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otraque

05/17/05 4:48 PM

#3693 RE: Ace Hanlon #3691

Rude Pundit is WHAT we need! A lot of them.
<<Once more, the Bush White House has stumbled into a way to divert the story away, away from systematic torture, away from false imprisonment, away from all of those horrors that have become the status quo for this America. Away from all the crimes committed in our names>>
I just said to my wife "We are getting closer and closer to being a fascist totalitarian state". She replied "We already are." She is exactly right.
We ran out of time for being polite and intellectual and reasoning thinking and working within the system deluding ourselves we are preventing something, that something IS, and it is entrenched and powerful and it is time for those that wear rose tinted glasses to rip them off their eyes and smash them with their feet and get into reality and adjust action in accordance to that reality.
But guess what, it won't happen, those wearers of rose-tinted glasses, those , 'we still have hope', those, 'we can change things in peaceful don't rock the boat deadening civility' will continue to remain the same.
Here is the quiet, civil, very bright, very good fellow Bill Bradley writing a devastating truth of how the right-wing has conquered america.
Sadly his "it will take at least a decade" to repair the broken democratic party, is a decade too long---the damage is terminal. The alternatives i unfortunately have no freedom to write.
<<A Party Inverted

By BILL BRADLEY
Published: March 30, 2005

FIVE months after the presidential election Democrats are still pointing fingers at one another and trying to figure out why Republicans won. Was the problem the party's position on social issues or taxes or defense or what? Were there tactical errors made in the conduct of the campaign? Were the right advisers heard? Was the candidate flawed?

Before deciding what Democrats should do now, it's important to see what Republicans have done right over many years. When the Goldwater Republicans lost in 1964, they didn't try to become Democrats. They tried to figure out how to make their own ideas more appealing to the voters. As part of this effort, they turned to Lewis Powell, then a corporate lawyer and soon to become a member of the United States Supreme Court. In 1971 he wrote a landmark memo for the United States Chamber of Commerce in which he advocated a sweeping, coordinated and long-term effort to spread conservative ideas on college campuses, in academic journals and in the news media.

To further the party's ideological and political goals, Republicans in the 1970's and 1980's built a comprehensive structure based on Powell's blueprint. Visualize that structure as a pyramid.

You've probably heard some of this before, but let me run through it again. Big individual donors and large foundations - the Scaife family and Olin foundations, for instance - form the base of the pyramid. They finance conservative research centers like the Heritage Foundation, the Cato Institute and the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, entities that make up the second level of the pyramid.

The ideas these organizations develop are then pushed up to the third level of the pyramid - the political level. There, strategists like Karl Rove or Ralph Reed or Ken Mehlman take these new ideas and, through polling, focus groups and careful attention to Democratic attacks, convert them into language that will appeal to the broadest electorate. That language is sometimes in the form of an assault on Democrats and at other times in the form of advocacy for a new policy position. The development process can take years. And then there's the fourth level of the pyramid: the partisan news media. Conservative commentators and networks spread these finely honed ideas.

At the very top of the pyramid you'll find the president. Because the pyramid is stable, all you have to do is put a different top on it and it works fine.

It is not quite the "right wing conspiracy" that Hillary Clinton described, but it is an impressive organization built consciously, carefully and single-mindedly. The Ann Coulters and Grover Norquists don't want to be candidates for anything or cabinet officers for anyone. They know their roles and execute them because they're paid well and believe, I think, in what they're saying. True, there's lots of money involved, but the money makes a difference because it goes toward reinforcing a structure that is already stable.

To understand how the Democratic Party works, invert the pyramid. Imagine a pyramid balancing precariously on its point, which is the presidential candidate.

Democrats who run for president have to build their own pyramids all by themselves. There is no coherent, larger structure that they can rely on. Unlike Republicans, they don't simply have to assemble a campaign apparatus - they have to formulate ideas and a vision, too. Many Democratic fundraisers join a campaign only after assessing how well it has done in assembling its pyramid of political, media and idea people.

There is no clearly identifiable funding base for Democratic policy organizations, and in the frantic campaign rush there is no time for patient, long-term development of new ideas or of new ways to sell old ideas. Campaigns don't start thinking about a Democratic brand until halfway through the election year, by which time winning the daily news cycle takes precedence over building a consistent message. The closest that Democrats get to a brand is a catchy slogan.

Democrats choose this approach, I believe, because we are still hypnotized by Jack Kennedy, and the promise of a charismatic leader who can change America by the strength and style of his personality. The trouble is that every four years the party splits and rallies around several different individuals at once. Opponents in the primaries then exaggerate their differences and leave the public confused about what Democrats believe.

In such a system tactics trump strategy. Candidates don't risk talking about big ideas because the ideas have never been sufficiently tested. Instead they usually wind up arguing about minor issues and express few deep convictions. In the worst case, they embrace "Republican lite" platforms - never realizing that in doing so they're allowing the Republicans to define the terms of the debate.

A party based on charisma has no long-term impact. Think of our last charismatic leader, Bill Clinton. He was president for eight years. He was the first Democrat to be re-elected since Franklin Roosevelt. He was smart, skilled and possessed great energy. But what happened? At the end of his tenure in the most powerful office in the world, there were fewer Democratic governors, fewer Democratic senators, members of Congress and state legislators and a national party that was deep in debt. The president did well. The party did not. Charisma didn't translate into structure.

If Democrats are serious about preparing for the next election or the next election after that, some influential Democrats will have to resist entrusting their dreams to individual candidates and instead make a commitment to build a stable pyramid from the base up. It will take at least a decade's commitment, and it won't come cheap. But there really is no other choice.

Bill BRADLEY, a former Democratic senator from New Jersey, is a managing director of Allen & Company.>>


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otraque

05/17/05 4:53 PM

#3694 RE: Ace Hanlon #3691

Laird if i was not so attached to my present "signature" post ending i would change it to this:)
<<The Rude Pundit
Proudly lowering the level of political discourse>>
http://rudepundit.blogspot.com/



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Amaunet

05/18/05 11:51 PM

#3729 RE: Ace Hanlon #3691

Despair compounded —Kamran Shafi

If there is an award for a government that has made its people the most enemies in the shortest possible time, to Dubya’s government it belongs

First off, and despite the fact that I am not a religious man, I would be most upset if a Muslim yahoo had desecrated the Torah or the Bible or the Vedas or Zend Avista or the Granth Sahib — any holy book for that matter. Let’s get on with it then:

“I am asking all our friends around the world to reject incitement to violence by those who would mis-characterise our intentions” — US Secretary of State, Ms Condoleezza Rice (aka The Warrior Princess in Dubya’s zoo, aka The White House), speaking before the Senate Appropriations Committee where she was appearing in an unrelated matter. She also said, “Disrespect for the Holy Quran is not now, nor has it ever been, nor will it ever be, tolerated by the United States.” She did not apologise, however.

Really, the arrogance; the unspeakable ignorance and the earth-shaking self-righteousness leaves you stunned. “Mischaracterise”, did she say? How can anyone, particularly in the Muslim world mischaracterise the Quran Sharif being flushed down the toilet, or mischaracterise very credible allegations to the effect that, at any rate, it was ‘placed’ in the toilets at the US Military Prison in Guantanamo Bay? What is there to “mischaracterise”?

Were the yahoos who desecrated the Quran, or those who were accused of desecrating it, US military personnel or were they not? Neither is this the first time that the US military has been accused of such beastly behaviour: disrespect for the Quran has been used before now as a tactic to ‘soften’ the inmates at Guantanamo and the other prisons being run by the US Department of Defence where the torturers of the government of the great United States of America have shown themselves to be as cruel and uncivilised and brutal and small-minded as those of any tin-pot dictatorship.

Why, in this same space, more than a year ago, I had written about these same tactics being used in Guantanamo quoting from stories broken by that same American press that broke the present one. Stories about the Quran being flung about by the yahoos-in-US-Army-uniform, and about it being placed (not then flushed down the hole) in toilets to rattle the prisoners. And about prisoners who had just gone through painstaking ablutions for prayers being smeared with what their women jailors (they couldn’t have been soldiers) called their own menstrual blood. And the women jailors (they couldn’t have been soldiers), stripped down to their bras and panties sitting in prisoner’s laps, most of them devout Muslims, to make them uncomfortable at the touch of women who were not their wives.

What has the United States government done about these charges, allegations, call them what you will, in more than a year? Absolutely, precisely nothing. And Ms Rice has the gall to say that disrespect for the Holy Quran will never be tolerated by the United States! If not prosecuting any of the yahoos who did what they did months ago is not toleration what is?

More importantly, how is it possible that this kind of behaviour by high-profile guards, sorry yahoos, in the most high-profile prison was not cleared by those at the very top of the heap? Surely the strongest, most efficient, and bestest armed forces in the entire world have a command and control system second to none too? So how come people like the arrogant Donald (‘Stuff Happens’) Rumsfeld did not know what was going on in the most important (and infamous) prison in his command? Or are the stories of him being completely out of touch with reality really true?

Really, this present lot and their neo-con ideologues who hold the good people of the United States by the throat take the cake for making such a hash of things that they have made a truly great country truly reviled the world over. If there is an award for a government that has made its people the most enemies in the shortest possible time, to Dubya’s government it belongs.

It is also rather late in the day for Newsweek, which broke the story of the Quran’s desecration this time around, to make a half-hearted retraction that doesn’t sound very convincing anyway. It not only seems like one made under great duress, Newsweek doesn’t completely retract the story either.

While it says: “We regret that we got any part of our story wrong, and extend our sympathies to victims of the violence and to the US soldiers caught in its midst”, it insists that the abuse claim was true in substance, citing several Guantanamo prisoners who say US officials repeatedly dishonoured the Quran (Declan Walsh’s report in The Guardian of May 18, 2005).

Neither is the US government alone in making a bad situation worse. See what Hamid Karzai, the “popularly elected” president of Afghanistan who is so popular he has to be guarded by American bodyguards, has to say: “I tell you — these demonstrations and the noises were not over Quran abuse at Guantanamo — it was against the solidarity of the world with Afghanistan. Especially as Afghanistan wants to have strategic links with the world, with the NATO and with the United States. It was against our programme that we’ve done (sic) for bringing in the Taliban, who are the sons of this soil. The activities of past days (sic) were to undermine Afghanistan’s parliamentary elections — but they’ve (using a Bushism!) mistook — the elections will take place in this country”. I ask you!

And so, while the American government’s misplaced and over-inflated ego and its brazen quest for world dominance pushes those of us who are America’s friends to the very edge of despair, it gives its enemies great heart — it’s unwise and imprudent actions playing directly into their hands.

Bushism of the Week: “The important question is, how many hands have I shaked?” — President George W Bush, answering a question about why he hasn’t spent more time in New Hampshire; The New York Times; October 23, 1999.

Kamran Shafi is a freelance columnist


http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_19-5-2005_pg3_6