Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!
The New American Revolution
« November 2004 »
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30
Entries by Topic
All topics  «
Bill of Rights
Bored Games
Bored Quizzes
Church and State
Classic Quizzes
Disturbing Information
Down With King Dubya
Environmental Politics
Financial Woes
Impending Draft
Inform Yourselves, People
Politics
Privacy
Protect Your Children
Save Democracy
Support Your Troops
Voting
WWWII: Hitler Resurrected
Blog Tools
Edit your Blog
Build a Blog
Buddy Page
View Profile
Window Licking Crew
AJ
Support Your Troops
Sisters Speak Out
You are not logged in. Log in
Wednesday, 24 November 2004
Tyranny of Normality
Mood:  don't ask
Now Playing: Papa Roach - Tyranny of Normality
Topic: Down With King Dubya
The media is the seduction of human desire (set their money, set their money,
on fire), if you try to sell me the truth
then I know you're a liar, a liar

[Chorus]
It's the tyranny of normality, it's the tyranny of normality

Our culture has become complacent, and has no desire (take back,
take back our empire), and the ethical slaughter of
truth needs to be retired, retired

Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 9:03 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post
Getting Away With Murder
Mood:  don't ask
Now Playing: Papa Roach - Getting Away With Murder
Topic: Down With King Dubya
Somewhere beyond happiness and sadness
I need to calculate
what creates my own madness
and I'm addicted to your punishment
and you're the master
and I am waiting for disaster

Chorus-
I feel irrational
So confrontational
To tell the truth I am
getting away with murder
it isn't possible
to ever tell the truth

but the reality is I'm getting away with murder
(Getting away, Getting away, Getting away)

I drink my drink and I don't even want to
I think my thoughts when I don't even need to
I never look back cause I don't even want to
and I don't need to
because I'm getting away with murder

Chorus

Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 9:01 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post
One Protester Dead, Two Missing
Mood:  don't ask
Now Playing: Papa Roach - Getting Away With Murder
Topic: Disturbing Information
----------------- Bulletin Message -----------------
From: Truth Hurts
Date: Nov 24, 2004 05:40 AM

----------------- Bulletin Message -----------------
From: The Unpromoted
Date: Nov 24, 2004 05:04 AM

One SOAW Prisoner Of Conscience Dead, Another Missing

I began investigating this story Saturday night
when Sue was known missing but we hadn't heard
yet that Nik was dead. This is a very disturbing
developing story.

Giles County, VA -- One Virginian activist, Niklan Jones-Lezama, is believed dead and another, Sue Daniels, is missing.

On Saturday, Niklan's body was found by a search party of friends within a few hundred yards of Sue's cabin outside of Blacksburg. This past Thursday, Sue's cabin had been burned to the ground in an apparent act of arson. Sue and Niklan's two cars were
found parked outside the charred remains of the building. The badly burned remains of what is believed to be a dog were found inside.

Both Nik and Sue were active around varous social justice issues, such as opposing war in the Middle East, oppression in Central America, and violent mountaintop removal in Appalachia. The two were in their forties and spent several months in federal
prison last year due to their participation in the annual School of the Americas protests in Georgia. These annual SOA protests coincidentally occurred this past weekend. The last time people report seeing Niklan was when he was due to leave to attend
the protests 5 a.m. on Thursday.

Arson sparks search for missing 2

Blacksburg social activists listed as missing following suspected arson

Body found near fire site

After suspected arson, one Southwestern Virginian activist is dead, another is missing

links by Nightwalker,
summary by Muna

Original Story

Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 7:32 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post
Tuesday, 23 November 2004
Fuck The South (More Humor With ACTUAL FACTUAL BACKING!)
Mood:  irritated
Now Playing: Tool - Sink or Swim
Fuck the South. Fuck 'em. We should have let them go when they wanted to leave. But no, we had to kill half a million people so they'd stay part of our special Union. Fighting for the right to keep slaves - yeah, those are states we want to keep.

And now what do we get? We're the fucking Arrogant Northeast Liberal Elite? How about this for arrogant: the South is the Real America? The Authentic America. Really?

Cause we fucking founded this country, assholes. Those Founding Fathers you keep going on and on about? All that bullshit about what you think they meant by the Second Amendment giving you the right to keep your assault weapons in the glove compartment because you didn't bother to read the first half of the fucking sentence? Who do you think those wig-wearing lacy-shirt sporting revolutionaries were? They were fucking blue-staters, dickhead. Boston? Philadelphia? New York? Hello? Think there might be a reason all the fucking monuments are up here in our backyard?

No, No. Get the fuck out. We're not letting you visit the Liberty Bell and fucking Plymouth Rock anymore until you get over your real American selves and start respecting those other nine amendments. Who do you think those fucking stripes on the flag are for? Nine are for fucking blue states. And it would be 10 if those Vermonters had gotten their fucking Subarus together and broken off from New York a little earlier. Get it? We started this shit, so don't get all uppity about how real you are you Johnny-come-lately "Oooooh I've been a state for almost a hundred years" dickheads. Fuck off.

Arrogant? You wanna talk about us Northeasterners being fucking arrogant? What's more American than arrogance? Hmmm? Maybe horsies? I don't think so. Arrogance is the fucking cornerstone of what it means to be American. And I wouldn't be so fucking arrogant if I wasn't paying for your fucking bridges, bitch.

All those Federal taxes you love to hate? It all comes from us and goes to you, so shut up and enjoy your fucking Tennessee Valley Authority electricity and your fancy highways that we paid for. And the next time Florida gets hit by a hurricane you can come crying to us if you want to, but you're the ones who built on a fucking swamp. "Let the Spanish keep it, it?s a shithole," we said, but you had to have your fucking orange juice.

The next dickwad who says, "It?s your money, not the government's money" is gonna get their ass kicked. Nine of the ten states that get the most federal fucking dollars and pay the least... can you guess? Go on, guess. That?s right, motherfucker, they're red states. And eight of the ten states that receive the least and pay the most? It?s too easy, asshole, they?re blue states. It?s not your money, assholes, it?s fucking our money. What was that Real American Value you were spouting a minute ago? Self reliance? Try this for self reliance: buy your own fucking stop signs, assholes.

Let?s talk about those values for a fucking minute. You and your Southern values can bite my ass because the blue states got the values over you fucking Real Americans every day of the goddamn week. Which state do you think has the lowest divorce rate you marriage-hyping dickwads? Well? Can you guess? It?s fucking Massachusetts, the fucking center of the gay marriage universe. Yes, that?s right, the state you love to tie around the neck of anyone to the left of Strom Thurmond has the lowest divorce rate in the fucking nation. Think that?s just some aberration? How about this: 9 of the 10 lowest divorce rates are fucking blue states, asshole, and most are in the Northeast, where our values suck so bad. And where are the highest divorce rates? Care to fucking guess? 10 of the top 10 are fucking red-ass we're-so-fucking-moral states. And while Nevada is the worst, the Bible Belt is doing its fucking part.

But two guys making out is going to fucking ruin marriage for you? Yeah? Seems like you're ruining it pretty well on your own, you little bastards. Oh, but that's ok because you go to church, right? I mean you do, right? Cause we fucking get to hear about it every goddamn year at election time. Yes, we're fascinated by how you get up every Sunday morning and sing, and then you're fucking towers of moral superiority. Yeah, that's a workable formula. Maybe us fucking Northerners don't talk about religion as much as you because we're not so busy sinning, hmmm? Ever think of that, you self-righteous assholes? No, you're too busy erecting giant stone tablets of the Ten Commandments in buildings paid for by the fucking Northeast Liberal Elite. And who has the highest murder rates in the nation? It ain't us up here in the North, assholes.

Well this gravy train is fucking over. Take your liberal-bashing, federal-tax-leaching, confederate-flag-waving, holier-than-thou, hypocritical bullshit and shove it up your ass.

And no, you can't have your fucking convention in New York next time. Fuck off.

Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 5:42 PM EST
Post Comment | View Comments (1) | Permalink | Share This Post
For The Sake of Our Sanity...
Mood:  mischievious
Check out this site - it's seriously funny - people are actually signing up!

Marry An American!

Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 3:09 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post
Watch Your Wallets
Mood:  incredulous
Now Playing: Jonathan Theory
Topic: Financial Woes
Mountains of interest add pain to credit debt

November 21, 2004

By PATRICK McGEEHAN The New York Times

When Ed Schwebel was whittling down his mound of credit card debt at an interest rate of 9.2 percent, the MBNA Corp. had a happy and profitable customer. But this summer, when MBNA suddenly doubled the rate on his account, Schwebel joined the growing ranks of irate cardholders stunned by lenders' harsh tactics.

Schwebel, 58, a semiretired software engineer in Gilbert, Ariz., was not pleased that his minimum monthly payment jumped from $502 in June to $895 in July. But what really made him angry, he said, was the sense that he was being punished despite having held up his end of the bargain with MBNA.

"I paid the bills the minute the envelope hit the desk," said Schwebel, who had accumulated $69,000 in debt over five years before the rate increase. "All of a sudden in July, they swapped it to 18 percent. No warning. No reason. It was like I was blindsided."

Read More...





Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 1:16 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post
To Each His Own
Mood:  lazy
Topic: Politics
Strong States' Rights Not Likely Key to Left, Right Unity
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
By Radley Balko

Election 2004 gave Republicans, for the first time in a generation, unquestionable control of the White House and both chambers of Congress ? the culmination of a trend that began a decade ago with the Gingrich revolution.

In those 10 years, as the Right has grown more powerful in American politics, it has also abandoned its traditional support for a restrained federal government ? the principle of federalism upon which the U.S. was founded ? in favor of an activist federal government that promotes conservatism.

Consider ?virtues czar? William Bennett's post-election gloating in National Review. Voters had given President Bush a mandate to push conservative values on the rest of the country, ?through both politics and law,? Bennett wrote. Bennett was joined by conservative talk radio, which also urged President Bush to stick it to the gay-rights groups and ?cultural elite.?

The Bush administration has epitomized this new ?big government conservatism.? Avowed states-righters like former Attorney General John Ashcroft invoked the supremacy of federal law to overrule the will of the states on issues such as drug prohibition, capital punishment, and physician-assisted suicide. President Bush and congressional Republicans championed more federal involvement in education. Republican committee chairmen secured loads of pork-barrel spending for their home states and districts, just as the Democrats did when they chaired those same appropriations committees.


Just a few weeks ago, on the National Review Web site, conservative author David Frum wrote that ?nearly all conservatives? support Medicaid and Medicare, two of the three largest programs the federal government runs. Not only that, but Frum recommended a tax on high-calorie foods to encourage American consumers to make better decisions about what they eat ? the very kind of social engineering conservatives have long opposed.

However, committed states-righters and libertarians can take heart. Apparently, federalism is not dead. The left, long proponents of big, activist federal government, finding itself unquestionably in the minority, is discovering the virtues of federalism. Facing what could be the lengthy reign of a conservative government, many blue-staters are thinking hard about the advantages of local rule.

Liberal Swarthmore historian Timothy Burke wrote on his blog shortly after the election:

[I]t is a shocking thing to wake up the next morning and feel that one is really the target of hatred, to recognize that one's country is now in the hands of people who hate you, disrespect you, and intend to leave little room for you to live the life you prefer on the terms you prefer to live it ?

Burke then suggested that the left abandon the idea of an influential federal government that dictates top-down policy for the entire country in favor of allowing blue-state jurisdictions to live by blue-state policy and red-state jurisdictions to live by red-state policy.

He isn't alone. University of Michigan Professor Juan Cole suggested on his Web site that the best way for Democrats to defuse hot-button cultural issues such as gay marriage is to privatize the institution, a position long held by libertarians.

Crooked Timber's Belle Waring went a step further, openly courting libertarians to join a coalition with the left. Salon and The Nation have also run pieces entertaining a left-side embrace of states' rights.

Principled federalists such as Tech Central Station's Nick Schulz (writing for FOXNews.com), Reason magazine's Jesse Walker, the New York Post's Ryan Sager and George Mason University's Don Boudreaux have correctly welcomed such sentiment.

The left's newfound interest in local rule, while baldly self-interested, is heartening. Even the most oppressive of public policies are tolerable if the people subjected to them are free to move to cities or states whose laws are more in line with their beliefs. The idea, to borrow from Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, is to have 50 ?laboratories of democracy? at the state level, and hundreds more at the municipal level, each setting its own laws, each competing for citizens and taxpayers.

But while the left's flirtation with federalism is encouraging, there's also plenty of room for skepticism. The political right once professed allegiance to federalism ? until they started winning elections. Now, after decades of wanting to be left alone, the right intends to use its power to impose its values on the rest of country. And now, after decades of trying to foist one-size-fits-all policy onto the rest of the country in nearly every facet of life ? from gun control to labor and environmental policy to driving laws to education ? the left, now out of power, simply want to be left alone.

Neither is all that surprising. Most people think everyone else should live they way they do. And at the same time, most people resent being told how to live.

Yet, the suggestion that the right and left could find common ground in federalism is problematic, to say the least. Any right-left federalist coalition would require the acceptance on both sides that life in Utah and Wyoming may be very different than life in Massachusetts and California ? even if those states have different laws on gun ownership, stem cell research, minimum wage, or the influence of religious beliefs on public policy. Both left and right would also have to come together to make the kind of cuts and rollbacks in the federal government necessary for federalism to thrive, and would then need to avoid the temptation to use the federal government to subvert federalism during the periods thier "side" happens to be in power.

A state's only obligation would be to respect the basic rights of its citizens inscribed in the U.S Constitution.

Call me a pessimist. But much as I'd like to see it, recent history offers little evidence that any of these things will happen.

Radley Balko maintains a Weblog at: www.TheAgitator.com.

Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 12:37 PM EST
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post
Monday, 22 November 2004
Ohio Dems join recount effort (Keith Olbermann)
Mood:  happy
Topic: Voting
SECAUCUS? The headline might be a little expansive since the national headquarters has not yet echoed it, but it's still pretty impressive as it is:

"Kerry/Edwards Campaign Joins Ohio Recount."

The news release was issued this afternoon over the signature of Ohio's Democratic chairman, Dennis White: "As Senator Kerry stated in his concession speech in Boston, we do not necessarily expect the results of the election to change, however, we believe it necessary to make sure everyone's vote is counted fairly and accurately." White called for witnesses, volunteers, and donations.

The statement ends nearly three weeks of official Democratic ambivalence towards the formal recount process in the election's decisive state. As late as Friday, Senator Kerry's email to 3,000,000 supporters contained a seemingly ambiguous reference to that process, which began with the phrase "Regardless of the outcome of this election, once all the votes are counted, and believe me they will be counted, we will continue to challenge the administration."

It had been left to the independent parties, the Greens and Libertarians, to do the initial work demanding a recount in each of Ohio's 88 counties. Their combined effort led to a bond of $113,600 being posted with the state last Friday to guarantee the coverage of expenses incurred. Just today, the "Glibs" amplified their demands in Ohio, filing a federal lawsuit that, if successful, would require the completion of the "full, hand recount" before the meeting of the Electoral College on December 13.

The Ohio Democrats did not attach themselves to the lawsuit. "The recount can begin after the official results are certified, which likely will be in the first week of December," reads the news release. "The Democratic party wants to be fully prepared to begin a recount immediately."

Howard Fineman joins me on Countdown tonight at 8 and Midnight eastern to discuss the ramifications.

E-mail KOlbermann@MSNBC.com

Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 12:01 AM EST
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post
Hanging Chads and Hanging Participles (Keith Olbermann)
Mood:  happy
Topic: Voting
NEW YORK - You don?t have to wait for the Ohio Presidential Recount to get confused. Just pay attention to the recasting of news releases from the Ohio Democratic Party.

Early Monday afternoon, Ohio Chairman Dennis White released a comparative bombshell inside the still tiny world of the Recount-Conscious. It bore the headline ?Kerry/Edwards Campaign Joins Ohio Recount? and advised that ?assuring Ohioans receive an accurate count of all votes cast for president has prompted the Democratic Party to join the initiative to recount the results of the November 2 presidential election.?

But by 8 p.m. Eastern,
a second press release was out, with two notable tweaks. Now the headline read ?Kerry/Edwards Campaign Participates In Ohio Recount,? and the lead sentence read ??has prompted the Democratic Party to participate in the initiative to recount the results??

The switch from ?join? to ?participate? reduces the Democratic commitment from virtual co-sponsorship to nearly the level of acquiescence. In late afternoon, Ohio Dems? spokesmen Dan Trevas told us that the remains of the national Kerry/Edwards campaign had approved the original press release and ?gave us the authority to proceed with this. Tomorrow we expect to have a letter from them to Kenneth Blackwell? which would ask Ohio?s Secretary of State to proceed with a recount.

But the lead Kerry lawyer on the ground in Ohio, Daniel Hoffheimer, was more cautionary. ?What they meant to say is that the Kerry/Edwards campaign will be putting witnesses in the Boards of Elections if a recount is asked for? We are not requesting a recount.?

At this point, the words are being that carefully chosen and, evidently, debated. So don?t think when John Kerry said in his web-exclusive statement and video Friday that ?Regardless of the outcome of this election, once all the votes are counted?? he wasn?t being deliberately vague. Similarly nuanced were the words of the Ohio Democratic chair, Mr. White: ?As Senator Kerry stated in his concession speech in Boston, we do not necessarily expect the results of the election to change??

Howard Fineman, chief political correspondent of Newsweek and since the days of our old The Big Show an MSNBC analyst, summed up the exact inexactitude of Kerry and the Democrats about Ohio, on the Monday Countdown. ?They keep saying these little things designed to make clear, at least to their supporters and the whole blogosphere out there, that they take the possibility (of a Kerry victory) and the need for a recount seriously.?

Fineman put it in terms that the mainstream can?t ignore. He told me he?d talked to Ohio?s Mr. Blackwell earlier in the evening. ?There in fact will be a recount,? Howard said with a sigh that encapsulated all of the Florida 2000 Experience. ?We will be talking about chads once again.?

As Kerry himself calculated early on November 3, the Provisional Ballots alone obviously could not provide anything close to enough bona fide Democratic votes to overcome President Bush?s 135,000 vote plurality in the Ohio election night tally. But as Howard also pointed out ?
and my colleague David Shuster so thoroughly extrapolated in a previous post on Hardblogger ? the Provisionals plus the ?Undercount? could make things very close indeed. The punch-card ballots ?where it looks like nobody marked anything? when read by an optical scanning machine, might produce thousands of legitimate votes if hand-counted and judged by Ohio?s strict laws defining how many corners of the proverbial chads have to be detached to make a vote valid.

In Ohio, the reality of the recount is beginning to sink in, and local governments aren?t happy about it. The Associated Press ran a story Monday afternoon in which its reporter quoted the incoming president of the Ohio Association of Election Officials, Keith Cunningham. ?The inference is that Ohio election officials will not count every vote,? said the man who is currently head of the Board of Elections in Allen County (that?s the Lima area, northwest of Columbus). ?That?s just insulting; it?s frivolous and simply harassment.?

Advised of the recount push by the Green and Libertarian Parties, and their plan to sue to force a second tally even before Secretary of State Blackwell is scheduled to certify the first count, Cunningham said his statewide group might sue back to prevent a recount. ?I need to see if this is merely my opinion or reflects the opinion of the association.?

The issue may boil down to money. The Glibs had raised $235,000 as of Monday morning, an amount which covers the $113,600 bond they had to provide as demanded by Ohio election law, plus some of their own organizational expenses. But Cunningham said the actual expenses would ?crush county governments,? and a spokesman for Blackwell said the final cost could be $1.5 million.

So there it is. There will be a recount in Ohio. Unless there won?t be. And the Kerry campaign staff will participate in it. Unless that?s too strong a word for them.

Keep those e-mails coming at KOlbermann@msnbc.com

Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 12:01 AM EST
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post
Sunday, 21 November 2004
Relax about Ohio, Relax about the guy tailing me (Keith Olbermann)
Mood:  cheeky
Topic: Voting
NEW YORK? Anybody else notice that when you politely refer to the Secretary of State of Ohio, you have to call him ?Mr. Blackwell,? just like that guy who compiles the goofy worst-dressed list?

Mr. Kenneth Blackwell is the subject of three actions regarding the Ohio vote that you haven?t seen on television yet. Each (the Cobb/Badnarik Recount bid, the Alliance for Democracy legal challenge, and the Ohio Democratic Party suit over provisional ballots) has an undertone suggesting time is of the essence, and that he is wasting it. The accusation may or may not be true, but it also may or may not be relevant.

The Glibs? recount effort was underscored last week by their letters to Blackwell insisting he hurry up and finish certifying the count well before the announced deadline of December 6, because otherwise, there won?t be enough time for the recount before the voting of the Electoral College on December 13. The Alliance attorney Clifford Arnebeck told The Columbus Dispatch that his quite separate legal challenge to the election must be addressed immediately because ?time is critical.? The local Democrats haven?t been commenting on their low-flying suit - more about that later. They?re just smiling quietly to themselves.

Cobb, Badnarik, Arnebeck, and everybody else actually has more time than they think. I addressed this topic with the wonderfully knowledgeable George Washington University Constitutional Law professor, Jonathan Turley, back on Countdown on November 9th. He noted the election process is a little slower? and has one more major loophole? than is generally known. It begins on December 7th, the date ?when you essentially certify your electors? it gives a presumption to the legitimacy to your votes. And then, on the 13th, the electors actually vote.?

But, Turley noted, ?those votes are not opened by Congress until January 6. Now, if there are controversies, such as some disclosure that a state actually went for Kerry (instead of Bush), there is the ability of members of Congress to challenge.? In other words, even after the December 13th Electoral College Vote, in the extremely unlikely scenario that a court overturns the Ohio count, or that the recount discovers 4,000 Gahanna-style machines that each recorded 4,000 votes too many for one candidate, there is still a mechanism to correct the error, honest or otherwise.

?It requires a written objection from one House member and one senator,? Turley continues. Once that objection is raised, the joint meeting of the two houses is discontinued. ?Then both Houses separate again and they vote by majority vote as to whether to accept the slate of electoral votes from that state.?

In these super-heated partisan times, it may seem like just another prospective process decided by majority rule instead of fact. But envision the far-fetched scenario of some dramatic, conclusive new result from Ohio turning up around, say, January 4th. What congressman or senator in his right mind would vote to seat the candidate who lost the popular vote in Ohio? We wouldn?t be talking about party loyalty any more - we?d be talking about pure political self-interest here, and whenever in our history that critical mass has been achieved, it?s been every politician for himself (ask Barry Goldwater when Richard Nixon trolled for his support in July and August, 1974, or Republican Senator Edmund Ross of Kansas when his was to be the decisive vote that would have impeached President Andrew Johnson in 1868).

The point of this dip into the world of political science fiction is that the Ohio timeframe is a little less condensed than it seems. The drop-dead date is not December 13, but January 6.

It is noteworthy that the announcement of a legal challenge made it into weekend editions of The Cleveland Plain Dealer, The Columbus Dispatch, the Associated Press wires, and other publications. The Columbus paper even mentioned something curious. ?Earlier this week, the Ohio Democratic party announced it would join a lawsuit arguing that the state lacks clear rules for evaluating provisional ballots, a move the party said will keep its options open if problems with the ballots surface.?

This makes a little more sense out of a confusing item that appeared in an obscure weekly paper in Westchester County, New York, last Wednesday, in which a reporter named Adam Stone wrote ?A top-ranking official with Democratic Senator John Kerry?s presidential campaign told North County News last week that although unlikely, there is a recount effort being waged that could unseat Republican President George Bush.? Stone quotes Kerry spokesman David Wade as saying: ?We have 17,000 lawyers working on this, and the grassroots accountability couldn?t be any higher - no (irregularity) will go unchecked. Period.? Gives a little context to Senator Kerry?s opaque mass e-mail and on-line video statement from Friday afternoon.

The Ohio newspaper coverage suggests that even the mainstream media is beginning to sit up and take notice that, whatever its merits, the investigation into the voting irregularities of November 2nd has moved from the Reynolds Wrap Hat stage into legal and governmental action. Tripe does continue to appear, like Carol Pogash?s column in today?s San Francisco Chronicle. Its headline provided me with a laugh: ?Liberals, the election is over, live with it.? I?ve gotten 37,000 emails in the last two weeks (now running at better than 25:1 in favor), and the two most repeated comments by those critical of the coverage have been references to the ratings of Fox News Channel, and the phrase ?the election is over, (expletive deleted), live with it. I hesitate to generalize, but this does suggest a certain unwillingness of critics to engage in political discourses that don?t have no swear words in ?em.

Meantime, The Oakland Tribune not only devoted seventeen paragraphs Friday to the UC Berkeley study on the voting curiosities in Florida, but actually expended considerable energy towards what we used to call ?advancing the story?: ?The UC Berkeley report has not been peer reviewed, but a reputable MIT political scientist succeeded in replicating the analysis Thursday at the request of the Oakland Tribune and The Associated Press. He said an investigation is warranted.?

In fact, he - MIT Arts and Social Sciences Dean Charles Stewart - said more than that. ?There is an interesting pattern here that I hope someone looks into.? Stewart is part of the same Cal Tech/MIT Voting Project that had earlier issued a preliminary report suggesting that there was no evidence of significant voting irregularity in Florida. Dean Stewart added he didn?t necessarily buy the Berkeley conclusion - that the only variable that could explain the ?excessive? votes in Florida was poisoned touch-screen voting - and still thought there were other options, such as, in the words of The Tribune?s Ian Hoffman ?absentee voting or some quirk of election administration.?

Neither MIT nor Cal Tech has yet responded to the comments of several poll-savvy commentators, and others, that its paper was using erroneous statistics. Its premise, you?ll recall, was that on a state-by-state basis, the notorious 2004 Exit Polls were within the margin of error and could be mathematically interpreted as having forecast the announced presidential outcome. It has been observed that the MIT/Cal Tech study used not the ?raw? exit polls - as did Professor Steven Freeman of Penn did in his study - but rather the ?weighted? polls, in which actual precinct and county official counts are mixed in to ?correct? the organic ?Hey, Buddy, who?d you vote for? numbers. The ?weighted? polls have been analogized to a football handicapper predicting that the New Orleans Saints would beat the Denver Broncos 24-14, then, after the Broncos scored twenty points in the first quarter, announcing his prediction was now that the Saints would beat the Broncos 42-41, or even, that the Broncos would beat the Saints 40-7.

None of the coverage of the Berkeley study clarified a vitally important point about its conclusions regarding the touch-screen wobble in the fifteen Florida counties, and that has led to some unjustified optimism on the activist and Democratic sides. Its math produced two distinct numbers for ?ghost votes? for President Bush: 130,000 and 260,000. This has led to the assumption in many quarters that Cal Tech has suggested as many as 260,000 Florida votes could swing from Bush to Kerry (enough to overturn the state). In fact - and the academics got a little too academic in summarizing their report and thus, this kind of got lost - the two numbers already consider the prospect of a swing:

a) There may have been 130,000 votes simply added to the Bush total. If proved and excised, they would reduce the President?s Florida margin from approximately 350,000 votes to approximately 220,000;

b) There may have been 130,000 votes switched from Kerry to Bush. If proved and corrected, they would reduce (by double the 130,000 figure - namely 260,000) the President?s Florida margin from approximately 350,000 votes to approximately 90,000.

On the ground in Florida, uncounted ballots continue to turn up in Pinellas County. Last Monday, an unmarked banker?s box with 268 absentee ballots was discovered ?sitting in plain sight on an office floor, with papers and other boxes stacked on top of it,? according to The St. Petersburg Times. On Friday, the same paper reported that County Supervisor of Elections Deborah Clark found twelve more?ten provisionals in a blue pouch at a loading dock, and two absentees in a box headed for a storage facility. ?I?m sick about this,? the paper quoted Clark, whose office also whiffed on 1400 absentee ballots on Election Day 2000, and counted another 600 twice. Asked by a reporter if the election is over, she replied ?I certainly hope so.?

Well, I know how Ms. Clark feels. To close, a little anecdote from Big Town: I approached Seventh Avenue from the east and the guy in the black trenchcoat was walking north.

He got that little surprised look of recognition in his eyes and said ?Keith! How are you?? We shook hands and he added, with apparent nervousness, ?I?ll just be tailing you for the next block.? I laughed and said I was used to it.

Now, I?ve been getting recognized in public since 1982, and I had a stalker for eight years who once talked her way into ESPN and wound up being escorted to my desk? so I think I can tell the difference between a fan and a threat (this was a fan; a threat doesn?t come up and announce he?s going to tail you). I relate this just because of the timing. In the last week, I have read that I?ve been fired, suspended, muzzled, threatened (that, I think, was my NBC colleague Kevin Sites, who reported the Marine prisoner shooting in Iraq? our mailbox had a couple of those), and in the middle of it, I get a ?What?s the frequency Kenneth moment? from a fan who was just trying to be funny.

The laugh was genuine. As was my decision to cross the street.

Write me at KOlbermann@msnbc.com


Posted by magic2/hotstuff at 12:01 AM EST
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post

Newer | Latest | Older