Tuesday, June 12, 2007

The New Christian Confederacy: How Would Americans Act if Our Country Were Iraq’d?

It seems hard for some Americans to understand why Iraqis might not be too happy with American soldiers in their country. But what would happen if we were occupied by military forces from other countries? How would we react? Would some of us side with the occupying force as a way to gain advantages? Would we start guerrilla warfare against the occupiers? Would people take advantage of the unrest to settle old feuds? Would gangs and drug lords help lead insurrections? It’s worth thinking about what things might look like if we were occupied.


Impossible you say. Aside from the fact of our great military strength, our geography also makes it extremely difficult for any other nation or group of nations to conquer us. Maybe. But what if we conquered ourselves?

Suppose that after the 2006 elections the Bush administration began to plot out their permanent control of the United States. They start making lists of generals who have been loyal and those who questioned Rumsfeld and the Bush administration. Among the many documents captured in Iraq are Saddam Hussein’s strategy for holding power in Iraq, for stifling political dissent. Imagine how interesting that would be to Robert Gates – an actual plan to quell the violence. How useful it would be to Karl Rove – an actual plan to stifle dissent. And when Saddam Hussein was executed in Baghdad with a leaked video as proof, unbeknown to all but a few, the dead man was one of Saddam’s doubles, and the real Saddam is now safely hidden in Wyoming ranch where he can give advice on how he kept the relative peace in Iraq all those years and how the Bush administration can take care of the traitors in the military, in Congress, in the media, in academia. and elsewhere.

The list of suspect military is now expanded to all sectors of the population. Torture techniques have already been approved and we already have prisons where these techniques are practiced. Handy for finding out who’s loyal and who isn’t. Some get called up on morals charges – lots more illicit IM logs come to light. An aneurysm here, a car accident there, an attempted robbery. Slowly enemies disappear. Dark skinned men with beards. Gays. Atheists. Environmentalists. Parents of the dead or injured US troops who dared to question official reports. And anyone who stands up for any of these people. Life becomes more difficult. Air travel becomes an ordeal. Telephones make strange noises. Police put down ‘riots’ at hip-hop concerts and other events where undesirables gather. The dead and wounded brought it on themselves.

Things get murky. Journalists find out there are consequences for aiding and abetting the enemy with their traitorous stories and printing and broadcasting classified material – even if it is already publicly available. A string of explosions at military bases inside the United States is the last straw. The President mourns the loss of our courageous fighting men and women and vows to find and destroy the perpetrators of this outrage. The terrorist alert color scheme has now gone past red to purple. The media, even if they have connected the dots between the enemy lists and the bases destroyed, do not even think about reporting the story. With his loyalists now firmly in charge of all the military branches, and with Blackwater mercenaries deployed to potential hotspots, Bush declares martial law. There are curfews in place. People don't come back from foraging for food. But staying home isn't safe either. All United Nations personnel from countries that have not supported the United States in at least 90% of all votes, and 100% of all votes the Bush administration deems critical, are ordered to leave the country in 24 hours. US troops then take over the United Nations headquarters in New York.

Germany, Holland, and Denmark are the first European countries to break off diplomatic relations with the US. Most Muslim countries also cut ties. The Chinese and the Russians are both nervous and smiling. They always knew that democracy couldn’t work. They understand dictators much more than they understand democrats. Across the nation there is panic. Most of the people who own guns and know how to use them are siding with the government. The liberals take to their computers and begin hacking the government systems. In some cases they find and post internal documents and plans. In other cases they are able to shut down vital systems. The power goes out in Washington DC and the surrounding areas. Troops occupy Microsoft, Google, and other critical computer centers and internet use is severely restricted.

The disruption to trade caused by the United States crisis threatens to topple the world economy. NATO, minus the US, but with help from Russia and China, and dissident US generals and troops overseas, begin to meet to determine what to do. Pakistan, having broken all ties with the US, is now working closely with North Korea to nuke Alaska.

Bush rallies his support. A new Confederacy is authorized to establish a semi-autonomous region in the South, ruled by fundamentalist Christians. The insurgents - a mix of liberals, libertarians, and true conservatives - are using what internet is left to appeal for help from NATO. Many have slipped into Canada or Mexico to start resistance movements.

Do I think this might happen? Of course not. We live in the United States of America, with the oldest constitutional democracy in the world, a constitution that guarantees such things as freedom of speech, freedom from religious prosecution, habeas corpus, due process. But I just spin this scenario so people can start to imagine what life might be like for Iraqis. So people can start to imagine the kinds of choices they would have to make if our cities' streets were ruled by violent militia and you couldn’t count on the police for safety, or the markets for food, or the corner gas station for fuel. When electricity and running water can no longer be taken for granted.

What would your options be? How would you protect your home, your family? What would you do if someone got sick or hurt, but the hospitals were occupied by drug dealers and looters?

So, when NATO - including China and Russia - troops finally landed, what would you do? Would you volunteer to join the new police? Would you join up with your ethnic, religious, or professional compatriots? Would you try to flee across the border? Would you join the insurgency? This is the life every day Iraqis would appear to be facing right now.

Monday, June 11, 2007

Jonathan, Mary, and Otto Visit



We knew our friends Mary and Jonathan would be in Anchorage sometime in June, but we didn't know exactly when. Joan had decided yesterday she needed to paint the entry way to the house. So they arrived by camper van from Juneau this today with everything out and the painting only partially done.



But no problem. They brought along Otto, their new pup. Taz, their Great Dane died at 10 1/2 recently. So after the parking lot at Moose's Tooth was packed - including a fire truck and lots of people outside - we decided to go to Thai Kitchen. You can see from the pictures that both Otto and Jonathan are always moving.


Sunday, June 10, 2007

Don't Surrender to Dan Fagan

Dan Fagan’s first piece as a regular journalist in the ADN appeared to today. This is part of preserving the ‘diversity’ of opinions offered by the agreement that gave the long defunct Anchorage Times a half page in the Opinion section of the ADN. Of course, that was basically a diversity of right wing opinions, that became an oil industry platform when VECO took it over. Now that the top two people at VECO have pled guilty to bribery, extortion, etc. the ADN finally ended the deal. One wonders how much they were paid to drag that deal out so long. Anyway, I’ve only heard Dan Fagan’s radio talk show a few times, so rather than lean on the opinions of others, I’ll just work from what he wrote today.

Basically his message was:

Surrender has become mainstream.
The school districts teach students to surrender (to walk away from bullies.)
We surrender to the thought police. (Can’t say lots of words or T.P. call you bad things)
We surrender our rights to government to think for us. And pay for it with 1/3 of our income.

We surrender to Muslim terrorists. "War is hell. Surrender is easy."
We surrender to personal vices.

Surrender is the path to bondage, slavery, oppression

This piece is short on facts and long on unsubstantiated opinion. . One of his rants here is against ‘thought police.’ If you’re against redefining marriage, he writes, “the thought police call you a homophobe, bigot, someone who discriminates.” So, is he saying that someone who stands up for what he believes is the ‘thought police?’ Someone who doesn’t surrender to what he sees as injustice is the ‘thought police?’ Why isn’t that free speech? Or is it ‘thought police’ and ‘political correctness’ only when the ideas are those Dan doesn’t agree with?

My idea of thought police comes from George Orwell’s book, 1984.

Any sound that Winston made, above the level of a very low whisper, would be picked up by it, moreover, so long as he remained within the field of vision which the metal plaque commanded, he could be seen as well as heard. There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment. How often, or on what system, the Thought Police plugged in on any individual wire was guesswork. It was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time. But at any rate they could plug in your wire whenever they wanted to. You had to live -- did live, from habit that became instinct -- in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in darkness, every movement scrutinized.

This is a far cry from someone calling you a homophobe. But we do have people working hard to shape how people think today. The best funded and most disciplined attempt to shape thought I know comes from the well organized Republican Party’s Talking Points where right wing politicians and media repeat the same message agreed upon by the Party tacticians each day. Yes, there are now Democratic Talking Points too, as they copied what they see as a too effective form of Republican thought control.

Given Dan’s repetition of the word ‘surrender’ 21 times ('is' 16 times, 'and' 17 times) in this 700 word essay, one has to wonder whether Dan is part of the Republican thought control program, since ‘surrender’ is one of their current favored terms. As in, “Withdrawal from Iraq is surrender to the terrorists.” In this piece he made everything so called liberals believe an act of surrender, then finally writing, "Surrender is the path to bondage, slavery, oppression." If we believe this as an absolute, then, yeah, surrender is the worst thing you could do. If he, along with countless other foot soldiers for the right wing, can get this to stick, then whenever the word ‘surrender’ is used, people will think of Democrats and bondage, slavery, oppression. Now, that is thought control.

The essay begins with the schools teaching kids to walk away from bullies as an example of everyone being taught to surrender. Then he goes on to say that we surrender everything to let government take over our lives and that we surrender 1/3 of our income in taxes for them to do it with. If Dan’s paying 1/3 of his income in taxes, he needs a new accountant. And it seems to me a lot of the tax money is going to fight that war in Iraq he doesn’t want us to ‘surrender.’ But I agree to a certain extent that Republicans generally can’t spend too much on police or national defense and bridges, while Democrats can’t spend too much to help the helpless.

But the whole idea of surrender here is being distorted. First, surrender isn’t all or nothing. But after making it an all or nothing concept, Fagan stretches it to cover all sorts of situations of negotiation and compromise. He seems to live in a world where if he doesn’t get his way 100%, he has surrendered, which leads to bondage, etc. Dan might want to look up game theory and the ideas of zero-sum and variable-sum games as game theory defines them. It’s Dan’s zero-sum type of thinking that has kept the Israelis and Palestinians killing each other rather than starting to move toward peace and security and economic prosperity. If every single insult is returned, there is no end to the feud. But, I understand the reasoning that says you have to stand up to a bully and partially accept it. But there are different ways to take down a bully. While there isn't agreement on bullying, it does seem reasonable that in many cases "[b]ullying is a learned behavior, not a character trait. Bullies can learn new ways to curb their aggression and handle conflicts." And for the cases of psychopaths, the community, not victims need to intervene. One option is the one Dan implies – beat the shit out of the bully and he leaves you alone. But what if he thrashes you? But even if you win, the bully goes on to pick on someone else. Another option is to give the non-psychopath bully some ways to gain respect, be fairly treated, and to have some power over his world.

But let me get back to the idea of thought police. If you read Dan’s piece carefully, it appears that people who disagree with Dan Fagan are ‘thought police,’ but when Dan tries to insinuate 'they' are all surrendering sissies, Dan isn't a 'thought policeman' he's just standing up for what he believes. Neat trick, but it doesn’t work. Nor does the following twisted logic. “Voters agreed and upheld the smoking ban. They said you can’t trust people…Government knows best.” Excuse me? Actually, it is Dan Fagan saying that you can’t trust the people, because they stupidly surrendered by voting for a smoking ban.

This piece is a lot of emotional words strung together in a way that should fire up Dan Fagan’s co-believers and piss off the rest. There’s no cohesive logical argument, nothing you could actually act on since ‘surrender’ is such a vague term. There’s no attempt to understand or explain, rather it is all declarative sentences or rhetorical questions about what Dan generally feels is good and what he generally feels is bad. The Veco Times may be gone in name, but Dan Fagan is now in place to carry on their tradition.

This Week's Blooming Flowers


Maybe this can be a regular during the summer - flowers blooming in our yard. And maybe someone will even tell me the names of the ones I can't remember.

The phlox form a carpet of bloom right now.






The chocolate lily is one of my favorite Alaskan flowers, but they don't smell at all like chocolate. Sniffing not advised.













The forget-me-not is the state flower and another favorite.













And the yellow lamium flowers.


















And there are still plenty of dandelions.

Palladium Shoes Delivers

I hate going shopping to find something I need. I can never find it. So if I find something I like and I know I can use, when I'm not really looking, I buy it. Doesn't happen often. So in Seattle a couple of months ago, I found this pair of shoes. I bought em. They were comfortable and looked cool.

I wore them maybe three times. We were back in Anchorage when the metal hook on the right for the shoelace broke off. You can see the left hook still there. I tried to just put the shoelace through the hole, but the hole was too small. I went to the Palladium website and emailed in my problem. After a week with no response, I got the 800 number and called Caryl. When I said the email didn't get answered, she said, "That's my fault, I'm behind." Wow, she didn't blame anyone else, admitted to being the problem. When I told her what happened
Caryl:"That shouldn't happen. I'll send you a new pair."
Me: "Well all I need is a new hook."
C: "No, we'll send a new pair."
Me: "Should I send the old ones back?"
C: "No, keep 'em, donate them to charity, do whatever."


A week later a new pair arrived. Part of me thinks only in the modern Western world is it 'cheaper' to send a new pair of shoes than to make a minor repair. But as a customer with a problem, I got back no attitude, no questions, just concern about my problem, a sense of humor from a real person, and immediate and generous response.

Since I've complained here about companies that seem to prey on the unsuspecting, I think I ought to also give credit to those companies that do a great job of serving their customers. Thanks Palladium, you've got a great employee in Caryl!

Friday, June 08, 2007

The Perfect Prayer at Cyrano's Playhouse



Immigrant parents, American born daughter, and 'real' American boyfriend. Novels, plays, movies about the cultural obstacles faced by immigrants are traditional American fare. Just different sets of immigrants over the years. In this play, the father is a devout Moslem from Egypt, the mother not quite so devout ("I pray in my own way"), the daughter caught between the rules of home and the rules outside. In this case, outside is Mississippi.

This production at Cyrano's in Anchorage is the West Coast premiere of the play and the playwright (Suehyla El-Attar) was up here last week. Just four actors (Jamie Pauley, Vivian Kinnaird, Marius Panzarella, and Anthony Oliva) powerfully conveyed the story, with gentle overlays we saw the daughter and boyfriend together in the foreground, while the parents, in the background, spoke the words embedded in Hadia's brain, fitting in beautifully with the foreground dialogue.


At Cyrano's it's clear - no photography during the performance - so luckily we got there pretty early so I could shoot the set and the new seats before they filled up. It's a very intimate theater.









We learn some basics of Islam very painlessly as the father teaches his university class on the subject and Hadia is a student in that class ("don't tell anyone I'm your father") where she meets Adam. It sounds a little contrived, but it worked seamlessly. The actors were all superb - the program says that local Arab/Americans worked with the actors to perfect their accents and their Arabic pronounciation.









Given the no picture rule, I had to make do with the photos on the wall outside the theater as we came out. I expect this is a play that people will hear about. It is funny and powerful and timely. Thanks to Sandy Harper at Cyrano's for recognizing the importance of this play and getting it to Anchorage.

Charlie's Bakery

I met a friend for a late lunch at Charlie's Bakery today. Charlie's is one of those Anchorage gems hidden in an ugly strip mall. One doesn't expect good, authentic Chinese food at a place called Charlie's Bakery that has French bread in the window. We all see places and people and unconsciously categorize them, and often we don't easily let them out of that first impression box. Just as the facade of the bakery hides a lot, I suspect that Charlie's appearance hides a lot for many people.

I first met Charlie and his wife Jade when we came back in 1990 from a year in Hong Kong and I was looking for real Chinese food. People steered me to the Golden Pond. I wanted to set up a real Chinese dinner and an audio conference meeting with a university program I'd gotten to know in Beijing.
That was when I learned that Charlie was a trained chef, not "just" an immigrant who started a restaurant. He'd gone to a good culinary school in Taiwan and came out with some of his cookbooks when we started to plan the menu.


What a true delight it was to share with my Anchorage friends some 'real' Chinese food right here in Anchorage. At that time, Jack Dalton (Jack comes at the bottom of the post, so scroll way down), was a student who worked as a waiter at Golden Pond. I mention that because Anchorage is a small town in many ways and there are all sorts of connections like that. We were able to have several special, six or seven course dinners at Golden Pond, including a few fund raisers for worthy causes. Well, at some point Charlie left (sold?) Golden Pond and I didn't know where to find real Chinese food in Anchorage. There are lots of Chinese restaurants, but only a couple are actually owned and run by Chinese, and fewer by any who have actually been professionally trained in Chinese cooking. (And if I'm wrong in that perception, please let me know.) Chinatown Restaurant is another good Chinese restaurant owned and run by people from Beijing that I found out about when I learned they'd taken the Chinese Consul General from San Francisco to dinner there. And if you get their fancy menus, you can order very good, authentic Chinese food - they even serve the same kinds of cold appetizers they serve in Beijing.





Anyway, after leaving Golden Pond, Charlie eventually opened Charlie's Bakery which does also offer French bread and and pastries along with Chinese pastries and a long list of lunch specials. But I too was deceived by the French flag imagery of the sign and didn't realize it was the same Charlie for a while. They are mainly open for lunch until early dinner. And the fancy Chinese dishes aren't on the menu. By the way, you can click on the menu to enlarge it and you should be able to read most of it. And while Charlie's name is on the sign and he's the person responsible for the food, Jade plays an equally important role managing the business.

So today I learned about another interesting facet of Charlie's life. In the late 80's he spent a month wandering around India and Nepal. He just rode trains and buses mostly and got off where things looked interesting. It takes a special person to go to India for a month, especially traveling on his own, and Charlie was well past the typical
backpacker stage of his life. I know he must have a lot more interesting stories to tell. So if you stop by for lunch, ask him.

Thursday, June 07, 2007

The New Pirates of the Seven Seas

The googling I did on the earlier post on Carnival Cruise Lines has got me more interested in the whole cruise business. Of course, front page NYTimes stories on Ted Stevens and Don Young, also helped pique my curiosity. So here's a book of interest to Alaskans whose legislature has been tinkering with an cruise line initiative Alaskans passed last fall at the behest of the cruise industry. Of course, this is a good time to raise issues about campaign contributions in Alaska.

The book's called Cruise Ship Squeeze The New Pirates of the Seven Seas by Ross A. Klein published by a Canadian company, New Society Publishers. USD$ 17.95

I don't normally feature books here that I haven't read, but they do have a 5 1/2 page overview of the book available as a pdf file. And I'll offer some quotes here along with my comments. And Klein, a college professor, has published numerous articles and books on the topic, and even testified before Congress as an expert witness. He's not without credentials and expertise And he runs www.cruisejunkie.com, with information on environmental issues, health issues, crew issues, etc. It also says on the New Society website that he's been on 300 cruises. So if he's writing about cruise lines, I bet they're all tax deductible.

THIS BOOK IS ABOUT MODERN PIRATES— the ones who sail huge cruise ships from one port to another and offload thousands of day-visitors at a time.


OK, the Pirate title is kind of provocative and certainly tells us what the author thinks before we even open the book. So we know we have to read this book critically and skeptically. But at least I'm hoping it will give us some good leads and facts to check up on. And it can't be any more biased than the cruise industries ads all over Alaska last summer and fall trying to defeat the cruise regulation initiative. And I recognize the marketing value of a catchy title, so I've used it for this post.

Passengers buy tours ashore provided by local folks in the ports they visit, but the cruise ship keeps more money from the sale than is given to the person providing the tour.On top of this,the stores where passengers shop kick back substantial sums for the privilege of having cruise passengers in their place of business,ports often provide incentives for cruise ships to stop,and governments look the other way regarding cruise industry environmental practices.


So Alaskans seem to be a little ahead of the curve. Of course, Alaska is a general destination. While the cruises can play one Southeast port against another, as they do in the Caribbean, it would be hard to just drop out of Alaska altogether...I think. Anyway, the initiative has language to tell passengers what kind of cut the ships take on the tours booked on board and from the stores they send them to. Hmmm, our cruises often start in Vancouver (where this book was published.) I wonder if the initiative writers read the book, or even know the author. He teaches way on the other side of Canada. I'll have to check to find out who was behind the initiative and how they came up with the language.


The North American cruise industry earned more than $2.5 billion
in net profit in 2004.It pays virtually no corporate income tax and is exempt from
most laws in the countries that the ships visit.

I got the money in the previous post, but not the tax deductions.

Princess Cruises,Norwegian Cruise Line,and Royal Caribbean Cruise Line
all began operations in the mid to late 1960s.Carnival Cruise Lines was a latecomer,
starting in 1972.

Carnival was the leader in takeovers and mergers. It was smaller than Princess
and Royal Caribbean in 1988,but by 1990 it eclipsed both.It was unsuccessful in its
1988 attempt to take over Royal Caribbean, but succeeded in acquiring Princess
Cruises in 2003.

Didn't know the timing of taking over Princess. What about Holland-America? Maybe the train station at the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport was worked out before Carnival took over.


Chapter 3 looks at how the industry avoids taxes and how it uses
lobbyists, campaign contributions, and contributions from industry-controlled
foundations to influence political decision-making.In stark contrast to the Boston
Tea Party’s cry in the 1770s against taxation without representation, the cruise
industry enjoys representation without taxation. The industry exercises its influence in national politics as well as state,provincial,and local decision-making.


I found www.newsmeat.com before I found New Society Publishers. I was trying to see what kind of contributions Carnival made to Stevens or Sheffield. The Alaska Public Offices Commission doesn't seem to have its records on-line. But newsmeat popped up a long list of contributions by Micky Arison, 67, Chairman of Carnival Cruiselines and owner of the Miami Heat. According to newsmeat Arison gave $181,150 to Republicans, $115,650 to Democrats, and $101,500 to special interests for a total of $398,300 from April 11, 1986 to March 3, 2007. Don Young's first contributions from Arison are listed as November 11, 1980. Not sure what the date means (date of contribution or of report of contribution?) because Young got $1000 on that date for the primary and another $1000 for the general. And, of course, the election was over by November 11. Frank Murkowski shows up first in December 1991 for $1000 primary contribution. Theodore Stevens gets his first $1000 in primary money in July 1993. I can see I'm going to have to bite the bullet and learn how to go through the campaign contribution websites more efficiently. On this one I don't seem to be able to sort so I can look at what Arison gave specifically to Stevens, to Young, to Murkowski, etc. Then, there is Mrs. Arison, but she doesn't seem to have given to Alaskans. But this is only Arison's money, not Carnival money, or money from other Carnival owned companies or employees.

Chapter 4 focuses on a strongly held perception that cruise ships are “cash cows.”The cruise industry, its lobbyists,and its various regional trade organizations promote this view. It is based in part on consistent claims by the cruise industry,and adopted by many ports,that the average cruise passenger spends more than $100 in each port a ship calls upon.


Too bad I didn't save those ads that helped keep the Anchorage Daily News profitable last summer touting how much money each passenger brought to the State of Alaska.

A passenger today can have a cruise for a fraction of the cost 10, 20, or even 30 years ago, but additional onboard costs today are exponentially higher than in those
earlier days. And as passengers spend more money onboard, they have less to spend onshore. Unbundling helps the cruise line with its income, but undermines the potential income for ports on which cruise lines depend.


I've been wondering why some of the cruise prices in the newspapers seemed so cheap. Unbundling. And it seems, based on a few letters to the editors, that the cruises are specifically identifying Alaska's new passenger tax for passengers instead of bundling them invisibly in the whole price. Well, if they can do that, it shouldn't be so hard to unbundle the commissions they get from Alaska shops and tours required by the new initiative.

OK, enough for now.

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Hike to Reed Lakes

[For a view of this trail August 8, 2008 go here.]
I hiked almost to Reed Lakes today with Iulian's grandfather, who's visiting for a couple of weeks from Moldova. (I'm not sure how to spell his name, it's pronounced "Lorentine.") If you look at the picture above, there's a big grey rock mountain in the back in the middle (snowy peak just to the left of it.) There's a long green slope from the right side of the pic, across the bottom of the grey mountain. Right in the middle are some tiny white spots above the green. They are rushing water falls. We went up a little ways into the valley at the bottom of the grey mountains. (It would be so much easier if I had a software program at home that let me draw on the picture, wouldn't it?) The ponds in front are beaver engineered, but we didn't see any out.




We didn't get all the way for two reasons. First, the dirt road from Hatcher Pass Road, was barred, so we had an extra 2.3 miles to go each way. Second, after climbing through the rocks - you'll see them below - when we saw the train was still so wet and snowy here and there that it meant more rocks, boulders really, we decided enough was enough.








Those rocks sitting on the tundra are the size of large moving vans.








Didn't get a chance to try to look up what kind of mushroom this is. About 2 inches tall, about three inches across the top (this was the biggest and strangest of the half dozen we saw), and on the edge between the sandy trail and the grass.


















This 'swimming hole' was where we turned around. It looked so inviting - clear, slow moving water, about 6-10 feet deep. Except for the ice chunks still floating here and there.











But that was ok, Lorentine had already washed his feet in equally cold water earlier.















All in all, we did about 10 miles (16km) round trip. If you are wondering why 'mental health' is one of the labels, then you haven't spent a day in the wilderness for a while.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Cheney on Good Guys, Bad Guys, and Prison

Today Vice President Cheney issued a press release saying what a wonderful person Scooter Libby is. Libby was sentenced today to 30 months in prison for covering up the leak of the CIA covert agent Plame.


Scooter has dedicated much of his life to public service at the State Department, the Department of Defense and the White House. In each of these assignments he has served the nation tirelessly and with great distinction. I relied on him heavily in my capacity as Secretary of Defense and as Vice President. I have always considered him to be a man of the highest intellect, judgment and personal integrity-a man fully committed to protecting the vital security interests of the United States and its citizens. Scooter is also a friend, and on a personal level Lynne and I remain deeply saddened by this tragedy and its effect on his wife, Harriet, and their young children. The defense has indicated it plans to appeal the conviction in the case. Speaking as friends, we hope that our system will return a final result consistent with what we know of this fine man.


To my knowledge, he did not issue a statement today giving comfort to the family of the nearly five year detainment of, now 20 year old, Omar Khadr at Guantanamo Bay detainee whose charges were dismissed yesterday by a a military judge. Or to Salim Hamdan whose charges were dismissed by a different military judge as reported in the Anchorage Daily News today.

It seems to me, based on what he said about Libby and what he said two years ago,


Mr Cheney says that those prisoners who remain [in Guantanamo] are "bad people" and "hardcore".


that good good guys, even if they are guilty, should NOT go to jail, but bad guys, even if they are innocent, should rot there.