Monday, August 31, 2009

Who Started WWII? Russia Denies Culpability

Cross-posted over at PoliticalVindication.com

Stalin smiles as he joins the Nazis.

European leaders are meeting tomorrow to reflect on the beginning of the second World War, happening seventy years ago on September first. Tensions have risen as the question of who started WWII are asked:
Ultimately, however, the row which threatens to eclipse a gathering on Tuesday of European leaders in Gdansk is not about history or the past. It is all about the present, specifically Russia's claim of having "privileged interests" in its post-Soviet neighbours. Russia's president, Dmitry Medvedev, made his own explosive contribution to the debate, saying it was a "flat-out lie" to suggest that Stalin bore any responsibility for starting the second world war, which he described as "the 20th century's greatest catastrophe". According to Medvedev, it was Stalin who in fact "ultimately saved Europe".
Anyone who has studied the issue at all recognizes the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, signed in August of 1939, whereby Stalin teamed up with Hitler to cut up Europe. The news shocked the world, and damn near guaranteed world war. Very soon after they attacked Poland on opposite borders, crushing her. The reward? The USSR was supposed to get Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, a whole lot of Romania and two-thirds of Poland in exchange for supporting the Third Reich. Why the normally suspicious Stalin trusted Hitler is a mystery that may never be answered, but it was known that the Soviet mass murder saw in Adolph much to admire. The military victory was not long celebrated. On June 22, 1941 Germany invaded Russia; tens of thousands of smiling Russians were slaughtered waving in welcome to their German allies. Stalin executed informants bringing news that Germany was invading, he refused to believe it. When proof finally convinced him, he was so shocked by the betrayal that he shut himself up in a room and saw no one for a week, they say he was in a drunken stupor, no doubt now regretting his paranoid purge of the Russian officer corp. The nation was reeling as German troops stormed toward Moscow without opposition, massacring civilians without remorse. The only thing that would save the young communist nation was the Russian winter. But Hitler's deceit doesn't forgive Stalin's evil designs. The pact was a deal among demons. In moral terms, there was no difference between the two men. Today Hitler is irredeemable but Russia still works to reframe Joseph Stalin:
The Kremlin now argues that Stalin had no choice but to forge the pact with Hitler in August 1939. It says Britain and France made war inevitable by signing the Munich agreement. And it puts the boot firmly into Poland; the Kremlin says the country was a willing Nazi ally and accomplice to Hitler's partition of Czechoslovakia the previous year. Historians are unimpressed. "This is a very stupid argument," Vladimir Ryzhkov, a historian and former Russian opposition MP said. "You are saying that Poland was bad for allowing the division of Czechoslovakia, but that Stalin was good when he agreed to divide eastern Europe with Hitler."
It's obvious that the new Russia has many of the same aspirations as the old Russia. The first thing they must do is re-write history. Fortunately for them we have a president who is eager to re-learn...

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Maggie's Sunday Morning Sermon Video: Uncle Sam and Your Wefare from the YouTube of Tim (Timothy?)

This morning's sermon from the YouTube of Tim (maybe Timothy?). Before the choir's soloist sings for us, pay special attention to the lyrics, and read them aloud with me, but first bow your head for a short prayer: Lord, may we be inspired to love and protect our Constitution as did our Founding Fathers, and we ask for your wisdom in doing so. Amen.

Who can take your money, with a twinkle in their eye? Take it all away and give it to some other guy? The government, the government can. Who can tax the sunrise, who can tax the trees? Let you run a business and collect up all the fees? The government, Oh the government can. The Government can 'cause they mix it all up with lies and make it all taste good. The government takes everything we make, to pay for all their solutions: health care, climate change, pollution...throw away the Constitution...
Congregation, please get our your pocket copy of the U.S. Constitution and go to: U.S. Constitution, Article I, Sec. 8:
“The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defense and general Welfare of the United States…” U.S. Const. Art. I, sec. 8"
The important thing to remember is, the above DEFINES the ONLY access to, and outlay of our money, your money, my money. Here is a quote from Senator John McCain, April 16, 2007, who wanted to give my money, and your money to millions of illegal aliens, who nevertheless, got this right:
But it was not intended to command our economy, or redirect its benefits to this or that interest group or subordinate its growth to the growth of government. Government's constitutional obligation to promote the general welfare did not empower it to assume the responsibilities of individuals but to protect our right to exercise those responsibilities without fear or favor, and to profit from the results.
Thank you to 9-12 Project for video. Video by Tim Hawkins Comedy Channel. Also visit Tim Hawkins' website. Here's a snippet from Tim's website bio:
Want clean comedy with an edge? Tim Hawkins brings the funny. Hawkins has been accused of being equally gifted and twisted. Whatever your take, he has indeed become one of the most in-demand comics in the country. His arsenal is unique: high energy stand-up, physical comedy, slick guitar skills, a thousand faces and voices, improvisational chops. It all combines to create an insane comedy experience. And yes, the guy can really sing. “People think I live a rock-star life”, said Hawkins. “Believe me, Mick Jagger never gets lost in a Hertz parking lot looking for his Ford Focus.” His art form was honed primarily in churches, with a brief 6-month stint performing in prisons as part of Chuck Colson’s Prison Fellowship. Since his shows ranged from little kids to youth groups to married adults, he had to develop material that would hit a wide age range... With 4 kids of his own and a wife who is winning her battle with breast cancer, Hawkins gets new material daily from the perils of marriage and parenting. But it must be difficult to work clean all the time, right? “Clean comedy is easy. Funny comedy is hard." Read more here.
Uncle Sam and Your Welfare
Don't miss today's most important news: Dick Cheney CIA Torture Investigation Video, Transcript

Farrah Fawcett Greg Lott: Farrah Fawcett Greg Lott Love Affair?

I can't wait to hear what Alana Stewart has to say about this. A man from Lubbock, Texas, Greg Lott says he met Farrah Fawcett in college and they remained deeply in love with each other to the day she died. A Farrah Fawcett, Greg Lott love affair? See update 11-16-09 below.


Farrah Fawcett - Greg Lott

Don't you know we'll find out, because Lott says for the last 11 years of Farrah's life, she was involved in a very private romance with him:
We were blind, crazy, in love,’ he says. ‘Farrah was my best friend and my inspiration.
And he also says he many love letters from the beautiful Farrah:

Farrah Fawcett - Greg Lott (photo)
The photographs and love letters Greg has been pouring over since Farrah’s death span the years 1996-2008 and are testimony to the strength of their bond. In one poignant note addressed to her ‘darling Greg’, she writes:
‘How sweet that we have been given the chance to grow up, grow wiser and I guess, older together. I’m grateful to still be a part of your life and benefit from your eternal optimism in so many ways.’ Another, in Farrah’s curvy handwriting on her personalised stationery embossed with the light-hearted heading ‘Double F’ reads simply: ‘Forever, until the end of time.’
In the article linked below, Lott says they kept their relationship secret from Redmond, Farrah's son with O'Neal, at Farrah's request, but it quotes Ryan O'Neal's son, Griffin, saying:
"I have to thank Greg Lott for one thing: For loving Farrah the way she deserved to be loved. Ryan was just there for the acclaim."
Related: Hitman PR's Blog:

Greg Lott in Search of the Will

Tabloid Baby for photo credit and Farrah and Greg reporting

Update 11-15-09:

A British online news service reports that Farrah excluded Ryan O'Neal from her will but left approximately $100,000 to Greg Lott. The bulk of her estate, $4.5 million, went to her twenty-four year old son with O'Neal, Redmond O'Neal. Redmond's money will be managed by a trustee to purchase a home and help fight his addictions.
Lott says he last spoke to Farrah on April 9th when she telephoned him from a Santa Monica hospital. She was on her way home and told him she loved him, and would call him. That was the last time Lott spoke with Fawcett. He flew to California but O'Neal barred him from seeing her.

“Farrah meant the world to me, and I know, based on the last 11 years of her life, that I equally had a profound impact on her. I cannot understand how those around her chose to keep me from her.

“They have an obligation to provide me with their justification for manoeuvring themselves back into her life, at the expense of the one she truly loved.”

O’Neal refuses to be drawn but a ­confidant insists: “Farrah just didn’t want to see Greg.”
Farrah’s father James, in his first interview since his daughter’s death, confirms he was aware of Lott’s relationship with Farrah but denies being involved in the decision to lock him out.

“I guess it must have been Ryan, because I had nothing to do with it,” he said.
 Farrah left her father $500,00 for "health, maintenance and comfortable support."



 


 
Farrah Fawcett Video

Los Angeles Area Fires Altadena, Glendale, Pasadena, La Crescenta, Big Tujunga Canyon: California Fire Mandatory Evacuations

Mandatory evacuations in fire-threatened areas in California have been announced. Residents in neighborhoods in Altadena, Glendale, Pasadena, La Crescenta and Big Tujunga Canyon are leaving their homes and Governor Arnold Schwartzenegger in a television appeal this morning, asked everyone to obey the mandatory evacuations. Updates below 9-1-09.

Los Angeles Fires
The latest reports says that 35,000 acres have been burned and 10,000 homes are under evacuation orders. Five hundred commercials buildings are threatened. Captain Mike Dietrich, the U.S. Forest Service commander in charge of this fire says he has never seen a fire grown so rapidly without Santa Ana winds to propel it:
...it is the "perfect storm of fuels, weather and topography coming together.
In northern Pasadena, NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab had flames dangerously close to the facility but today the fire has seemed to move on toward the town of Acton. This report says that the underbrush in the area has not been burned off in 60 years, so high winds weren't need to spark the flames in an area with humidity under 10 percent. Doesn't it make you wonder why the brush hasn't been dealt with? Could it be that environmentalists were able to ban the clearing? As of this report yesterday, at least threes homes were destroyed in the Angeles National Forest, and today's reports have not increased that number so far. While this fire is the largest and most dangerous, it is not the only fire the state is dealing with. Yosemite Nation Park has had 5-1/2 square miles burned and the county of Mariposa is under a state of emergency and about 100 residents have been evacuated, with more to come. Mount Wilson is a huge concern because "many of the region's broadcast and communications antennas" are in the area as well as Mt. Wilson Observatory. Three people were reported injured and air-flighted out of the evacuation area. The case of the fires are not known but are under investigation. Two thousand fire fighters are on the job. California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection offers online updates. See an interactive map here. I cannot vouch for its accuracy or rate of update. Update 8-30-09: As 2,000 firefighters are battling the widespread blazes through the Los Angeles area, two firefighters are reported non-burn injured today in a house fire, unrelated to the wildfires, and referred to as a "Hollywood estate." fire near Runyon Canyon. It took more than 2 hours for 130 firefighters to get the fire under control. The house had areas of dry brush around it and it was feared the house would expand. Update 9-1-09: In the past 12 hours, the blaze around Los Angeles is said to have increased by 15,000 acres in a 12 hour period. Officially today, the LA fires are only 5% contained. Damage estimates stand at about $13.6 million. Fifty structures are believed to be destroyed. 3,600 firefighters are on the job on this area. Two firefighters died and one is hospitalized with renal failure due to dehydration. The original fire that started on Wednesday August 26th is now identified at the "Station" fire. Thirty cabins and bildings are known to be destroyed in Big Tujunga Canyon. Two firefighers have died when their truck overturned or plunged over down a hillside due to low visibility. The details are not yet clear. the 100-year old Mt. Wilson Observatory is now under dire threat. Mt. Wilson is home to 22 television and radio transmission towers. According to this report, a couple thought they would be safe in their hot tub, but...not. They did not heed the evacuation orders and later were injured and needed rescuing. In San Diego, firefighters are heading north to help with the LA fires. Fires in the Yucaipa community, referred to as the Pendleton Fire called for 400 home evacuations in the Wildwood Canyon - "east of Fremont Street to Oak Glen Road and everything north of Wildwood Canyon Road.". This fire originated mid-afternoon, Monday, August 31st. Photo credit: Chatty Kathy

Dick Cheney CIA Torture Investigation Video, Transcript

August 30, 2009: Former Vice President Dick Cheney speaking about Attorney General Eric Holders political decision to interrogate member of the CIA how information was received from terrorists and terrorist suspects. It "offends the hell out of me" Mr. Cheney said...it is "an outrageous political act...", and readers, it offends the hell out of me too. All of the interview concerning Holder's announcement, but then they move on to another subject, but in the transcript below, notice the last two words of the total interview from Cheney to Wallace: Cheney signs off with "Good Luck." Those two words were pertinent to nothing in the interview or Chris Wallace other than "Good Luck" because this country is going to need it - a somber message that we know and understand. Now how do we heed it?

Dick Cheney CIA Torture Investigation (Video)

Transcript courtesy Fox News.

CHRIS WALLACE, HOST: Mr. Vice President, welcome back to "FOX News Sunday."

RICHARD CHENEY, FORMER VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: It's good to be back, Chris.

WALLACE: This is your first interview since Attorney General Holder named a prosecutor to investigate possible CIA abuses of terror detainees.

What do you think of that decision?

CHENEY: I think it's a terrible decision. President Obama made the announcement some weeks ago that this would not happen, that his administration would not go back and look at or try to prosecute CIA personnel. And the effort now is based upon the inspector general's report that was sent to the Justice Department five years ago, was completely reviewed by the Justice Department in years past.

They made decisions about whether or not there was any prosecutable offense there. They found one. It did not involve CIA personnel, it involved contract personnel. That individual was sentenced and is doing time. The matter's been dealt with the way you would expect it to be dealt with by professionals.

Now we've got a political appointee coming back, and supposedly without the approval of the president, going to do a complete review, or another complete investigation, possible prosecution of CIA personnel. We could talk the whole program about the negative consequences of that, about the terrible precedent it sets, to have agents involved, CIA personnel involved, in a difficult program that's approved by the Justice Department, approved by the National Security Council, and the Bush administration, and then when a new administration comes in, it becomes political.

They may find themselves dragged up before a grand jury, have to hire attorneys on their own because the Justice Department won't provide them with counsel.

It's a terrible, terrible precedent.

WALLACE: There are a lot of aspects that you just raised. Let me review some of them. Why are you so concerned about the idea of one administration reviewing, investigating the actions of another one?

CHENEY: Well, you think, for example, in the intelligence arena. We ask those people to do some very difficult things. Sometimes, that put their own lives at risk. They do so at the direction of the president, and they do so with the -- in this case, we had specific legal authority from the Justice Department. And if they are now going to be subject to being investigated and prosecuted by the next administration, nobody's going to sign up for those kinds of missions.

It's a very, very devastating, I think, effect that it has on morale inside the intelligence community. If they assume that they're going to have to be dealing with the political consequences -- and it's clearly a political move. I mean, there's no other rationale for why they're doing this -- then they'll be very reluctant in the future to do that.

WALLACE: Do you think this was a political move not a law enforcement move?

CHENEY: Absolutely. I think the fact is, the Justice Department has already reviewed the inspector general's report five years ago. And now they're dragging it back up again, and Holder is going to go back and review it again, supposedly, to try to find some evidence of wrongdoing by CIA personnel.

In other words, you know, a review is never going to be final anymore now. We can have somebody, some future administration, come along 10 years from now, 15 years from now, and go back and rehash all of these decisions by an earlier administration.

WALLACE: Let me follow up on that. The attorney general says this is a preliminary review, not a criminal investigation. It is just about CIA officers who went beyond their legal authorization. Why don't you think it's going to stop there?

CHENEY: I don't believe it. We had the president of the United States, President Obama, tell us a few months ago there wouldn't be any investigation like this, that there would not be any look back at CIA personnel who were carrying out the policies of the prior administration. Now they get a little heat from the left wing of the Democratic Party, and they're reversing course on that.

The president is the chief law enforcement officer in the administration. He's now saying, well, this isn't anything that he's got anything to do with. He's up on vacation on Martha's Vineyard and his attorney general is going back and doing something that the president said some months ago he wouldn't do.

WALLACE: But when you say it's not going to stop there, you don't believe it's going to stop there, do you think this will become an investigation into the Bush lawyers who authorized the activity into the top policymakers who were involved in the decision to happen, an enhanced interrogation program?

CHENEY: Well, I have no idea whether it will or not, but it shouldn't.

The fact of the matter is the lawyers in the Justice Department who gave us those opinions had every right to give us the opinions they did. Now you get a new administration and they say, well, we didn't like those opinions, we're going to go investigate those lawyers and perhaps have them disbarred. I just think it's an outrageous precedent to set, to have this kind of, I think, intensely partisan, politicized look back at the prior administration.

I guess the other thing that offends the hell out of me, frankly, Chris, is we had a track record now of eight years of defending the nation against any further mass casualty attacks from Al Qaeda. The approach of the Obama administration should be to come to those people who were involved in that policy and say, how did you do it? What were the keys to keeping this country safe over that period of time?

Instead, they're out there now threatening to disbar the lawyers who gave us the legal opinions, threatening contrary to what the president originally said. They're going to go out and investigate the CIA personnel who carried out those investigations. I just think it's an outrageous political act that will do great damage long term to our capacity to be able to have people take on difficult jobs, make difficult decisions, without having to worry about what the next administration is going to say.

WALLACE: If the prosecutor asks to speak to you, will you speak to him?

CHENEY: It will depend on the circumstances and what I think their activities are really involved in. I've been very outspoken in my views on this matter. I've been very forthright publicly in talking about my involvement in these policies.

I'm very proud of what we did in terms of defending the nation for the last eight years successfully. And, you know, it won't take a prosecutor to find out what I think. I've already expressed those views rather forthrightly.

WALLACE: Let me ask you -- you say you're proud of what we did. The inspector general's report which was just released from 2004 details some specific interrogations -- mock executions, one of the detainees threatened with a handgun and with an electric drill, waterboarding Khalid Sheikh Mohammed 183 times.

First of all, did you know that was going on?

CHENEY: I knew about the waterboarding. Not specifically in any one particular case, but as a general policy that we had approved.

The fact of the matter is, the Justice Department reviewed all of those allegations several years ago. They looked at this question of whether or not somebody had an electric drill in an interrogation session. It was never used on the individual, or that they had brought in a weapon, never used on the individual. The judgment was made then that there wasn't anything there that was improper or illegal with respect to conduct in question...

(CROSSTALK)

WALLACE: Do you think what they did, now that you've heard about it, do you think what they did was wrong?

CHENEY: Chris, my sort of overwhelming view is that the enhanced interrogation techniques were absolutely essential in saving thousands of American lives and preventing further attacks against the United States, and giving us the intelligence we needed to go find Al Qaeda, to find their camps, to find out how they were being financed. Those interrogations were involved in the arrest of nearly all the Al Qaeda members that we were able to bring to justice. I think they were directly responsible for the fact that for eight years, we had no further mass casualty attacks against the United States.

It was good policy. It was properly carried out. It worked very, very well.

WALLACE: So even these cases where they went beyond the specific legal authorization, you're OK with it?

CHENEY: I am.

WALLACE: One specific question about Holder, the Obama administration -- you put out the statement saying that you were upset that President Obama allowed the attorney general to bring these cases. A top Obama official says, hey, maybe in the Bush White House they told the attorney general what to do, but Eric Holder makes independent decisions.

CHENEY: Well, I think if you look at the Constitution, the president of the United States is the chief law enforcement officer in the land. The attorney general's a statutory officer. He's a member of the cabinet.

The president's the one who bears this responsibility. And for him to say, gee, I didn't have anything to do with it, especially after he sat in the Oval Office and said this wouldn't happen, then Holder decides he's going to do it. So now he's backed off and is claiming he's not responsible.

I just, I think he's trying to duck the responsibility for what's going on here. And I think it's wrong. WALLACE: President Obama has also decided to move interrogations from the CIA to the FBI that's under the supervision of the National Security Council, and the FBI will have to act within the boundaries of the Army Field Manual.

What do you think that does for the nation's security? And will we now have the tools if we catch another high-value target?

CHENEY: I think the move to set up this -- what is it called, the HIG Group?

WALLACE: Yes.

CHENEY: It's not even clear who's responsible. The Justice Department is, then they claim they aren't. The FBI is responsible and they claim they aren't. It's some kind of interagency process by which they're going to be responsible for interrogating high-value detainees.

If we had tried to do that back in the aftermath of 9/11, when we captured Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of 9/11, we'd have gotten no place. I think it moves very much in the direction of going back to the old way of looking at these terrorist attacks -- that these are law enforcement problems, that this isn't a strategic threat to the United States.

I think it's a direct slap at the CIA. I don't think it will work.

I think that if they were faced with the kind of situation we were faced with in the aftermath of 9/11, suddenly capturing people that may have knowledge about imminent attacks, and they're going to have to have meetings and decide who gets to ask what question and who's going to Mirandize the witness, I think it's silly. It makes no sense. It doesn't appear to be a serious move in terms of being able to deal with the nation's security.

WALLACE: Well, on another issue, the CIA has stopped a program to kill or capture top al Qaeda leaders, top al Qaeda terrorists. And CIA Director Panetta told lawmakers that you told the CIA not to inform Congress.

Is that true?

CHENEY: As I recall -- and frankly, this is many years ago -- but my recollection of it is, in the reporting I've seen, is that the direction was for them not to tell Congress until certain lines were passed, until the program became operational, and that it was handled appropriately.

And other directors of the CIA, including people like Mike Hayden, who was Leon Panetta's immediate predecessor, has talked about it and said that it's all you know a very shaky proposition. That it was well handled, that he was not directed not to deal with the Congress on this issue, that it's just not true.

WALLACE: The CIA released two other documents this week -- "Khalid Sheikh Mohammed: Preeminent Source on Al Qaeda"...

CHENEY: Right.

WALLACE: "Detainee Reporting Pivotal for the War Against Al Qaeda."

While they say that the overall program got absolutely crucial information, they do not conclude whether the enhanced interrogation programs worked. They just are kind of agnostic on the issue. And then there's what President Obama calls the core issue -

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

PRESIDENT OBAMA: Could we have gotten that same information without resorting to these techniques? And it doesn't answer the broader question, are we safer as a consequence of having used these techniques?

(END VIDEO CLIP)

CHENEY: Well, these two reports are versions of the ones I asked for previously. There's actually one, "Detainee Reporting Pivotal for the War Against Al Qaeda," there's another version of this that's more detailed that's not been released.

But the interesting thing about these is it shows that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Abu Zubaydah provided the overwhelming majority of reports on Al Qaeda. That they were, as it says, pivotal in the war against Al Qaeda. That both of them were uncooperative at first, that the application of enhanced interrogation techniques, specifically waterboarding, especially in the case of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, is what really persuaded him. He needed to cooperate. I think the evidence is overwhelming that the EITs were crucial in getting them to cooperate, and that the information they provided did in fact save thousands of lives and let us defeat all further attacks against the United States.

The thing I keep coming back to time and time again, Chris, is the fact that we've gone for eight years without another attack. Now, how do you explain that?

The critics don't have any solution for that. They can criticize our policies, our way of doing business, but the results speak for themselves. And, as well as the efforts that we went to with the Justice Department and so forth to make certain what we were doing was legal, was consistent with our international treaty obligations.

WALLACE: At one point the Vice President showed us the view of majestic mountains from his back yard. I asked about the Democrats running battle with the CIA including Nancy Pelosi's charge the agency once lied to her.

Republicans have made the charge before, do you think Democrats are soft on National Security?

CHENEY: I do, I've always had the view that in recent years anyway that they didn't have as strong of advocates on National Defense or National Security as they used to have, and I worry about that, I think that things have gotten so partisan that the sort of the pro defense hawkish wing of the Democratic party has faded and isn't as strong as it once was.

WALLACE: Now that he has been in office for seven months, what do you think of Barack Obama?

CHENEY: Well, I was not a fan of his when he got elected, and my views have not changed any. I have serious doubts about his policies, serious doubts especially about the extent to which he understands and is prepared to do what needs to be done to defend the nation.

WALLACE: Now, he has stepped up the use of the Predator drones against Al Qaeda. He has continued rendition. Aren't there some things you support that he has done?

CHENEY: Sure, some of those things have been -- the use of the Predator drone, something we started very aggressively in the Bush Administration, marrying up the intelligence platform with weapons is something we started in August of 2001. It has been enormously successful. And they were successful the other day in killing Batula Masood, which I think all of those are pluses.

But my concern is that the damage that will be done by the President of the United States going back on his word, his promise about investigations of CIA personnel who have carried those policies, is seriously going to undermine the moral, if you will, of our folks out at the agency. Just today, for example, the courts in Pakistan have ruled that A. Q. Khan, the father of the Pakistan nuclear weapon man who provided assistance to the Iranians, the North Koreans, the Libyans, has now been released from custody.

It is very, very important we find out and know long term what he is up to. He is, so far, the worst proliferator of nuclear technology in recent history. Now we have got agents and people out at the agency who ought to be on that case and worried about it, but they are going to have to spend time hiring lawyers at their own expense in order to defend themselves against the possibility of charges.

WALLACE: Actually, the CIA has now said that they are going to pay for the lawyers.

CHENEY: Well, that will be a new proposition. Always before, when we have had these criminal investigations, the fact is that the employees themselves had to pay for it.

WALLACE: What do you think of the debate over healthcare reform and these raucous town halls?

CHENEY: I think it is basically healthy.

WALLACE: And what do you think of the healthcare reform issue?

CHENEY: I don't -- well, it is an important issue, but I think the proposals the Administration has made are -- do not deserve to be passed. I think the fact that there is a lot of unrest out there in the country that gets expressed in these town hall meetings with folks coming and speaking out very loudly about their concerns indicates that there are major, major problems of what the administration is proposing.

WALLACE: There was a story in the Washington Post a couple of weeks ago that in the process of writing your memoir, you have told colleagues about your frustration with President Bush, especially in his, your second term. Is that true?

CHENEY: No.

WALLACE: That story was wrong.

CHENEY: Right.

WALLACE: The report says that you disagreed with the President's decision to halt water boarding, you agreed with his decision to close the secret prisons, you disagreed with his decision to reach out to Iran and North Korea. Is that true?

CHENEY: Well, we had policy differences, no question about that, but to say that I was disappointed with the President is not the way it ought to be phrased. The fact of the matter is, he encouraged me to give him my view on a whole range of issues. I did.

Sometimes he agreed. Sometimes he did not. That was true from the very beginning of the Administration.

WALLACE: Did you feel that he went soft in the second term?

CHENEY: I wouldn't say that. I think you are going to have wait and read my book, Chris, for the definitive view.

WALLACE: It sounds like you are going to say something close to that?

CHENEY: I am not going to speculate on it. I am going to write a book that lays out my view of what we did. It will also cover a lot of years before I ever went to work for George Bush.

WALLACE: Will you open up in the book about areas where you disagreed --

CHENEY: Sure.

WALLACE: -- with the president?

CHENEY: Sure.

WALLACE: There is a question I have wanted to ask you for some period of time. Why didn't your Administration take out the Iranian nuclear program, given what a threat I know you believe it was, given the fact that you knew that Barack Obama favored, not only diplomatic engagement, but actually sitting down with the Iranians, why would you leave it to him to make this decision?

CHENEY: It was not my decision to make.

WALLACE: Would you have favored military action?

CHENEY: I was probably a bigger advocate of military action than any of my colleagues.

WALLACE: Do you think that it was a mistake, while you were in power, while your administration was in power, not to go after the nuclear infrastructure of Iran?

CHENEY: I can't say that yet. We do not know how it is ultimately going to come out.

WALLACE: But you don't get the choice to make it 20/20 hindsight.

CHENEY: Well, I --

WALLACE: In 2007, 2008, was it a mistake not to take out their program?

CHENEY: I think it was very important that the military option be on the table. I thought that negotiations could not possibly succeed unless the Iranians really believed we were prepared to use military force. And to date, of course, they are still proceeding with their nuclear program and the matter has not yet been resolved.

We can speculate about what might have happened if we had followed a different course of action. As I say I was an advocate of a more robust policy than any of my colleagues, but I didn't make the decision.

WALLACE: Including the president?

CHENEY: The president made the decision and, obviously, we pursued the diplomatic avenues.

WALLACE: Do you think it was a mistake to let the opportunity when you guys were in power, go, knowing that here was Barack Obama and he was going to take a much different --

CHENEY: I am going to -- if I address that, I will address it in my book, Chris.

WALLACE: It is going to be a hell of a book.

CHENEY: It is going to be a great book.

WALLACE: Was it a mistake for Bill Clinton, with the blessing of the Administration, to go to North Korea to bring back those two reporters?

CHENEY: Well, obviously, you are concerned for the reporters and their circumstances, but I think if we look at it from a policy standpoint, it is a big reward for bad behavior on the part of the North Korean leadership. They are testing nuclear weapons.

They have been major proliferators of nuclear weapons technology. They built a reactor in the Syrian Desert very much like their own reactor for producing plutonium for nuclear weapons.They probably are the worst proliferators of nuclear technology any place in the world today. And there ought to be a price for that. Instead, I think when the former President of the United States goes, meets with the leader and so forth, that we are rewarding their bad behavior. And I think it is a mistake.

WALLACE: You would not have done it.

CHENEY: No.

WALLACE: How concerned are you about the increase in violence in Iraq since we pulled out of the major population areas and also what do you make of the fact that the top Shiite parties have formed an alliance tilting towards Iran and leaving out Prime Minister Maliki?

CHENEY: Well, I am concerned about Iraq, obviously. I have been a strong supporter of our policies there from the very beginning. I think we made major, major efforts to take down Saddam Hussein's regime, establish a viable democracy in the heart of the Middle East. I think especially going through the surge strategy in '07 and '08, we achieved very significant results.

It is important that we not let that slip away. And we need to be concerned, I think, in these days now in the beginning of the new Administration, I would like to see them focus just as much on victory as they are focused on getting out. And I hope that they don't rush to the exit so fast, that we end up in a situation where all of those gains that were so hard won are lost.

WALLACE: Given the increase in violence, given some of these new issues, in terms of the political lay of the land, given President Obama's plan to pull all combat troops out by a year from now, the summer of 2010, how confidant are you that -- that Iraq, as a stable, moderate country, is going to make it?

CHENEY: I don't know. I don't know that anybody knows. I think it is very important that they have success from a political stand point. I think the Maliki government is doing better than it was at some points in the past. I hope that we see continued improvement in the Iraqi armed forces, security services.

But I think to have an absolute deadline by which you're going to withdraw, that's totally unconditioned to developments on the ground -- I think there's a danger there that you're going to let the drive to get out overwhelm the good sense of staying long enough to make certain the outcome is what we want.

WALLACE: Obviously, this weekend, the country is focused on the death of Ted Kennedy. What did you think of him?

CHENEY: Well, I -- personally, I liked him. In terms of policy, there's very little we agreed on. He was a liberal Democrat from Massachusetts. I was a conservative Republican from Wyoming. So there wasn't much that we had to work together on.

On the other hand, I admired the fact that he got into the arena as much as he did for most of his professional life, and was obviously a very active participant.

WALLACE: How are you adjusting to life out of power?

CHENEY: Well, this is the fourth time I've done it, Chris. So it's not my first rodeo, as we say. I'm enjoying private life. I just -- excuse me -- took my family on an Alaskan cruise for a week, all the kids and the grandkids. We've gotten to spend a great deal of time in Wyoming, which, as you can tell her in Jackson Hole, is one of the world's finer garden spots.

So I have, I think, adjusted with a minimal amount of conflict and difficulty. It's been pretty smooth.

WALLACE: What do you miss?

CHENEY: Oh, I'm a junky, I guess, all those years. I spent more than 40 years in Washington, and enjoyed, obviously, the people I worked with, wrestling with some of the problems we had to wrestle with. I enjoyed having the CIA show up on my doorstep every morning, six days a week, with the latest intelligence.

WALLACE: You miss that?

CHENEY: Sure.

WALLACE: Why?

CHENEY: Because it was fascinating. It was important stuff. It kept me plugged in with what was going on around the world. And as I say, I'm a junky from a public policy stand point. I went to Washington to stay 12 months and stayed 41 years.

I liked it. I thought it was important. And I will always be pleased that I had the opportunity to serve.

WALLACE: Do you miss having your hands on the levers of power?

CHENEY: No, I don't think of it in those terms.

WALLACE: But I mean being able to affect things. You obviously feel strongly about these issues.

CHENEY: Right.

WALLACE: Do you miss the fact that now you're just another man watching cable news?

CHENEY: No, and as I say, I've been there before. I left government after the first Nixon term and went to the private sector. I left after the Ford administration and ran for Congress. Then left after the secretary of defense and went to the private sector. So these are normal kinds of transitions that you've got to make in this business.

What I've always found is that there are compensating factors to living a private life, to having more freedom and time to do what I want, and to spend more time with the family, which is very important. Over the years, you know, I've sacrificed a lot in order to be able to do those things I've done in the public sector.

WALLACE: Well, we want to thank you for talking with us and including in your private life putting up with an interview from the likes of me.

CHENEY: It's all right. I enjoy your show, Chris.

WALLACE: Thank you very much, and all the best sir.

CHENEY: Good luck.

IAEA Paper Tiger vs Iranian Nukes

By Stanford Matthews MoreWhat.com

IAEA Director General Mohamed ElBaradei has circulated his latest reports on nuclear safeguards in Iran and Syria to Member States. The report outlines developments since the Director General´s report of 5 June 2009.

Circulation of the reports is restricted; they cannot be released to the public unless the IAEA Board decides otherwise.

General Mohamed ElBaradei has circulated his latest report on nuclear safeguards in Iran to the Agency´s Board of Governors, the 35-member policymaking body. The Board next convenes in Vienna on 7 September.

So here’s a recent Arab response on Iran’s nuclear program.

Israeli nuclear weapons and Western hypocrisy By Yusuf Fernandez (Source: thepeoplevoice.org)

Once again, Arab states have announced that this year they will submit a resolution at September’s general assembly of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in order to force Israel to sign the Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and open up its secretive military nuclear program to international inspections.

The article also suggests ‘Israel’s rejection to sign the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) as the main obstacle to global nuclear disarmament.’ After stating that Israel has nukes with a 2000 km range and able to reach any Arab capital the article changes direction with ‘Israel is one of the few states in the world that have refused to sign the NPT and is reportedly the only state in the Middle East having nuclear weapons.’

Reportedly the only state in the Middle East having nukes, indeed. ‘Iran has repeatedly assured that its nuclear program is peaceful…’ Repeatedly ‘assured’ is the key here.

You may recall that Saddam Hussein commented after being apprehended from a hole in the ground that he did nothing to convince the world Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction for fear of looking weak to ‘his’ neighbors in the region. Had he not chosen that strategy he may have avoided another confrontation with the US military accompanied by the inevitable outcome. As if Desert Storm in 1991 was not proof enough he could not win a war against the US after invading Kuwait.

Like Iraq’s former ‘leader’ Saddam Hussein, Iran’s leadership behaves in a similar manner allowing statements calling for the destruction of Israel to stand refusing to recognize Israel’s right to exist and yet claim their nuclear ambitions are purely peaceful. They now promote the notion of ‘Western hypocrisy’ while they express the desire to destroy Israel and at the same time define their nuclear program as ‘peaceful’.

If you are curious to know who is Yusef Fernandez the following is from Frontpage magazine. ‘Yusuf Fernandez, the spokesman for the Spanish Federation of Islamic Religious Entities…

Some additional information may be found useful as well.

In 1967 the first law allowing the Muslims to organize themselves, after a parenthesis of centuries, was promulgated in Spain, leading to the establishment in 1968 of the first local Muslim Association in Spain in Melilla, and in 1971, the first national association, the Association of Muslims in Spain (AME), which has its headquarters in Madrid. Under the Spanish Constitution the Statutory Law of Religious Freedom is promulgated, now in force, and the Union of Islamic Communities in Spain was constituted (UCIDE), as well as the Spanish Federation of Islamic Religious Entities (FEERI), which together constitute the Islamic Commission of Spain (CIE), which is a member of the Muslim Council of Cooperation in Europe (MCCE)[1]in Brussels, which is a consultative body to the European Union.

So the IAEA reports to this point have solved nothing as indicated in numerous reports in the ‘media’.

Yossi Melman / The IAEA report on Iran lacks the bottom line

‘IAEA hiding incriminating evidence’

UN nuclear watchdog denies hiding Iran information

UN reports increase in Iranian uranium programme

IAEA to report Iran atom slowdown ahead of talks

Iran, Syria have not carried out sufficient cooperation in …

Iran is continuing nuclear activity, says United Nations watchdog

Iran Claims Report ‘Vindicated’ Nuclear Program

Iran dismisses nuclear assessment

Iran is stonewalling the UN nuclear watchdog agency about “possible military dimensions” to its suspect nuclear programme, officials have said.

The UN is urging the regime to clarify the mysterious role of a foreign explosives expert and shed light on other issues.

A senior Iranian envoy angrily denounced the assessment as “fabrication,” insisting his country has gone out of its way to be transparent and co-operative.

In its latest report, the International Atomic Energy Agency said it has pressed the Islamic Republic to clarify its uranium enrichment activities and reassure the world that it is not trying to build an atomic weapon.

Iran insists its nuclear programme is peaceful and geared solely toward generating electricity. The United States and key allies contend the country is covertly trying to build an atomic weapon.

These stories support comments suggesting the ‘international community’ response to the nuclear ambitions of Iran, North Korea and others is impotent. They do nothing about the problem outside of promoting resolutions at the equally impotent United Nations. This criticism includes the IAEA.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Glen Beck Video 9-12 March on Washington: Justin in Alabamas Video

I found this at Logistics Monster with a message to pass it on, and I gladly do so. Justin in Alabama made this video for his mother:

Glen Beck 9-12 March on Washington
This resulted from a Mom in Alabama asking her high school son to help with a commercial for the Tea Party she was involved in organizing. Boy, does it slam the message home. Very impressive. Here is her note: “I asked Justin if he could help me make a commercial for my group’s Tea Party. He sat down at the laptop for about an hour, and then brought this to me and asked, ‘is this okay, Mom?’ After I finished watching it, my stomach was in my throat. Everyone that I have sent it to has really enjoyed it, so I wanted my friends to see it. I am so proud!”
For information on the 9-12 Project, go here.
Glen Beck 9-12 Project March on Washington: Justin's Video

Chappaquiddick Joke on Ted Kennedy

ChicagoRay found this video. Ed Klein tells the story of Chappaquiddick being one of Ted Kennedy's favorite jokes. Klein is a former Editor of The New York Times Magazine and currently the foreign editor of Newsweek. He is releasing a new book on Ted Kennedy, and the question is, who isn't? If this is true, the joke is really on Ted Kennedy. He may be lionized today, but surely those hearing the "Chappaquiddick" jokes, had to wonder what kind of a sick joke Ted Kennedy was.

As he has been memorialized today, it is obvious that he was beloved by his family, that he stepped up for all the nieces and nephews who were fatherless, that his own children loved him dearly, and that he knew how to get done what he wanted to get done in the halls of the U.S. Senate.

What I remember about Ted Kennedy is the Kennedy-McCain Amnesty Bill - one of the most devastating Bills to ever hit Capitol Hill. I won't forgive Kennedy or McCain for that one. I won't forget what he did to Judge Robert Bork. It was cruel and contemptible and it all lies. For those who want to see as his pompous tirade about the Judge as merely political rhetoric, your political world is much different than mine. I didn't know much about Robert Bork at the time, as most Americans didn't, but Kennedy's comments were uncalled for and only a black heart could stand in the Senate and rip a good man in this way:

Robert Bork’s America is a land in which women would be forced into back-alley abortions, blacks would sit at segregated lunch counters, rogue police could break down citizens’ doors in midnight raids, schoolchildren could not be taught about evolution, writers and artists could be censored at the whim of the Government, and the doors of the Federal courts would be shut on the fingers of millions of citizens for whom the judiciary is — and is often the only — protector of the individual rights that are the heart of our democracy… President Reagan is still our president. But he should not be able to reach out from the muck of Irangate, reach into the muck of Watergate and impose his reactionary vision of the Constitution on the Supreme Court and the next generation of Americans. No justice would be better than this injustice.
This was not acceptable for the U.S. Senate, and he should have been excoriated by his peers, but he he was not - it's just politics. And may we all be reminded that Ted Kennedy wanted no part of windmills or oil rigs off his Hyannis Port shoreline, but he didn't mind if they were in your backyard.

I have no way to know whether Ted Kennedy had real remorse for the death of Mary Jo Kopechne, but I feel he did. Who would not, but you can read what some of the locals had to say, as well as some astonishing, odd and unusual details of what really happened here. Ted Kennedy's real legacy is proof that we should make it unlawful to be a career Senator or U.S. Representative.





 
Chappaquiddick Joke on Ted Kennedy

Dubai Weapon Shipment Seizure: Emirates Stop NK Weapons to Iran

Good news. Dubai and the UAE stepped up and stopped a weapons shipment to Iran from North Korea. The UAE has "reported the seizure of the [North Korean] vessel to the UN." I wonder how long it will take before the UN orders the release and safe passage on to Tehran? If the Emirates can stop North Korean weapons shipments, then every shipment should be stopped. In fact, North Korean leaders should be quaking in their cognac that a "seized" shipment of banned goods will bring wrath down upon them - but that's not the way we keep people free from nuclear threats around the world. What a shame.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Heidi Lynn Childs David Lee Metzler are Virginia Tech Students Murdered

Heidi Lynn Childs and David Lee Metzler are the Virginia Tech Students murdered and found in the Jefferson National Forest. Said to be close friends, Childs and Metzler were found shot to death Thursday at a popular forest campground, known as Cadwell Fields, about 15 minutes from the VA Tech campus. New video added. See update below 8-30-09 9-3-09.

Heidi Lynn Childs - David Lee Metzler
Heidi Childs of Forest, Virginia was 18 years old and David Metzler of Lynchburg was 19. FoxNews reports that Mr. Metzler was found inside a car and Miss Childs was found somewhere outside the car. It is believed the couple were murdered on Wednesday night, August 26th. Heidi was a sophomore and a biochemistry major. David was a sophomore industrial and systems engineering major. No suspects or persons-of-interest have been identified. In 2007, Virginia Tech was the scene of the deadliest school shootings in history. Known as the Virginia Tech Massacre, the shooter was a VA Tech student. Thirty two died, and many were wounded when Seung-Hui Cho opened fire on the student body. The murders of Virginia Tech students, Childs and Metzler, has set the University on edge and reaching out to students, many of whom were students at the time of the 2007 Massacre. Update 8-29-09: Friends of Heidi and her family will have an opportunity to offer condolences from 3-6 p.m. Sunday, August 30th at Tharp Funeral Home in Lynchburg, VA. Heidi's funeral will be Monday, August 31st at 3 p.m. at Heritage Baptist Church in Lynchburg, Heidi's home church. Internment will follow at Virginia Memorial Park in Bedford County. Friends of David and his family will have an opportunity to offer condolences from 3-6 p.m. Sunday, August 30th at Heritage Baptist Church in Lynchburg, VA. David's funeral will be Monday, August 31st at 1 p.m. at Heritage Baptist Church. Internment will follow at Virginia Memorial Park in Bedford County after Heidi's service. To visit Heidi Lynn Child's guest book and leave a message, go here. To visit David Lee Metzler's guest book and leave a message, go here. This report says that Heidi and David were in a "relationship," and attended Heritage Baptist church "for a long time, and were members of Campus Crusade for Christ." God bless these two young people. It seems it isn't safe to leave your house anymore. Heidi and David both worked at Mountain Frost Creamery in Lynchburg. Update 8-01-09: Heidi's father is reportedly a Virginia State Trooper. The news reminds us that the Virginia Tech Massacre and the deaths of David and Heidi are not the only macabre incidents at the school. Remember the January 2009 murder of Xin Yang, 22. She was enjoying a cup of coffee in a VA Tech campus cafe when a man who listed her as an emergency contact, walked in and beheaded her with a kitchen knife? Update 9-3-09: Quotes from friends at David's funeral:
"He was just full of joy and full of life," David Logan said. "He was real," Morgan Paulette said. The crowd laughed when student ministries pastor at Heritage Baptist, Kent Gregory, said, "I will miss his dignified ways and his monstrous belching." "David I love you man. I really do... I can't wait to see you again," Logan said. Matt Durran, Metzler's brother-in-law, said, "He was rapidly becoming more of a peer to me who I had great respect and admiration for." Family says he was a genuinine person. "He was more than a good son, good brother. He loves his 3 sisters...he would do anything for his sisters," Metzler's father said.
Heidi Lynn Childs and David Lee Metzer (video)
Photo credit: Facebook Prayer Group Second Photo credit: ListOwn.com
Heidi Lynn Childs and David Lee Metzler

Carl Probyn is Jaycee Dugard Step-Father: Phillip Nancy Garrido is Jaycee Dugard Snatcher

Carl Probyn is Jaycee Dugard's stepfather. Phillip and Nancy Garrido snatched Jaycee DuGard on her way to a school bus stop when she was 11 years old, 18 years ago. Carl Probyn has spent the last 18 years under suspicion by the police and FBI. Many lives changed when Jaycee was taken by Phillip and Nancy Garrido. See video below. See updates below 8-29-09 8-30-09.

Jaycee Lee DuGard
Eighteen years later, the kidnapped Jaycee DuGard, now 29, returned to her family with 2 daughters, ages 15 and 11, fathered by Garrido. The youngest daughter is the same age as Jaycee when she was taken. Phillip Garrido and Nancy Garrido kept Jaycee as a sex slave in their backyard.
Jaycee Dugard - Phillip Garrido Home
Phillip Garrido, a convicted sex offender, and now under arrest again, along with his wife, is already telling his story to the television camera. KCRA3 gave this pervert, who is unfortunately not eligible for the death penalty, the opportunity to tell his story, and Garrido says it is a "heartwarming" story:
Phillip Garrido (photo)

In an interview with CBS13, Garrido on Thursday night urged people to wait for more details about the case to come out before making a judgment.

"What's kept me busy the last several years is I've completely turned my life around," he said.

"And you're going to find the most powerful story coming from the witness, the victim - you wait. If you take this a step at a time, you're going to fall over backwards and in the end, you're going to find the most powerful heartwarming story."

Jaycee Dugard
8-29-09: Phillip Garrido is being investigated in the murders of Antioch, California prostitutes dating back to the 1990's. Phillip Garrido and his wife pleased not guilty to 39 counts "including forcible abduction, rape and false imprisonment. Antioch residents told police that they had a "psychotic sex addict" in their neighborhood, and told authorities that Garrido was housing young girls in backyard tents. According to reports, the deputy went to the house but never though the front door and did not walk to the backyard. Probation officers came to the home, sometimes as often as three times a month to check on their released and paroled sexual predator from Nevada, but somehow did not know that children were on the property. Garrido was convicted in 1977 of kidnapping a 25-year-old woman from a parking lot in South Lake Tahoe, the same town Jaycee was taken from. Garrido ran a printing business out of his house and seems to have had long-time customers. One said he had met Jaycee inside the Garrido house. She was introduced as Alyssa, Garrido's daughter. Update 8-30-09: This interesting story at DailyMail has more photos. Found on the property was an 8' by 4' steel cage which "appeared unused." How easy it to clean a steel cage? Really easy, is the answer. Perhaps it was used many times in the past, until Garrido no longer felt it necessary - and perhaps the steel cage sat there as ominous threat. Update 8-30-09: News Conference 3:15 pm CDT 8-30-09: According to a police spokesman, a number of years ago, Phillip Garrido had access to the next door neighbor's property, which was vacant at that time and had nothing to do with the current occupant, Damon Robinson. Years ago, Garrido lived in a shed on the property now occupied by Mr. Robinson, and now being searched. Mr. Robinson is not a suspect or a person of interest in anyway in the Dugard-Garrido case. Mr. Robinson offered his property to the police for investigation. Perhaps police are looking for the bodies of the missing prostitutes. The spokesman confirmed that cadaver dogs are on the property. 9:05 pm CDT: Geraldo is on this minute. A neighbor of the Garrido's, Haydee Perry, is speaking. She has lived near Garrido for a couple of months. He came to her house to help her charge her car battery. Jaycee's 11 year old daughter accompanied her father (Phillip Garrido). The young girl told Ms. Perry that she had a sister, and they had some casual conversation about how she and her sister would fight every day but they always made up. Then she told Perry that she also had a 28 year old sister. If this is true, Jaycee's girls believed that Jaycee their mother, was their older sister. Haydee Perry said she saw the 11 year old more frequently thann the 15 year-year-old, and that the girl seemed to stare vacantly much of the time. Photo credit Nick Stern - Redthinkmedia.com for DailyMail

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Crime Writer Dominick Dunne Dies: Vanity Fair Writer Dominick Dunne Dead

Author Dominick Dunne died today at the age of 83. Mr. Dunn died in his home in New York City from bladder cancer.

Dominick Dunne
Dunne was a noted author and columnist, covering the rich and famous, and the infamously incarcerated, yet I remember him most for the justice he sought for his murdered daughter, Dominique. Dominique, 22, was murdered by a rejected lover in 1982. She broke-up John Thomas Sweeney, refused to reconcile and in her own driveway, he grabbed the 5-1" girl by the neck, dragged her to the backyard and strangled her. Sweeney was convicted of manslaughter and served 2-1/2 years of a 6-1/2-year sentence. How can a crime like this garner a manslaughter conviction? What happened to "murder? Bloomberg prints this interesting quote:

Sweeney “came dressed as, like, a sacristan at a Catholic seminary, and he held a Bible and he read it piously and it was all an act,” Dunne said on CNN’s “Larry King Live” in 2006. “I had never been to a trial before and it disgusted me. And the extraordinary thing is, it fooled the jury, and this man who strangled my daughter for five minutes got a slap on the wrist.”

Convicted of voluntary manslaughter, Sweeney was sentenced to 6 1/2 years in prison and released after 2 1/2 years. Outraged, Dunne for a time paid a private detective to follow him.

Ms. Dunne, an actress, appeared as the oldest daughter, Dana, in The Poltergeist. She appeared in the Requiem for a Hairbag segment of Hill Street Blues, and was hired for the role of Robin Maxwell for the miniseries "V." She almost completed two full episodes before her death. From that point on, Dominick Dunne's work life became entwined with crime. A former filmmaker, he became a chronicler of high-profile crime, and began that career as a staff writer for Vanity Fair. Dunne credits the O.J. trials for his celebrity:
“I had a literary following before, but because of O.J. I became a name and a public person, which I love,” Dunne told the New York Times in September 2008.
He followed every minute of the first criminal trial against O. J. Simpson. He believed that O.J. was guilty. When the second O.J. criminal trial began in 2008, Dunne covered the proceedings although he had already announced that he was in treatment for cancer.
Upon Simpson’s conviction, Dunne wrote: “I had quite a few chats with O.J. during the Las Vegas trial. I found him to be a lonely figure with a wrecked life. This is the verdict that should have come 13 years ago.”
He covered almost all of the high profile cases. He single-handedly revived the Martha Moxely murder. Dunne wrote a book about it and then a TV series came along and eventually, Michael Skakel, Ethel Kennedy's nephew, was convicted and imprisoned. Dunne inserted himself into every murder he could. He found a way, one way or the other to become a part of the crime, to enter the room where the murder occurred, to talk to the suspect on his own terms...whatever it took, and then he wrote a book about it. This article gives some fascinating details of these events and uses quotes from Dunne. Mr. Dunne was more than his family and his stories. He was awarded the Bronze Star for service as a 19-year-old in World War II. He had a discipline of steel and did what is today considered almost impossible, he "drove himself up to the woods in Oregon. Living alone in a cabin, he became sober and began, at age 50, to write." Dunne had one last book in the works when he died: Too Much Money.

Mark Lloyd is Diversity Czar: Mark Lloyd FCC Diversity Officer

Mark Lloyd is the FCC Diversity Czar, or Diversity Officer. The first of this title ever - whether "Czar" or "Officer." See video below.

Mark Lloyd
You will see below that the FCC now views "communications" as a civil rights issue. If you saw Glen Beck today, he played a video with Mike Lloyd speaking and expressing his admiration for Hugo Chavez. As soon as the video is available, I'll have it below. Mark Lloyd was a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think-tank. Lloyd believes there is a "Structural Imbalance of Political Talk Radio and he co-authored a report with three other Center for American Progress members, and titled it the same. My report on this today talks about three things: (1) What Lloyd plans to do and (2) and a meeting in 2007, referenced in Lloyd's "Structural Imbalance..." report. From that meeting came the American Media Contract 2007, a means to balancing Lloyd's "Structural Imbalance...," (3) fees and fines coming our way. Lloyd's report found that Conservative radio talk shows are successful and Liberal talk shows are not - because the analysis found, "91 percent of the total weekday talk radio programming is conservative, and 9 percent is progressive." The report went on to demonstrate how very popular talk radio is, and what a miserable failure Liberal talkers are. Now Lloyd plans to get something done about it. I wrote about this report in November 2008, and the actions that Democrats plan to take through the FCC. I'll quote some of that here, because nothing has changed other than the new title "Diversity Czar or Officer:
The Fairness Doctrine: Not your Daddy's Doctrine November 25, 2008 The Liberal think tank, Center for American Progress, has issued a 36-page report explaining why and how talk radio must be, and easily can be, regulated by a Fairness Doctrine - but not regulated in the way we conventionally think of a Fairness Doctrine. This is a simple and doable plan for Democrats. The Fairness Doctrine will happen this way: All stations will be required to issue many new licenses to minorities - ethnic and women, which is known as "localism." Licenses will be up for review, and reissue, every three years rather than the current eight years. Programming will be basically local. The Center for American Progress says that the original Fairness Doctrine's real value was not in the "fair discussion of important issues," but in the way licenses could be issued:
...limited license terms to three years [from eight, I think], subjected broadcasters to license challenges through comparative hearings, required notice to the local community that licenses were going to expire, and empowered the local community through a process of interviewing a variety of local leaders.
Perhaps the plan is to scrap the Telecommunications Act of 1996, mandated by Congress, which increased the number of radio stations that "one entity could own in the same market." However, doing so may not be necessary to bring achieve a plethora of Liberal programming and deny Conservative content. The death of syndicated programming (nation shows like Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity) is imminent if Democrats have their way, to be replaced with local programming. In public, Democrats will say this has little to do with providing opposing viewpoints, but as this study finds, the new licensees will be decidedly Liberal.
...of all 10,506 licensed commercial radio stations in the country suggests that stations owned by racial or ethnic minorities are statistically less likely to air conservative hosts or shows and more likely to air progressive hosts or shows....
This is an issue Barack Obama and Congress need not direct. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) can accomplish all of the above without a word from Congress or the President. A question for readers: Any opinions about advertisers and the enormous income to stations from successful programming, supported by advertising dollars? How will the money be replaced? Does it matter if stations are smaller, local and not in need of big money?
Reprinted from The Fairness Doctrine: What You May Not Know From the Media Contract with America 2007:
In January 2007, FCC Commissioner Michael Copps unveiled a new American Media Contract at a gathering of the National Media Reform Conference in Memphis. The text of the speech appears to have been removed from the web, although I have found several links to it, one titled Copps Unveils New American Media Contract, which then takes the reader to the 2008 Conference speech. Just a typo? I don't think so. Maggie's Notebook reported on this on January 27, 2007 and is likely not the only webpage documenting the words of Michael Copps.
We expect these: 1. A right to media that strengthens our democracy 2. A right to local stations that are actually local 3. A right to media that looks and sounds like America 4. A right to news that isn’t canned and radio playlists that aren’t for sale 5. A right to programming that isn’t so damned bad so damned often
Who decides what America "looks and sounds"like? Who decides if the news is "canned" or not" Who decides what strengthens our democracy? Copps said this about the state of television in 2007:
And what do the American people — who own the public airwaves, by the way — get in return? Too little news, too much baloney passed off as news. Too little quality entertainment, too many people eating bugs on reality TV. Too little local and regional music, too much brain-numbing national play-lists. Too little of America, too much of Wall Street and Madison Avenue...."
An immediate red flag: "...too much baloney passed off as news." I think Mr. Copps' baloney is not my baloney. Other speakers for the event were well-known leftists Jane Fonda, Danny Glover, Geena Davis, Senator Bernie Sanders, Bill Moyers, Helen Thomas and Jessie Jackson. Henry Rivera [became Obama's FCC Transition Team head] is said to see "communications as a civil rights issue," and my research bears that out. As current Chair of the Minority Media & Telecommunications Council, he has proposed to: 1) funnel more "federal advertising" to minority media [39] 2) allow foreign ownership; relax U.S. trade barriers to provide "overseas capital," for minority broadcasters [17] 3) develop "constitutionally permissible yet non-dilute method of defining" the class [race] of licensees, i.e., "an applicant's race would be one of the numerous factors considered when the Commission reviews a license application." [30] 4) change the FCC Commission to a more diverse Commission - it should look like America [38] In addition, Rivera wants a blue-ribbon panel discussion, now, to bring Communications to the table by creating a White House Cabinet position, and he advocates for "localism" to prevail when issuing broadcasting licenses - a position to be seen in Copps' comments above. The above is taken from Rivera's Minority Media & Telecom Council pdf, page numbers are in brackets. To date I've found nothing in Rivera's own words directly calling for a Fairness Doctrine, however, in a January 2008 news release, Rivera and a law partner, Richard Wiley, discuss the issue of "localism," - requiring TV stations to "cover local news," Mr. Wiley added, "Are we going to return to the broadcast regulations of the past? That's the question." I believe this may speak directly to a Fairness Doctrine, which is particularly difficult for smaller local stations to implement. Limited cast and crew find it difficult to allow equal time ON EVERY ISSUE. It's costly, often not pertinent, and history shows that that the stations just give up and don't report controversial issues. It is reported that Obama is not interested in a Fairness Doctrine, but if you take a look at his press secretary, Michael Ortiz', statement, it not reassuring:
He [Obama] considers this debate [Fairness Doctrine] to be a distraction from the conversation we should be having about opening up the airwaves and modern communications to as many diverse viewpoints as possible.
When it comes to "fairness" in media, we have nothing to feel good about in an Obama administration. Team Obama attorneys: 1) asked the Department of Justice to remove TV ads produced by American Issues Project 2) threatened individual TV and radio stations airing NRA ads even "intimidating cease and desist letters...threatening their FCC license if they run the ads" according to the NRA 3) at the direction of a Team Obama email, deluged the Milt Rosenberg's Chicago radio show interview of Dr. Stanley Kurtz, by jamming phones during the live show, sending copious emails, and gathering outside the studio. ALL at the command of the Obama campaign. Obama does not bode well for free speech.
On August 17, 2009, Senator Charles Grassley wrote a letter to the current FCC Chairman about "Fairness Doctrine Statements." Here's the letter:
My concerns relate to Mr. Lloyd’s participation in scholarly writings on political talk radio, the Fairness Doctrine, and efforts to bring greater diversity to talk radio. Prior to joining the FCC, Mr. Lloyd served as a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress (CAP), in addition to positions as a professor at the Georgetown Public Policy Institute. In his capacity as a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress, he coauthored a paper titled, “The Structural Imbalance of Political Talk Radio.” This paper argued that radio programming was currently “imbalanced” and that there are “serious questions about whether the companies licensed to broadcast over the public airwaves are serving the listening needs of all Americans.” Mr. Lloyd’s paper suggests three options to remedy the “imbalance” in political talk radio, including (1) restoring caps on commercial radio station ownership, (2) ensure greater accountability in licensing, and (3) require owners who fail to enforce public interest ownership obligations to pay a fee. While these remedies seem innocuous on their face, hidden within the paper are some stark revelations. First, Mr. Lloyd’s paper suggests that the Fairness Doctrine was “never formally repealed.” Instead, Mr. Lloyd argues that the FCC merely announced “it would no longer enforce certain regulations under the umbrella of the Fairness Doctrine.” The paper continues by stating that while the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the FCC decision, the Supreme Court has “never overruled the cases that authorized the FCC’s enforcement of the Fairness Doctrine…thus it technically would not be considered repealed.” Second, the paper suggests that the FCC revise the licensing process for radio broadcasters. Specifically, it suggests that licenses should not be permitted for longer than three years, that they be subject to challenges in the decision to renew their licenses, and that they submit to strict documentation and regulatory requirements. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the paper suggests that commercial radio owners be subjected to new regulatory requirements enforcing public interest obligations and if they fail to meet these standards, subjecting them to fees and taxes in order to compel compliance. The paper suggests that such a fee or fine structure could raise between $100 million to $250 million in new revenue, but would not “overly burden commercial radio broadcasters.” Taken together, these statements represent a view that the FCC needs to expand its regulatory arm further into the commercial radio market. However, it would be unfair for me to say that Mr. Lloyd has specifically advocated for a return to the Fairness Doctrine. Instead, he has argued that the Fairness Doctrine is unnecessary if other regulatory reforms to commercial radio are implemented. Specifically, in discussing the CAP paper “The Structural Imbalance of Political Talk Radio,” Mr. Lloyd authored an internet article published on CAP’s website entitled, “Forget the Fairness Doctrine.” In that piece, Mr. Lloyd stated, “we call for ownership rules that we think will create greater local diversity…we call for more localism by putting teeth into the licensing rules. But we do not call for a return to the Fairness Doctrine.” Simply put, I strongly disagree with Mr. Lloyd. I do not believe that more regulation, more taxes or fines, or increased government intervention in the commercial radio market will serve the public interest or further the goals of diversifying the marketplace. I am concerned that despite his statements that the Fairness Doctrine is unnecessary, Mr. Lloyd supports a backdoor method of furthering the goals of the Fairness Doctrine by other means. Accordingly, I ask that you clarify and reaffirm your commitment to me to oppose any reincarnation of the Fairness Doctrine. Further, I ask you to affirmatively state that you will not pursue an agenda that includes any new restrictions, fines, fees, or licensing requirements on commercial radio that would effectively create a backdoor Fairness Doctrine. I appreciate your prompt reply regarding this important matter.
There is fleeting hints today that fees must be paid by some licensees, perhaps totaling 100 percent, with fines of 200 percent on Conservative broadcasts - and while it is not being said outright, this has to be the way they intend to fund the new "diverse" locals who will now be given a broadcasting license. Are we ready to be told we cannot hold an FCC license because we are White, Conservative, Male? Are we ready to let the FCC decide "what America looks like?" Rough translation of Mike Lloyd speaking in video:
In Venezuela Chavez...and social change...In Venezuela, with Chavez, really an incredible revolution, a Democratic revolution to begin to put in place... saying that we're going to have an impact on the people of Venezuela. The property owners and the folks who were then controlling the media...Venezuela rebelled, worked frankly with folds here in the U.S. Government...worked to oust him and came back...another revolution and Chavez then started to take the media very seriously in this country.
Mark Lloyd on Glen Beck

©2007-2010copyrightMaggie M. Thornton