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Month: June 2007

Travesty of Logic

by digby

Ron Christy on MSNBC was robotically on Scooter message, repeating the phrase “travesty of justice” over and over again.


Talking points ad nauseum:

  • Fitzgerald introduced evidence not introduced at trial. (Does anybody out there know what that talking point is about? He claims that this will allow the appeals court to throw out the verdict. It’s a new one to me.)
  • This was a “process” crime of he said/she said because Ari Fleisher never talked to Walter Pincus.
  • It’s a travesty of justice.
  • The case should never have been brought because they already knew that Richard Armitage was the one who leaked and anyway Sandy Berger got away with murder.
  • Scooter will win his appeal, but the president should pardon him too because the whole thing is horrible, horrible horrible because he was improperly railroaded by a runaway prosecutor.
  • It’s a travesty of a travesty of justice!!@!!

The most interesting thing about this is that Pat Buchanan, of all people, is doing an excellent job of defending the prosecutor, the judge and the verdict. He keeps saying “he was tried by Bush’s own justice department and convicted by a jury.” he says, “these guys have to play by the same rules as everyone else.”

(Are pigs flying around your head right now?)

For once I’m glad they didn’t book any Democrats.

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Fasten Your Seat Belts

by digby

The shrieking harpies are about to go berserk. Scooter was denied his request to stay out of jail on appeal.

I hear there is going to be a candlelight vigil at the Lincoln memorial led by David Broder and Mary Matalin tonight. Tony Blankley is talking about a hunger strike (some think it’s just a way to motivate himself for his latest diet) and Sean Hannity is going to make a pilgrimage to Selma and spray himself with a garden hose in solidarity with his brother Scooter. (Ann Coulter is also scheduled to hang Hillary in effigy down in South Beach but that was planned well before the Scooter verdict.)

The rest of the DC insiders are planning to fan out onto TV later today to emit primal screams and flagellate themselves, after which they will gather in various secret locations to drink martinis and pray.

They shall overcome.

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Not My Problem

by digby

Rudy Giuliani quote of the day:

“What I was trying to do was to look at the things, as best as you can predict it now, that are going to be there a year and a half from now,” he said. “Iraq may get better; Iraq may get worse. We may be successful in Iraq; we may not be. I don’t know the answer to that. That’s in the hands of other people. But what we do know for sure is the terrorists are going to be at war with us a year, a year and a half from now.”

Are we being had by the Republicans? It must be some kind of elaborate joke because they can’t actually be serious about this. Not after Bush. C’mon.

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Thong Of Tholoman

by digby

Huckabee quote of the day:

Q: I read that you’re against miniskirts.

A: If a person dresses provocatively, they’re calling attention — maybe not the most desirable kind — to private parts of their body.

Q: What about a burka?

A: No, that hides everything. I think a person’s hair, arms, shoulders, legs are an appropriate display of who they are. I want people to be attracted to me because they find me interesting, not because I’m wearing something … well, I doubt I own anything provocative.

Q: How about a minskirt?

A: A thong.

I’ll just let you all think about that for a while.

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Bubblicious

by digby

Can someone tell me what hold Scooter Libby has on everyone in Washington that he can even get Barack Obama’s general counsel to go to bat for him? Pictures? Videos? What?

Bush’s opposition has braced for a pardon and its rage at the prospect is building. To Bush’s antagonists on left, a pardon would be only another act in the conspiracy — a further cover-up, a way of getting away with it. But this is the entirely wrong way of seeing things. A pardon is just what Bush’s opponents should want.

A pardon brings the president into the heart of the case. It compels him to do what he has so far managed to avoid: accept in some way responsibility for the conduct of his Administration in communicating with the public about national security and in its treatment of dissent. If the pardon would be politically explosive, then this is what the administration’s critics, hungering for accountability, have been waiting for. The case against this government on the larger charge of abuse of power is diminished, made even laughable, by resolving into a 30-month sentence for an obscure figure named Libby.

A presidential pardon is finally an intervention by the President, his emergence from behind the thick curtain he has dropped between him and these momentous events involving his government, his policy, his Vice President. By pardoning Libby, he acknowledges that Libby is not really the one to confront the administration’s accusers. Now the president, the true party in interest, would confront them, which is what his opponents have demanded all along.

Well, that’s a slick argument — if you happen to be a 12 year old. (General counsel? Really?) A Libby pardon means that Bush will finally be paying the price for his administration’s Iraq war because he will have to take the heat. Right. My question is, from whom? Atrios? Jane Hamsher? Because I don’t see that anybody in the press will say much, and there certainly will not be an uproar. They are, after all, implicated in this case and have every reason to portray the pardon as the reversal of a miscarriage of justice, which is exactly how it is being sold. And now that major Democrats seem to be actively supporting the pardon in some byzantine plan to make Bush “look bad” (as if he cares) it would seem that “accountability” means never having to say you’re sorry.

But then, when you have someone who reads history like this, you shouldn’t be surprised:

Nothing in the nature of the pardon renders it inappropriate to these purposes. The issuance of a presidential pardon, not reserved for miscarriages of justice, has historically also served political functions — to redirect policy, to send a message, to associate the president with a cause or position. Gerald Ford radically altered the nation’s politics with the pardon of Richard Nixon. Credited with an act of national healing, he also spared the man who had selected him for the vice presidency and whose prosecution might have haunted his party even more than the act of pardoning him. He reshaped with a stroke of the pen the national agenda: this pardon, he told Congress, was meant to “change our national focus.” George W. Bush’s father expressed his contempt for the opposition’s “criminalization” of policy differences, with a batch of pardons for high Republican officials convicted in the Iran-Contra scandals .

In each of these cases, the president who issued the pardons was, by determining the course of a criminal matter, redefining its political significance and acquiring in it a personal and lasting place. By pardoning Libby, Bush will have done the same. Presidential fingerprints, so far nowhere to be found in this case, will surface at last, indelibly, on the pardon.

Presidential fingerprints are already on this case, as everybody knows, and which historians will have no problem finding. After all, Libby worked in the white house and was a special counsel to both the president and vice president. I don’t think we need to worry about the “case” against the Bush administration’s Iraq lies dying with Libby’s prison sentence. It’s a pretty big case.

The idea that Republicans paid a price for their previous pardons is laughable. In fact, they paid such a huge price that one of the people Bush senior pardoned is working in the white house today! The “political significance” was that it encouraged Republicans to commit crimes while in office knowing that there will be no price to pay. I’m not sure why Democrats should find this a positive, but that’s just me.

Ever since Nixon, the Republicans have been getting away with criminal behavior when they are in power. Nixon was allowed to resign and was pre-emptively pardoned. His minions all took their punishment like men, however, and did their time without complaints. But that was the last time. After the multiple crimes committed in Iran-Contra — big ones, to do with national security and unconstitutional executive power-grabs — the Republicans decided they had nothing to lose by pardoning their criminal underlings and so they did.

Once Bill “he’s not my president” Clinton was elected, the rules changed of course, and they tried to run him out of office with endless partisan witch hunts and impeachment over consensual sexual behavior. For the coup de grace, they had a full-blown hissy fit over his pardon of Marc Rich — who was represented by Scooter Libby! Now they are clutching their pearls once again about a Republican being the victim of the long arm of the law and the pundits (and now some Democrats) are whining about how he must never see the inside of a jail because he is such a fine fellow and the horrible Republican appointed prosecutor was out to get him.

So excuse me for being skeptical that a pardon will somehow blow back on Bush. Of course it won’t. Bush will instead be (temporarily, perhaps) rehabilitated by his party and considered a thoughtful statesmanlike gentleman by the press for having the compassion and decency to spare someone of Scooter’s superior humanity from rubbing shoulders with hoi polloi.

I don’t know why Scooter is so damned special that everybody in Washington is having the vapors over the fact that he may have to do time. (I know if I were Jack Abramoff, I’d be a little bit miffed that nobody is lifting a finger after the tens of millions I’d funneled to all my good friends.)I mused yesterday that it was because the town elders are circling the wagons around one of their own, and I think that’s part of it.

But it appears that this is actually something more and it’s beginning to smell very ugly to me. The political and media establishment are making an explicit argument that high level Republicans really should be held to a lower standard than other Americans — the exact opposite of the argument they made in the Clinton impeachment, where they insisted that a non-material lie about a private sexual matter in a dismissed case was so important that it required a duly elected and successful president be removed from office. Perhaps the problem is simply that the it’s a capitol full of lawyers, who tailor their arguments for each individual case. Unfortunately, the only client seems to be the Republican party.

The fact is that the Libby case is simply not partisan. The Democrats were completely out of power and had nothing to do with it, so the cries of witchhunt and prosecutorial misconduct are absurd on their faces. Patrick Fitzgerald is the kind of prosecutor Republicans usually revere — a by-the-book believer in the letter of the law. Yet they are making these specious arguments anyway and they are quite likely, in my estimation, to make them work, through sheer insider power.

I frankly never cared if Scooter did time or got probation or did community service. But nice people get jail sentences that seem harsh every day in this country and all of Scooter’s friends are the first ones to say the judge should throw away the keys. Certainly, George “please don’t kill me, please don’t kill me” Bush is not known for his compassion when it comes to matters of sentencing. So all this special pleading is especially distasteful coming from these people.

I’m not big on blog triumphalism, but if there is one thing we bring to the table it’s that our distance from that milieu brings some perspective to it. And from where I sit we have a decadent elite who rule on behalf of a political party that finds authoritarianism quite appealing — as long as they aren’t personally subject to it. Pardon me for thinking that might not be the best thing for the country.


Update:
The good news is that Obama himself does not endorse this view. But the thinking in this post is so convoluted and frankly, embarrassing, that I would hope Obama would never appeal to this guy for any kind of serious advice.

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Dumb Xenophobes R Us

by digby

Chris Matthews has tried to wrap his inchoate mind around this question a few times, but for the most part nobody seems to get what a ridiculous proposition Rudy Giuliani is peddling with his proposal to “identify every non-citizen in our nation.” I assume from what he said in the debates that he means to do this by forcing all the non-citizens to carry ID cards:

GIULIANI: The problem with this immigration plan is it has no real unifying purpose. It’s a typical Washington mess. It’s everybody compromises — four or five compromises.

And the compromises leave you with the following conclusion: The litmus test you should have for legislation is, is it going to make things better? And when you look at these compromises, it is quite possible it will make things worse. The organizing purpose should be that our immigration laws should allow us to identify everyone who is in this country that comes here from a foreign country.

They should have a tamper-proof I.D. card. It should be in a database that allows you to figure out who they are, why they’re here, make sure they’re not illegal immigrants coming here for a bad purpose, and then to be able to throw out the ones who are not in that database.

We can do that. Credit card companies…

BLITZER: Thank you.

GIULIANI: … take care of data that is greater than that.

Does anyone have any idea what in the hell he’s talking about? How is this supposed to work? Run anyone who Rudy (or someone else) thinks looks like they might be foreign through the database? Demand that people with foreign accents be prepared to show their ID’s and if they don’t have them — force them to prove they aren’t illegal immigrants? Implant tourists and foreign businessmen with a homing device when they come through the border? I don’t get it.

The fact is that this scheme only makes sense if everybody carries a tamper proof national ID, which could be demanded by law enforcement and employers for any reason they choose. Some people think this is a good idea, others don’t. I think it’s completely unnecessary. But let’s not pretend that Rudy’s nonsensical idea could possibly work any other way.

Xenophobia is the new black (if you know what I mean) in this campaign so I’m not entirely surprised. But after George W. Bush the press really should hold these candidates to a higher standard than Junior-style gibberish. I’m not holding my breath.

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Principled Conservatives

by digby

Decorated Iraq war veteran Anthony Circosta seemed like an ideal candidate for a pardon from then-Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney for his boyhood conviction for a BB gun shooting.

Romney said no — twice — despite the recommendation of the state’s Board of Pardons.

At age 13, Circosta was convicted of assault for shooting another boy in the arm with a BB gun, a shot that didn’t break the skin. Circosta worked his way through college, joined the Army National Guard and led a platoon of 20 soldiers in Iraq’s deadly Sunni triangle.

In 2005, as he was serving in Iraq, he sought a pardon to fulfill his dream of becoming a police officer.

“I’ve done everything I can to give back to my state and my community and my country and to get brushed aside is very frustrating,” said Circosta, 29, of Agawam, Mass. “I’m not some shlub off the street.”

In his presidential bid, Romney often proudly points out that he was the first governor in modern Massachusetts history to deny every request for a pardon or commutation during his four years in office. He says he refused pardons because he didn’t want to overturn a jury.

But critics argue that the blanket policy is an abdication of a key power given governors and the president — the ability to recognize how someone convicted of a past crime has turned their life around.

During the four years Romney was in office, 100 requests for commutations and 172 requests for pardons were filed in the state. All were denied.

“Governor Romney’s view is that it would take a compelling set of circumstances to set aside the punishment and guilt resulting from a criminal trial,” said Romney aide Eric Fehrnstrom, who added he was not familiar with Circosta’s case. “The power to pardon should only be used in extraordinary circumstances.”

I’m afraid this Iraq war vet is a schlub off the street. The Mittster would only consider using the power of the pardon for someone a little bit more worthy:

BLITZER: I just want to do a quick “yes” or “no.” And I’m going to go down the rest of the group and let everybody just tell me “yes” or “no”: Would you pardon Scooter Libby?

ROMNEY: This is one of those situations where I go back to my record as governor. I didn’t pardon anybody as governor, because I didn’t want to overturn a jury.

But in this case, you have a prosecutor who clearly abused prosecutorial discretion by going after somebody when he already knew that the source of the leak was Richard Armitage.

He’d been told that. So he went on a political vendetta.

BLITZER: Was that a yes?

ROMNEY: It’s worth looking at that. I will study it very closely if I’m lucky enough to be president. And I’d keep that option open.

But that slapping flip-flop is nothing compared to this one:

GIULIANI: I think the sentence was way out of line. I mean, the sentence was grossly excessive in a situation in which, at the beginning, the prosecutor knew who the leak was…

BLITZER: So, yes or no, would you pardon him?

GIULIANI: … and he knew a crime wasn’t committed. I recommended over a thousand pardons to President Reagan when I was associate attorney general. I would see if it fit the criteria for pardon. I’d wait for the appeal.

I think what the judge did today argues more in favor of a pardon because…

BLITZER: Thank you.

GIULIANI: … this is excessive punishment.

BLITZER: All right.

GIULIANI: When you consider — I’ve prosecuted 5,000 cases.

BLITZER: I’m trying to get a yes or no.

(LAUGHTER)

GIULIANI: Well, this is a very important issue. This is a very, very important — a man’s life is at stake. And the reality is, this is an incomprehensible situation.

They knew who the leak was.

ROMNEY: Hey, Wolf, can I explain…

GIULIANI: And ultimately, there was no underlying crime involved.

Oh, Rudy, Rudy, Rudy, do you think we’re stupid?

Rudolph Giuliani, who ran for mayor of New York City as a crimebuster, will be remembered instead as the federal prosecutor who made RICO famous. The law, passed as part of an organized-crime bill in 1970, had the sole purpose of strengthening the hand of prosecutors trying to lock up mobsters. One of the original proposals was a simple provision making it a crime to be a member of the Mafia. The Supreme Court frowns on so-called status crimes, however, so Congress instead tried to write RICO to cover the mob without mentioning it by name. It wound up writing the definition so broadly that almost any activity can become racketeering.” All it takes is two “predicate acts” within ten years as part of a “pattern” involving a criminal enterprise.” In other words, RICO violations are the American equivalent of the Soviet crime of hooliganism.

The Justice Department understood the risks of RICO well enough to send U. S. attorneys a separate set of guidelines for using it. Mr. Giuliani apparently never got his copy. The guidelines tell prosecutors not to bring “‘imaginative’ prosecutions under RICO which are far afield from the congressional purpose of the RICO statute,” defined as “the infiltration of organized crime into the nation’s economy.” Prosecutors are also prohibited from using RICO to coerce a plea bargain or persuade a witness to testify. These safeguards are necessary because of the pre-trial powers RICO gives prosecutors, including the ability to get a court order freezing the assets of a target before trial.

The dry run for the Milken trial was the case Mr. Giuliani brought against the comparatively small securities firm of Princeton/Newport. The racketeering counts arose from end-of-year tax trades that prosecutors claimed were shams. No such case had ever been tried under RICO or under any other criminal statute, and there remains a good case that the trades were perfectly legal, but Princeton/Newport was apparently only a means to a greater end. A defense lawyer told a reporter that a prosecutor had told him: “We have no real interest in Princeton/Newport” except as a way to “get Drexel Burnham Lambert and others. We have bigger fish to fry and we will roll over you to get where we want to go.”

Prosecutors deny the quote, but roll they did. They demanded pre-trial seizures of $23.8 million from the firm. Investors such as the Harvard endowment decided they couldn’t risk having their investments seized, so they pulled out, forcing Princeton/Newport into liquidation before trial.

Rudy Giuliani is also the guy who invented the perp walk (after which he often dropped the charges for lack of evidence.) Romney wouldn’t even pardon a war hero who had a blight on his record from when he was 13 years old. And both of these guys are whining and blubbering like four year olds about how unfair Patrick Fitzgerald was to pursue poor little Scooter.

These people can say and do anything and get away with it. Anything.

H/T joejoejoe

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The Deciders

by digby

Is it just me or is the DC establishment’s circling of the wagons around Scooter just a little bit over the top, even for them? I mean, I can appreciate the fact that he’s one of them and they think he’s been targeted by a runaway Republican prosecutor and a runaway Republican judge. (It happens.) But this rending of garments over him going to jail is verging on hysteria.

Even Condi, who is known for her calm — some might say somnambulent — rhetoric, waxes Hallmark when it comes to Scoot:

SECRETARY RICE: Look, let me tell you what I think about Scooter Libby. I think he’s served the country really well. I think he did it to the best of his ability. I think that he is going through an extremely difficult time with his family and for him. And you know, I’m just desperately sorry that it’s happening to him and I — you know, the legal system has spoken, but I tell you, this is a really good guy who is a good public servant and ought to be treated in accordance with that.

The entire “village” is beside themselves over this, in much the same way they worked themselves into a frenzy over Clinton’s hallway trysts. It’s that same phony, operatic fervor that leaves the rest of the country wondering what in the hell these people are smoking. Libby may be a friend, but these bilious paeans to his “goodness” and excusing his behavior from everyone from Joe Klein to Condi Rice is verging on bizarre.

This case is not hard for normal people to understand. Libby was convicted in a court of law for perjury and obstruction of justice. It happens every day. It was not a partisan witch hunt — the prosecutor and the judge were both appointed by George W. Bush and confirmed by a Republican Senate. And while there was plenty of kibitzing in the blogosphere, there were no leaks or manipulation of the press by the prosecutor and he’s continued to be tight lipped since the trial.

Scooter screwed up, pure and simple and whether it was on his own or to cover for his boss, it doesn’t matter. To those of us who live out here in the real world, his conviction is not a surprising outcome. If you screw up when you are dealing with the FBI, the DOJ and the CIA and you get caught — you pay. End of story. Yet, the DC establishment is weeping and wailing and clutching their pearls over this as if Scooter were Emmett Till while the rest of us watch with our jaws agape at their disorienting, inconsistent worldview that seems to operate on some other plane than the rest of us. When we joke about Versailles on the Potomac, this is what we’re talking about.

It is not surprising that people like Scooter Libby and Paris Hilton refuse to accept responsibility for their actions. They are rich and spoiled and don’t believe that the rules apply to them. But unlike the limousine liberal Hollywood left, the conservative, law and order DC establishment enlists all of their heavy hitters to keep poor Scooter out of jail no matter what. Here in LA the only one making an ass of herself defending Paris is her mother, who, like the DC courtiers, verbally assaulted the prosecutor and the judge, much to Paris’ detriment. It’s one thing for a dim-witted socialite to do it in defense of her daughter, but it’s a sad day when highest levels of the DC establishment issue puerile threats of political retribution and obscenely assert that “a good man” like their friend Scooter shouldn’t have to pay for his crimes.

It seems to me that like provincial elders from the beginning of time, these insiders believe that only they get to decide which witches should be burned and which ones shouldn’t. Outsiders like Patrick Fitzgerald, the career federal prosecutor, have no business interfering. Unlike that nice Republican judge, Ken Starr, who they all agreed understood what needed to be done, he’s not one of them. Scooter is, and when Fitzgerald held him to the same standard as the little people, he broke their rules.

The problem, of course, is that their “town” isn’t really their town and these town elders haven’t been elected by anybody. It’s the seat of government of the most powerful nation on earth and their little social construct has ramifications for everyone on the planet. When they become screaming gorgons to irrationally protect one of their own (or destroy an outsider) they are telling people that they “are different from you and me,” which may have been fine in feudal Europe, but it’s a little out of place in 21st century America.

My advice for Scooter is to tell all these crybabies to back off and take a lesson from Martha Stewart, who showed twice the class and three times the grit he has. Shut up, suck it up and do your time. It won’t be the end of the world — he’ll have a lifetime of wingnut welfare waiting for him when he gets out and the GOP mafia will take care of his family while he’s in the joint. Let’s face it, his career in government was over anyway — anyone closely associated with Dick Cheney now has the mark of the kevorka. No president will ever trust him again. So, show some class and take it like a man. It’s not such a bad fate for a man who helped bring misery, heartache and death to hundreds of thousands of people.

I’m not sure what to do about the DC establishment, but something must done. They may run the social circuit in their “town” but they don’t own this country and somebody needs to make sure these “elders” understand the difference.

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Rash, Devious, Incapable Of Admitting Error

by digby

Following up on my post about Huckabee, below, I was pointed to this column by Arkansas homeboy Gene Lyons that smartly reminds everyone how well Huckabee would fit in with the soft on crime Republicans in Washington:

Becoming governor after Kenneth Starr convicted Democrat Jim Guy Tucker, Huckabee executed a classic Clintonian straddle. A Baptist preacher invulnerable from the right, he took progressive stances on education reform and Medicaid insurance for poor children—made possible by former President Clinton’s policies. Contrary to Huckabee’s claims, however, taxes and government employment rose steadily during his decade in office, along with the state’s population.

Even so, what’s more likely to prevent him from succeeding in national politics is Huckabee’s role in the appalling saga of Wayne DuMond.

DuMond was the Arkansas celebrity inmate of the 1990s. Convicted of raping a Forrest City high school cheerleader at knife point in 1985, he became famous for two reasons.

First, somebody castrated him while he was free on bond awaiting trial. (Local investigators said they suspected drunken self-mutilation, not unknown among sex offenders.) Worse, the local sheriff exhibited DuMond’s testicles in a jar of formaldehyde, an Arkansas-gothic stunt triggering rumors of vigilante justice.

Second, DuMond’s victim, who’d recognized her attacker on the street weeks after the crime, was a distant cousin of Clinton. That excited the kinds of conspiracy nuts who circulated Clinton “death lists.” They portrayed DuMond as a victim of the Clinton machine’s satanic wrath. His innocence became an article of faith on the fruitcake right.

Huckabee came into office talking about pardoning DuMond, citing “serious questions as to the legitimacy of his guilt.” He did that without consulting the prosecutor, who described the case as one of the strongest he’d ever tried. If nothing else, what were the odds that the victim would have identified, purely by chance, a perp with an extensive rap sheet? DuMond’s criminal history included arrests for murder and assault as well as other allegations of rape. He’d beaten the murder rap by testifying against two accomplices he’d helped beat a soldier to death with a claw hammer. The rape cases never came to trial. Young Ashley Stevens’ courageous eyewitness testimony, however, sent him to the penitentiary. After Stevens went public in 1997, Huckabee relented somewhat. Instead of pardoning DuMond, he held an improper closed-door meeting with the state’s parole board, which subsequently reversed itself, paroling DuMond to Missouri. Huckabee claimed the board brought up DuMond; some board members insisted that he did. Huckabee wrote a “Dear Wayne” letter, stating, “My desire is that you be released from prison. I feel that parole is the best way for your reintroduction into society to take place.”

In June 2001, DuMond was charged with the murder of a Kansas City area woman, exactly as some of us predicted. Police found his DNA under the victim’s fingernails. Stevens said that when she heard the news on her car radio, she had to pull off the highway until she’d cried herself out. Convicted of first-degree murder, Du-Mond died in prison in 2005. No sooner was his Missouri arrest announced than Huckabee began blaming everybody in Arkansas except himself. “I think you guys are being played like a cheap fiddle by the Democrats,” he complained to reporters. “They’re trying to make a Willie Horton out of it. And if anybody needs to get a Willie Horton out of it, it’s Jim Guy Tucker and the Democrat Party, and it ain’t me.” His recent book,“From Hope to Higher Ground,”claims that DuMond died in Missouri before coming to trial. He even blames Clinton, who played no role whatsoever in the affair, whining that the Arkansas “tabloid press” has mischaracterized his actions. That’s Huckabee at his worst: rash, devious, incapable of admitting error, a crybaby and definitely not, I submit, presidential material.

Like George W. Bush smart-ass mockery of a death row inmate before the the 2000 election, Huckabee’s extremely nasty little one-liners in this campaign are sure signs that he is still very much in tune with the same talk radio ditto-heads who were sure that Wayne Dumond was being railroaded, which is not surprising for someone running for the GOP nomination. The problem is that Huckabee has a record of actually acting on those nutzoid wingnut conspiracy theories and that makes him unfit to be president.

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Buchanan’s Hood

by digby

As with every other show on earth today, on Tucker they were just discussing the last episode of “The Sopranos” when Pat Buchanan came out with this one:

He wanted to let your own mind create, let everybody create their own ending. For me it was those two guys up at the thing who were coming in, those dark guys — I thought, those are the guys that are gonna do it.

Of course he did.

Update:

For your edification, here’s a very useful critique of the episode in last night’s Sopranos post comment thread, from one of the 100 most dangerous academics in the country:

OK, I hate to disagree with Heather Havrilesky on anything, because I consider her a minor goddess, but I think the twenty seconds of black screen did signify Tony getting clipped. And what other “loose ends” did people want to see tied up? We know how AJ and Meadow are going to wind up, and Tony has made the rounds of his surviving family and associates (Uncle Jun the last among them, reminding us of what we come to in the end), and the NY-NJ war leaves two families decapitated. As for Havrilesky’s objection — “That’s probably wishful thinking, like hoping that there really is a Santa Claus simply because it would make the holidays much more interesting. We’ve never seen things from Tony’s perspective, so why would we start now? And wouldn’t we at least know who killed him?” — well, I think of the moment in Casino when Joe Pesci’s character gets killed while doing the voiceover so that the voiceover itself gets cut off. You don’t come across that narrative device every day, now, do you. It’s an abrupt and jarring focalization (to use one of those barbaric terms from narratology), and it suddenly puts us right in Tony’s place. But look at what happens as a result: we don’t have to see the “reaction” shots from his family or from the rest of the patrons as all hell breaks loose. His life just ends. There’s no catharsis for us at all, and that’s part of what people seem to be angry at — at least the ones who are complaining on the Sopranos message board that this ending ruins the entire series.

Now, the fact that Chase didn’t even give us a gunshot to go on, no clue that Tony really dies — well, so what? Are there really ghosts in The Turn of the Screw, or is the governess mad? (That debate has been going on for more than a century now.) We’re left to wonder whether we’ve been duped into thinking that Tony dies because all the staging in that final scene — the brief shots of each of the restaurant patrons, the focus on the guy going to the men’s room, the closeups of Meadow having trouble parking the car — feels like the generic suspense-creatin’ mechanisms that precede a catastrophe. We stop and ask ourselves how much of our reaction depends on those narrative mechanisms. And so the ending becomes, in a meta- way, not Chase’s “final fuck you” to the viewers (as so many pissed-off viewers have said) but, rather, a form of what did you expect? — except that it’s a real question, not a rhetorical one.

It might not be utterly brilliant or anything, but it works for me. . . .

Works for me too.