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Look, I have no doubt that this sort of thing has been going on for a long time, and I certainly don’t kid myself that the Democrats hold the moral high ground. But it still makes me sick. From Antiwar.com, via Wikileaks: With over a quarter of a million WikiLeaks documents coming to light today, a number of previously stalled stories are being given new life, including the bungled kidnapping of German citizen Khalid El-Masri and his subsequent abuse in US custody. Masri was kidnapped in early 2004 by CIA officials and sent to Baghdad and later Afghanistan, where he was repeatedly abused before officials finally discovered that they meant to kidnap Khalid al-Masri, an entirely different person with a similarly spelled name. A 2007 State Department document revealed the US “warned” the German government against making any moves to secure the arrests of the CIA agents responsible for the kidnapping , saying any such move would have “repercussions” to the relationship between the two nations. German officials, according to the document, conceded that they understood the possible diplomatic consequences but also warned hat given the outcry from the German media their options were limited. The US admonished them to consider the “political context” of the kidnapping of the innocent man. Despite the warnings the German government did issue Interpol arrest warrants for CIA officials involved in the kidnapping, though they dropped them a few months later. El-Masri attempted to sue the CIA over his torture in a US court but the case was thrown on “national security” grounds .

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Stockman: Bush Administration and Paulson Destroyed Last Vestige of Fiscal Responsibility We Had in the Republican Party

Click here to view this media As William Cohen noted, David Stockman continues to make the rounds after bucking with the Republicans on tax cuts for the rich last summer. A Republican for Higher Taxes : David Stockman has never been one to shy away from a roaring economic-policy debate. The former boy-wonder budget director in the first Reagan administration and the architect of Reagan’s supply-side economic policies, Stockman has been very busy lately rejecting the tax-cutting recommendations of Republicans in Washington and arguing that we must get our fiscal house in order or watch our way of life continue its decline. As an “imperialist power,” he says, America is in danger of being at “sundown.” Stockman, who turned 64 on Wednesday, has always been ahead of the curve on tax and fiscal issues, and it appears that he is ahead of it again this time, too. Read on… Stockman continued his media appearances with CNN’s Fareed Zakaria and went after the GOP for their single minded devotion to tax cuts. Reagan Budget Director: GOP Has Abandoned Fiscal Responsibility By Adopting ‘Theology’ Of Tax Cuts : As Congress prepares to take up extension of the Bush tax cuts during its lame duck session, Republican lawmakers have been unanimous in demanding that the cuts for the richest two percent of Americans be extended, claiming they are necessary for economic growth and that tax cuts (miraculously) pay for themselves . While independent economists have shown these arguments to be false , today on CNN’s Fareed Zakaria GPS, President Reagan’s former budget director took on his own party for pushing this faulty logic. David Stockman, who led the all-important Office of Management and Budget under Reagan and was a chief architect of his fiscal policy, criticized today’s GOP for misreading Reagan’s legacy by adopting a “theology” of tax cuts. Stockman has spoken out before , but took perhaps his strongest stance yet against his own party today, saying “I’ll never forgive the Bush administration” for “destroying the last vestige of fiscal responsibility that we had in the Republican Party.” Transcript below the fold. ZAKARIA: And we are back with David Stockman, Ronald Reagan’s Budget Director, the architect of the Reagan tax cuts. We’re going to talk about what to do now. You say the only solution, logically, is you have to cut spending and raise taxes. STOCKMAN: That’s correct. ZAKARIA: That simply that the hole is too large that you could – you can indulge in the fantasy that you just do one or the other, but part of what you want to do is you really feel very comfortable raising the taxes – raising taxes substantially on the rich because you feel that there has been a real divergence in the fate of – of Americans over the last 25 years. STOCKMAN: Yes, because this wasn’t a real solid, sustainable, productivity, technology-based prosperity. Much of this was a debt- fuelled money – easy money bubble. In fact, it was a serial bubble. First, the dot-com and then the housing and consumer credit and the ATM machine and everybody buying, you know – borrowing from their house in order to buy things they couldn’t afford. So all of this ended up, strangely enough, shifting wealth and income to the very top strata of our society in a way that we’ve never seen in history. Because it wasn’t real, sustainable, mainstream economic growth and prosperity. One number that I think is shocking is that in 1985 the top five percent of households had $8 trillion of net worth. By the peak of this bubble in 2007 they had $40 trillion. ZAKARIA: So from $8 to $40 trillion. STOCKMAN: Eight to 40. Five fold in 25 years. ZAKARIA: And the economy didn’t – STOCKMAN: A $30 trillion gain. ZAKARIA: Right. And the economy didn’t grow five fold. STOCKMAN: The economy didn’t grow five fold, and it was because of the bubble valuations of assets, stocks and bonds and real estate and all of the other speculative classes. I’m saying that it is now so distorted that to get the economy back to health, we’re going to have to reset some basic parameters of our economy, and one of them in this environment would be a higher tax burden on the upper income than a conservative, like myself, would ordinarily advocate. But right now, this isn’t about growth. This isn’t about Morning in America in 1980. This is about solvency. This is about cleaning up the mess the morning after from a 30-year binge that wasn’t sustainable as we’ve learned. ZAKARIA: And one of the problems at the Republican Party, it seems to me, is, as you say, is tax cutting has become a kind of theology and so that when you – when you bring up the fact that if you do extend the Bush tax cuts or if you have further tax cuts, you will lose revenue. People say, no, no, no, that’s not how it works. You know, if we cut taxes, we will get more revenue. Reagan did it, and they often point to the Reagan tax cuts. STOCKMAN: Yes, and, unfortunately, that was one of the unfortunate legacies of the 1980s that I don’t think was really intended. After 1985, the Republican Party adopted the idea that the tax cuts had solved the whole problem and that, therefore, in future deficits didn’t matter and the tax cuts would always be the solution of first, second, and third resort. And I think once that got embedded and a whole generation of new Republican congressmen and senators became drilled in that catechism and then became positioned politically on that proposition, it really led the party out into the wilderness. And then when Dick Cheney, who should have known better, in the 2001 debate, I think it was, about the Bush – first Bush tax cut, it was totally not need. He said, well, Reagan proved that deficits don’t matter. Reagan proved nothing of the kind, and, yet, that became the mantra and it just led the Republican Party away from its traditional sound money, you know, fiscal restraint principles that were really the heart of the Republican Party and its job in our system. The Republican Party’s job as the Conservative Party is to be the party that says no, the party of restraint, the party of fiscal responsibility. The others can be the party of, you know, dealing with social issues and so forth, and that’s necessary as well. But when you have both parties playing the Santa Claus and you have no one willing to spend political capital on fiscal and financial restraint, we end up with the situation we had by 2008. ZAKARIA: You’re pretty critical of the bailouts themselves. You think that they did a lot of damage. I mean, Warren Buffett said we should thank the United States that it intervened, saved the system, but you are very concerned about it, and I say – and you say this as a Michigan congressman who voted against the Chrysler bailout. STOCKMAN: The first one in 1979 and I think history proved that that was correct. I am strongly opposed to bailouts, but particularly bailouts of Wall Street. And the idea that Wall – that the government ought to be thanked as Mr. Buffett said last week, for the bailouts as just so much humbug. The panic that occurred in September, 2008 was not in main street America. It wasn’t businesses about ready to close their doors because they didn’t have cash to meet payroll. That is all urban legend. It’s mythology. The panic that was going on was in the fifth floor of the Treasury Building. It was in the Eccles Building where the Federal Reserve and Bernanke reside, and they created the panic. They stirred up Congress. They were so concerned about where the stock price of Morgan Stanley and Goldman was that they didn’t look at the bigger picture. If a couple more banks had gone under, they would have gone under. If the Golden stock had gone down to $10 and stayed there for a couple of years, it wouldn’t have been the end of the world. But when we did that, that was the waterloo for fiscal policy because how can you ever tell a congressman from Alabama to cut cotton subsidies after you have bailed out every one of the major banks and not only bailed them out, but within a year they were back to a picture of rosy pink health and paying bonuses which they will this year of $144 billion, nearly the highest in history. And I’ll never forgive the Bush administration and Paulson for basically destroying the last vestige of fiscal responsibility that we had in the Republican Party. After that, I don’t know how we ever make the tough choices. ZAKARIA: David Stockman, pleasure to have you on. STOCKMAN: Thank you. ZAKARIA: We will be back.

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The Washington Post went to a Catholic cathedral in Washington on Sunday to survey the “faithful” on how they feel about the church's opposition to condoms — and reporter Michael Ruane apparently could not locate a single Catholic who believed in the church teaching. The headline was “Catholics mixed on condoms,” but the message the Post was sending was “All Catholics think Pope is wrong, and should be ignored.”

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Three Green Building Lawyer Bloggers Predict The Next Big Thing

Stephen Del Percio, Lloyd Alter, Shari Shapiro, Chris Cheatham I follow the three leading bloggers on green building law closely; they make complicated and important issues affecting green building comprehensible. When I saw that they were all on a panel together at Greenbuild, I had to attend and meet them in person, and hear their responses to the question “What’s the Next Big Challenge in Green Building Law?” Although all three are great at making complex issues understandable to non-legal types, I still could not understand my notes well enough to do a post, so I asked them all to look into their crystal ball and send me their… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Hope, Real Hope, Is About Doing Something

By Chris Hedges Many of us will, after our rally in Lafayette Park, attempt to chain ourselves to the fence outside the White House. It is a pretty good bet we will all spend a night in jail. Hope, from now on, will look like this. Related Entries November 29, 2010 Blaming Obama’s America First November 28, 2010 Rudolph the Unemployed Reindeer

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By E.J. Dionne, Jr. We are about to enter a two-year period in which the Beltway Republicans will always blame Obama’s America first—you know, the America that happens to disagree with much of the conservative agenda, the America from which they want to “take back” the country, as if the rest of us represent an alien force. Related Entries November 28, 2010 Iran’s Best Friends on Capitol Hill November 24, 2010 Fail and Grow Rich on Wall Street

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Rudolph the Unemployed Reindeer

By Mike Luckovich Related Entries November 25, 2010 North Korea Attack: ‘It’s Whatever’ November 24, 2010 Cultural Rebirth in the Old World

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Old Friends

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Old Friends

By Mr. Fish Related Entries November 25, 2010 North Korea Attack: ‘It’s Whatever’ November 24, 2010 Cultural Rebirth in the Old World

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WikiLeaks Outs U.S. Diplomats’ Saucy Secrets

And they’ve done it again. According to diplomatic cables obtained and leaked by the whistleblowers extraordinaire, the king of Saudi Arabia asked the U.S. to attack Iran, Hillary Clinton instructed her diplomats to spy on U.N. leaders and others, Vladimir Putin is deeply involved with the Russian mafia, military leaders lack confidence in the war in Afghanistan, Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal and unstable state are as worrying as they seem and a rogue shipment of nuclear material nearly caused an “environmental disaster” last year. These are just some of the initial revelations. More are promised. If you want to read about Muammar Gaddafi’s voluptuous Ukrainian nurse, you’re going to have to go straight to the source. The Guardian: The United States was catapulted into a worldwide diplomatic crisis today, with the leaking to the Guardian and other international media of more than 250,000 classified cables from its embassies, many sent as recently as February this year. At the start of a series of daily extracts from the US embassy cables – many designated “secret” – the Guardian can disclose that Arab leaders are privately urging an air strike on Iran and that US officials have been instructed to spy on the UN leadership. These two revelations alone would be likely to reverberate around the world. But the secret dispatches, which were obtained by WikiLeaks, the whistleblowers’ website, also reveal Washington’s evaluation of many other highly sensitive international issues. Read more Related Entries November 25, 2010 North Korea Attack: ‘It’s Whatever’ November 24, 2010 Cultural Rebirth in the Old World

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It’s a strange and troubling news story: on April 8th of this year, an estimated fifteen percent of all web traffic was “hijacked” and routed through China , including military and government domains . A lengthy new congressional report on U.S.-China relations details two major Internet security events that saw Chinese data policies and practices ripple beyond the border to affect users in other countries, including the United States. The more alarming event came in April, when the state-owned China Telecom managed to redirect foreign Internet traffic through Chinese servers. As a result, for a brief period on April 8, about 15 percent of the world’s Internet traffic, including large portions of government and military transmissions, were “hijacked” and rerouted to Chinese servers, according to the new report from the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission . “Although the Commission has no way to determine what, if anything, Chinese telecommunications firms did to the hijacked data, incidents of this nature could have a number of serious implications,” the study’s authors wrote. “This level of access could enable surveillance of specific users or sites.” That’s right, now that they had access, they could be continuing to surveil military and government communications. Great. We worry about the “national security threat” posed by Wikileaks revealing information about things we’ve already done, how about the threats posed by the Chinese knowing what we plan to do in the future? Of course, “experts” are playing down the threat as is the Chinese telecom company involved.

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