wwe

Daily News Roundup: Oops, We Did It Again

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Nobody said it would be smooth sailing … The New York Times reports that Eric Holder, Barack Obama’s pick to be attorney general, was much more involved in Marc Rich’s pardon than has previously been acknowledged. The most meaty paragraph:

Mr. Holder had more than a half-dozen contacts with Mr. Rich’s lawyers over 15 months, including phone calls, e-mail and memorandums that helped keep alive Mr. Rich’s prospects for a legal resolution to his case. And Mr. Holder’s final opinion on the matter—a recommendation to the White House on the eve of the pardon that he was “neutral, leaning toward” favorable—helped ensure that Mr. Clinton signed the pardon despite objections from other senior staff members, participants said.

In the aftermath of the Mumbai attacks, stories of horror and bravery … The terrorists targeted foreigners, including Jews, and apparently tortured most of the Jewish hostages before executing them. But as it is in all horrible events, stories are also emerging of acts of heroism. Vishnu Datta Ram Zende, the public-address announcer for Mumbai’s largest train station, calmly evacuated the entire station after he heard a large explosion. Just as the station cleared, attackers reached Zende’s booth and fired inside it. The announcer was unhurt.

We’re in for the long haul … The Dow is up in early trading Tuesday, after falling almost 680 points Monday on news that the U.S. economy has been in a recession since last December. The National Bureau of Economic Research has the task of determining a recession’s beginning and end, and it said the recession began when businesses began cutting jobs in late 2007. The more scary news is that some analysts are saying the downturn won’t end until 2010.

Thai court dissolves government and planes are set to fly … Thailand’s Constitutional Court ruled the coalition of parties currently in power committed electoral fraud in the 2007 election that brought them to power. Although current Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat did not resign, as anti-government protesters had hoped, he accepted the court’s decision and said he would enter private life again. Executives from the banned parties, including the prime minister, are barred from participating in politics for five years. The protesters that had kept planes flying for a week at Bangkok’s largest airport said it would reopen to traffic again by Friday.

Barack or Britney? That’s an easy choice … A captivating election, a new face on the political scene—nothing could unseat Britney Spears as the top Yahoo search in 2008, for the fourth year in a row. More frightening is that Barack Obama was only the third-most-searched-for topic—WWE was No. 2.

The weekend roundup: habeas schmabeas

Monday, June 16th, 2008

gitmo

Last Friday, hot on the heels of the Supreme Court’s 5-4 ruling that Guantanamo Bay detainees have the right to challenge their imprisonment in the US Court System, Sen. John McCain called it “one of the worst decisions in the history of this country.

Really, John?  Was that hyperbole, like when your mom orders the Monte Cristo and calls the lunch “the worst I have ever had” because the cole slaw had too much mayo?

Or the type of “worst decision” that one would apply when discussing the needless squandering of international political capital in the Arab world in the face of an extensive McClatchy Newspapers investigation which shows the Gitmo boogeymen were (and are) not, as you and your misinformed brethren insist, “the worst of the worst”?

If the former detainees whom McClatchy interviewed are any indication — and several former high-ranking U.S. administration and defense officials said in interviews that they are — most of the prisoners at Guantanamo weren’t terrorist masterminds but men who were of no intelligence value in the war on terrorism.

In addition to claiming that legislation he helped passed all but assured the civil treatment of detainees at Gitmo — or en route there — McCain also claimed that of the people let go, several were apprehended attacking US forces in Iraq, proving their nature as dangerous individuals.

(more…)

Caucus crazy

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

Evidence suggests that peer-to-peer voter turnout campaigns work to significantly mobilize young voters. For any of you Iowans who haven’t yet been successfully peer-to-peered, Rock the Vote and its smackdown partner are posting some motivational PSAs and trivia quizzes that are kinda funny. So rock your caucus, people, because caucusing means working for change!