Open thread.
Make a new account
Ask Obama About Don't Ask, Don't Tell
As a candidate for president, Barack Obama told the country's leading gay rights group, the Human Rights Campaign, "America is ready to get rid of the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy. All that is required is leadership." Now he is about to decide whether he will make good on his promise to end what he called a "policy of discrimination." His decision will come soon because Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen are set to testify at a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee on the policy--the first of its kind since the law was enacted in 1993. Most administration observers who follow this closely believe that the Pentagon has already signed off on supporting an end to Don't Ask, Don't Tell once the White House decides the timing is right. But Messrs. Gates and Mullen have yet to say so publicly. Their upcoming testimony is the result of pressure from New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, a Democrat, who last year called for legislation that would have placed a moratorium on gay military discharges. Many question why the White House avoided dealing with Don't Ask, Don't Tell last year, when Democrats had big majorities in Congress and polls showed that a majority of Americans favor changing the policy. A Quinnipiac poll in April, for example, found that 56% of Americans support repealing the policy. A big part of the reason why the White House hesitated is fear of a backlash similar to the one suffered by President Bill Clinton in 1993 when he tried to allow gays to serve openly in the military.
His decision will come soon because Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen are set to testify at a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee on the policy--the first of its kind since the law was enacted in 1993.
Most administration observers who follow this closely believe that the Pentagon has already signed off on supporting an end to Don't Ask, Don't Tell once the White House decides the timing is right. But Messrs. Gates and Mullen have yet to say so publicly. Their upcoming testimony is the result of pressure from New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, a Democrat, who last year called for legislation that would have placed a moratorium on gay military discharges.
Many question why the White House avoided dealing with Don't Ask, Don't Tell last year, when Democrats had big majorities in Congress and polls showed that a majority of Americans favor changing the policy. A Quinnipiac poll in April, for example, found that 56% of Americans support repealing the policy.
A big part of the reason why the White House hesitated is fear of a backlash similar to the one suffered by President Bill Clinton in 1993 when he tried to allow gays to serve openly in the military.
two weeks later every person at the table got a pinkslip except me. Parent
"....in bed." Parent
And if, as I fear, they have to give up on this economy and head to her homeland with their skills and expertise to find full employment at last . . . well, then it will be me who will be grateful for Skype. But I still will be d*mned angry at the Dems for the heartbreak and brain drain. I know of quite a few smart 20-somethings and 30-somethings who have given up and gone abroad now -- for example, finding better work in Guam than here. There goes our future, and there is something very wrong with that. Parent
it even freezes well. Parent
One more time, in case you did not catch this message earlier. Parent
I didn't see your comment! Everybody is good! He's home now and sounds like everyone has settled after the 2 day ordeal. Here's his latest pic, he found his thumb :) Parent
I grow my own, so they're pretty tasty!
Also, it's entirely reasonable to use some russet chunks to thicken the soup, then drop in the Yukons for flavor.
Potato and leek soup, with or without various additions, is one of my most favorite things. I grow my own leeks, too, so I made up a lot of it for the freezer. Parent
We kids scarfed 'em down like candy. Now I've gotta go see if somebody grows 'em organically around here. I can taste that perfect mealy texture even now, loaded with butter . . . mmmmm.
Btw, my other fave from the Northwest is candy -- candy called aplets, as my mom also raised us to know that apples grow wonderfully in Washington. Ever had aplets? Look 'em up; they can be shipped, and are almost as good as the homemade ones that grandma used to cook up and send east. Parent
No, I don't grow Idaho potatoes. Not even sure what specific variety of Russet they used to grow, but I should see if I can find that out from Teh Google since there's an awful lot of places resurrecting old varieties of just about everything.
But there are lots of other superb Russets from the better seed potato sources, and they are at least reminiscent of that great old Idaho taste when you grow them small-scale in a well-tended home garden. I plant a variety called Butte, but Kennebec is good, too, and I'm going to try a few others this year. Parent
Mmmmm, make 'em mealy for me, the way a tater oughta be. Parent
I may try to do some Burbanks this summer and see. But soil and climate have a heck of a lot to do with the flavor, too, so they may not have that Idaho taste grown in my garden.
If you decide to plant potatoes, DO NOT try to save a little money and just cut up and plant pieces from even an organic market. There are all kinds of potato diseases that can and do live invisibly in the tubers of affected plants. They're fine to eat, but planting them will resurrect the disease.
Be sure to get "certified disease-free" seed potatoes. This is my favorite source for potatoes and all sorts of other things, though you'd be better off trying to find a more local one that has stuff field-tested for your growing conditions. Parent
If your timetable changes for any reason....you can hitch a cross-country ride with me. Miss Dot will have two new boys to hang out with...:-)
If not, maybe us NYC/NJ talklefters can throw you a little going away party. I have a feeling, I can count on kdog attending! Parent
So when are you going across country? And when are we going to see pics of da boys? How's the new kid working out?
We should get together before I hike west! Parent
My new boy has turned out great. I was a little nervous about how Oliver would adjust since he spent the first few days making sure he put every toy of his on the bed or the couch so the little guy could not reach them... :-0. Now they are buddies but Oliver still has first dibs on ALL toys! Parent
Before we decide it's our responsibility to rebuild all the lost homes in Haiti, let's remember that it's our actual responsibility to make sure our own people have roofs over their heads. Haiti isn't our problem alone. China and Germany and other economically powerful countries also have a "good neighbor" responsibility to less fortunate nations like Haiti. In fact, Haiti's not really our problem at all. Our "good neighbor" responsibility today is to our actual neighbors here in America, the mom in Milwaukee, the dad in Detroit, the grandparents in Grand Rapids, and the brothers and sisters in Baltimore and Cincinnati - not the huddled masses of Haiti, horrifying as their situation might be. Sure, for a few weeks, it makes sense to send American forces into Haiti to help them recover from the initial shock of the crisis. But with two wars already stop-lossing our troops to the breaking point, we can't afford to adopt another country as a matter of national policy. Until we can make sure that the kids in Kentucky can get medical care, or the millions of uninsured Americans can have access to the drugs they need to stay alive, we can't commit to sending a never-ending supply of free medicine to another country while at the same time blocking lower-cost medicine from entering the U.S. at our borders - with the blessing of the U.S. Congress - simply because Big Pharma wants to make an even greater profit. In the past week, we've seen cabinet members and the First Lady ask Americans to give $10 to the Red Cross by texting "HAITI". Perhaps, instead, these leaders should ask, nay, demand that all those bankers who bungled billions and stole millions in bonuses directly from taxpayers, send some of it to Haiti. Or perhaps, even, to the newly homeless in Houston.
Haiti isn't our problem alone. China and Germany and other economically powerful countries also have a "good neighbor" responsibility to less fortunate nations like Haiti. In fact, Haiti's not really our problem at all.
Our "good neighbor" responsibility today is to our actual neighbors here in America, the mom in Milwaukee, the dad in Detroit, the grandparents in Grand Rapids, and the brothers and sisters in Baltimore and Cincinnati - not the huddled masses of Haiti, horrifying as their situation might be.
Sure, for a few weeks, it makes sense to send American forces into Haiti to help them recover from the initial shock of the crisis. But with two wars already stop-lossing our troops to the breaking point, we can't afford to adopt another country as a matter of national policy.
Until we can make sure that the kids in Kentucky can get medical care, or the millions of uninsured Americans can have access to the drugs they need to stay alive, we can't commit to sending a never-ending supply of free medicine to another country while at the same time blocking lower-cost medicine from entering the U.S. at our borders - with the blessing of the U.S. Congress - simply because Big Pharma wants to make an even greater profit.
In the past week, we've seen cabinet members and the First Lady ask Americans to give $10 to the Red Cross by texting "HAITI". Perhaps, instead, these leaders should ask, nay, demand that all those bankers who bungled billions and stole millions in bonuses directly from taxpayers, send some of it to Haiti. Or perhaps, even, to the newly homeless in Houston.
I got this rant. poor guy. if you are interested in this stuff you should click the link and check out that weird story about how they are "targeting the effects industry": Things are going terrible ;) they are slowly deindustrializing LA while canadian taxes subsidizes the industrializing of Vancouver. DD now has a place up in Vancouver. Producers loose "points" for hiring experienced people, and now the industry is setting up artist to pay for their own payroll: irs-and-freelance-dilemma New breed of kids coming in have what they claim a "libratarian" mindset, which is a perversion of the word because in reality they are apolitical and don't want to be told what to do. Kids probably raised with no structure at home because both parents were working now bring that undiciplined mindset to work. So these brats are anti guild/union and think that if "you're good, you don't need a union". Wait until their girlfriends start popping out kids and wants a "house on the westside", then the tune starts to change. But by then they have new kids filling the ranks. Also now companies want artist working at flat rate while in house directors change their mind and work people into 40 hour straight shifts. Any momentum present at organizing artist have been undermined by the artist themselves who have reverted the industry to the bullying tactics that places like DD used to do 15 years ago. I completly blame the artist. Meanwhile Venice and much of LA is becoming a resort town: where people bring their wealth. The only people making money are bestbuy employees making enough to eat at macdonalds, and macdonald employees making enough to buy x-boxes at bestbuy. Grey Matter, where I worked in 2004 on Abbot Kinny, is now a gallery. Where well paid post production people used to sit is a grad from Tish School of Arts making minimum wage as a receptionist, and the folks who make a commission on $10k artwork being sold. It looks like resort gallery towns like Windsor and Healsburg. Meanwhile there are now companies that manage former homes (like the one you rented down here) as furnished luxury rentals. Screw rent control. ;). Hanging out on Venice: all euro foreigners who bring their money, and kids under 30 driving 250K cars. Sorry for the nutz-o rant, it's been eating at me! I hope you are doing well and I scared you enough about LA!
Things are going terrible ;) they are slowly deindustrializing LA while canadian taxes subsidizes the industrializing of Vancouver. DD now has a place up in Vancouver. Producers loose "points" for hiring experienced people, and now the industry is setting up artist to pay for their own payroll:
irs-and-freelance-dilemma
New breed of kids coming in have what they claim a "libratarian" mindset, which is a perversion of the word because in reality they are apolitical and don't want to be told what to do. Kids probably raised with no structure at home because both parents were working now bring that undiciplined mindset to work. So these brats are anti guild/union and think that if "you're good, you don't need a union". Wait until their girlfriends start popping out kids and wants a "house on the westside", then the tune starts to change. But by then they have new kids filling the ranks. Also now companies want artist working at flat rate while in house directors change their mind and work people into 40 hour straight shifts. Any momentum present at organizing artist have been undermined by the artist themselves who have reverted the industry to the bullying tactics that places like DD used to do 15 years ago. I completly blame the artist.
Meanwhile Venice and much of LA is becoming a resort town: where people bring their wealth. The only people making money are bestbuy employees making enough to eat at macdonalds, and macdonald employees making enough to buy x-boxes at bestbuy. Grey Matter, where I worked in 2004 on Abbot Kinny, is now a gallery. Where well paid post production people used to sit is a grad from Tish School of Arts making minimum wage as a receptionist, and the folks who make a commission on $10k artwork being sold. It looks like resort gallery towns like Windsor and Healsburg. Meanwhile there are now companies that manage former homes (like the one you rented down here) as furnished luxury rentals. Screw rent control. ;). Hanging out on Venice: all euro foreigners who bring their money, and kids under 30 driving 250K cars.
Sorry for the nutz-o rant, it's been eating at me! I hope you are doing well and I scared you enough about LA!
Just my own little rant... Parent
Just wait, one day you'll be voting for CST and you won't even know it :)
- although it will probably come out during the campaign, and something I said here will come back to bite me.
Maybe I'll just stick to my other goal of becomming a cabinet member. I always thought it would be nicer to be appointed than elected. Parent
I have to say, though, that I always have had to wonder if all those boisterous Kennedy boys and lively Kennedy girls really did behave so well at the dinner table. We had a strict mom, too, but a woman can do only so much. Maybe it took a village of servants to raise all those Kennedy children to behave well at the table every dinner, every day. Parent
I sense that patriarch Joe was more interested in the substance of current events and the ability of his kids to learn to defend their opinions with facts and logic. Rose, I would guess, probably had more interest in making sure the children were using proper grammar as they discussed issues. Parent
Why do I emphasize Joe? Because time and again in the hundreds of books written about the family you see his family dinner table discussions mentioned, which were, I gather, very memorable and formative events.
Not so much mention of those led by Rose. Though undoubtedly she was in her own way influential with the kids, especially in their religious upbringing. And it's simply a fact that she had a keen interest in correcting the children in their grammar. Even into their adulthood. Parent
There were few joys greater for me than going to the polls with my children, when they were living nearby and registered in the same district. When it came time for my daughter's first vote, she made such a deal of it -- calling the day before to check our schedules and find a time -- and she still talks about it as a big day for her, heading to the polls with her mom.
I always had to take them to the polls with me when they were young, and I swear it pays off later. Other things, maybe not so much.:-) But modeling good citizenship does seem to work. Parent
Surely this will anger the football gods and they will be sure the Lombardi Trophy heads to N'awlins...Go Saints!
Tasering folks, stealing their team in the middle of the night from the loyal Balmer fans, subjecting us to two solid weeks of the Manning family saga. "OMG, Archie played for NO--whoever will he root for?!!11?" Gawh.
Geaux Saints! Parent
At least we salvaged a split...I killed us out there...2 dropped passes, got beaten on two jump balls on D...I'll be sick all week till I can get a shot to redeem myself...one of dem days. Parent
I have no connection to the Aints, so, Colts all the way. Parent
And then the Jets sat on it with a minute left in the half...I understand Rex's reasoning but c'mon, this is the AFC Championship...try to get in position for a FG...you know 17 pts ain't beating the Colts. Parent
The Jets probably went too long trying to avoid having their young QB make mistakes.
Winning with a limited, hamstrung Jets QB nearly worked of course, but in the end Manning's talent wore down the opposition. Parent
If you woulda told me beforehand Sanchez would be up 2-1 in passing TD's at the half, I'd have booked a flight to Miami. Parent
The Saints owner Benson had Poppy Bush as a guest last night. Previously, post-Katrina, he'd strongly hinted he may have to move his team out of N.O., permanently, for Sanan Tone (Benson is a native Texan). Public pressure forced him to back down.
The Colts Irsay is a bit of a mexed missage in terms of his politics (though he's probably a Repub), but to his great credit he was the first NFL owner to come out against Rush Limbaugh owning the Rams. And he did hire black guy/nice guy Tony Dungy as head coach some years back. Parent
Washington -- For hours after allegedly trying to use a bomb in his underwear to blow up a Christmas Day flight to Detroit, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab talked and talked to authorities. He spoke openly about what he'd done and why, and provided valuable intelligence, U.S. officials said in interviews that spell out the details of Abdulmutallab's arrest on Dec. 25. Burned and bleeding, the suspect tried a last gambit as he was taken from the plane: He claimed there was another bomb on board, officials said. There was no second bomb, federal agents learned after a tense search. But the Nigerian suspect's threat set off conversations that are the subject of a fierce political debate over how to handle terrorism suspects. As he was taken from the scene, federal agents repeatedly interviewed him or heard him speak to others. But when they read him his legal rights nearly 10 hours after the incident, he went silent. Since the attempted bombing, several prominent lawmakers have argued he should have been placed immediately in military custody, and the nation's top intelligence official said he should have been questioned by a special group of terror investigators, rather than the FBI agents who responded to the scene.
He spoke openly about what he'd done and why, and provided valuable intelligence, U.S. officials said in interviews that spell out the details of Abdulmutallab's arrest on Dec. 25.
Burned and bleeding, the suspect tried a last gambit as he was taken from the plane: He claimed there was another bomb on board, officials said.
There was no second bomb, federal agents learned after a tense search. But the Nigerian suspect's threat set off conversations that are the subject of a fierce political debate over how to handle terrorism suspects.
As he was taken from the scene, federal agents repeatedly interviewed him or heard him speak to others. But when they read him his legal rights nearly 10 hours after the incident, he went silent.
Since the attempted bombing, several prominent lawmakers have argued he should have been placed immediately in military custody, and the nation's top intelligence official said he should have been questioned by a special group of terror investigators, rather than the FBI agents who responded to the scene.
Ruthann Veal is one of only three people sentenced to die in prison in Iowa for an offense at age 14. Her sentencing judge could not take into account that Ruthann was born to abusive, alcoholic parents who violently beat her because Iowa law makes life-without-parole sentences mandatory for certain offenses.
This is the first reference I have found to the judge citing the "fugitive disentitlement doctrine" at Friday's hrg.
And no, I didn't see any jobs in there . . . . Parent
Running as much against the Bush White House as he was running against Sen. John McCain, Barack Obama easily carried Virginia, New Jersey and Massachusetts in 2008. Yet when Democratic nominees for governor in Virginia and New Jersey and for Senate in Massachusetts sought to tie their GOP opponents to the still-unpopular former president, the strategy didn't resonate. Voters were more focused on the current administration or local political issues -- and the onetime Democratic magic formula seemed yesterday's news. "Voters are pretty tired of the blame game," said longtime Democratic strategist Steve Hildebrand, a top aide on Obama's presidential campaign. "What a stupid strategy that was." Howard Wolfson, a senior official on Hillary Clinton's campaign and veteran Democratic communications guru, noted that his party was able to run against Republican Herbert Hoover's Depression-era presidency for 30 years. "That doesn't seem to be the case here," he Another well-respected Democratic consultant put said. it simply: "Need a new game plan!"
Yet when Democratic nominees for governor in Virginia and New Jersey and for Senate in Massachusetts sought to tie their GOP opponents to the still-unpopular former president, the strategy didn't resonate. Voters were more focused on the current administration or local political issues -- and the onetime Democratic magic formula seemed yesterday's news.
"Voters are pretty tired of the blame game," said longtime Democratic strategist Steve Hildebrand, a top aide on Obama's presidential campaign. "What a stupid strategy that was."
Howard Wolfson, a senior official on Hillary Clinton's campaign and veteran Democratic communications guru, noted that his party was able to run against Republican Herbert Hoover's Depression-era presidency for 30 years.
"That doesn't seem to be the case here," he Another well-respected Democratic consultant put said. it simply: "Need a new game plan!"
A year later, not having tied Bush sufficiently to the economic and foreign war problems, he's largely lost the opportunity to do try to start now.
Of course, another major problem he has: the MSM. Having mostly sat on their hands for 8 yrs of Junior and only occasionally done tough, honest reporting about that admin, they probably weren't going to let Obama's admin get away with too much Bush bashing at any time. Still, Obama should have gone for it and dare the corp media to defend Bush's horrible legacy. Parent
"Obama will also call for caps on some student loans, limiting a borrower's payments to 10 percent of his or her income, and forgiving all remaining debt after 10 years of payment for those in public service work -- and 20 years for all others."
Emphasis mine.
And there is always the enthusiasm gap to look out for. Parent
Sundance officially kicks off tonight with one of my most anticipated films - renowned documentarians and first-time narrative filmmakers Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman's "Howl." Starring James Franco (!), David Strathairn, Jon Hamm (!!), Mary-Louise Parker (!!!), and Jeff Daniels, the film recounts Allen Ginsberg's obscenity trial. Reactions from both myself and all of our criticWIRE participants should be available here starting tomorrow - but here's three short clips to wet your anticipation: