Tuesday, January 25, 2005

Senator Byrd Grills Condi. What a "Sheet Head!"

Former Ku Klux Klansmen, Robert Byrd of West Virginia grilled Condi Rice today. Where's the outrage in the African American community.

http://reuters.myway.com/article/20050126/2005-01-26T011422Z_01_N25379705_RTRIDST_0_NEWS-CONGRESS-RICE-DC.html

Robert Byrd of West Virginia said her confirmation would be viewed "as another endorsement of the administration's unconstitutional doctrine of pre-emptive war, its bullying policies of unilateralism, and its callous rejection of our long-standing allies."

Republicans pointed to the sparkling resume of the 50-year-old Rice who grew up in the segregated South, the daughter of a preacher. She became provost at Stanford University and later served in the top echelon of the Bush White House as one of his closest advisers.


Sunday, January 23, 2005

"Fili-Buck-ster"

I am in year two of a Milwaukee Bucks filibuster. I have not watched, listened to, read about or attended any Milwaukee Bucks games. As long as Senator Kohl, the owner of the Bucks, refuses to allow the Presidents judicial nominees to get floor vote, I will continue my boycott.

I think if we turn up the heat here in Milwaukee we can spread to the other NBA cities in which the Bucks are the opponent that night. For those who have already purchased season tickets, they can participate by not purchasing any concessions at the game or at any bars and restaurants before or after the game. This may not hurt the wealthy Senator but it may cause the vendors, bartenders etc. to complain as they feel the impact of the boycott.

Conservatives need to re-visit and refute Moore's Movie

Many who saw Michael Moore's movie are unaware of all of the untruths. Conservative talk shows should read Christopher Hitchen's comments so that the record is set straight. This will help not only those that were swayed by the movie but it will also help Bush supporters refute Moore's falsewhoods. Let's face it. His movie had a big impact on America. It is time to show that none of it ways true.

fighting words
Unfairenheit 9/11
The lies of Michael Moore.
By Christopher Hitchens
Posted Monday, June 21, 2004, at 12:26 PM PT

One of the many problems with the American left, and indeed of the American left, has been its image and self-image as something rather too solemn, mirthless, herbivorous, dull, monochrome, righteous, and boring. How many times, in my old days at The Nation magazine, did I hear wistful and semienvious ruminations? Where was the radical Firing Line show? Who will be our Rush Limbaugh? I used privately to hope that the emphasis, if the comrades ever got around to it, would be on the first of those and not the second. But the meetings themselves were so mind-numbing and lugubrious that I thought the danger of success on either front was infinitely slight.

Nonetheless, it seems that an answer to this long-felt need is finally beginning to emerge. I exempt Al Franken's unintentionally funny Air America network, to which I gave a couple of interviews in its early days. There, one could hear the reassuring noise of collapsing scenery and tripped-over wires and be reminded once again that correct politics and smooth media presentation are not even distant cousins. With Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11, however, an entirely new note has been struck. Here we glimpse a possible fusion between the turgid routines of MoveOn.org and the filmic standards, if not exactly the filmic skills, of Sergei Eisenstein or Leni Riefenstahl.

To describe this film as dishonest and demagogic would almost be to promote those terms to the level of respectability. To describe this film as a piece of crap would be to run the risk of a discourse that would never again rise above the excremental. To describe it as an exercise in facile crowd-pleasing would be too obvious. Fahrenheit 9/11 is a sinister exercise in moral frivolity, crudely disguised as an exercise in seriousness. It is also a spectacle of abject political cowardice masking itself as a demonstration of "dissenting" bravery.

In late 2002, almost a year after the al-Qaida assault on American society, I had an onstage debate with Michael Moore at the Telluride Film Festival. In the course of this exchange, he stated his view that Osama Bin Laden should be considered innocent until proven guilty. This was, he said, the American way. The intervention in Afghanistan, he maintained, had been at least to that extent unjustified. Something—I cannot guess what, since we knew as much then as we do now—has since apparently persuaded Moore that Osama Bin Laden is as guilty as hell. Indeed, Osama is suddenly so guilty and so all-powerful that any other discussion of any other topic is a dangerous "distraction" from the fight against him. I believe that I understand the convenience of this late conversion.

Fahrenheit 9/11 makes the following points about Bin Laden and about Afghanistan, and makes them in this order:

1) The Bin Laden family (if not exactly Osama himself) had a close if convoluted business relationship with the Bush family, through the Carlyle Group.

2) Saudi capital in general is a very large element of foreign investment in the United States.

3) The Unocal company in Texas had been willing to discuss a gas pipeline across Afghanistan with the Taliban, as had other vested interests.

4) The Bush administration sent far too few ground troops to Afghanistan and thus allowed far too many Taliban and al-Qaida members to escape.

5) The Afghan government, in supporting the coalition in Iraq, was purely risible in that its non-army was purely American.

6) The American lives lost in Afghanistan have been wasted. (This I divine from the fact that this supposedly "antiwar" film is dedicated ruefully to all those killed there, as well as in Iraq.)

It must be evident to anyone, despite the rapid-fire way in which Moore's direction eases the audience hastily past the contradictions, that these discrepant scatter shots do not cohere at any point. Either the Saudis run U.S. policy (through family ties or overwhelming economic interest), or they do not. As allies and patrons of the Taliban regime, they either opposed Bush's removal of it, or they did not. (They opposed the removal, all right: They wouldn't even let Tony Blair land his own plane on their soil at the time of the operation.) Either we sent too many troops, or were wrong to send any at all—the latter was Moore's view as late as 2002—or we sent too few. If we were going to make sure no Taliban or al-Qaida forces survived or escaped, we would have had to be more ruthless than I suspect that Mr. Moore is really recommending. And these are simply observations on what is "in" the film. If we turn to the facts that are deliberately left out, we discover that there is an emerging Afghan army, that the country is now a joint NATO responsibility and thus under the protection of the broadest military alliance in history, that it has a new constitution and is preparing against hellish odds to hold a general election, and that at least a million and a half of its former refugees have opted to return. I don't think a pipeline is being constructed yet, not that Afghanistan couldn't do with a pipeline. But a highway from Kabul to Kandahar—an insurance against warlordism and a condition of nation-building—is nearing completion with infinite labor and risk. We also discover that the parties of the Afghan secular left—like the parties of the Iraqi secular left—are strongly in favor of the regime change. But this is not the sort of irony in which Moore chooses to deal.

He prefers leaden sarcasm to irony and, indeed, may not appreciate the distinction. In a long and paranoid (and tedious) section at the opening of the film, he makes heavy innuendoes about the flights that took members of the Bin Laden family out of the country after Sept. 11. I banged on about this myself at the time and wrote a Nation column drawing attention to the groveling Larry King interview with the insufferable Prince Bandar, which Moore excerpts. However, recent developments have not been kind to our Mike. In the interval between Moore's triumph at Cannes and the release of the film in the United States, the 9/11 commission has found nothing to complain of in the timing or arrangement of the flights. And Richard Clarke, Bush's former chief of counterterrorism, has come forward to say that he, and he alone, took the responsibility for authorizing those Saudi departures. This might not matter so much to the ethos of Fahrenheit 9/11, except that—as you might expect—Clarke is presented throughout as the brow-furrowed ethical hero of the entire post-9/11 moment. And it does not seem very likely that, in his open admission about the Bin Laden family evacuation, Clarke is taking a fall, or a spear in the chest, for the Bush administration. So, that's another bust for this windy and bloated cinematic "key to all mythologies."

A film that bases itself on a big lie and a big misrepresentation can only sustain itself by a dizzying succession of smaller falsehoods, beefed up by wilder and (if possible) yet more-contradictory claims. President Bush is accused of taking too many lazy vacations. (What is that about, by the way? Isn't he supposed to be an unceasing planner for future aggressive wars?) But the shot of him "relaxing at Camp David" shows him side by side with Tony Blair. I say "shows," even though this photograph is on-screen so briefly that if you sneeze or blink, you won't recognize the other figure. A meeting with the prime minister of the United Kingdom, or at least with this prime minister, is not a goof-off.

The president is also captured in a well-worn TV news clip, on a golf course, making a boilerplate response to a question on terrorism and then asking the reporters to watch his drive. Well, that's what you get if you catch the president on a golf course. If Eisenhower had done this, as he often did, it would have been presented as calm statesmanship. If Clinton had done it, as he often did, it would have shown his charm. More interesting is the moment where Bush is shown frozen on his chair at the infant school in Florida, looking stunned and useless for seven whole minutes after the news of the second plane on 9/11. Many are those who say that he should have leaped from his stool, adopted a Russell Crowe stance, and gone to work. I could even wish that myself. But if he had done any such thing then (as he did with his "Let's roll" and "dead or alive" remarks a month later), half the Michael Moore community would now be calling him a man who went to war on a hectic, crazed impulse. The other half would be saying what they already say—that he knew the attack was coming, was using it to cement himself in power, and couldn't wait to get on with his coup. This is the line taken by Gore Vidal and by a scandalous recent book that also revives the charge of FDR's collusion over Pearl Harbor. At least Moore's film should put the shameful purveyors of that last theory back in their paranoid box.

But it won't because it encourages their half-baked fantasies in so many other ways. We are introduced to Iraq, "a sovereign nation." (In fact, Iraq's "sovereignty" was heavily qualified by international sanctions, however questionable, which reflected its noncompliance with important U.N. resolutions.) In this peaceable kingdom, according to Moore's flabbergasting choice of film shots, children are flying little kites, shoppers are smiling in the sunshine, and the gentle rhythms of life are undisturbed. Then—wham! From the night sky come the terror weapons of American imperialism. Watching the clips Moore uses, and recalling them well, I can recognize various Saddam palaces and military and police centers getting the treatment. But these sites are not identified as such. In fact, I don't think Al Jazeera would, on a bad day, have transmitted anything so utterly propagandistic. You would also be led to think that the term "civilian casualty" had not even been in the Iraqi vocabulary until March 2003. I remember asking Moore at Telluride if he was or was not a pacifist. He would not give a straight answer then, and he doesn't now, either. I'll just say that the "insurgent" side is presented in this film as justifiably outraged, whereas the 30-year record of Baathist war crimes and repression and aggression is not mentioned once. (Actually, that's not quite right. It is briefly mentioned but only, and smarmily, because of the bad period when Washington preferred Saddam to the likewise unmentioned Ayatollah Khomeini.)

That this—his pro-American moment—was the worst Moore could possibly say of Saddam's depravity is further suggested by some astonishing falsifications. Moore asserts that Iraq under Saddam had never attacked or killed or even threatened (his words) any American. I never quite know whether Moore is as ignorant as he looks, or even if that would be humanly possible. Baghdad was for years the official, undisguised home address of Abu Nidal, then the most-wanted gangster in the world, who had been sentenced to death even by the PLO and had blown up airports in Vienna* and Rome. Baghdad was the safe house for the man whose "operation" murdered Leon Klinghoffer. Saddam boasted publicly of his financial sponsorship of suicide bombers in Israel. (Quite a few Americans of all denominations walk the streets of Jerusalem.) In 1991, a large number of Western hostages were taken by the hideous Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and held in terrible conditions for a long time. After that same invasion was repelled—Saddam having killed quite a few Americans and Egyptians and Syrians and Brits in the meantime and having threatened to kill many more—the Iraqi secret police were caught trying to murder former President Bush during his visit to Kuwait. Never mind whether his son should take that personally. (Though why should he not?) Should you and I not resent any foreign dictatorship that attempts to kill one of our retired chief executives? (President Clinton certainly took it that way: He ordered the destruction by cruise missiles of the Baathist "security" headquarters.) Iraqi forces fired, every day, for 10 years, on the aircraft that patrolled the no-fly zones and staved off further genocide in the north and south of the country. In 1993, a certain Mr. Yasin helped mix the chemicals for the bomb at the World Trade Center and then skipped to Iraq, where he remained a guest of the state until the overthrow of Saddam. In 2001, Saddam's regime was the only one in the region that openly celebrated the attacks on New York and Washington and described them as just the beginning of a larger revenge. Its official media regularly spewed out a stream of anti-Semitic incitement. I think one might describe that as "threatening," even if one was narrow enough to think that anti-Semitism only menaces Jews. And it was after, and not before, the 9/11 attacks that Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi moved from Afghanistan to Baghdad and began to plan his now very open and lethal design for a holy and ethnic civil war. On Dec. 1, 2003, the New York Times reported—and the David Kay report had established—that Saddam had been secretly negotiating with the "Dear Leader" Kim Jong-il in a series of secret meetings in Syria, as late as the spring of 2003, to buy a North Korean missile system, and missile-production system, right off the shelf. (This attempt was not uncovered until after the fall of Baghdad, the coalition's presence having meanwhile put an end to the negotiations.)

Thus, in spite of the film's loaded bias against the work of the mind, you can grasp even while watching it that Michael Moore has just said, in so many words, the one thing that no reflective or informed person can possibly believe: that Saddam Hussein was no problem. No problem at all. Now look again at the facts I have cited above. If these things had been allowed to happen under any other administration, you can be sure that Moore and others would now glibly be accusing the president of ignoring, or of having ignored, some fairly unmistakable "warnings."

The same "let's have it both ways" opportunism infects his treatment of another very serious subject, namely domestic counterterrorist policy. From being accused of overlooking too many warnings—not exactly an original point—the administration is now lavishly taunted for issuing too many. (Would there not have been "fear" if the harbingers of 9/11 had been taken seriously?) We are shown some American civilians who have had absurd encounters with idiotic "security" staff. (Have you ever met anyone who can't tell such a story?) Then we are immediately shown underfunded police departments that don't have the means or the manpower to do any stop-and-search: a power suddenly demanded by Moore on their behalf that we know by definition would at least lead to some ridiculous interrogations. Finally, Moore complains that there isn't enough intrusion and confiscation at airports and says that it is appalling that every air traveler is not forcibly relieved of all matches and lighters. (Cue mood music for sinister influence of Big Tobacco.) So—he wants even more pocket-rummaging by airport officials? Uh, no, not exactly. But by this stage, who's counting? Moore is having it three ways and asserting everything and nothing. Again—simply not serious.

Circling back to where we began, why did Moore's evil Saudis not join "the Coalition of the Willing"? Why instead did they force the United States to switch its regional military headquarters to Qatar? If the Bush family and the al-Saud dynasty live in each other's pockets, as is alleged in a sort of vulgar sub-Brechtian scene with Arab headdresses replacing top hats, then how come the most reactionary regime in the region has been powerless to stop Bush from demolishing its clone in Kabul and its buffer regime in Baghdad? The Saudis hate, as they did in 1991, the idea that Iraq's recuperated oil industry might challenge their near-monopoly. They fear the liberation of the Shiite Muslims they so despise. To make these elementary points is to collapse the whole pathetic edifice of the film's "theory." Perhaps Moore prefers the pro-Saudi Kissinger/Scowcroft plan for the Middle East, where stability trumps every other consideration and where one dare not upset the local house of cards, or killing-field of Kurds? This would be a strange position for a purported radical. Then again, perhaps he does not take this conservative line because his real pitch is not to any audience member with a serious interest in foreign policy. It is to the provincial isolationist.

I have already said that Moore's film has the staunch courage to mock Bush for his verbal infelicity. Yet it's much, much braver than that. From Fahrenheit 9/11 you can glean even more astounding and hidden disclosures, such as the capitalist nature of American society, the existence of Eisenhower's "military-industrial complex," and the use of "spin" in the presentation of our politicians. It's high time someone had the nerve to point this out. There's more. Poor people often volunteer to join the army, and some of them are duskier than others. Betcha didn't know that. Back in Flint, Mich., Moore feels on safe ground. There are no martyred rabbits this time. Instead, it's the poor and black who shoulder the packs and rifles and march away. I won't dwell on the fact that black Americans have fought for almost a century and a half, from insisting on their right to join the U.S. Army and fight in the Civil War to the right to have a desegregated Army that set the pace for post-1945 civil rights. I'll merely ask this: In the film, Moore says loudly and repeatedly that not enough troops were sent to garrison Afghanistan and Iraq. (This is now a favorite cleverness of those who were, in the first place, against sending any soldiers at all.) Well, where does he think those needful heroes and heroines would have come from? Does he favor a draft—the most statist and oppressive solution? Does he think that only hapless and gullible proles sign up for the Marines? Does he think—as he seems to suggest—that parents can "send" their children, as he stupidly asks elected members of Congress to do? Would he have abandoned Gettysburg because the Union allowed civilians to pay proxies to serve in their place? Would he have supported the antidraft (and very antiblack) riots against Lincoln in New York? After a point, one realizes that it's a waste of time asking him questions of this sort. It would be too much like taking him seriously. He'll just try anything once and see if it floats or flies or gets a cheer.

Indeed, Moore's affected and ostentatious concern for black America is one of the most suspect ingredients of his pitch package. In a recent interview, he yelled that if the hijacked civilians of 9/11 had been black, they would have fought back, unlike the stupid and presumably cowardly white men and women (and children). Never mind for now how many black passengers were on those planes—we happen to know what Moore does not care to mention: that Todd Beamer and a few of his co-passengers, shouting "Let's roll," rammed the hijackers with a trolley, fought them tooth and nail, and helped bring down a United Airlines plane, in Pennsylvania, that was speeding toward either the White House or the Capitol. There are no words for real, impromptu bravery like that, which helped save our republic from worse than actually befell. The Pennsylvania drama also reminds one of the self-evident fact that this war is not fought only "overseas" or in uniform, but is being brought to our cities. Yet Moore is a silly and shady man who does not recognize courage of any sort even when he sees it because he cannot summon it in himself. To him, easy applause, in front of credulous audiences, is everything.

Moore has announced that he won't even appear on TV shows where he might face hostile questioning. I notice from the New York Times of June 20 that he has pompously established a rapid response team, and a fact-checking staff, and some tough lawyers, to bulwark himself against attack. He'll sue, Moore says, if anyone insults him or his pet. Some right-wing hack groups, I gather, are planning to bring pressure on their local movie theaters to drop the film. How dumb or thuggish do you have to be in order to counter one form of stupidity and cowardice with another? By all means go and see this terrible film, and take your friends, and if the fools in the audience strike up one cry, in favor of surrender or defeat, feel free to join in the conversation.

However, I think we can agree that the film is so flat-out phony that "fact-checking" is beside the point. And as for the scary lawyers—get a life, or maybe see me in court. But I offer this, to Moore and to his rapid response rabble. Any time, Michael my boy. Let's redo Telluride. Any show. Any place. Any platform. Let's see what you're made of.

Some people soothingly say that one should relax about all this. It's only a movie. No biggie. It's no worse than the tomfoolery of Oliver Stone. It's kick-ass entertainment. It might even help get out "the youth vote." Yeah, well, I have myself written and presented about a dozen low-budget made-for-TV documentaries, on subjects as various as Mother Teresa and Bill Clinton and the Cyprus crisis, and I also helped produce a slightly more polished one on Henry Kissinger that was shown in movie theaters. So I know, thanks, before you tell me, that a documentary must have a "POV" or point of view and that it must also impose a narrative line. But if you leave out absolutely everything that might give your "narrative" a problem and throw in any old rubbish that might support it, and you don't even care that one bit of that rubbish flatly contradicts the next bit, and you give no chance to those who might differ, then you have betrayed your craft. If you flatter and fawn upon your potential audience, I might add, you are patronizing them and insulting them. By the same token, if I write an article and I quote somebody and for space reasons put in an ellipsis like this (…), I swear on my children that I am not leaving out anything that, if quoted in full, would alter the original meaning or its significance. Those who violate this pact with readers or viewers are to be despised. At no point does Michael Moore make the smallest effort to be objective. At no moment does he pass up the chance of a cheap sneer or a jeer. He pitilessly focuses his camera, for minutes after he should have turned it off, on a distraught and bereaved mother whose grief we have already shared. (But then, this is the guy who thought it so clever and amusing to catch Charlton Heston, in Bowling for Columbine, at the onset of his senile dementia.) Such courage.

Perhaps vaguely aware that his movie so completely lacks gravitas, Moore concludes with a sonorous reading of some words from George Orwell. The words are taken from 1984 and consist of a third-person analysis of a hypothetical, endless, and contrived war between three superpowers. The clear intention, as clumsily excerpted like this (...) is to suggest that there is no moral distinction between the United States, the Taliban, and the Baath Party and that the war against jihad is about nothing. If Moore had studied a bit more, or at all, he could have read Orwell really saying, and in his own voice, the following:

The majority of pacifists either belong to obscure religious sects or are simply humanitarians who object to taking life and prefer not to follow their thoughts beyond that point. But there is a minority of intellectual pacifists, whose real though unacknowledged motive appears to be hatred of western democracy and admiration for totalitarianism. Pacifist propaganda usually boils down to saying that one side is as bad as the other, but if one looks closely at the writing of the younger intellectual pacifists, one finds that they do not by any means express impartial disapproval but are directed almost entirely against Britain and the United States …

And that's just from Orwell's Notes on Nationalism in May 1945. A short word of advice: In general, it's highly unwise to quote Orwell if you are already way out of your depth on the question of moral equivalence. It's also incautious to remind people of Orwell if you are engaged in a sophomoric celluloid rewriting of recent history.

If Michael Moore had had his way, Slobodan Milosevic would still be the big man in a starved and tyrannical Serbia. Bosnia and Kosovo would have been cleansed and annexed. If Michael Moore had been listened to, Afghanistan would still be under Taliban rule, and Kuwait would have remained part of Iraq. And Iraq itself would still be the personal property of a psychopathic crime family, bargaining covertly with the slave state of North Korea for WMD. You might hope that a retrospective awareness of this kind would induce a little modesty. To the contrary, it is employed to pump air into one of the great sagging blimps of our sorry, mediocre, celeb-rotten culture. Rock the vote, indeed.

Correction, June 22, 2004: This piece originally referred to terrorist attacks by Abu Nidal's group on the Munich and Rome airports. The 1985 attacks occurred at the Rome and Vienna airports. (Return to the corrected sentence.)

Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair. His latest book, Blood, Class and Empire: The Enduring Anglo-American Relationship, is out in paperback.

Article URL: http://slate.msn.com/id/2102723/

Senator Biden. Great Questions of Condi. Who did you plagiarize?

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/6/4/170345.shtml

Kerry's DNC Enforcer Outed Biden as 'Plagiarist'

The man tapped by Sen. John Kerry to enforce loyalty at the Democratic National Committee had to resign in disgrace from Michael Dukakis' 1988 presidential campaign, after revealing that then-Dukakis presidential rival Sen. Joe Biden was a plagiarist.

John Sasso, who managed the failed Dukakis campaign, has been installed as Kerry's key man at the DNC, the New York Post reported Friday, in a bid to keep an eye on Clinton loyalist, DNC chair Terry McAuliffe.

"[Sasso] is totally loyal to Kerry," the Post's source said.

But what the Post didn't say was that the top Kerry aide was forced to resign from the Dukakis campaign in September 1987, after admitting he distributed a videotape that proved rival candidate Biden had been using verbatim excerpts from speeches of British Labour political leader Neil Kinnock without attribution.

The revelation prompted increased scrutiny of Biden's record, which turned out to include a case ofplagiarism committed in law school. Biden also was forced to admit he had lied about his academic record.

The Delaware Democrat withdrew from the presidential race on Sept. 23, 1987.

After firing Sasso, Dukakis told angry Biden supporters, "There is no place in American politics for this type of thing."

Apparently Sen. Kerry disagrees.


Sunday, January 16, 2005

O.I.C "Oh I See Corrupt People" Milwaukee's Oil For Food Scandal

Just like the UN Oil for Food Scandal, corrupt individuals punish the poor, especially children by stealing aid that was intended for them.

OIC board resigns as affiliations end

Agency report says members felt pressure from state to depart

By STEVE SCHULTZE
Posted: Jan. 14, 2005

The ailing Opportunities Industrialization Center of Greater Milwaukee took its first big steps to recast itself Friday after a criminal scandal, announcing that its entire board had quit and that several affiliates were being eliminated.

48694OIC Troubles
Related Coverage
Editorial: A new board, a new start?

Previous Coverage
Archive: Previous coverage of troubles at the Opportunities Industrialization Center of Greater Milwaukee

Two new board members also were announced: Milwaukee businessman Fred Jones; and Richard Cox, the former superintendent of the Milwaukee County House of Correction.

Recruiting people to fill the rest of the seven vacant slots on the board of the tainted agency has been difficult because of ongoing news coverage of the agency's woes, according to an OIC progress report delivered to state lawmakers Friday.

The Rev. Fred Crouther, OIC's outgoing board chairman, and the other eight OIC board members agreed to quit at a meeting Wednesday, but OIC announced their departure Friday in a statement that suggested pressure from the state was the cause.

Conversations with the officials at the state Department of Workforce Development made it clear they "desire the resignations of the OIC-GM board of directors" and felt that was necessary to protect OIC's diminished role as a Wisconsin Works contractor, the OIC statement says.

The departing board members "regret that the agency has recently faced a series of misfortunes and setbacks that have impacted its effectiveness and diverted the agency from its mission," the statement says.

The state last month trimmed OICs W-2 contract by about two-thirds, or $23 million, after a kickback scandal resulted in the conviction of former OIC President Carl Gee, further findings of improper spending of taxpayer money and poor performance in helping W-2 participants.

About $500,000 in taxpayer W-2 money from OIC was paid to former state Sen. Gary R. George, according to criminal indictments in the case. George is serving a prison term. Gee's sentencing is Jan. 25.

The agency also has lost its state contract for weatherizing low-income families' homes, which was worth nearly $11 million last year. And OIC has been rocked by two new unsettling disclosures: Its recently resigned chief financial officer spent $45,000 in OIC money for cell phones to be sent to Africa; and OIC came up short $370,000 in its weatherization program.

Accountability necessary

Bill Clingan, who oversees W-2 for Wisconsin, said state officials did not seek the resignation of OIC's board.

"That never came from us," said Clingan, administrator of the state Division of Workforce Solutions. Instead, he said, the state has pushed for quality service to W-2 clients from OIC.

Some lawmakers, however, have called for a new board at OIC. They have warned that and other steps must be taken if the firm wants to keep any state contracts. Lawmakers warned OIC officials during a hearing last month that senior management and board members with any links to the scandals should be purged from the organization.

OIC announced these changes Friday:

  • The resignations of Crouther, Jim Copeland, Carole Culbreath, the Rev. Clarence Robinson, James Elliott, the Rev. Michael Cousin, Carrie Banty, Linda Stewart and Douglas Brodzik. All except Stewart, a former state official, have sat on the OIC board for a decade or more.

    Three of the resigning board members will stay on for six weeks to help in the transition, but those three weren't identified. Mae Bolden, an OIC senior vice president, declined to comment Friday and said Crouther, the board chairman, would have no comment.

    None of the resigning board members returned phone calls Friday.

  • OIC affiliates Opportunities Investments Associates and the Garfield Foundation have begun the process of dissolution, which was required as part of a plea deal in federal court. The affiliates this week agreed to plead guilty to felony charges in connection with OIC payments to George and a falsified document submitted to a federal grand jury.

  • The Garfield Foundation, which controls $4 million in real estate, "is no longer controlled by OIC-GM," according to a letter to lawmakers. Unspecified properties will be "divested," the letter says, without elaboration.

  • OIC will close its investment arm and sell its holdings in a corn roasting company and Urban Developers, a development partnership with John Bowles.

  • Two other affiliates - Inner City Redevelopment Corp. and New Concept Self Development Center - are being spun off as independent companies.

  • Project Respect will be dissolved as a company but survive as an OIC program.

  • One affiliate not embroiled in criminal controversy - Learning Opportunities Center Inc. - will remain as OIC's sole subsidiary.

    A committee of bankers from three big OIC lenders is helping OIC work out the financial details, the report says. Those lenders are M&I Bank, Legacy Bank and North Milwaukee State Bank. Outgoing OIC board member Stewart is president of North Milwaukee State Bank.

    Pared-down operation

    "Upon completion of all the dissolution and close-out processes, this will leave a much smaller, simpler organization," the OIC letter to lawmakers says.

    Tyrone Dumas, the interim executive director, said in a brief interview Thursday this year's budget was about $18 million. The agency operated on a $65 million budget last year, according to OIC's Web site.

    Dumas also has said the agency is several million dollars in the red. He couldn't be reached Friday.

    State lawmakers praised OIC for the resignation of its board Friday, but some also had harsh words.

    Sen. Lena Taylor (D-Milwaukee) said the board change "shows a commitment to getting back to the mission and getting rid of any appearance of the old way of doing things.

    "I don't think the agency needs to disappear," Taylor said. "The good OIC has done surely outweighs the bad."

    But Sen. Alberta Darling (R-River Hills) said the board resignations were too little, too late. The state should cut its losses and sever all ties with OIC, Darling said.

    "I can't see how they are going to be able to pick up and meet the needs of the clients they have," she said.

    State Sen. Robert Cowles (R-Green Bay) also was skeptical.

    "I see this as a colossal waste of money," he said of the state's ongoing W-2 pact with OIC. The agency is expected to get about $16 million this year for operating a smaller W-2 caseload.

    Cowles said Dumas needs to be empowered to fire top OIC managers linked to Gee, his predecessor.



  • "Kof-Lee" Holloway. "I Have a Dream...House"

    Editorial: Ethics probe for Holloway

    From the Journal Sentinel
    Posted: Dec. 28, 2004

    Eight county supervisors - more than one-third of the Milwaukee County Board - have filed a formal complaint demanding that the County Ethics Board investigate County Board Chairman Lee Holloway’s dealings with a beleaguered social services agency.

    An ethics probe is absolutely necessary, if for no other reason than to reassure a citizenry that is still rightly smarting from the county pension scandal only a few short years ago.

    The Ethics Board must first determine if probable cause exists to begin an investigation. In our view, enough questions have been raised about this deal, despite explanations offered by Holloway’s attorney, Jeremy Levinson.

    Levinson has attempted to explain how it was that a real estate firm, Webb Investments, run by Holloway and his wife, Lynda, was paid $165,000 in public funds from an affiliate of the Opportunities Industrialization Center of Greater Milwaukee for a building the firm owned. Despite the payments, the affiliate never used the building and the building never changed hands.

    Levinson insists that Holloway did nothing wrong and points out, quite correctly, that neither the Holloways nor their firm was charged by the U.S. attorney’s office as part of a criminal investigation into the OIC affiliate.

    Levinson says the couple attempted several times to close on the building and formally transfer ownership to the OIC affiliate but were unsuccessful. The Holloways, Levinson said, believed they were holding the building for the affiliate and consequently never even tried to rent it. The building remains vacant and boarded up.

    But that explanation still doesn’t answer all of the questions raised. As the ethics complaint filed by Holloway’s fellow supervisors pointed out, since Holloway continued to hold title to the property and pay taxes on it, why did he fail to list it, as required, on his financial disclosure statements filed with the Ethics Board? And why did he not recuse himself while voting on county contracts and grants for OIC, considering that he had financial dealings with the agency? Last week, Holloway sent a letter to the Ethics Board further explaining his actions while also amending his ethics disclosure statements to add the building in question to the list of properties he owns.

    The Ethics Board must attempt to answer these and other questions. In the meantime, the eight supervisors, which, significantly, includes both supporters and critics of Holloway, have every right to wonder whether the board chairman has violated his public trust.

    His colleagues haven’t taken a vote of confidence yet, but if they did, it appears that a number of them wouldn’t have to think twice about how they would vote.

    An ethics probe is the first step to determine if confidence is warranted.

    It's Time for the US to Take a "Kofi Break"

    U.N. WATCH

    The Real Reason Kofi Annan Must Go
    Genocide, not oil money, is the proof of his failed leadership.

    BY KENNETH L. CAIN
    Monday, December 20, 2004 12:01 a.m.

    A debate currently rages about whether Kofi Annan enjoys the moral authority to lead the United Nations because the Oil for Food scandal happened under his command. That debate is 10 years too late and addresses the wrong subject. The salient indictment of Mr. Annan's leadership is lethal cowardice, not corruption; the evidence is genocide, not oil.

    As the controversy roiled over the past several weeks, I was on a research trip to the two ground-zeros of Mr. Annan's failed leadership while he was head of the U.N. Department of Peacekeeping Operations--Rwanda and Bosnia. We have heard from too many conservative commentators and Republican politicians recently--most of whom reject multilateralism anyway--about Mr. Annan's qualifications to lead. But we have not heard from enough Rwandans or Bosnians. I thought I'd talk to a few.

    Before my recent return, the last time I was in Rwanda was 10 years ago; I was counting skulls. A young U.N. human-rights officer, I was tasked with collecting evidence for the U.N.'s forthcoming war-crimes tribunal after the successful genocide of Rwanda's Tutsi minority by Hutu militias in 1994. We were looking for the mass graves of mass murder. We found them in churches, schools, gardens, latrines--anywhere Tutsis had gathered seeking protection or their killers had dumped their bodies, dismembered and entangled, like life-size rag dolls. Some 800,000 bodies rotted in the African sun.

    But it isn't just the stench of death I remember so vividly; the odor of betrayal also hung heavily in the Rwandan air. This was not a genocide in which the U.N. failed to intervene; most of the U.N.'s armed troops evacuated after the first two weeks of massacres, abandoning vulnerable civilians to their fate, which included, literally, the worst things in the world a human being can do to another human being.

    It did not have to happen. Gen. Romeo Dallaire, the U.N.'s force commander in Rwanda, sent Mr. Annan a series of desperate faxes including one warning that Hutu militias "could kill up to 1,000" Tutsis "in 20 minutes" and others pleading for authority to protect vulnerable civilians. But at the crucial moment, Mr. Annan ordered his general to stand down and to vigorously protect, not genocide victims, assembled in their numbers waiting to die, but the U.N.'s image of "impartiality."

    The outline of this story is well known, but its most important detail is not: Tutsis often gathered in compounds (large church complexes, schools and even stadiums) where they had assumed they would be safe based on implicit, and sometimes explicit, promises of protection by Blue Helmeted peacekeepers. The U.N.'s withdrawal was, therefore, not a passive failure to protect but an active, and lethal, perfidy.

    Rwandans still seethe. Last month I went to a tiny, remote village, deep in the central Rwandan hills to meet Charles Kagenza, a famous Tutsi survivor who hid in the bell tower of a church full of Tutsis that was bulldozed to the ground, burying victims alive. When I told him I worked for the U.N. 10 years ago, just after the war, he looked me straight in the eye, with his one remaining good eye, and shot back, "What are you doing here? You had the capacity to save us but you abandoned us."

    Some 3,300 miles directly north from Kigali is the town of Srebrenica, a grim, shell-pocked village on the border of Republika Srpska and Serbia. A few kilometers down a decrepit road is a sprawling abandoned battery factory. Ten years ago, thousands of Muslim civilians concentrated here seeking shelter at a U.N. base. But Serb militias separated the men and boys from their women and put them on buses. Armed Blue Helmeted U.N. Peacekeepers--tasked under Mr. Annan's leadership to protect Srebrenica's civilians in this U.N.-declared "Safe Area"--watched passively. The women of Srebrenica never saw their men again.

    Across the street lies a new cemetery and memorial for the 8,000 fallen men of Srebrenica. The remains of most of Safe Area Srebrenica's men have not yet been identified through DNA, but 1,300 have, and they rest in fresh mounds of earth on one end of the mostly empty graveyard. A long desolate green field waits to bury the rest of the remains.

    The most arresting elements of this memorial are inscribed on its small, uniform, green headstones bedecked in Muslim prayer beads: All the names of the dead are men, and, though the birthdates span three generations, the death dates are all the same: 1995. Whole families of men lay clustered together.

    One of the women of Srebrenica whom these men left behind entered the graveyard while I was there. Ashen white face and gold teeth framed in a traditional black Bosniac headscarf, she moved from tombstone to tombstone bowed in prayer. She told me her name was Magbula and she lost six of her men here, husband, sons and brothers. The whole family had gathered across the street at the battery factory, assuming the U.N. soldiers there would protect them, she said. Her men were put on a bus at the gate of the factory and she never saw them again.

    "Do you think the U.N. was at fault?" I asked. Not the soldiers, she said, but the leaders. "If they had done their job, and were responsible, this would not have happened." I asked if she'd heard about the current controversy over Mr. Annan's leadership. Yes she had. So I asked if she thought he should resign. It was not oil that fueled her angry answer, but genocide: "Yes," she said, waving her hand, "all the U.N. leaders. They could have reacted if they wanted to. If the U.N. goes somewhere now, how can the people there believe or trust that the U.N. will save them?"

    Liberal multilateralists on the left, like me, are often skittish about offering too pungent a critique of Mr. Annan, because it offers aid and comfort to the "enemy" on the conservative unilateralist right. But if anyone's values have been betrayed at the U.N. over the past decade it is those of us who believe most deeply in the organization's ideals. Just ask the men and women of Rwanda and Srebrenica.
    Mr. Cain served in U.N. peacekeeping operations in Somalia, Rwanda, Haiti and Liberia.

    Note to the Liberal Media. "We Have a Blog In the Fight Now"

    PEGGY NOONAN

    MSM Requiem
    After the Dan Rather scandal, American journalism will never be the same.

    Thursday, January 13, 2005 12:01 a.m.

    The Rathergate Report is a watershed event in American journalism not because it changes things on its own but because it makes unavoidably clear a change that has already occurred. And that is that the mainstream media's monopoly on information is over. That is, the monopoly enjoyed by three big networks, a half dozen big newspapers and a handful of weekly magazines from roughly 1950 to 2000 is done and gone, and something else is taking its place. That would be a media cacophony. But a cacophony in which the truth has a greater chance of making itself clearly heard.

    Is it annoying that the panel that issued the report did not find liberal bias in the preparation and airing of the Bush National Guard story? Yes, but only that. It's not as if anyone has to be told. I hate to be cynical, and this is cynical, but the panel that produced the report was not being paid by CBS to find liberal bias. It was being paid to do the anatomy of a failure with emphasis on who did what wrong.

    It found fault with the anchorman, the producer and their overseers, a conclusion CBS likely welcomed because CBS has wanted to remove Dan Rather for a long time because of low ratings. Rathergate weakened his position, and CBS moved. Firing the producers and overseers allows them to say We've turned the page, paid a price and put the story behind us. Also, if the report was to be taken seriously by the rest of the mainstream media it could not allege liberal bias. The MSM were not going to do headlines saying, "We've been busted!"

    Finally, one somehow gets the impression the writers of the Report thought proof of bias would be found in memos saying, "Comrades, we move against the imperialistic Bush Regime at 0800." Which is not exactly how it works. In any case those memos were not found. But maybe the writers of the report thought someone else would write about the whole sticky issue of bias. Like bloggers, who the report tells us have "a conservative agenda." That will surprise Duncan "Atrios" Black and Josh Marshall, but let it go.

    Of the commentary that followed the report, the most interesting so far has been Howard Fineman's essay on MSNBC.com. Mr. Fineman, a fluid writer who is likely aware of his own biases--I have wondered if he doesn't track them to make sure they are in line with the biases of Newsweek and MSNBC, which employ him--is a hardworking journalistic veteran who entered the MSM when it was at its zenith, in the 1970s. One might say he is the platonic ideal of MSMness. Mr. Fineman writes that the Rathergate report has left the MSM damaged and reeling, its hegemony a thing of the past. All true. In his roll call of responsibility he names first "George Bush's Republican Party," but that is the reflex of a certain mindset and not true. Mr. Bush and the GOP had nothing to do with what has happened to the MSM, which is not to say they are not happy it's been deeply and deservedly wounded.

    Mr. Fineman asserts that the MSM came into existence after World War II, which is essentially true, but goes on to claim that it came into existence as the result of the fact that "a temporary moderate consensus came to govern the country." Please. America was a political battleground in those days, fighting over everything from McCarthyism to the true nature of communism to the proper role of government to Vietnam. The MSM didn't come into existence because of a brief period of political comity. The MSM rose because it had a monopoly. And it fell because it lost that monopoly.

    Let me repeat that: The MSM rose because it had a monopoly on information. The networks, newspapers and magazines were a Liberal Monolith. In one of his "Making of the President" books the liberal but ingenuous Teddy White famously said of 57th Street in Manhattan that when he stood there he was within a stone's throw of all the offices in which all of American media was busily churning out its vision of The News. Churning it out were a relatively small group of a few hundred liberals who worked and mostly lived on an island off the continent; they told that continent not only what it should be thinking about but how it should be thinking of it. (I think the New York Times unconsciously echoes this old assumption in their television commercials in which an earnest, graying, upscale dunderhead says the New York Times surrounds a story and gives him new ways to think about it. Doesn't it just?)

    But in the past decade the liberals lost their monopoly. What broke it? We all know. Rush Limbaugh did, cable news did, the antimonolith journalists who rose with Reagan did, the internet did, technology did, talk radio did, Fox News did, the Washington Times did. When the people of America got options, they took them. Conservative arguments rose, and liberal hegemony fell.

    All this has been said before but this can't be said enough: The biggest improvement in the flow of information in America in our lifetimes is that no single group controls the news anymore.

    You can complain now, and your complaints can both register and have an impact on the story, as happened with bloggers and Rathergate. You can be a part of the story if you find and uncover new information. You can create the story, as bloggers did in the Trent Lott scandal. American journalism is no longer a castle, and you are no longer the serf who cannot breach its walls. The castle doors have been forced open. Other voices have access. Bloggers for instance don't just walk in and out, they have offices in the castle walls.

    Is there a difference between the bloggers and the MSM journalists? Yes. But it is not that they are untrained eccentrics home in their pajamas. (Half the writers for the Sunday New York Times are eccentrics home in their pajamas.) It is that they are independent and allowed to think their own thoughts. It is that they have autonomy and can assign themselves stories, and determine on their own the length and placement of stories. And it is that they are by and large as individuals more interesting than most MSM reporters.

    Remember the movie "Broadcast News"? The bland young reporter played by William Hurt who yearned to be a star and a member of the establishment would be a major network anchor or producer now, his hair gone a distinguished gray. The character played by Albert Brooks--the bright, mischievous and ultimately more talented journalist--would be a blogger now.

    Now anyone can take to the parapet and announce the news. This will make for a certain amount of confusion. But better that than one-party rule and one-party thought. Only 20 years ago, when you were enraged at what you felt was the unfairness of a story, or a bias on the part of the storyteller, you could do this about it: nothing. You could write a letter.

    When I worked at CBS a generation ago I used to receive those letters. Sometimes we read them, and sometimes we answered them, but not always. Now if you see such a report and are enraged you can do something about it: You can argue in public on a blog or on TV, you can put forth information that counters the information in the report. You can have a voice. You can change the story. You can bring down a news division. Is this improvement? Oh yes it is.

    Some think bloggers and internet writers of all sorts are like the 19th century pamphleteers who made American politics livelier and more vigorous by lambasting the other team in full-throated broadsides. Actually, I've said that. And there are similarities. But it should be noted that the pamphleteers were heavy on screeds and colorfully damning the foe. The most successful bloggers aren't bringing bluster to the debate, they're bringing facts--font sizes, full quotes, etc. They're bringing facts and points of view on those facts that the MSM before this could ignore, and did ignore. They're bringing a lot to the debate, and changing the debate by what they bring. They're doing what excellent reporters would do.

    They will no doubt continue to be the force in 2005 that they have been the past few years. Meantime the MSM will not disappear. But it will evolve. Some media organs--Newsweek, Time, the New York Times--will likely use the changing environment as license to be what they are: liberal, only more so. Interestingly they have begun to use Fox News Channel as their rationale. We used to be unbiased but then Fox came along with its conservative propaganda so now just to be fair and compete we're going liberal.

    I don't see why anyone should mind this. A world where National Review is defined as conservative and Newsweek defined as liberal would be a better world, for it would be a more truthful one. Everyone gets labeled, tagged and defined, no one hides an agenda, the audience gets to listen, consider, weigh and allow for biases. A journalistic world where people declare where they stand is a better one.

    Networks, on the other hand, may try harder to play it down the middle, and that would be wise. The days when they could sell a one-party point of view is over. No one is buying now because no one is forced to buy. But everyone will buy the networks when they sell what they're really good at, which is covering real news as it happens. Tsunamis, speeches, trials--events. Real and actual news. They are really good at that. And there is a market for it. And that market isn't over.

    Ms. Noonan is a contributing editor of The Wall Street Journal and author of "A Heart, a Cross, and a Flag" (Wall Street Journal Books/Simon & Schuster), a collection of post-Sept. 11 columns, which you can buy from the OpinionJournal bookstore. Her column appears Thursdays.

    3 of the 4 CBS firings were Female. Martha Burke Where Are You?

    DOROTHY RABINOWITZ'S MEDIA LOG

    The Small Matter of Proof
    The CBS report is the liveliest investigative document to come along in a long time.

    Wednesday, January 12, 2005 12:01 a.m.

    The Independent Review Panel's conclusions concerning CBS's "60 Minutes" report on George Bush's National Guard Service was a long time in coming--not long enough, though, to dull memories of that debacle, or the bitterness of CBS staff bearing the heaviest burden of blame for it. Mary Mapes, producer of the Sept. 8 segment, who was fired outright--three others accountable for the program, one of them a longtime executive, were asked for their resignations--issued a statement Monday night, accusing CBS chairman Leslie Moonves of "vitriolic scapegoating," which, she said, shocked her. Mr. Moonves, it appears, was also shocked--in particular, he told the press that same day, at the CBS team's investigative failures.

    The first matter to leap out at readers of the report would be its refusal to deliver judgments on certain questions. Chief among these: the matter of whether the Bush National Guard broadcast had been motivated by political bias. The report's authors--Dick Thornburgh, former U.S. attorney general, and Louis D. Boccardi, former head of the Associated Press--concluded they had no basis for such a finding.

    The subject chewed up considerable airtime Monday night as pundits, roundtable guests and plenty of other people wondered how such indicators as producer Mary Mapes's five-year pursuit of the National Guard story--zeal of this sort doesn't come along every day--could have been overlooked, in this regard, or explained, as the report does, simply as a matter of a producer having waited, all those years, for the right proof. The producer thus described as one who had cautiously refrained from going forward with that story without adequate proof is, after all, the same Ms. Mapes who, a few months ago, gave false assurances about the reliability of her chief source and committed offenses against fairness and accuracy--described in merciless detail in the panel's report--in order to get the segment on the air.

    Ms. Mapes's faith that the documents on which the program was based are authentic endures to this day. Indeed, she pointedly noted Monday, the panel had not concluded that they were false--a wonderfully revealing testament to the mind behind the broadcast. The panelists had decided, as they said, that they could not prove the documents false and so would not make the charge. To Ms. Mapes, to whom cautions of this kind may seem quaint, it was a corroboration of her claims.

    She is not alone. Dan Rather, too, continues to believe in the authenticity of the documents on the ground, as he told the panel, that no one provided evidence the documents were not authentic. The anchor's interviews with the panel on this, as well as his various and complicated public apologies for the segment--which the panelists are moved, twice, to call "troubling"--stand among the most intriguing features of this report. (Mr. Rather announced yesterday that he would keep its lessons in mind.)

    The Independent Review Panel's report is, indeed, the liveliest investigative document to come along in a long while. A good thing, given the considerable number of Americans not normally inclined to worry their heads over behind-the-scenes network mysteries who followed this affair during the amazing 12-day period in which the network stood by its story, even when its last shred of respectability was clearly gone; that saw, indeed, Dan Rather--reporter on the "60 Minutes'' segment in question--claim that political adversaries were behind all the attacks on the piece.

    The public following all this seemed to know that it was witnessing something exceptional and strange--namely, the spectacle of one of the most powerful media organs in society apparently willing to stand exposed to the world, day after day, as it issued a series of responses clearly revealing that what mattered to CBS News, above all, was a successful defense of its story. The obviousness of this raw purpose would be, in the end, the most memorable feature of this saga. As criticism of the "60 Minutes" broadcast increased, the "CBS Evening News" itself weighed in with reports asserting the story's legitimacy--reports prepared and delivered by the very personnel responsible for the "60 Minutes" story.

    All this, the panelists contemplate in crisp, unsparing terms. One of the e-mails they quote nicely captures the wartime atmosphere at the network, with executives hanging tough in support of the documents' authenticity. Gil Schwartz, executive vice president for CBS Communications, sends a Sept. 13 message titled "Total Red Alert" to CBS News head Andrew Heyward. It says, "Our entire reputation as a news division now rests on our fielding a couple of experts on our side TODAY. BY PRESS TIME. Tomorrow will be TOO LATE. . . ."

    Monday, the authors did a long round of television interviews in which they evidenced a tone notably more benevolent than any to be found in their 223-page work. Television has a way of inducing such tones in guests--these were no exception--and a way, not equally harmless, of reducing matters to simple points. Encouraged to provide a main reason for CBS's handling of the story, Mr. Thornburgh obliged, telling host Terence Smith of the "NewsHour With Jim Lehrer," "If you're looking for a villain in this story, we have one. It's haste."

    The villainy that the panel's report had unearthed concerned, of course, matters infinitely more complicated, subtle and dark than this answer suggests. Nor is it easy for anyone acquainted with the case to imagine that more time would have produced a different story--the producer had the story she wanted. Possibly, to be sure, some executive might in time have overcome the problem of the diffidence generally accorded producer Mapes and Dan Rather long enough to demand verification of the charges CBS was about to air. Decidedly iffy propositions, these. Neither does haste explain the most extraordinary aspect of this history--namely the behavior of the network, which had, it would appear, no end of time to devote to its stonewalling.

    The panel's authors otherwise used their media interviews to their advantage, not least in their responses to the most often raised questions put to them: Why had they come to no conclusion about the authenticity of the documents on which CBS relied for the segment? And why had they decided they could find no basis for political bias? Their answer to both questions was clear--they had no wish to emulate the producers responsible for the "60 Minutes" report by making allegations for which they could offer no proof.

    It would be difficult to argue with this position, however tempting it might be. The panel's report did take note of the producers' clear failure to avoid the appearance of political motivation in the Bush National Guard story.

    Messrs. Thornburgh and Boccardi deserve credit for their report. Among all the reasons cited, one could also add their failure to succumb to any temptation to universalize CBS's offense, their disinclination to meditate on the nature of journalism and the frailties of its practitioners. They focused on facts, uncovered evasions and lies without averting their eyes, confronted all the significant issues stemming from this saga, and did it all in eminently lucid and astringent prose. It's hard to ask for much more. There will be, in our future, other stories like the one that gave birth to this drama--investigations driven by zeal, political and otherwise, devoid of proofs, reported by journalists interested only in testimony supportive of their charges. But it will be some while, we may guess--and not only at CBS--before a producer will be able to undertake one without apprehension about some blogger waiting to pounce, or, more simply, the memory of the National Guard story and its aftermath. The ghost of "60 Minutes," Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2004, could be around to do its haunting for a long time to come, and a good thing it will be.

    Washington State ballott stuffers need to look to Milwaukee

    When all is said and done, Milwaukee may have allowed anywhere from 10,000 to 30,000 illegal ballots to be cast. However, don't count on the Democratic Mayor or the Democratic DA to do anything to get to the bottom of this mess.


    JOHN FUND ON THE TRAIL

    Don't Count Rossi Out
    A stolen election in Washington state? Not if bloggers can help it.

    Monday, January 10, 2005 12:01 a.m.

    The new media--talk radio, bloggers and independent watchdog groups--have followed up their success in exposing Dan Rather's use of phony memos by showcasing another scandal: Washington state's bizarre race for governor, which features a vote count so close and compromised it allows Florida to retire the crown for electoral incompetence. If Democrat Christine Gregoire, who leads by 129 votes and is scheduled to take the office Wednesday, eventually has to face a new election, it will have been in large part because of the new media's ability to give the story altitude before it reached the courts.

    When the idea of a revote was first broached three weeks ago by a moderate Republican former secretary of state, Ms. Gregoire's reaction was swift: "Absolutely ludicrous." With Republican candidate Dino Rossi filing a formal court challenge last Friday alleging a massive breakdown in the vote count, she may still think the idea of a court-ordered revote is laughable, but her legal team is taking it seriously. "There's not even a 50-50 chance a court would rule with Republicans to set aside the election," says Jenny Durkan, a Gregoire confidant who is representing state Democrats. Hardly an expression of supreme confidence.

    The feeling that a revote is possible is buoyed by polls showing the public still thinks Mr. Rossi, who won the first two vote counts before falling behind in the third, actually won. His legal team has also compiled a strong body of evidence showing irregularities, certainly one far more detailed than that which North Carolina officials used last week to order a statewide March revote of the race for agriculture commissioner after a computer ate 4,438 ballots in a GOP-leaning county. Without those votes, the GOP candidate was leading by 2,287 votes out of 3.5 million cast.

    In Washington state, the errors by election officials have been compared to the antics of Inspector Clouseau, only clumsier. At least 1,200 more votes were counted in Seattle's King County than the number of individual voters who can be accounted for. Other counties saw similar, albeit smaller, excess vote totals. More than 300 military personnel who were sent their absentee ballots too late to return them have signed affidavits saying they intended to vote for Mr. Rossi. Some 1 out of 20 ballots in King County that officials felt were marked unclearly were "enhanced" with Wite-Out or pens so that some had their original markings obliterated.

    Most disturbing is the revelation last week by King County officials that at least 348 unverified provisional ballots were fed directly into vote-counting machines. "Did it happen? Yes. Unfortunately, that's part of the process in King County," elections superintendent Bill Huennekens told the Seattle Times. "It's a very human process, and in some cases that did happen."

    King County elections director Dean Logan, Mr. Huennekens' boss, also concedes the discrepancy between the number of ballots cast and the list of people who are recorded as voting. Even though the gap is 1,200 votes, he says, "that does not clearly indicate that the election would have turned out differently." Are voters supposed to trust an election merely because it can't "clearly" be shown to be hopelessly tainted? Mr. Logan is certainly singing a different tune now than he was on Nov. 18, when he responded to charges of voting irregularities in an e-mail to colleagues, which read in part: "Unfortunately, I have come to expect this kind of unsubstantiated crap. It's all too convenient, if not now fashionable, to stoop to this level when there is a close race."

    Slade Gorton, a Republican former state attorney general and U.S. senator who is advising Mr. Rossi, says a court should order a revote rather than declare valid one of the two earlier vote counts that Mr. Rossi won. "No one can govern effectively under the cloud this race has created," Mr. Gorton says. He notes that state law doesn't require any showing of fraud to contest an election. "That is irrelevant to whether the election should be done over," he says. "The law is quite clear in giving a court the right to void any election where the number of illegal or mistaken votes exceeds the margin of victory, and it has done so in the past."

    Mr. Gorton notes that Sam Reed, the Republican secretary of state who certified Ms. Gregoire's victory, issued a report in 2003 noting that King County's sloppy election procedures could lead to just this sort of election meltdown. "The county is not consistent in their ballot enhancement procedures," Mr. Reed's report concluded. "Ballot enhancement, while done in full view of political observers, did not use the procedures outlined in the Washington Administrative Code. Inconsistencies in how this procedure is handled significantly increase the possibility of a successful election contest."

    Much of the evidence uncovered on King County's flouting of election laws first appeared on Soundpolitics.com, a blog run by computer consultant Stefan Sharkansky. A former liberal who worked for Michael Dukakis in 1988, Mr. Sharkansky calls himself a "9/11 conservative mugged by reality." He uses his knowledge of statistics and probability to illustrate how unlikely some of the reported vote count changes are. He also uncovered the fact that in Precinct 1823 in downtown Seattle, 527, or 70%, of the 763 registered voters used 500 Fourth Avenue--the King County administration building--as their residential address. A full 61% of the precinct's voters only registered in the last year, and nearly all of them "live" at 500 Fourth Avenue. By contrast, only 13% of all of King County voters registered in 2004.

    Not all of the voters at the county building are homeless or hard to find. A noted local judge and her husband have been registered at the county building for years. When I called her to ask why, she became flustered and said it was because of security concerns, specifically because "the Mexican mafia are out to get me." When I pointed out that her home address and phone number were easily found on the Internet and in property records, she ended the conversation by refusing to answer a question about whether she had improperly voted for state legislative candidates who would represent the county building but not her residence.

    Even liberal officeholders in Seattle privately acknowledge that the combination of bloggers, talk radio and local think tanks like the Evergreen Freedom Foundation have helped skeptics of the election's validity win the public relations war. Evergreen president Bob Williams says his group isn't focused on overturning Ms. Gregoire's election so much as on highlighting the obvious problems in the vote count that cry out for permanent legislative fixes. He notes the public is paying attention: A poll taken last week by Seattle's KING-TV found that by a 20-point margin state residents back a new election, and by 53% to 36% they don't think Mr. Rossi should concede.

    Seattle Times columnist Joni Balter says the attack on the vote count by Republican-leaning media "is by now a near-military operation--air, land and sea." She blames radio hosts Kirby Wilbur, John Carlson and Mike Siegel for keeping listeners updated and in a constant state of outrage. "There's a lot to be outraged about," responds Mr. Carlson, an unsuccessful candidate for governor in 2000. "Last week, I did 13 out of my show's 15 hours on the election and people wanted more."

    In his new book, "Blog: Understanding the Information Reformation," radio host and law professor Hugh Hewitt calls the new media a form of "open-source journalism" in which gatekeepers can no longer control what reaches the public. Readers and listeners interact with bloggers and talk show hosts so that a free market of ideas and information can emerge. "Blogs analyzed the Washington state election shenanigans in a more sophisticated and comprehensive way than the mainstream media," he told me. "When a swarm of blogs and new media focus on a story it can fundamentally alter the general public's understanding of an event or person. Ask John Kerry, Trent Lott, Tom Daschle and soon-to-retire CBS anchor Dan Rather if they think the new media changed people's perceptions of them."

    Similarly, when Christine Gregoire takes the oath of office as governor on Wednesday, she will still face a threat to her seat of power should the new media keep up the pressure and more evidence of a tainted vote count emerges in court.

    She would do well to recall what happened in Minnesota after the 1962 election for governor there. Republican Elmer Anderson won a squeaker and was sworn in, but a recount of disputed ballots ground on. A hundred days into Mr. Anderson's term, a panel of three state judges ruled that Democrat Karl Rolvaag had actually won by 91 votes. To end the legal wrangling, Mr. Anderson dropped any appeals and calmly left office, allowing Mr. Rolvaag to move into the governor's mansion.

    You can expect the new media to talk up that historical example a lot as they seek to instill in the public's mind the belief that Washington state's election for governor isn't over just because after Wednesday someone occupies the office.

    Who's the Boss?

    I am all for political debate and I know a lot of musicians supported Democratic candidates. Bruce Springsteen even travelled and capaigned with John Kerry. However, now that the presidential race is over, how about a concert and or relief effort for the families that have lost a loved one or for soldiers injured or killed in the war on terror. Put your money where your mouth is and show that you really support the troops.

    From the Wall Street Journal.

    REVIEW & OUTLOOK

    Before We Started Giving . . .
    In the wake of this tsunami, there's no time for fancy fundraisers.

    Friday, January 7, 2005 12:01 a.m.

    The outpouring of charitable donations for tsunami relief in Asia is truly astounding. Given the immediacy of the problem, there can be little doubt that aid money spent in the region can help save lives and alleviate terrible despair and suffering. Although many of the recipients are too dazed now to think about where the help has come from, donors can take comfort in knowing that they have participated in an act of mass kindness. The harder part is making sure the check goes to an organization that will use it effectively.

    Making a difference is never easy. Remember Bob Geldof, the Irish rocker who was moved by a 1984 TV broadcast on the famine in Ethiopia and kicked off the whole Band Aid-Live Aid concert and fund-raising effort? It's heartening to think that part of the many millions of dollars that poured in kept some Ethiopians alive. In retrospect, however, it seems even clearer than it did at the time that channeling all that money through the corrupt and brutal government of Col. Mengistu Haile Mariam cost many lives, too. Not only was Mengistu the chief architect of the famine, since he waged a war of deliberate dislocation and starvation against his people in a land already ravaged by Marxist economic policies. But much of the hard-currency aid money and even the food that Ethiopia got undoubtedly financed the dictator's war at home and abroad, leading to more death and destruction.

    In the case of the tsunami victims, they and their compatriots are facing a natural disaster, not a man-made one. Yet as special tsunami fund-raising events like celebrity concerts (and the inevitable records) pop up all over the place, it's worth remembering that few, if any, of the promoters involved know how the money will be used to help Asians rebuild their lives.

    Assuming that it is used that way. It took some 11 years for the money raised in the famous 1971 Concert for Bangladesh to reach that country. Other charity-concert efforts have been marred by accusations of fraud, and few are compelled to open their books. How many people who bought "We Are the World" knew that while the performances were donated, other expenses, including record-company royalties, took a bite? When charity balls make money only after expenses for the food, the drink and the band have been deducted, we're told that simply heightening awareness of a problem is important. Why just put a check in the mail when you can dance the night away for AIDS? In today's case, however, there is no room for fooling around. Serious aid groups don't want to waste a penny.

    Heifer International, for instance, certainly will be on the scene eventually with donated livestock. But for now, it is telling visitors to its Web site that other agencies are better equipped to meet the immediate needs of people in tsunami areas. Best of all, it offers a link to Interaction (at interaction.org), whose members are established aid groups that have agreed to a code of ethics that includes financial accountability. At the Interaction site, you can see what many of these organizations are doing for tsunami relief.

    That's one way to make an informed decision so that each donated dollar really counts. It's not as exciting as a concert, and there's no CD. That's why they call it giving.

    Saturday, January 15, 2005

    UN Letters From the Front

    This was e-mailed to me. Kudos to the unknown auther.

    "Friends. Sometimes in our rush to laugh at the United Nations for being so utterly useless, we forget that it is composed of people serving and doing their very best. I came across this letter the other day that I think reminds us of what's truly important in life.

    I will continue to post these wonderful letters as I find them.

    UN Letters from the front.

    My Dearest Claudette:

    It has been 24 hours since we landed on this horrible island full of water, dread and misery. No French cuisine anywhere. No opera. No Jerry Lewis festivals playing at the theatre. Oh the humanit’. How I long for the wonderful Paris shore. But I have a duty to you and to the United Nations. So here I remain.

    Today, we were issued our Toyota Land Rover vehicles. There was a problem at the dealer, but we told them the Americans would be forking over some cash soon. However, all is not good. How can they send us to this mission without the tools we need to carry them out? Of course, for this, we can only blame Monsieur Bush.

    My Land Cruiser is missing a CD player. I had all my favorite Jerry Lewis routines recorded onto a CD and now what am I supposed to when I’m driving around looking and listening for survivors?

    Not that I can hear anything with that incessant sound of the U.S. Navy helicopters. Really, the Americans love all that military technology, they can get several thousand sailors anywhere in the world in a day or so – you’d think they’d invent a more silent helicopter. I'm sure they do it to annoy us.

    My bed is a twin size, when I ordered a King. I said,” I want I Roi size”. They thought I was trying to talk like an American Marine. 'Urah', indeed. Not to mention the fact I forgot to pack my favorite slippers. I’ll have to send my little houseboy out to find me some. I can’t imagine that all of the stores are closed for business. Surely they knew we were coming.

    I’ll write more later, cheri. I must turn in for the evening. We have a day full of meetings, and more meetings. After that, our chef will be preparing a lovely Thai dinner in honor of our host nation.

    Give everyone a kiss and make sure you complain to everyone about the horrible Americans here in Thailand.

    **

    Let us remember these fine people in the UN. Let us continue to pray for the survivors and they can continue to survive until help gets to them."