July 2008

Who has the best Military service to be president, you decide.

This whole flap over who has the best military experience to be president really has been bothering me. So let’s go over 3 presidential candidates experience and see who has the best,

Wesley Kanne Clark (born December 23, 1944) is a retired General of the United States Army. Clark was valedictorian of his class at West Point, was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to the University of Oxford where he obtained a degree in PPE (Philosophy, Politics & Economics), and later graduated from the Command and General Staff College with a master’s degree in military science. He spent 34 years in the Army and the Department of Defense, receiving many military decorations, several honorary knighthoods, and a Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Clark commanded Operation Allied Force in the Kosovo War during his term as the Supreme Allied Commander Europe of NATO from 1997 to 2000.

George Stanley McGovern volunteered for the United States Army Air Forces during World War II and served as a B-24 Liberator bomber pilot in the Fifteenth Air Force, flying 35 missions over enemy territory from bases in North Africa and later Italy, often against heavy anti-aircraft artillery, earning the Distinguished Flying Cross for saving his crew by landing his damaged bomber on a British airfield on Vis, a small island off the Yugoslav coast controlled by Tito’s Partisans. McGovern’s wartime story, including his island landing, is at the center of Stephen Ambrose’s profile of the men who flew B-24s over Germany in World War II, The Wild Blue.[2]

John Sidney McCain III  graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1958 (194th in his class out of 199) and became a naval aviator, flying ground-attack aircraft from aircraft carriers. During the Vietnam War, he nearly lost his life in the 1967 USS Forrestal fire. Later that year while on a bombing mission over North Vietnam, he was shot down, badly injured, and captured as a prisoner of war by the North Vietnamese. He was held from 1967 to 1973, experiencing episodes of torture and refusing an out-of-sequence early repatriation offer; his war wounds would leave him with lifelong physical limitations. He retired from the Navy as a captain in 1981 and, moving to Arizona

So when Wesley Clark says McCain’s military service doesn’t qualify him to be president, I think he hits the nail on the head. Because if you think about it, the first two candidates lost their presidential bids and McCain’s miltary service PALES in comparison to theirs.

Bill Moyers on Big Oil and Iraq

 
June 27, 2008

BILL MOYERS: Oh no, they told us, Iraq isn’t a war about oil. That’s cynical and simplistic, they said. It’s about terror and al Qaeda and toppling a dictator and spreading democracy and protecting ourselves from weapons of mass destruction. But one by one, these concocted rationales went up in smoke, fire, and ashes. And now the bottom turns out to be the bottom line. It is about oil.
Alan Greenspan said so last fall. The former Chairman of the Federal Reserve, safely out of office, confessed in his memoir: “…everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil.” he then told reporter Bob Woodward, “if Saddam Hussein had been head of Iraq and there was no oil under those sands, our response to him would not have been as strong as it was in the first Gulf War.”
Remember, also, that soon after the invasion Donald Rumsfeld’s deputy, Paul Wolfowitz, told the press that war was our only strategic choice. “We had virtually no economic options with Iraq,” Wolfowitz said, “because the country floats on a sea of oil.”
Shades of Daniel Plainview! You remember Plainview – the monstrous petroleum tycoon in the movie “There Will Be Blood.” Half-mad, he shouts: “there’s a whole ocean of oil under our feet!” then adds, “no one can get at it except for me!”
No wonder American troops only guarded the Ministries of Oil and the Interior in Baghdad, even as looters pillaged museums of their priceless antiquities. Our soldiers were making sure no one could get at the oil except…guess who?
Take a look at this headline the other day in THE NEW YORK TIMES: “deals with Iraq are set to bring oil giants back.” Read on: “Four western oil companies are in the final stages of negotiations this month on contracts that will return them to Iraq, 36 years after losing their oil concession to nationalization as Saddam Hussein rose to power.”
There you have it. After a long exile Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total and BP are back in Iraq. And on the wings of no-bid contracts – that’s right, sweetheart deals like those granted Halliburton, KBR, Blackwater. The kind of deals you get only if you have friends in high places. And these war profiteers have friends in very high places.
Let’s go back a few years, to the 1990s, when private citizen Dick Cheney was running Halliburton, the big energy supplier. That’s when he told the oil industry that, “By 2010 we will need on the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day. So where is the oil going to come from?” Cheney asked. While many regions of the world offer great oil opportunities, the Middle East…is still where the prize ultimately lies.”
Fast forward to Cheney’s first heady days in the White House. The oil industry and other energy conglomerates have been handed back-door keys to the white house, and their CEOs and lobbyists were trooping in and out for meetings with their old pal, now Vice President Cheney. The meetings are secret, conducted under tight security. But as we reported in July 2003, among the documents that turned up from some of those meetings were maps of oil fields in Iraq and a list of companies that wanted access to them. The conservative group Judicial Watch and the Sierra Club filed suit to find out who attended the meetings and what was discussed. But the White House fought all the way to the Supreme Court to keep the press and public from learning the whole truth.
Think about it. These secret meetings took place six months before 9/11, two years before Bush and Cheney invaded Iraq. We still don’t know what they were about. What we know is that this is the very oil industry enjoying swollen profits these days. It would be laughable if it weren’t so painful to remember that their erstwhile cheerleader for invading Iraq – the press mogul Rupert Murdoch – once said that a successful war there would bring us $20 a barrel oil. The last time I looked, it was more than $140 a barrel. Where are you, Rupert, when we need the facts?
At those hearings earlier this week, scientist James Hansen, who 20 years ago alerted us to the dangers of global warming, compared the chief executives of big oil to the tobacco moguls who denied that nicotine is addictive or that there’s a link between smoking and cancer. Hansen said these barons of black gold should be tried for committing crimes against humanity and nature in opposing efforts to deal with global warming.
Perhaps those sweetheart deals in Iraq should be added to his proposed indictments. They have been purchased at a very high price. Four-thousand American soldiers dead, tens of thousands permanently wounded for life, hundreds of thousands of dead and crippled Iraqis plus five million displaced, and a cost that will mount into trillions of dollars. The political analyst Kevin Phillips says America has become little more than an “energy protection force” doing anything to gain access too expensive fuel without regard to the lives of others, or the earth itself. One thinks again of Daniel Plainview, in “There Will Be Blood”. His lust for oil came at the price of his son and his soul.
That’s it for the JOURNAL. We’ll be off next week for the July 4th concert.
You’ll see us here again in two weeks.
I’m Bill Moyers.

Bill Janklow and Now the SD Supreme court still don’t know the meaning of satire or the 1st Amendment

 

Janks thinks 12 juror’s should decide the meaning of the First Amendment:.

“The Argus Leader’s day in court is a long time coming, but it will soon be here and they will have to do what everybody else has had to do when it’s been their turn to stand before the bar of justice. They will be seated in front of a jury of 12 citizens who will decide if they libeled Dan Scott and how much they damaged him,” said Janklow, who also served as South Dakota’s governor for 16 years.

I think that has already been clarified by our founding fathers. This case is a waste of time and taxpayer money. I hope you and crybaby Dan Scott lose, and lose big.

Intitiated Measure 10; What the party fools aren’t telling you.

 I decided to look at Initiated Measure #10 to see what all the hoopla is about. I had read it about a month ago and found nothing in it that I disagree with. So I decided to take a second look to see if I was missing something, since both parties oppose it. Which doesn’t surprise me. Like I have said in the past, parties oppose open government laws because they don’t want the public to know where their campaigns get money. Read the Measure here, with explanations.

http://cleanupsd.com/read-the-sd-open-and-clean-government-act/

My analysis:

I agree with Section 1. It should be against the law to use taxpayer’s money to lobby. We have seen this in the past with the city of Sioux Falls hiring lobbyists.

I agree with Section 2. This basically charges you with a crime if you violate Section 1. Makes sense, because then their is accountability.

I think Section 3 is really unnecessary because those rights are already granted to an elected official under the First Amendment. But it does not take away anything from the measure by keeping it in there.

I strongly agree with Section 4. It basically says your tax dollars cannot be used to buy supposed ‘neutral’ studies that support one position or another. It is up to voters to do their own research when it comes to candidates and ballot issues.

Section 5 is wishy-washy. On one hand I agree with limiting golden parachute jobs, but I also wonder if this will hamper the right for someone to provide for themselves? I think this section needs more clarification.

I strongly agree with Section 6. This has been going on way to long. Awarding contracts to campaign contributors will become illegal under Section 6.

Section 7 goes into more detail about Section 6 and reiterates it. These two sections should have been combined.

Section 8 allows citizens to file complaints in court about violators of Section 7 if state attorney’s choose to ignore complaints. This is good, because it gives citizens the power to hold government officials accountable when state employees fail us.

Section 9 is long overdue. Governor Rounds has been promising a state contract website for a longtime, and he will NEVER deliver it on his own, he has too much at stake to do so. I have also believed this section of  the measure should be on the ballot by itself. As a Pierre insider told me once, “If the citizens of South Dakota knew the enormous waste state contracts are, they would overthrow the government in Pierre.”

Section 10 clarifies what state contracts will apply to Section 9.

I think this measure is long overdue, and I can see why state Republicans and Democrats oppose the measure, it’s all about campaign contributions, favors and PAC money, that’s all it seems they live for these days. If we publicly funded campaigns in the state, there would be no need for this measure, but that’s a whole other debate in itself.

I’m no lawyer, but it seems to me this measure is very solid and constitutional. Of course anyone can challenge it in court if it becomes law, BUT I wonder if any politicians would want to go through that embarrassment? It’s time we tell politicians they work for us, not lobbyists or contractors.