some firm consensus on the questions 2 by all three of us… (Yes); 3(Yes) and 4(NO).

_____

Actually, questions number 2 and 3 really are housekeeping and everyone ought to consider Yes on both questions.

As far as question 1, it just seems to me that if the governor were to be a Democrat, the Maryland General Assembly would have never passed the bill requiring the question… It just seems like so much of the situational ethics employed by a Maryland General Assembly pre-occupied with gotcha politics.

Question number 1 involves the perception that “Republican Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s (attempted) to sell a parcel owned by the state to a business executive…”

In 2003, Governor Ehrlich asked state agencies to review all state assets to identify surplus assets that could be disposed of because they were no longer essential for state use. It is a typical management technique taken by any executive searching for greater efficiencies in operations.

I have had too many folks, who are strait-shooters; whose judgment I accept as objective, say that question number 1 is all about gotcha politics and making a mountain over a molehill.

_____

The Washington Post suggests Vote yes on the first three, no on the fourth.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/25/AR2006102501664_pf.html

Four Maryland Questions

Vote yes on the first three, no on the fourth.

Thursday, October 26, 2006; A24

MARYLAND VOTERS face four statewide ballot questions this year -- three constitutional amendments and a decision on whether to retain changes the General Assembly made this year to election law. The amendments should all pass, but voters should reject the election law changes.

Question 1 asks voters to approve a constitutional amendment to prohibit the Maryland Board of Public Works from allowing the sale of state land without the approval of the General Assembly.

Following an uproar over Republican Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr.'s attempt to sell a parcel owned by the state to a business executive, the legislature passed a law requiring that it sign off on land transfers.

Writing the rule into the constitution represents a basic check on the authority of the board -- an authority that is itself a part of the constitution. The amendment is far from onerous, allowing the General Assembly to delegate this power to a committee. Its adoption makes sense.

Questions 2 and 3 are both judicial housekeeping measures that ought to pass.

Question 2 makes constructive technical changes to the state's appeals process.

Question 3 ups from $5,000 to $10,000 the amount a plaintiff in a civil case has to seek in damages before he can demand a jury trial in a circuit court rather than a trial before a judge in a district court.

Question 4 deals with changes to election law that were so controversial that the state's highest court has already thrown out their centerpiece, an early voting system.

By the time the court acted, however, opponents of the measure had already gathered enough signatures to put the law on the ballot -- meaning voters get to decide whether to ratify its residue, which has already gone into effect.

They should vote it down.

The most important provision remaining requires the State Board of Elections, which has five members, to act on all matters by supermajority vote. This could disable the board from doing much of anything, requiring bipartisan agreement for every step. The law also gives the elections administrator, Linda H. Lamone, new powers to go to court to force local election boards to comply with the rules.

The cumulative result would be to shift power into Ms. Lamone's hands. As the General Assembly already has to go back to the drawing board on early voting, it makes sense to start over with the rest of the bill, too.

© 2006 The Washington Post Company

_____

The colleague who made the most understandable analysis on the four questions says: - No on question number 1; - yes and questions 2 and 3; and No on question number 4. I have pasted that colleague’s analysis here:

Understanding the Statewide Ballot Questions

The November ballot has four statewide ballot questions. The first three of the questions are Constitutional Amendments passed by the General Assembly and referred to the public for adoption. The fourth question is a referred bill on election law that was successfully petitioned to referendum by Marylanders for Fair Elections.

The official ballot language and background is located on the State Board of Elections website: http://www.elections.state.md.us/elections/2006/questions/index.html

Statewide Question 1 – Constitutional Amendment - Disposition of Park Lands

This question is a totally political ploy by the Democrat Party to stick it to Ehrlich. The policy is currently in place by statute.

There is no reason for it to be incorporated into the State Constitution.

But the Democrats wanted a rallying cry to bring the environmental community out to the polls against Bob Ehrlich in 2006 – so they made the bill a Constitutional Amendment.

In 2003, Governor Ehrlich asked state agencies to review all state assets to identify surplus assets that could be disposed of because they were no longer essential for state use.

It is a typical management technique taken by any executive searching for greater efficiencies in operations.

Over the last four years, the Democrats in the legislature placed a premium on finding issues to make the Governor look bad. They made sure that the Governor’s slots initiative did not pass. They spent over $1 million to determine that at-will employees were legally dismissed from their positions.

And they exaggerated the circumstances under which surplus land sales were being considered, including one instance in St. Mary’s County, in order to undermine the Governor’s significant accomplishments with the environmental community through his Chesapeake Bay initiatives.

The Governor supports this amendment because it memorializes the statutory requirements that already exist.

But it is simply surplusage to add it to the Constitution, it restricts Gubernatorial powers, the policy adds a layer of bureaucracy through General Assembly intervention into executive decision-making and it is on the ballot only for it’s value to turn out anti-Ehrlich vote.

It deserves a big “AGAINST” the referred law.

Statewide Question 2 – Constitutional Amendment – Circuit Court In Banc Decisions

Typically, a case heard in a county circuit court is heard by one judge. The Constitution provides that a party may appeal a circuit court decision to the circuit court sitting “in banc.” “In banc” literally means the entire bench but in contemporary practice provides for an appeal hearing before a panel of three circuit court judges. In the early history of Maryland, “in banc” review saved the time, travel and expense of traveling to Annapolis for an appeal before the Maryland Court of Appeals.

While making some substantive change to appeal rights in Maryland, this Constitutional Amendment can be characterized as housekeeping. When the Court of Special Appeals was created as an intermediate appellate court in 1966, it left a question that has not been addressed until this bill. If you are a party in a circuit court case and the other party appeals for an “in banc” review, you could lose your right to appeal the “in banc” decision because it would go directly to the Court of Appeals where the appeal is not automatic but instead is discretionary by certiorari. This bill guarantees the party that did not request an “in banc” review to have an appeal right to the Court of Special Appeals.

Bottom line: this amendment is needed to insure that the party that did not request the “in banc” review continues to retain an automatic appeal right. Vote “FOR” the referred law.

Statewide Question 3 – Constitutional Amendment – Civil Jury Trials

This is another bill that can be characterized as housekeeping. In 1998, the General Assembly increased the amount-in-controversy threshold under which one is entitled to request a jury trial in a civil case from $5,000 to $10,000. However, in a recent case, the Court of Appeals ruled that there is a common law right to a jury trial and that the General Assembly did not have the authority to establish the amount-in-controversy threshold because of a conflict between the Constitutional language and the common law in the Declaration of Rights.

This bill resolves this conflict and would allow the General Assembly to pass a bill next session to set the threshold – more than likely at $10,000. Some people would oppose this bill on the premise that anyone should be allowed to request a trial of one’s peers no matter what is at controversy.

However, under a greater efficiency in the courts rationale – I say vote “FOR” the referred bill.

Statewide Question 4 – Statewide Referendum – Election Law Revisions

Don’t let the preface to this bill fool you! Many of you signed petitions to bring this bill to referendum so that it could be defeated.

Even though the biggest atrocity in the bill – early voting – was struck down as unconstitutional by the Court of Appeals, there is still bad stuff in this bill for which the rest should be struck down by the voters.

Again, the Democrat leadership of the General Assembly injected pure partisan politics into our election laws.

The bill requires a supermajority vote (4 of 5 members) for the State Board of Elections to make any decisions – with 3 Republicans and 2 Democrats on the board, it means that the Democrats totally control any actions at the State level. It also handcuffs the Board’s powers thus yielding greater power to the incumbent State Administrator (who was given a job for life by an earlier bill passed by the Democrat leadership).

The law also consolidates considerable new powers in the State Administrator to be able to sue local election boards, to hold veto power over basic decisions made by local election boards and assist registered voters to sue their local boards.

Need we also remind you that this bill requires that every polling place be outfitted with the epollbooks that performed so poorly for the Primary election.

TrueVote Maryland and other good government election’s organizations say vote “AGAINST” this law – and so do I.

####

20061106 The Delmarva Farmer endorsement of Governor Ehrlich

Agriculture says Gov. Ehrlich deserves second term

Since most all of my roots are agriculture – I wish I had written this… But I didn’t and besides, Mr. Hostetter said it better...

http://www.americanfarm.com/TopStory10.31.06f.html

The Delmarva Farmer endorsement of Governor Ehrlich

Gov. Ehrlich deserves second term

VIEWPOINT

10.31.2006

By E. RALPH HOSTETTER
AFP Publisher

Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. is seeking his second term as governor of Maryland on Nov. 7.

Democrat Mayor of the City of Baltimore Martin O’Malley seeks to unseat the governor.

The Delmarva Farmer endorses Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich for re-election.

Gov. Ehrlich’s election in 2002 brought a much-needed return of respectability and a fiscally responsible government to Maryland’s State House.

After 16 years of big-city, big-county domination by Gov. William Donald Schaefer and Gov. Parris N. Glendening, rural Marylanders welcomed a governor not controlled by special interests and political activitists, one who would represent them. This was particularly true for the Eastern Shore and the agricultural community of Maryland.

Gov. Ehrlich has proved to be fiscally responsible. Inheriting a billion-dollar-plus deficit from the Glendening Administration, Gov. Ehrlich balanced the budget with a minimum of tax increases.

Gov. Ehrlich has been in the forefront of public education, providing a program for charter schools and more funding for kindergartens.

His contributions to agriculture are many. He is a leader in land preservation for farming and has provided funding for cover crops that make possible a workable nutrient management program.

In an endorsement by the Maryland Farm Bureau, Chuck Fry, vice president, said, “For the first time in eight years, farmers are being heard, and under Gov. Ehrlich’s leadership we actually feel like the state is listening. Maryland farmers are grateful for Bob Ehrlich in his success at saving our livelihoods and our land.”

Gov. Ehrlich kept a campaign promise to provide “a place at the table for Maryland agriculture.”

He did this admirably with his appointment of a Democrat, Lewis Riley, as Secretary of Agriculture.

Lew Riley, highly respected by Maryland farmers, had worked tirelessly in a previous administration not known as pro-agriculture.

The Washington Post has endorsed Gov. Ehrlich with the following words: “He has grown in the role to become a generally proficient, pragmatic governor. ... He has chalked up successes on transportation, the environment and education, among other things. For Mr. Ehrlich, the state’s first Republican governor in a generation, those are real achievements — particularly when weighed against the monolith of Democratic dominance in the state legislature.”

Gov. Ehrlich’s opponent, Martin O’Malley, represents the re-emergence of a former inner city political machine that once dominated a one-party system for years in Baltimore.

The Washington Post characterized the O’Malley campaign as “Baltimore-centric,” saying, “His campaign is seen by some of his own allies as insular — a worrisome trait in a governor.”

Prior to the administration of Gov. Ehrlich, rural Maryland and, in particular, Maryland agriculture went unrecognized through two administrations of Baltimore City and big county “centric, insular” government.

A vote for Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich will solve the problem.

In all fairness, Mayor O’Malley has made statements recently in support of Maryland agriculture.

The Maryland voter’s choice is between a political statement at election time and the demonstrated record of Gov. Ehrlich’s support for Maryland agriculture during his administration over the past four years.

####

20061106 Ranting and Raving in Maryland by Dan Gainor


Ranting and Raving in Maryland

Ranting & raving for the whole world to see

By Dan Gainer of The Examiner

November 6th, 2006

Hat Tip: MY Mom, relayed to me by my wife – Mom saw the hard copy version off-line.

I see where Crablaw is aware of it… Mr. Godfrey, until you get to some connectivity later in the day, the hard copy article can be found on page 28 and 29.

Dan Gainor of The Examiner has penned a lengthy piece in the paper about blogging. He has been working on this piece for quite some time and many of us were looking forward to what he found out – and subsequently reported.

I have only sped-read it - - I’m on deadline for a column and won’t have time to post much about it until much later in the day. What I have read looks to me like a rather in depth look at the Maryland Blogosphere. It also looks like an incredible amount of work on the part of Mr. Gainor and it is appreciated. Yeah, from a quick glance- it is perhaps the most definitive work on blogging in Maryland that I have yet to see. A big thank you to Don Gainor.

I did a quick read looking for mentions of Maryland Blogger Alliance colleagues.

I also noticed that a colleague from the Howard County “Gang of Four” was mentioned: “Dave Wissing, a 31-year-old Columbia engineer who writes the Hedgehog Report…” For more info: See here and here.

** Maryland Blogger Alliance colleagues **

The Baltimore Examiner’s Dan Gainor’s

The Best Local Blogs

November 6th, 2006

Looking for a hot local blog? Check out these:

» Maryland Politics NOW — www.mdpoliticsnow.com

**** » Kevin Dayhoff site — kevindayhoff.blogspot.com

» Blogtimore — blogtimore.com/

» Maryland Democrats Blog Network — www.mddems.org/ht/d/sp/i/583271/pid/583271

**** » Soccer Dad — soccerdad.baltiblogs.com

» Charm City Chronicle — charmcitychronicle.blogspot.com

» Baltimore Crime — baltimorecrime.blogspot.com

» Anger Hangover — angerhangover.livejournal.com

» The Hedgehog Report — www.davidwissing.com

» Your Neighborhood Librarian —

yourneighborhoodlibrarian.blogspot.com

****» Free State Politics — freestatepolitics.blogspot.com

****» Baltimore Reporter — baltimorereporter.com

» Alanlaz — www.alanlaz.blogspot.com

Clips from mentions of Maryland Blogger Alliance members, by Mr. Gainor include:

Local blogs don’t just lean right. Bruce Godfrey a 37-year-old Reisterstown attorney who posts on www.crablaw.com, said his favorite post was about his own political evolution. He called it “A Libertarian Limps Leftward,” and the writing detailed his political shift from right to left. The GOP, he now says, “ballooned the deficit through unfunded wild spending beyond the wildest drunken dreams of the last Texan president, Lyndon Johnson.”

And:

Resentment of traditional media is a driving force for many bloggers.

Robert Farrow, a 36-year-old nursing home director from Halethorpe, is one of several people who write for baltimorereporter.com. The blog comments on journalism including CNN, Newsweek, The New York Times, The Baltimore Sun and The Baltimore Examiner. Farrow is critical of today’s news media. “Journalism is supposed to report the facts, editorials are supposed to give opinions, but this is no longer the case,” he stated.

And:

David Gerstman, a 45-year-old Baltimorean who blogs as “Soccer Dad,” said media bias was “what inspired me to get involved in blogging in the first place.”

And:

Owings Mills writer Stephanie Dray, a 35-year-old former attorney, said her “blogging is essentially publishing your own syndicated column on the Internet.”

And:

Former Westminster mayor Kevin Dayhoff’s blog mixes news and commentary and photos such as his Sept. 19 report of a fatal Westminster crash “involving a bicyclist and a Carroll County Sheriff’s deputy.”

And:

Former Westminster mayor Kevin Dayhoff, 53, is one of many bloggers who mixes politics with local news and items of interest — much like a newspaper. He says blogging is “an alternative electronic conversation about current events and issues. An electronic show and tell.”

That show and tell and can be a strange mix. Dayhoff’s posts tell of his trip to Ocean City, running into Baltimore Mayor Martin O’Malley and struggling to make his mobile Internet connection work. “I felt like the computer-geek that I am,” he wrote, telling about moving the car back and forth to get a signal. “Pray for my wife,” he added.

Go to: “Ranting & raving for the whole world to see” to read the fruits of Mr. Gainor’s hard work.

####

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA. E-mail him at: kdayhoff@carr.org www.thetentacle.com Westminster Eagle Opinion and Winchester Report www.thewestminstereagle.com www.kevindayhoff.com has moved to http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/

20061106 The Baltimore Examiner’s Don Gainor’s The best local blogs


The Baltimore Examiner’s Don Gainor’s

The Best Local Blogs

November 6th, 2006

** Maryland Blogger Alliance colleagues **

Looking for a hot local blog? Check out these:

» Maryland Politics NOW — www.mdpoliticsnow.com

**** » Kevin Dayhoff site — kevindayhoff.blogspot.com

» Blogtimore — blogtimore.com/

» Maryland Democrats Blog Network — www.mddems.org/ht/d/sp/i/583271/pid/583271

**** » Soccer Dad — soccerdad.baltiblogs.com

» Charm City Chronicle — charmcitychronicle.blogspot.com

» Baltimore Crime — baltimorecrime.blogspot.com

» Anger Hangover — angerhangover.livejournal.com

» The Hedgehog Report — www.davidwissing.com

» Your Neighborhood Librarian —

yourneighborhoodlibrarian.blogspot.com

****» Free State Politics — freestatepolitics.blogspot.com

****» Baltimore Reporter — baltimorereporter.com

» Alanlaz — www.alanlaz.blogspot.com


20061105 The 1898 Wilmington North Carolina Race Riots


The 1898 Wilmington North Carolina Race Riots

Elections, Race Riots, A Coup d’Etat, Murder and Mayhem in the old south of 1898

The November 5th, 2006 edition of Editor and Publisher is carrying an Associated Press story about The News & Observer of Raleigh and The Charlotte Observer doing a special report on the 1898 Wilmington North Carolina race riot. Both papers are owned by The McClatchy Company

Thirty-five years ago, while attending Elon College and playing a very minor role in civil rights activism, the 1898 Wilmington Race Riot – “which unfolded in the days after Election Day on Nov. 8, 1898” - was primarily the stuff of oral folklore.

I will be very interested in reading more about this very dark episode in America’s past. It is a story that has everything to fascinate and horrify a political scientist; race relations in the old south, the role of newspapers during an era in which many were openly very biased and agenda-driven, government – or rather, the overthrow of a government, Republicans and Democrats, murder and mayhem.

According to a PowerPoint Presentation by LeRae S. Umfleet: “The Wilmington Race Riot was the result of the 1898 white supremacy campaign instituted by the Democratic Party. Democrats fueled racial hatred and promised violence to win the election. Although Election Day was peaceful as Democrats regained control of the General Assembly and New Hanover County government, violence broke out two days later in the state’s most progressive city.”

The Associated Press story begins:

2 North Carolina Papers Team on Special Report on 1898 Race Riot

Published: November 05, 2006 5:00 PM ET

RALEIGH North Carolina's two largest daily newspapers have produced a 16-page special section on the 1898 race riot and state-labled "coup d'etat" that drove hundreds of Wilmington's black residents from the coastal city, and are offering the section to newspapers statewide.

Tim Tyson, a professor at the University of Wisconsin and author of a book on the Wilmington riot, is the lead writer for the section produced by The News & Observer of Raleigh with help from The Charlotte Observer.

The section, to be published in the two papers as a tabloid on Nov. 17, will include photos, graphics and an examination of newspapers' role in fanning white discontent in advance of the 1898 elections.

The full section and a one-page summary designed for smaller papers are being offered to all members of the North Carolina Press Association for same-day publication. The material may be downloaded beginning Thursday; users must pay only their own printing costs.

"Our goal is to get as many people as possible to know this story," said News & Observer executive editor Melanie Sill.

The Wilmington Star-News and several smaller papers have said they will run the section, she said. Its release is timed to coincide roughly with the 108th anniversary of the riots, which unfolded in the days after Election Day on Nov. 8, 1898.

Sill and News & Observer publisher Orage Quarles III began discussing the idea this summer as a state-appointed commission prepared a report on the violence that claimed as many as 60 lives, drove out the city's Republican government and sparked an exodus of 2,100 black residents.

Read the rest here.

####

20061104 Military Times says Rumsfeld must go



The text of Military Times editorial: ‘Rumsfeld must go’

Writing for “The Blog” on the Huffington Post, on November 4, 2006, Brent Budowsky agrees: “Military Times Speaks Truth To Power And the Country: Calls For Rumsfeld To Go.”

However, Editor and Publisher reports that the “White House Calls Editorials Urging Rumsfeld Exit 'Shabby'.”

The text and only the text at this point…

http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/story.php?f=1-292925-2333376.php

Saying Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has lost credibility with the uniformed leadership, with the troops, with Congress and with the public at large, a Military Times editorial calls on President Bush to fire him.

Published in the Nov. 13 issue of Army Times, Navy Times, Air Force Times and Marine Corps Times, on newsstands Monday, the editorial says it is time for the president “to face the hard bruising truth.”

“His strategy has failed, and his ability to lead is compromised. And although the blame for our failures in Iraq rests with the secretary, it will be the troops who bear its brunt,” the newspapers say.

In a statement released on Saturday, Department of Defense spokesman Bryan Whitman said that “the new ‘chorus of criticism’ noted by the editorials is actually old news and does not include commanders in the field, who remain committed to the mission….The assertion, without evidence, that senior military officers are ‘toeing the line’ is an insult to their judgment and integrity.”


Read the editorial.

November 04, 2006

Editorial

Time for Rumsfeld to go

“So long as our government requires the backing of an aroused and informed public opinion ... it is necessary to tell the hard bruising truth.”

That statement was written by Pulitzer Prize-winning war correspondent Marguerite Higgins more than a half-century ago during the Korean War.

But until recently, the “hard bruising” truth about the Iraq war has been difficult to come by from leaders in Washington.

One rosy reassurance after another has been handed down by President Bush, Vice President Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld: “mission accomplished,” the insurgency is “in its last throes,” and “back off,” we know what we’re doing, are a few choice examples.

Military leaders generally toed the line, although a few retired generals eventually spoke out from the safety of the sidelines, inciting criticism equally from anti-war types, who thought they should have spoken out while still in uniform, and pro-war foes, who thought the generals should have kept their critiques behind closed doors.

Now, however, a new chorus of criticism is beginning to resonate. Active-duty military leaders are starting to voice misgivings about the war’s planning, execution and dimming prospects for success.

Army Gen. John Abizaid, chief of U.S. Central Command, told a Senate Armed Services Committee in September: “I believe that the sectarian violence is probably as bad as I’ve seen it ... and that if not stopped, it is possible that Iraq could move towards civil war.”

Last week, someone leaked to The New York Times a Central Command briefing slide showing an assessment that the civil conflict in Iraq now borders on “critical” and has been sliding toward “chaos” for most of the past year. The strategy in Iraq has been to train an Iraqi army and police force that could gradually take over for U.S. troops in providing for the security of their new government and their nation.

But despite the best efforts of American trainers, the problem of molding a viciously sectarian population into anything resembling a force for national unity has become a losing proposition.

For two years, American sergeants, captains and majors training the Iraqis have told their bosses that Iraqi troops have no sense of national identity, are only in it for the money, don’t show up for duty and cannot sustain themselves.

Meanwhile, colonels and generals have asked their bosses for more troops. Service chiefs have asked for more money.

And all along, Rumsfeld has assured us that things are well in hand.

Now, the president says he’ll stick with Rumsfeld for the balance of his term in the White House.

This is a mistake. It is one thing for the majority of Americans to think Rumsfeld has failed. But when the nation’s current military leaders start to break publicly with their defense secretary, then it is clear that he is losing control of the institution he ostensibly leads.

These officers have been loyal public promoters of a war policy many privately feared would fail. They have kept their counsel private, adhering to more than two centuries of American tradition of subordination of the military to civilian authority.

And although that tradition, and the officers’ deep sense of honor, prevent them from saying this publicly, more and more of them believe it.

Rumsfeld has lost credibility with the uniformed leadership, with the troops, with Congress and with the public at large. His strategy has failed, and his ability to lead is compromised. And although the blame for our failures in Iraq rests with the secretary, it will be the troops who bear its brunt.

This is not about the midterm elections. Regardless of which party wins Nov. 7, the time has come, Mr. President, to face the hard bruising truth:

Donald Rumsfeld must go.

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Sunday, November 05, 2006

20061104 Greatest movie line ever

Greatest movie line ever

November 4th, 2006

Just like Democrats





Re: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_wg9G2PEHk

Hat Tip: Grammy. Perhaps this video is making the rounds on the internet? I just received it via e-mail from “Grammy” and it is priceless.

Please enjoy. If anyone has some additional information about this clip, please let me know…

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September 21, 2007 Update: I tracked down a reference to my November 4th, 2006 post, “20061104 Greatest movie line ever,” on Andrew Sullivan’s “The Daily Dish” in a post on July 7, 2007.

Apparently as the YouTube featuring an hilarious give-and-take commentary on Democrats in which Bob Hope participates and delivers the “zinger,” made its rounds on the internet it found a spot on Mr. Sullivan’s blog and that, in turn sparked an initiative to find the “Best Movie Line Ever.”

For a follow-up, see:

20070921 Best Movie Line Ever – and the winner is