Archive for October 28th, 2005


Fitzgerald press conference

What an anti-climax. Nothing new was revealed, with Fitzgerald utterly close-mouthed about what is coming next, if anything.

Still, if Libby thinks he’s facing prison, then he may sing. He was Chief of Staff to VP Cheney and thus no doubt has much he could sing about. And the prospect of that must make Rove and Cheney nervous indeed. Bush too.

Pre-trial costs for federal trials like this will be hundreds of thousands of dollars. If it goes to trial, then it could cost Libby in the seven figures.

Incidentally, a lawyer familiar with federal court once told me, if you’re a defendant in federal court, you’re screwed, noting that federal prosecuters often have 90% conviction rates because the rules are stacked against the defendant.

Will Libby, who is facing huge expenses and possible prison, roll over and tell prosecutors all he knows? I’m not saying it will happen, only that it could.

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Libby indicted on 5 counts, resigns

More from Kos.

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Vice President for Torture

Cheney is asking Congress to approve legal language that would allow the CIA to commit such abuses against foreign prisoners it is holding abroad. In other words, this vice president has become an open advocate of torture.

And what dangerous leftie publication is this from? Read on.

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Global warming news 10/28

Record heat raises climate fears

As Britain enjoyed the warmest 27 October since records began in 1880, experts warned that a pattern of extreme weather events is beginning to provide hard evidence that the climate of the world is changing.

Pt. 2 of the  WorldChanging interview with Bruce Sterling

In getting certain world leaders to be responsive to the increasingly obvious, we can’t seem to get past legacy issues (e.g. George W. Bush ignoring Kyoto because it would "cost jobs.") What should the average person, or at least the citizen change agent, be doing at this point to support both mitigation and adaptation?

I don’t want to be a big cynic about this, but really, at this point, who WANTS George W Bush to get all interested in climate change? Sooner or later, that guy poisons everything he touches. He’d probably start a highly secretive and utterly disorganized "Department of Greenhouse Security," where Bechtel apparatchiks took over abandoned army bases to install leaky nuclear power plants in dead of night with extraordinarily-rendered, off-the-books, union-busting labor. Would that help? If he fought the Greenhouse in utter sincerity and with all his might, would he win?

George Bush doesn’t care about Kyoto and "jobs." The American right’s loathing for Kyoto is strictly a nationalist, anti-globalist, unilateralist power issue. They don’t want Kyoto inspectors dropping by to double-check Exxon-Mobil’s emissions; they figure they’d show up in black helicopters, with handcuffs and guns. Because that’s exactly how they themselves would behave, if they had the chance.

I don’t believe in "average people" doing anything. People ought to support mitigation and adaptation within their own line of work, no matter how un-average that is. I mean: if you’re butcher, baker, ballerina, banker, or a plumber, envision yourself as the post-fossil-fuel version of yourself, and get right after it. We’d be best off struggling to create some kind of Solidarnosc-style entirely alternate society, for a 1989-sized across-the-board upheaval. So, just, well, stop co-operating with the status quo. Stop collaborating. Stop being afraid and stop feeling helpless. Just stop all that and start living by entirely other means.

Be glad for any scrap of choice you’re offered. The UN expects 50 million people to have their lives entirely uprooted by environmental mayhem — EVERY YEAR. That could be you or me. You’re worried that a hybrid car costs more money? People in Key West are standing on the roofs of drowned cars.

Our best hope is to "collapse upwards."

Prince Charles call to fight global warming

Prince Charles today said climate change was the "greatest challenge to face man" and should given greater priority in the UK.

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Schwarzenegger eats humble pie, might be toast soon.

As a poll shows all of <Schwarzenegger’s> Nov. 8 initiatives faltering, the governor appeals to voters by admitting shortcomings,

The new poll by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California found that none of Schwarzenegger’s four major initiatives was favored by a majority of voters likely to cast ballots.

For a governor whose public image is the driving force in the election, the survey also found broader trouble: Just 38% of likely voters gave him positive job ratings, a steep drop from a year ago.

Arnold has proven to be one of the most inept, blundering (and arrogant) politicians in California history. He had no previous political experience, refused to build coalitions, and ignored advice of those more experienced. He has no one to blame but himself. 

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Source: Rove won’t be indicted today.

Libby will be. Press conference at 2 pm ET 

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