Click here to view this media Republican senators that vote for the new START nuclear arms treaty with Russia will have to do so against the wishes of GOP leadership. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and Minority Whip Jon Kyl (R-AZ) both said Sunday that they will oppose passage. “I’ve decided I can not support the treaty,” McConnell told CNN’s Candy Crowley. “I think the verification provisions are inadequate. And I do worry about the missile defense implications of it.” Republicans failed Saturday to pass an amendment that would have removed language that critics say would have inhibited missile defense. Supporters argued that the amendment would have killed the treaty because it would have required the the US to conduct further negotiations with Russia. The vote came after President Barack Obama sent a letter to McConnell and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) assuring them that the treaty would not hamper plans to development missile defense. “Regardless of Russia’s actions in this regard, as long as I am president, and as long as the Congress provides the necessary funding, the United States will continue to develop and deploy effective missile defenses to protect the United States, our deployed forces, and our allies and partners,” Obama wrote. The president’s letter did nothing to convince Kyl. “Look, tell it to the Russians. Send a letter to the Russians. In fact, change the preamble to the treaty, which would eliminate any doubt about this issue…That’s why I say talk to the Russians. Don’t send a letter to Mitch McConnell,” he told Fox News’ Chris Wallace. But appearing on ABC Sunday, Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) disagreed said that the language in the treaty’s preamble had no bearing on missile defense. “There is no legal binding statement whatsoever,” Kerry said. The language in the preamble “is a sort of statement that for political purposes was necessary to achieve what we achieved.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The Senate has passed a law repealing the military’s gay ban but one Republican leader is not letting the issue drop. Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl (R-AZ) said Sunday that the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell” could actually “cost lives” by disrupting combat units. “From a constitutional stand point, this is not a constitutional right or a constitutional issue as was the issue of racial segregation,” Kyl told Fox News’ Chris Wallace. “I frankly have to follow the lead of people like the commandant of the Marine Corps, like my colleague John McCain, who say when it comes especially to the small units who do the fighting on the ground, that the US Marine Corps, the Army combat troops, who according to the survey taken by the pentagon were 60 percent opposed to this,” Kyl continued. “It could disrupt the unit cohesion. As the commandant said, cost lives. That means a lot to me,” he said. The Senate minority whip brushed off the similarities between “don’t ask, don’t tell” repeal and racial integration in the military. “With regard to the US military, itself, it’s got one function. That is to fight and fight well. And maybe to die. And the people who are responsible for that need to make a judgment about whether this will inhibit their ability to carry out that ultimate job that we ask them to do,” he insisted. Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) noted that 70 percent of service members and their families were prepared to accept repeal. “The number, incidentally, when those in the military were asked about integration so 60 years ago was 20 percent,” Durbin added. The Senate passed legislation Saturday that will repeal the policy of discrimination by a vote of 65-31. President Barack Obama is expected to sign the measure this week.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media SNL’s Bill Hader was back again this week as Julian Assange, this time around taking a shot at Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg winning Time Magazine’s “Person of the Year.” Tonight, I take a moment to congratulate Time Magazine on the excellent selection of Mark Zuckerberg as Person of the Year. Time Magazine, always on the cutting edge… discovering Facebook only weeks after your grandmother. What are the differences between Mark Zuckerberg and me? Let’s take a look. I give you private information on corporations for free and I’m a villain. Mark Zuckerberg gives your private information to corporations for money, and he’s man of the year. Thanks to WikiLeaks, you can see how corrupt governments operate in the shadows and then lie to those who elect them. Thanks to Facebook, you can figure out which Sex and the City character you are. I’m a Samantha, but if the Swedish police ask, I’m a Charlotte. If you want to make a movie about Mark Zuckerberg interesting, you’ll have to make stuff up. In order to make a movie about me, just to rate it R, you’ll have to leave stuff out.
Continue reading …In a classic case of telling the boss what he wants to hear, WikiLeaks released cables asserting that Michael Moore’s documentary Sicko was banned in Cuba. Only problem? It wasn’t . Michael Moore was as surprised as anyone when WikiLeaks revealed a US cable asserting that Cuban officials banned his Sicko documentary because it depicted a “mythical” view of health care there. He was even more surprised when the media picked up on the cable and reported it as gospel truth. (See the Guardian , whose report in turn got widely disseminated.) The problem is that the documentary—a damning assessment of the American health care system—was not banned in Cuba, he writes at the Huffington Post . As Digby points out , we used to have this thing that would actually check out stories before running them. If only there were professional people who gather facts and research issues and interview subjects who could be called upon to investigate such things. I recall that there used to be an organization called The New York Times which was interested in sorting out various secrets and lies but they seem to have gone into another business. (Some strange foreigners still practice this old fashioned craft but here in the US not so much.) Too bad. It could be useful. The point is apt, and makes the Americans media’s tweaking about Julian Assange look all that much more ridiculous, because it looks more and more that many of these cables were written by people looking to make the bosses happy, not truthfully inform them. Like those cables that asserted that the Saudis actively supported and encouraged US aggression against Iran, all of these leaks and revelations must be met with skepticism and investigation into its validity. But that would require actual journalism…
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Life Magazine Capt. John G. Crommelin – Stormy Petrel with more than a few mummies in the closet. Click here to view this media When Captain John G. Crommelin issued a scathing report criticizing Military politics as concentrating military authority in the hands of an elite few and that the Defense Department was scuttling Naval air power in favor of the Air Force, and that a “Prussian General staff system of the type employed by Hitler” was being imposed on the armed forces under a proposed unification of the branches of service, needless to say he was quickly and severely reprimanded by the Defense Department. Trouble was, John G. Crommelin had more than a few mummies in his own closet to contend with. As much as he was praised as something of a whistle blower, he was also vilified when it became public that he was a virulent segregationist, white supremacist and anti-semite, known for extolling his opinion that Jews were the real enemy of “white christian Alabamans”, claiming they were behind the formation of the NAACP. On October 1, 1949, Crommelin was asked to appear on Meet The Press to answer not only his critics, but to answer his criticisms of the Defense Department. Before the interview began, Crommelin issued a statement saying in effect he had received a gag order from the Defense Department prior to his appearance on the program. Warren Francis (Los Angeles Times): “Captain, I don’t think this is covered by your orders, you are quoted in a recent news magazine as saying that people have called you on the telephone and that your wire has been tapped. Who tapped it and why?? Crommelin: “I have no idea who tapped it.” Francis: “Did you say that it had been tapped?” Crommelin: “I did not say that it had been . . .I said that it probably IS tapped.” Francis: “The statement is correct then, that you did say it’s probably tapped?” Crommelin: “That’s correct.” Francis: “But you have no idea why?” Crommelin: “No, no. No particular idea, except uh . . .I had made the statement. I thought that . . .very probably it was. That . . .it’s information that I’m not going to give you Mister Francis, because I don’t want to get into any petty discussions on that . . . “ Francis: “Now Captain, just a minute, I don’t think the orders cover that. Why did you think it was tapped? Could you tell us that?” Crommelin: “I could, but I don’t propose to Mister Francis.” Crommelin would later be reassigned to San Francisco before being furloughed at half pay in 1950 and later retired from the Navy. After that, he would get involved in the far-right National States Rights Party and have several runs for the Senate and Governor of Alabama between 1950 and 1968.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Fox News is reporting that the Senate has voted to approve the House bill repealing the military’s ‘Don’t Ask Don’t Tell’ policy banning gay servicemembers. From MSNBC : WASHINGTON — In a landmark for gay rights, the Senate on Saturday voted to let gays serve openly in the military, giving President Barack Obama the chance to fulfill a campaign promise and repeal the 17-year policy known as “don’t ask, don’t tell.” Obama was expected to sign it next week, although the change wouldn’t take immediate effect. The legislation says the president and his top military advisers must certify that lifting the ban won’t hurt troops’ fighting ability. After that, there’s a 60-day waiting period for the military. “It is time to close this chapter in our history,” Obama said in a statement after a test vote cleared the way for final action. “It is time to recognize that sacrifice, valor and integrity are no more defined by sexual orientation than they are by race or gender, religion or creed.” The Senate vote was 65-31. The House had passed an identical version of the bill, 250-175, on Wednesday. Here’s Politico on the six Republican senators who voted to end this misbegotten policy: Scott Brown of Massachusetts, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, George Voinovich of Ohio, Mark Kirk of Illinois, plus Maine Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe voted to end debate on the bill that would repeal the policy that bans openly gays service members.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Rachel Maddow talked to Rep. Anthony Weiner about his outburst on the floor of the House back in July when Republicans were doing their best to use procedural moves to prevent the 9-11 first responder’s bill from making it through the House. Congressman Weiner expressed his concerns that this might be the last chance to get the bill passed because he doesn’t have much hope of the House bringing this back up for a vote once the Republicans take control in January. I hope Harry Reid makes the Senate stay there through Christmas if they decide to keep blocking this bill. Rachel asked Anthony Weiner about his response to John McCain, who “described work on this bill as fooling around” and whether or not procedure matters. WEINER: Well look, I think of all of the people who understand the sincerity of this, John McCain at least in theory should. Look, I think what sometimes my friends in the Senate don’t realize is that what they think is regular day to day procedural maneuvering looks to the rest of the country as standing in the way of really letting democracy work. But in this case, literally we have this universe of people and we think it’s about 10,000 people; no one is dying to get… no, that’s a wrong use of words. No one wants to get this benefit. It’s not like an entitlement. No one’s trying to get toxic stew in their lungs to go then be able to sign up for the 9-11 first responders program. We figured out a way to pay for it. It’s completely paid for now. And we have the votes and so for John McCain to say this is some kind of a game or a stunt… no. This is us trying to do frankly what I think we should have done on September 11th and we’re trying to finally do now. And I would just say to my Senate colleagues if there is one issue all year that should transcend politics, it really should be this one. It should be, but nothing transcends politics when it comes to the Republicans and who they’re willing to sacrifice to score political points. Weiner went on to explain why he voted against the agreement on extending the Bush (or now Obama) tax cuts and why it was such a bad idea.
Continue reading …Today the Senate tries to get much work done, as the lame duck session comes to a close — which includes Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, the DREAM Act and the START Treaty. I wonder if the media will hold the GOP up to the same bipartisan standards as they do the Democratic party? I know Villagers were very happy that millionaires got their tax cuts, thereby raising the national debt which happens to be the Tea Party Holy Grail with no real visible resistance. Now after getting their unpaid tax cuts the GOP then torpedoed the trillion dollar appropriations bill that Republicans helped craft and which contained a food safety bill because it had earmarks that they negotiated into it. Andrea Mitchell was quite giddy on Friday as she discussed how Harry Reid got played at the game of ‘chess” after he had already secured the votes from the Republican side, before they were against the bill. Doesn’t that sound like bipartisan sabotage? I expect if Democrats don’t bow down to the GOP because they won the House after the midterms, even after the huge tax bill compromise, the media will attack Dems for not being bipartisan. Or when Republicans destroy legislation it’s because they are principled, but Democrats are just Dirty F*&king Hippies. Digby adds: Meanwhile, here’s a little preview for you about how the implementation of the health care bill is going to go: A confluence of facts and events helped McConnell convince senior appropriators in his own party — people who, like he, don’t fundamentally oppose the earmarking process — to back off the omnibus, according to a Republican leadership aide. Part of it was that, though bipartisan, the bill itself included funding for key Democratic priorities that in the current political environment no Republican supports, or wants to be accused of supporting. The omnibus included $1 billion in spending to implement the health care law — a provision no Republican wanted to de facto support. “Health care money helped a lot….it added on to the urgency,” the aide said. So, will they shut down the government over health care? I don’t see why not. After all, deficits are the most serious threat to the nation since Hitler and the only weapon we have to fight them are cuts in “entitlements”. And while I think the President wants more than anything to preserve his signature accomplishment, they have every reason to believe he won’t fight to the death for it. In any case, they can certainly use it as leverage. I don’t know what they want more than to force Obama to dismantle his own legacy, but dismantling Roosevelt’s might do in a pinch. And what will happen when the debt ceiling fight comes up? What will Republicans want President Obama to give up in that fight? I shudder at the thought.
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