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« December 19, 2004 - December 25, 2004 | Main | January 9, 2005 - January 15, 2005 »
I am leaving soon for my holiday vacation, but first wanted to give you some updates on several stories I've been blogging about lately.
Now the work in the areas hit by the tsunami turns to staving off disease, getting necessary supplies to the living, and over the long term making these areas livable again. In the case of the Maldives, it might mean that an entire nation is no longer livable and the survivors must pick up and leave. What makes this even more difficult is that in two of the areas hit, Aceh in Indonesia and Sri Lanka, there was already a great deal of distrust of their governments due to ongoing strife. An earthquake or a flood is never easy to recover from, and this disaster combines the worst elements of both together with an extra layer of political trouble.
So, please do what you can to help. As my friend at the Samuel Taylor Coleridge Foundation reminds us, there are several charities doing good work who could use our support, including:
American Red Cross
International Response Fund P.O. Box 37243 Washington, D.C. 20013
800-HELP NOW www.redcross.orgDoctors Without Borders
P.O. Box 1856 Merrifield, Va. 22116-8056
888-392-0392 www.doctorswithoutborders.orgSave The Children
Asia Earthquake/Tidal Wave Relief Fund 54 Wilton Road Westport, Conn. 06880
800-728-3843 www.savethechildren.orgDirect Relief International
27 South La Patera Lane Santa Barbara, Calif. 93117
805-964-4767 www.directrelief.org
In the latest tabulation of spammers by nation, the U.S. leads by a wide margin with 42% of all email spam originating in this country. South Korea, which has among the highest rates of broadband access in the world, is in second at 13%, followed by China at 8%, Canada at 6% and Brazil at 3%. More from the CIO Today story:
Despite such efforts as the CAN-SPAM act, which was passed in January, efforts to address the problem in the U.S. are having little impact, Gregg Mastoras, senior security analyst at Sophos, told NewsFactor. "The problem is poor legislation and a lack of interest among law enforcement agencies to pursue spammers," he said, noting that the U.S. topped the previous "Dirty Dozen" list issued early this year.
Canada, on the other hand, has taken more concrete steps and has shown results in stemming the flow of spam. Just one of many things we can learn from our neighbors to the north.
Interesting that Japan and the EU countries don't make the list, not to mention that nice gentleman from Nigeria who keeps emailing me about his recent financial dilemma. And then there's the Dutch fellow who's been contacting me lately. Or at least I think he's Dutch; anyway, his English could use some work: "revollutionaary and new peenjs enlaargment devjce."
This is a good time to recommend Thunderbird to you, the email client companion to Firefox. It's free and developed from the open source Mozilla project. I've been using beta versions for months now and love it, and the official 1.0 release just came out. RSS support, spell checker, many extensions available ... but the reason I bring it up is that it has a built-in adaptable spam filter which has worked quite well for me (the Nigerian and peenjs enlaargment spams I dug out from the "junk" folder where they're sent automatically).
They hate us for our freedom. And our ample supplies of Vioxx.
The Washington Post reports that Hastert is considering replacing the current chair of the House ethics committee, Joel Hefley, who has shown a modicum of independence by not sweeping under the rug charges levied against Majority Leader DeLay. As the Post points out, Hefley has had the temerity to say he will treat charges against the Hammer "like I would handle anything else."
Hastert is considering replacing Hefley with a pliable ally of the leadership, Lamar Smith of DeLay's home state of Texas. Says the Post:
The effort by DeLay and his allies to preserve his leadership post, even if he faces criminal charges, is one of the most sensitive issues facing Republicans as the new Congress begins. If Hefley is replaced by Smith, it is another signal by House leaders that they will stand by DeLay. "It certainly seems they're circling the wagons," said a GOP staff member who declined to be identified.
But Lamar Smith isn't just any friend -- he's a friend who has donated $10,000 to DeLay's legal defense fund, as Public Citizen has documented. Better yet, as the Austin Statesman-American puts it, Smith "got the ball rolling" by writing the first check of 2004 to the fund (via corrente). Oh, and yes, I know what you're thinking: He did vote for the DeLay rule in the Republican Conference to permit an indicted leader to keep his post. (Hefley voted against and has not donated money to date to the defense fund; however, they both received $20 from DeLay's PAC.)
Off the Kuff shows at least one instance when Smith clearly carried water -- er, rum -- for the Hammer on a matter of dubious ethics regarding a favor for Bacardi. This, you will recall, was after DeLay caught some heat for pushing the same legislative language into a defense appropriations bill not long after receiving a $40,000 donation from the company. Smith's bill aimed to do the same thing and provided some political cover for DeLay. That's just the kind of team player Hastert wants to install as chair of the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, as the ethics panel is formally known.
The right's continuing obsession with everything Clinton is fascinating. The latest way it has reared its icky head is in the administration's reaction to the tsunami disaster. As Josh Marshall reports, the Bushies are defining their response according to what Clinton would not do.
That is a poor and unstatesmanlike way to make policy, not to mention...
Dude! He's been out of office for four years! Get over it already!
Now get that relief in gear and forget trying to be the unClinton for a moment.
The New York Times reports on Washington's revolving door, including Billy Tauzin's move to PhRMA for $2 million per annum which I discussed a few weeks ago, and now the mass exodus from the cabinet back into the private sector. The article links it to continuing debates over the proper level of compensation for top government officials, including whether it lags too far behind comparable private-sector jobs. For figures on current and past compensation for top officials, visit this page at TheCapitol.Net which also includes links to relevant CRS reports.
Here are the 2004 salaries for a few significant federal positions:
Though the article links congressional and executive pay, I think they are different creatures. I have less trouble accepting the current salary for Members of Congress as well as future increases than for cabinet members for one simple reason: Almost all Members of Congress must maintain two residences, often very far from one another. This means, in most cases, renting (or sharing) an apartment at the fairly expensive rates in DC in addition to a home in the district/state where their families live. Moreover, though they get an official travel allowance, that does not cover partners and children. Yes, that salary is well above the median household income (a little over $43,000 in 2003), but few people have these demands, either.
In the case of executive appointments, I have less sympathy since they never have to face the dual household dilemma. In fact, given the negligible restrictions on post-service employment, it is easy for former cabinet members to cash in just like Tauzin did, and like Ridge will now according to the Times. For that reason, I do not buy the argument put forward by some that cabinet salaries must keep pace with executive compensation in the private sector in order to attract top candidates. Because the expected income for a cabinet member almost certainly would be higher after service than before, it is quite easy for them to make up the difference and then some.
The question is, of course, whether we want them to. As the Tauzin case showed us, there are few restrictions to bar the revolving door (with some differences between former Members of Congress and executive appointees). It is difficult if not impossible to demonstrate that a job was promised in order to curry favor with an official, and such cases are rarely pursued beyond a complaint filed by organizations like Public Citizen and Common Cause. At best the revolving door is tawdry and unseemly, and at worst it corrupts and distorts public policy.
It is a losing battle merely to try to tighten those restrictions, however. The 1989 Ethics in Government Act illustrates. At the time the question involved honoraria given to Members of Congress by interest groups, often in the hundreds and thousands of dollars. For those who were not independently wealthy, this was an important source of income, capped at the time at 30% of annual salary for representatives and 40% for senators. More importantly, they were not going to give it up without some kind of trade. So, to bar honoraria in order to shut off one source of interest group influence, Congress increased their salaries to nearly match the lost honoraria.
With a friendly House and Senate right now, including members who are thinking about their own post-congressional jobs, Congress is extremely unlikely to tighten revolving door restrictions on its own. Because it would be viewed as a limit on expected income, salaries would have to increase as well. Similarly, it is a mistake to worry excessively about cabinet salaries without at the same time tightening these regulations. Otherwise it is money for nothing. Since their cabinet service can already be viewed as a long-term net gain, they ought to give up some of that future gain in order to get their higher cabinet salaries in the short term.
Major Cathy Kaus, a 28-year veteran, was released yesterday after serving a six-month sentence in a Navy brig. Kaus, a commander for the Ohio Army Reserve in Iraq, was court-martialed for "scrounging" equipment and parts from abandoned army vehicles in Kuwait in order for the soldiers under her command to do their job in Iraq, a fuel truck convoy of the type under frequent attack from insurgents.
You would think this were the perfect case for the president to pardon, especially after that dust-up between Rumsfeld and the troops not long ago over this very topic -- a statement of good faith that the commander only meant the best for her soldiers and the military acknowledging there is room to improve in providing our soldiers with the equipment they need to do the job.
Then again, pardoning is just not something this president does, as Talk Left tells us. In fact, it would entail two things this president doesn't do: Pardon and apologize for past mistakes.
Six soldiers altogether were court-martialed, and Sens. DeWine (R) and Durbin (D) have asked for clemency for them. At least one part of their request went unheeded by the military and the administration. From DeWine's letter of December 14:
I am also very concerned about Major Kaus’ current scheduled release date from prison. I understand she is to be released either on Christmas Day or after. I urge you, and the Department of Defense, to reconsider the timing of her release, and encourage a scheduled release prior to Christmas Day. Such a change would make a meaningful difference to Major Kaus and her family.
Apparently you celebrate the holidays you have, not the holidays you'd like to have.
As you have probably heard by now, a huge earthquake off the coast of Sumatra triggered a tsunami which hit Indonedia, Thailand, Sri Lanka and India, among other places. At this writing, 22,000 people are estimated to have died and more than a million driven from their homes, in many cases with whole towns and villages washed away.
For several recommended relief funds, visit this post from Skippy and this diary at Daily Kos.
For firsthand accounts of the tsunami, read these Washington Post stories here, here and here, and go visit the Moderate Voice for excerpts from blogs on the scene.
A terrible, terrible catastrophe.
Ah yes, the old "problem" of liberals in academia. This is a topic I will comment on in more detail at some point, but for now go read the Samuel Taylor Coleridge Foundation's post about being a liberal student at a very conservative college. Here is an excerpt:
I'll always especially remember the final exam in a Creation Science class (yes: we actually had one, and it was required for graduation), when the main essay question required us to write why we agreed with the conclusions in a creation science text we'd read*, and my answer was instead a refutation of them...I left the test sure I'd be failed, but I got an A+ from two very biased professors, who graded me on my argument, not on my content.
This is a lesson the David Horowitzes of the world never take the time to learn. While no doubt there are some faculty who do grade on ideology -- on the right and left -- in my experience college and university faculty are far more concerned about half-assed reasoning, poor use of evidence, uncritical parroting of sources and obstinate failure to consider alternate points of view. These are sins across the ideological spectrum -- right, left and center.
When a conservative student, egged on by gadflies like Horowitz, blames the liberalism of a professor for giving him or her a D for a poorly written paper, it's just another case of smearing the messenger in order to ignore the message. They ought to spend more time studying and writing and less time complaining, let alone filing lawsuits because they're asked to read a book.
Ellen Goodman's column in yesterday's Boston Globe lists the corrections and regrets from her year's columns. Here is but one:
Have you noticed that the only thing that the abstinence-only crowd cannot abstain from is criticizing their critics? Writing about their sex mis-education, we chided a text for teaching, among other things, that "cervical cancer is the result of premarital sex." Dozens of readers wrote to insist that since the human papillomavirus strain may cause cervical cancer, this cancer qualifies as a sexually transmitted disease.
Well, folks, it's still not the premarital sex that causes the cancer. But let's make a deal: We will add that STD footnote to our annual list if they will add condoms to their curriculum.
The most immediate threat to your grandmother's Social Security isn't Bush's privatization plan, it's fundraisers for the College Republicans.
The Washington Post updates a story that has been in the news for a couple months now about the College Republican National Committee, reconstituted as a 527, bilking the elderly out of their retirement savings. And we're talking millions of dollars. If there is a silver lining at all -- and it would have to be a very tarnished one -- it is that the group was so incompetent organizationally that more than 90% of the money raised went not to campaigning but to overhead and more fundraising.
The solicitations, which were created by Response Dynamics and approved by the CRNC, at first did not say the name of the organization at all but indicated in big bold letters that it was for Bush-Cheney 2004 and generic Republican activities. After catching a little heat, they put the CRNC's name in tiny letters at the bottom while keeping the bold lettering for the national GOP efforts. To top it off, multiple mailing were sent with different messages -- as though coming from different organizations -- to the same household.
Pudentilla tells us, much to my shock and dismay, that this is not the first time Response Dynamics has used deceptive tactics to milk the savings of the elderly. OK, more dismay than shock. In at least one case, she reports, it was fear mongering over Social Security. Sounds like that's just the kind of talent the CRNC was after.
If you are concerned that your elderly relatives may have been suckered, and to see for yourself the damage done, here is the latest 527 filing the group made to the IRS. To find all their records online, go to this page at the IRS and search for "College Republican National Committee" as the Organization Name. The Center for Responsive Politics has helpfully organized the data as well. One thing you will see in perusing their latest filing from November 15 is the very large number of donors listed as "retired," many of whom made multiple donations, sometimes the same day. Not hard to figure out what was going on there.
This blog was not yet around when the story first broke, but others have covered it well. Check out posts on Off the Kuff, for example, here, here and here to follow its progression.
The cad at the heart of the story is Eric Hoplin, head of the group. A few months ago he was seen as a golden boy of Republican youth, someone who had followed the same career trajectory as Karl Rove and talked big about how many youth votes they'd win for BC04. Well, turns out the vote predictions were wrong -- Kerry won his largest proportion among young voters out of all demographics -- and now several state College Republican organizations are asking Hoplin to step down, according to the Post.
This is not the first time Hoplin and CRNC received some negative attention. At their 2003 convention, a vendor was caught selling racist and homophobic T-shirts, which a Kerry staffer discovered and exposed. Illuminating from this episode, especially in view of recent events, is a story in the "news" section of GOPUSA's website. Under the appropriately predatory name Talon News, they report:
The CRNC fired back at Kerry, issuing a press release that accused the candidate of attacking them simply to raise funds. Eric Hoplin, chairman of the organization said, "I hope bullying college students makes Senator Kerry feel big and strong after months of being beaten to a pulp by Howard Dean."
Oh, no irony there.
What I also find interesting about the whole sordid episode is the reaction of actual College Republicans. Here is what a couple of bloggers have to say:
Nice to see they're so concerned about the elderly who have lost their savings due to the CRNC's deceptive practices.
But at least one College Republican is pissed off about the corrupt Hoplin regime. Read the vitriol here. I guess this one hasn't received the memo: This is the modus operandi of the right, to win at any cost. Hoplin is just following the path paved by his mentor, Karl Rove.