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fundraiser in NYC to help defeat Tom DeLay

Brian Flanagan, James F. Capalino, & Travis Terry
extend a special invitation to IseFire readers to attend an event for

NICK LAMPSON FOR CONGRESS

Come to Chelsea Thursday night and help Nick beat Republican Tom DeLay (TX-22nd Dist.)

Nick_lampson



Where:

The Proproom @ crobar
530 West 28th Street
in Manhattan's Chelsea neighborhood

When:
December 1st, 2005
6:30 – 8:30pm Open bar from 6:30-7:30

Tickets:
$150 Supporters
$75 Guests

Sign-up to be a host and help raise $1000
Larger donations are accepted, needed, and greatly appreciated

Buy Tickets Online at: www.2006housedemvictory.com
For more information contact: info@2006housedemvictory.com


A long-time Texas Democrat, Nick Lampson is fighting to return to Congress and send a message to the Republican Party that we will no longer stand for the deception, corruption and lies. Help elect a solid Democrat to Congress and get the Country headed back in the right direction.

Contributions or gifts to the Nick Lampson for Congress Committee are not tax deductible. The committee may accept contributions from an individual totaling up to $4,200 ($2,100 for the primary and $2,100 for the general election).

Federal law requires the committee to use their best efforts to collect and report the name, mailing address, occupation and name of employer of individuals whose contributions exceed $200 in an election cycle.

Michael Kinsley's "The Phony War Against the Critics"

From The Washington Post, Friday, November 25, 2005; A37

"One might also argue," Vice President Cheney said in a speech on Monday, "that untruthful charges against the commander in chief have an insidious effect on the war effort." That would certainly be an ugly and demagogic argument, were one to make it. After all, if untruthful charges against the president hurt the war effort (by undermining public support and soldiers' morale), then those charges will hurt the war effort even more if they happen to be true. So one would be saying in effect that any criticism of the president is essentially treason.

Lest one fear that he might be saying that, Cheney immediately added, "I'm unwilling to say that" -- "that" being what he had just said. He generously granted critics the right to criticize (as did the president this week). Then he resumed hurling adjectives like an ape hurling coconuts at unwanted visitors. "Dishonest." "Reprehensible." "Corrupt." "Shameless." President Bush and others joined in, all morally outraged that anyone would accuse the administration of misleading us into war by faking a belief that Saddam Hussein possessed nuclear and/or chemical and biological weapons.

Interestingly, the administration no longer claims that Hussein actually had such weapons at the time Bush led the country into war in order to eliminate them. "The flaws in the intelligence are plain enough in hindsight," Cheney said on Monday. So-called WMD (weapons of mass destruction) were not the only argument for the war, but the administration thought they were a crucial argument at the time. So the administration now concedes that the country went to war on a false premise. Doesn't that mean that the war was a mistake no matter where the false premise came from?

Cheney and others insist that Bush couldn't possibly have misled anyone about WMD since everybody had assumed for years, back into the Clinton administration, that there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. That's why any criticism of Bush on this point is corrupt, reprehensible, distasteful, odiferous, infectious and so on. But this indignation is belied by Cheney's own remarks in the 2000 election. In the vice presidential debate, for example, Cheney was happy to agree with Bush that Saddam Hussein's possession of weapons of mass destruction would be a good enough reason to "take him out." But he did not assume that Hussein already had such weapons. And he certainly did not assume that this view was the general consensus. "We'll have to see if that happens," he said. "It's unfortunate we find ourselves in a position where we don't know for sure what might be transpiring inside Iraq. I certainly hope he's not regenerating that kind of capability."

If you're looking for revisionist history, don't waste your time on the war's critics. Google up Cheney's bitter critique, in the 2000 campaign, of President Bill Clinton's military initiatives, specifically the need for more burden sharing by allies and a sharply defined "exit strategy." At the time, there were about 11,000 American troops in Bosnia and Kosovo, working alongside about 55,000 from allied countries. If only!

Until last week, the antiwar position in the debate over Iraq closely resembled the pro-war position in the ancient debate over Vietnam. That is: It was a mistake to get in, but now that we're in we can't just cut and run. That was the logic on which Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger took over the Vietnam War four years after major American involvement began and kept it going for another four. American "credibility" depended on our keeping our word, however foolish that word might have been. In the end, all the United States wanted was a "decent interval" between our departure and the North Vietnamese triumph -- and we didn't even get that. Thousands of Americans died in Vietnam after America's citizens and government were in general agreement that the war was a mistake.

We are now very close to that point of general agreement in the Iraq war. Do you believe that if Bush, Cheney and company could turn back the clock, they would do this again? And now, thanks to Rep. John Murtha, it is permissible to say, or at least to ask, "Why not just get out now? Or at least soon, on a fixed schedule?" There are arguments against this -- some good, some bad -- but the worst is the one delivered by Cheney and others with their most withering scorn. It is the argument that it is wrong to tell American soldiers risking their lives in a foreign desert that they are fighting for a mistake.

One strength of this argument is that it doesn't require defending the war itself. The logic applies equally whether the war is justified or not. Another strength is that the argument is true, in a way: It is a terrible thing to tell someone he or she is risking death in a mistaken cause. But it is more terrible actually to die in that mistaken cause.

The longer the war goes on, the more Americans, "allies" and Iraqis will die. That is not a slam-dunk argument for ending this foreign entanglement. But it is worth keeping in mind while you try to decide whether American credibility or Iraqi prosperity or Middle East stability can justify the cost in blood and treasure. And don't forget to factor in the likelihood that the war will actually produce these fine things.

The last man or woman to die in any war almost surely dies in vain: The outcome has been determined, if not certified. And he or she might die happier thinking that death came in a noble cause that will not be abandoned. But if it is not a noble cause, he or she might prefer not to die at all. Stifling criticism that might shorten the war is no favor to American soldiers. They can live without that kind of "respect."

"God and Country"

Just a reminder that if you're looking for reading material for the long Thanksgiving weekend, you can't go wrong with a print-out of articles from the current Mother Jones special edition, "God and Country."

The magazine is generously offers readers of Religious Right Watch and IseFire online access to their special edition issue through a free subscriber code.

Just go to MotherJones.com, use subscriber code MJ5RES.

Camp Casey returns

From Bob Fertik at Democrats.com:

Camp Casey is back....

Come to Crawford for Thanksgiving with the Bushes!
SPONSORS: GOLD STAR FAMILIES FOR PEACE & CRAWFORD PEACE HOUSE

ENDORSED BY:
Iraq Veterans Against the War,
Veterans For Peace,
Code Pink

Date: November 22 - 27, 2005
Place: Crawford, Texas (Camp Casey 2)
Events:
11/22: Civil Disobedience
11/23: Organization of Katrina Relief/Meal Preparation
11/24: Simple Thanksgiving Meal
11/25: Memorial Dedication
11/26: March/Rally - Possible Interfaith Service

Talk To Action Launch Coincides with Special Mother Jones Edition on The Religious Right

Churchsign Talk to Action (TTA), a website dedicated to fostering coordinated responses to, and educational discussions about, the Religious Right launches today, to coincide with the publication of Mother Jones' special issue, "God and Country."

Please go to TTA right away and register to become a user. (It's free.) You'll enjoy the ability of read, interact, and learn relative to the subject of the Religious Right's massive influence in American politics, policy, culture, education, government, and law.

Also, you can read the Mother Jones special edition online for FREE. The magazine is generously offers readers of Religious Right Watch and IseFire online access to their special edition issue through a free subscriber code.

Just go to MotherJones.com, use subscriber code MJ5RES, and be a part of history.

This ground-breaking special issue of Mother Jones, "God and Country, Where the Christian Right Is Leading Us," brings together some of the most important writers and thinkers about the Religion Right today, and will be a milestone in the national discussion about where the Religious Right is leading America.

The TTA Team

Today Talk to Action launches!

Who's the Talk To Action team?

TTA is an exciting development: a website dedicated to taking action in response to, and fostering educational discussions relating to, the Religious Right in America. Involved are authors, journalists, commentators, experts, and educators:

Chip Berlet is Senior Analyst at Political Research Associates. He has researched and written about the Right for 25 years.

Joan Bokaer is the founder of Theocracy Watch.

Max Blumenthal writes for The Nation and The Huffington Post, among other places. He works at Media Matters for America.

Cynthia Cooper is an attorney, journalist, and playwright. She is a regular contributor to Womens eNews.

Michelle Goldberg is a Senior Writer at Salon.com. She has just finished a book on Christian nationalism.

Jonathan Hutson is an attorney and the communications director of Trial Lawyers for Public Justice.

Scott Isebrand has an MA in religion from Yale and operates the blog site, Religious Right Watch.

Esther Kaplan is a contributing editor at The Nation, and has a new book, With God on Their Side.

Michelle Murrain recently left a career in the tech industry to go to seminary at the Pacific School of Religion.

Bruce Prescott blogs at Mainstream Baptist, and is the exec. dir. of Mainstream Oklahoma Baptists.

Joel Pelleteir is an artist whose extraordinary painting, American Fundamentalists, is touring the country.

Pastordan is a UCC minister and runs the new blog site, Street Prophets.

Carlos Stouffer operates the blog site, Jesus Politics.

Sunfell is a veteran of the U.S. Air Force, and operates the blog site Dark Christianity.

Bruce Wilson is a longtime blogger and is leading the building of the TTA web site.

Jack Murtha - The New Walter Cronkite?

No I am not suggesting that Jack Murtha is going to be the next anchor of the CBS Evening News.  However, I am suggesting Jack Murtha's coming out for withdrawal from Iraq may be similar to Walter Cronkite's coming out for withdrawal from Vietnam in 1968.

Walter Cronkite came out in early 1968 for withdrawal from Vietnam in a rare commentary on his newscast.  Cronkite was so respected that many people believe it was the blow that galvanized public opinion against Vietnam.  One thing is certain shortly after this Lyndon Johnson announced he would not seek another term as President and it is not a coincidence. 

Jack Murtha is not Walter Cronkite or held in the same respect by Americans as Cronkite.  However, he is one of the most respected Democrats in the area of defense policy.  He is not a blowhard or press hound so his decision to go public with his views was big news.  For an inside player the coverage of his decision was amazing and a sign of the respect with which he is held in this area.  Additionally, the Republican's panic at his announcement culminating in Friday's nights resolution which blew up in there face also signals this announcement was a big deal.

I suspect we will look on this moment as a turning point in the homeland debate about Iraq in much the same way we look at Walter Cronkite's similar decision as the turning point in the debate over Vietnam.

-uppereastdem

A summing-up

Gorevidal This past week Gore Vidal accepted PEN's lifetime achievement award from writer and director David Mamet. Vidal summarized the state of the republic aptly:

"We suffer under a tyrannous regime while a number of small nations are dedicated to our destruction. They are jealous of a people encased in fat and on a constant diet of a hurricane of lies."

Renewing The Democratic Party

(This is the first post by new IseFire contributor, UpperEastSideDem.)

Renewing the Democratic Party

The past five years have been tough for those of us who are progressives.  While this week’s elections were heartening it is clear that the Democratic Party needs to identify new issues and ideas to push in the 21st Century. We need to move forward with the modernization of the Democratic Party so that it remains progressive but also relevant to the needs of Americans.

Defense/Security Policy

Despite all the discussion about “values” being the turning point of the 2004 election, national security is clearly where the Democrats lost the last election.  The Bush team scared enough people into thinking that Democrats were weak on defense and would let another terrorist attack occur on US soil.  While this is obviously not true, the Democratic Party has been uncomfortable with the use of force and in a post 9/11 world we must get over this hump to be a successful national party.

This does not mean supporting the invasion of Iraq or being war mongers.  However, we need to convince the public that we are not afraid to use force when necessary and have a strong, reasonable policies to protect our nation. 

One solution is to adopt the “Powell Doctrine” which has been abandoned by the Republicans.  The Powell Doctrine says that the US should only go to war with clear political objectives, overwhelming force and with an exit plan/rebuilding strategy.  This is common sense but this administration has ignored these tenets.  Picking up this mantra as the policy of the Democratic Party will help highlight this fact. 

Foreign Policy

The Bush Administration has thrown away 60 years of internationalism in favor of unilateralism.  While the US should never seek the permission of its allies to protect itself, it should not operate in a vacuum where the views of our allies don’t count.  We must work to restore the credibility we have lost in the past 5 years.

Fiscal Policy

The Democratic Party is clearly the party of fiscal responsibility.  All you have to do is compare the Clinton years with the Bush years.  The 1990s proved that good fiscal policy is good for the economy.  We must emphasize this fact.  Most people are not better off than they were 5+ years ago and we should link the deficit to the economy as Bill Clinton did so effectively in 1992.

The Democrats should also propose reforms on how the federal budget is developed to bring it into line with 21st Century budgeting.  Specifically, the federal government should use the rules that state and local governments operate by – it is okay to borrow for infrastructure and public works, not okay to borrow for operating and entitlement expenses.  Operating and entitlement costs should only be funded with tax revenues which would make it much harder for the Republicans to push unfunded tax cuts and corporate welfare programs.

Borrowing should be permitted for public works projects and defense spending because it has tangible value and can amortized over a number years.  This would allow the federal government to finance needed infrastructure projects and defense needs in time of war or national emergency but would prevent the reckless tax and budgeting policy we have seen in the last 5 years.

Energy Independence

This will likely become one of the biggest issues of the next 5-10 years.  We have been reliant on fossil fuels for last 100 years but every year the US becomes more and more dependent on the Middle East for oil.  Reducing our dependence on foreign oil could help bring energy prices down while also helping decrease the amount of money being sent to countries which finance terrorists.

The Democratic Party should take Dick Gephardt’s mantra that if we can put a man on the moon in 10 years we can make this country energy independent in the same amount of time.

The Republican Party is literally run by former oil company executives and is wedded to the policies of old.  The Democratic Party has a unique opportunity to seize this issue and push the US to develop new energy sources which are more affordable, renewable and cleaner.

In my next post, I will address other issues that the Democrats need to focus on including healthcare, education, tax policy, worker retraining and Social Security/retirement security.

Is the sun setting or rising?

Consider the design of the DefCon site--a good site getting even better, and dedicated to the worthy cause of combating the Religous Right.

The photograph on the home page is one of the most original photographs of D.C. I’ve seen—it captures how the city, as an echo of the nation as a whole, sprawls with self-consciously imperial grandeur but, metaphorically speaking, is also a shadowy and even sometimes ominous place (which is also an echo of the nation as a whole, frankly, though amplified). The photo works so well with the site, and can also be read to suggest either that the darkness of dominionism is overtaking us, or rather that “the lights are coming on in America" (the title of a Frederick Clarkson post about the Religious Right many months ago) in response to the darkness of ignorance being imposed on the republic.

Defcon