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Karl Rove Resigning Aug 31

tetrahedrassface writes "According to CNN current Bush Administration political advisor Karl Rove will be resigning his post as senior political advisor at the end of August to spend more time with his family. Few if any prior senior political advisors to presidents have been the lightning rods for controversy that Mr. Rove has. Accused of running smear campaigns and celebrated for pioneering district level up campaigns that rely heavily on databases and fake grassroots origins, Mr Rove is one of the chief architects of the Republican Revolution."

114 of 739 comments (clear)

  1. Ever notice? by UncleWilly · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ever notice the smart rats jump first from the burning ship?

    1. Re:Ever notice? by Stonent1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm just looking forward to the next election simply because once Bush is out, I no longer have to hear about people constantly complaining about him. I'm starting not to care who wins, I just don't trust Hillary one bit. I can see it in her eyes and her expressions. I didn't get a good feeling about her even during the 1992 elections.

    2. Re:Ever notice? by endianx · · Score: 5, Funny

      Same here. I am certain nobody will complain about whoever the next president is. I can not wait for the peace and quiet.

    3. Re:Ever notice? by truthsearch · · Score: 4, Informative

      He's far from the first to leave the administration.

      And how's this ship burning? It doesn't appear anyone is going to be indicted for any more crimes. Impeachment proceedings haven't begun. And it's their second term so no worries over re-election. Bush doesn't care about his lack of popularity as he's already accomplished most of his goals.

    4. Re:Ever notice? by hedwards · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I wouldn't personally worry about Hillary. I don't think that she has a snowballs chance. What with the way that large parts of the country hating her and all.

      I for one say good bye and good riddance to Rove. I mean seriously, he has done more to damage this country's political system than just about anybody since the British.

      Pushing his radical agenda, which doesn't even reflect genuine conservative values, while making a complete mockery of the entire political process. It genuinely amazes me how so many minority view points have managed to permeate an administration, even after it has lost so much popularity.

      The way of campaigning in recent years has been just appalling. The war in Iraq wasn't sufficiently important for congressional attention in '04, but trying to pass a anti-same sex marriage constitutional amendment was worthy of time. I don't get it, why exactly are Republicans so quick to pretend to be conservative? I mean I thought that conservativism had something to do with states rights, keeping the government out of ones business and cutting spending. I haven't seen any progress on any one of those issues in the last 6+ years. Embarrassingly enough, there was more progress on those fronts during the Clinton administration than in GWB's.

      And I should probably just mod this down, because this is slashdot, and I'm sure that somebody will do me that favor. I mean, thoughtful posts should never be in the positive, right?

    5. Re:Ever notice? by catbutt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I wouldn't personally worry about Hillary. I don't think that she has a snowballs chance. Given that futures markets give her nearly double the chance of the second place candidate (39% vs. 20% for Guiliani), why not bet against her and make some money? Since you obviously know more than those who actually are putting real money, rather than just words, on the line.
    6. Re:Ever notice? by pravuil · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Hillary was the wife of a person that committed adultery. She handled it publicly and was very conservative with how she handled the public. In terms of popularity, she held on to her position as Senator of New York, so that has to account for something. About what her platform is based on, it's been pretty consistent even though I disagree with some of it. How it develops overtime is anyones guess.

      I do know that I am ultimately responsible as a citizen of the US to educate myself about whom I would chose to represent us to the world. So instead of writing someone off because you have a superstitious feeling about them, try to make an educated unbiased guess before you concede to a nihilistic haphazard attitude. Stand up for once and stop saying that it doesn't matter. Apathy is the most ridiculous aspect of humanity sometimes. If you don't like someone, there has to be a reason why other than just superstitious intuition.

    7. Re:Ever notice? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The Dems were also trying to distance themselves from the Clintons at the end of Bill's terms in office.

      Which was, in retrospect, an incredibly dumb thing to do. The Clinton Administration was marked by a general trend of peace and prosperity, and while Bill Clinton's personal exploits were shameful, his job approval rating remained quite high. If Gore had campaigned on a platform of "keep doing what my predecessor did, except I'm faithful to my wife", he very well could have had an undisputable win in 2000.

      I just hope that some people finally put their vote where their mouth is a vote third parties.

      I hope that some third-party candidates appear on the scene that actually have the qualifications needed to serve in office. I don't care how long you've been publishing your pamphlet or running your oil fields, if you haven't already been elected to city, county, state or federal government, I don't trust you to lead my nation.

      The political machine will chew you up if you don't have experience operating it.

    8. Re:Ever notice? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bush doesn't care about his lack of popularity as he's already accomplished most of his goals.

      Like reforming immigration, privatizing Social Security, and establishing an independent, democratic, and peaceful Iraqi state?

    9. Re:Ever notice? by Alzheimers · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Colin Powell resigned as Secretary of State in 2004, and was the first high ranking Republican official to go on to testify on record about all the many mistakes were made leading up to the war, including the lies that were included in his speeches leading up to the invasion.

      I'm not aligned either way, but in my opinion he's the *only* Republican that has an ounce of credibility left.

    10. Re:Ever notice? by Pojut · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While I completely agree with you, finding truely unbiased information regarding political canidates is damn near impossible.

    11. Re:Ever notice? by Pojut · · Score: 3, Funny

      Apparently, it's impossible for me to spell 'truly" correctly as well.

      inbeforethegrammarnazis

    12. Re:Ever notice? by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Funny

      Huh? What are you talking about? I think he meant lining his and his buddies pockets and...

      Ohhh. The official goals. I see, you didn't get the memo. Wait. Are you on the memo list anyhow? How did you get in here? Guys? Find that person's IP address and bring him to my office! He hacked me and gained confidential information!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    13. Re:Ever notice? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Personally, I'd argue that having served as an elected official is pretty much a black mark on someone's resume - especially if they ran for multiple terms. I believe Socrates and Adams when they say that good people just have no interest in politics.

      I don't care if you know how to operate the political machine. All that means is that you know who to call to get money for your campaigns. Which is why Hillary and Rudy are both out for me.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    14. Re:Ever notice? by scumdamn · · Score: 3, Funny
      Thanks so much for your data driven election analysis! I've never seen such an intereseting cogent explanation of why a candidate is the wrong choice for our great country!

      Also, the best reason to wish the end of this Presidency is surely that people will stop complaining about him. It's definitely not that he's actually a bad President or that his administration is incompetent or anything. Have you ever thought of getting a job at CNN or maybe replacing Tim Russert on Meet the Press?

    15. Re:Ever notice? by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Which goals are those? If he was thinking of making vast amounts of money for his cronies from the invasion of Iraq, the Insurgency has taken care of that. His education program is a disaster. Congress wouldn't co-operate on his immigration reforms. His social security reforms have evaporated. His good pal Michael Brown made sure that FEMA was an absolute joke during Katrina, which pretty much revealed to the world (including all those enemies slinking around in nasty places waiting to blow Americans up) that the richest nation on the planet was intensely incompetent. The ball has totally been dropped on catching bin Laden and the NATO coalition is now finding itself battling a recharged Taliban. The White House's most important Central Asian ally, Pakistan, looks more and more to be sliding towards some sort of pro-Islamist regime.

      I dunno. It doesn't look to me like Bush has accomplished any goals, unless his goals were the humiliation of the US on the international stage.

      (I would lay the blame for 9-11 on him as well, but to be honest, his part in that was rather small. The blame for the attacks sits more on Bill Clinton's shoulders. So take that, you Dwemocwats).

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    16. Re:Ever notice? by E++99 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Same here. I am certain nobody will complain about whoever the next president is. I can not wait for the peace and quiet.

      Hey, it could happen. It's just hard to remember, as for the last 16 years we've had no one but Clinton and Bush. I remember the first time I really paid attention to Bush on TV, after he won his first nomination. I remember thinking, "holy cow, the lefties are going to hate this guy every bit as much as we righties hate Clinton." And I was right. But it doesn't have to be that way. Of course it would be with Hillary. With Obama, I think it would just be a general disgust at his incompetence, like with Carter. The key is whether the person will polarize or unite the center. Someone like Fred Thompson, I think would likely win them over, the way Reagan did. If Newt runs, it's hard to say. He eventually lost the center to Clinton as house speaker, but first he masterminded the Contract with America and won Congress for the Republicans by winning them over. But if he had the machinery of a presidential campaign with which to respond and react to the MSM, who knows?
    17. Re:Ever notice? by catbutt · · Score: 4, Funny

      What's going to happen when we beat the terrorists in Iraq? What are the cowering, wimpering, cut and run democrats going to do then? Probably strap on their jet packs, and fly home to spend time with their families and pet dragons.
    18. Re:Ever notice? by Ucklak · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's Otters vs. Scientists all over again.

      --
      if you steal from one source, that is plagiarism, if you steal from many, well, that's just research.
    19. Re:Ever notice? by eln · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's a good point, but I think his performance in the run-up to the war proved to me that he made the right decision when he said he wouldn't get into politics.

      At the time, everyone pretty much knew that Powell didn't agree with the way the war was going to be executed. After all, the "Powell Doctrine" of always going in with overwhelming force was named after him, and the Bush administration (thanks mainly to Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz) were convinced they could get it done with a much smaller force. Not to mention that he was perfectly willing to go up in front of the UN and present intelligence that he (allegedly) knew to be faulty when he made the speech. The fact that he said he regretted it later doesn't change the fact that he was willing to tow the party line in the face of his own (alleged) doubts.

      The thing that makes him ill suited for high office, though, is not that he was right about these things, it's that he was totally ineffective at convincing the people that mattered to do things his way. What good is someone who has all the right answers if he is incapable of exercising any influence over anyone? Powell was Secretary of State, one of the most powerful cabinet positions in terms of foreign policy, and he was unable to convince anyone in the administration that his viewpoint was the correct one.

      Yes, the President and his advisors are notoriously hard headed, but if you can't at least reach some sort of compromise with hard headed people, how can you manage foreign affairs, a game that involves talking to heads of state that are pretty much all egotistical and hard headed by nature? We don't need, and we frankly can't afford, another President whose only influence over foreign heads of state derives from his willingness to conduct preemptive strikes.

    20. Re:Ever notice? by michrech · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Yeah... Ummm.. Good luck with that..

      Bush (and some in his administration) has created such a mess that we will be cleaning it up for some time. You will be hearing complaints for a good while after he is gone, I'm sure of it.

      Hell, people are still complaining about Clinton's BJ. How long has he been out of office now?

      Yeah...

      I'm just looking forward to the next election simply because once Bush is out, I no longer have to hear about people constantly complaining about him. I'm starting not to care who wins, I just don't trust Hillary one bit. I can see it in her eyes and her expressions. I didn't get a good feeling about her even during the 1992 elections.
      --
      bork bork bork!
    21. Re:Ever notice? by pla · · Score: 4, Funny

      Bush's low popularity numbers reflect on how much conviction he has.

      ...Whereas most of us just want one conviction.



      He operates under beliefs, not by raising his finger in the air and seeing which way the wind is blowing

      The direction of the wind at least has some basis in fact, in that it means doing what the populace wants them to do. Granted, most people couldn't find their way out of a paper sack with a map and a flashlight, but I'll take playing to the polls over playing god any day.



      What's going to happen when we beat the terrorists in Iraq?

      I dunno... We'll all have to duck the flying pigs? Bush can look forward to building snowmen in the afterlife? Goatse-man will experience the least pain of all of us when monkeys start flying out?

      Or, if we actually can claim such a victory, we can polish the crater and use the newly-vitreous ex-middle-east as the largest objective lens on the planet for a new telescope? Hrmph, and to think some people have the audacity to claim Bush doesn't support science!

    22. Re:Ever notice? by Alzheimers · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Despite his charisma and intelligence, which should make him a natural leader, he's also a soldier. As such, he's been trained to obey his superiors even when he personally disagreed with the decisions. This made him ineffective "incapable of exercising any influence" as Secretary of State, because his role was as foot soldier for an administration that had no use for tact or strategy.

      This administration has shown from the beginning that they're not willing to compromise or negotiate with anyone. As you pointed out, how can anyone of conscience succeed when their bosses are completely unable to play the game by the rules? Powell's only mission was to get us to war, and he did that despite the world's most egotistical hardheads being being opposed to it.

      If you're choosing a leader, pick the one that listens to the ones they lead. For all his mistakes, at least he had the conscience to resign with some humanity and humility intact.

    23. Re:Ever notice? by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The loss of intelligence in the Islamic world happened under Clinton's watch. It was the failure to realign to the new threat after the end of the Cold War that forces one to consider the failings of the Clinton administration. Don't worry, Bush gets his share of the blame for the lack of comprehension of intelligence immediately prior to 9-11, but this was a systemic failure that had taken hold of the intelligence community for a decade.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    24. Re:Ever notice? by Xonstantine · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If Gore had campaigned on a platform of "keep doing what my predecessor did, except I'm faithful to my wife", he very well could have had an undisputable win in 2000.

      Woulda, coulda, shoulda.

      Going by Clinton's approval ratings is misleading. Even against a lackluster candidate like Dole, Clinton was only able to muster 49.2% of the vote during his relection campaign in 1996, despite having around 60% approval ratings at the time. In other words, that high approval rating didn't translate very well into votes at election time. Also...Gore manifestly had a lot of problems:
      1) He wasn't Clinton.
      2) He didn't have ANY of Clinton's charm or charisma. Where Clinton came across as your buddy, Gore came across as the condescending guy no one likes.
      3) From 1992-2000, Gore veered to the left. Politically, he went from being a fairly conservative blue dog Democrat as a Tennessee Senator to being a left-wing idealogue VP. This happened at the same time that the country, as a whole, was trending more conservative. To give you an idea of the impact, Gore lost his home state of Tennessee to Bush in 2000. Forget about Florida, if Gore had simply won Tennessee, he would be President today.

      The fact that Gore lost after a successful illustrates his overall weakness as a candidate. Good candidates win elections, bad candidates do not. A fairly simple formula that people, especially party operatives, seem to forget. The Democrats electoral success in 2006 hinged in no small part to them putting forth better candidates than the Republicans (who, in many cases, actually ran to the right of Republicans on certain issues like immigration).

      As an aside, the problem with Hillary is...she's not a good candidate. Not because she isn't effective at politics...she is. She is immensely talented, ruthless, and goal oriented. She has a great fund raising machine, and a lot of people owe her favors. The problem is a little over half the voting population won't vote for her under any circumstance. She's extremely polarizing. As popular as Bill was across demographics and party lines, Hillary has never had cross over appeal. Feminists love her, west coast and east cost liberals love her. And that's it. And you can't win an election on that alone.

    25. Re:Ever notice? by syntaxglitch · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I would go so far as to say Bush's low popularity numbers reflect on how much conviction he has. He operates under beliefs, not by raising his finger in the air and seeing which way the wind is blowing (IE Dems on Iraq).

      Sticking to one's "convictions" when reality has proven them wrong is not an admirable trait. When you find you are digging yourself into a hole, you stop digging, not "stay the course" and dig faster.

      What's going to happen when we beat the terrorists in Iraq? What are the cowering, wimpering, cut and run democrats going to do then?

      If they have any sense they'll cut our losses and write off Iraq. The American people, unfortunately, probably don't have the patience for the time and effort it would take to clean up the huge mess Bush has made.

      And hopefully after a few years of no major terrorist activity the cowardly conservatives crying like children about monsters under their beds will grow up and grow some balls.

    26. Re:Ever notice? by FauxPasIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > The loss of intelligence in the Islamic world happened under Clinton's watch.

      And yet, even with all that lost intelligence, even with all the horrible, horrible things Clinton supposedly did to our intelligence and national security apparatus... it was still able to provide written warning of pretty much exactly what was going to happen and put it in Bush's hands on August 6th.

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    27. Re:Ever notice? by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 4, Funny

      If Newt runs, it's hard to say. He eventually lost the center to Clinton as house speaker, but first he masterminded the Contract with America

      You owe me a new monitor.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    28. Re:Ever notice? by Stonent1 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Everytime I hear her speak it sounds so condescending. And that speech she gave about 2 years ago about "We're going to have to take some things away from you for the common good" smacked of communism.

    29. Re:Ever notice? by Sunburnt · · Score: 3, Informative

      He might be humorously surprised at the assertion that Gingrich "masterminded" a political tactic initially conceived by über-pollster Frank Luntz and the Heritage Foundation.

      Or, he might be laughing at the use of the term "mastermind" to describe Newt Gingrich, whose political career displayed a great deal of confusing his own hypocritical moralizing and three-bong-hit ideas about the role of the market with public sentiment.

      --
      Tags != Comments, and -1 (Troll) != -1 (I Would Respond Angrily To This Poster So They Must Be Trolling)
    30. Re:Ever notice? by ultranova · · Score: 4, Funny

      And yet, even with all that lost intelligence, even with all the horrible, horrible things Clinton supposedly did to our intelligence and national security apparatus... it was still able to provide written warning of pretty much exactly what was going to happen and put it in Bush's hands on August 6th.

      Written warning ? The fools ! They should had read it aloud !

      Seriously speaking, maybe the intelligence organizations need to take heed of schoolteachers; the person the report is delivered to must submit in return, in a given timeframe, a summary of the reports contents (to prove he has read it) and a summary of actions he has taken concerning it, as well as the reasons he considers said actions adequate. Failure to do so satisfactorily will result in being placed in detention in a secret CIA torture facility.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    31. Re:Ever notice? by phantomlord · · Score: 2, Informative

      She handled it publicly and was very conservative with how she handled the public She blamed "the vast right wing conspiracy" instead of her husband. It was all the fault of those evil republicans since her forever philandering husband would never have an affair in the oval office. Why, way back in 1995, Karl Rove set them up by sending an affluent liberal intern to the White House to tempt Bill so that Bush could steal the election in 2000. Not only that, they drugged Bill Clinton and while he was out, had a very good impersonator do an interview as him where he slammed his fist on the podium demanding that "[He] did not have sex with that woman."

      Hillary always knew what was going on... she's a very, very shrewd politician and so is her husband. On that vein, she really is a totalitarian marxist, but she knows that it won't play politically in the US so she pretends to be a moderate. She wrote her college thesis about her idol, Saul Alinsky, who was a leftist radical and "the father of grassroots organizing." Her biggest mistake gave her her only major political set back while also revealing her stripes. The 1993-4 Hillary Care plan where the government would control things down to the level of telling you what doctor you were allowed to go to while forcing a state take over of 1/7th of the US economy and introducing whole new levels of taxation on people.

      In terms of popularity, she held on to her position as Senator of New York Her choice to run from NY is another example of her political savvy. First of all, lets look at the party enrollment. 5,320,943 Democrats, 3,015,385 Republicans, 2,331,561 unaffiliated. Many of those Republicans are fairly liberal and I'm not sure why they even associate with the party. A Republican candidate needs to garner every Republican vote (bridging the divide and getting the conservatives and liberals to vote for them) as well as all of those unaffiliated votes just to put them in the default position of the Democrat. They need to get some Democratic votes to actually win. Also factor in that the media never asked Hillary the tough questions, they portrayed Lazio as a victimizer for trying to get her to sign a campaign financing pledge, they failed to mention that her infamous "listening tour" was all pre-scripted questions asked by people on an invitation only basis, etc. Basically, Hillary couldn't lose and she deliberately chose NY because there are only a handful of states in the country with that kind of demographic with an open seat... and she needed experience of her own if she was going to further her political ambition.

      On a side note, 3,744,244 of those Democratic voters live in NYC, Long Island, Rockland or Westchester Counties. Despite taking up a small fraction of the area of the state (I'd guesstimate single digit percentage), they control the entire state and have no clue that there is a huge body of land north and west of them. Back in the 90s, they held up state budgets to force the state to renew WWII era rent control policies for NYC and they're constantly forcing mandates statewide that are good for NYC but are crippling the rest of our state. As manufacturing and industry have left Buffalo and Rochester, young people are fleeing to find economic opportunity leaving behind a rapidly aging population, an ever increasing number of government employees and every increasing taxes which just fuel the cycle more. But hey, NYC is thriving and the Island is nice, so who cares. I'm also still waiting for Hillary to fulfill her 2000 campaign promise to help bring 200,000 new jobs to upstate NY.
      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    32. Re:Ever notice? by E++99 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I guess you could say that Newt "moralized" about public corruption, but that was hardly hypocritical.

      Wrong.

      The Democrats came up with literally hundreds of accusations, and the committee had to go through all of them. And every one was bogus, but ONE where he accidentally used a certain type of donation for the wrong purpose. If even half of Congress could stand up to that kind of scrutiny and come out that clean, it would be a much better place than it is now.
    33. Re:Ever notice? by Sunburnt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      or do u care to tell me how Bush won both terms as a "good" candidate?

      Because, by definition, a good candidate is one who wins an election, since the purpose of a candidate is to win the election.

      There's a difference between being a good candidate and being a good person, though. Or a good leader, chief executive, whatever.

      --
      Tags != Comments, and -1 (Troll) != -1 (I Would Respond Angrily To This Poster So They Must Be Trolling)
    34. Re:Ever notice? by Sunburnt · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Democrats came up with literally hundreds of accusations

      Wrong again. The House Ethics Committee, both Repubs and Demos with a Repub majority, filed eighty-four ethics charges. Perhaps that may figuratively equal "hundreds," but not literally.

      And every one was bogus, but ONE where he accidentally used a certain type of donation for the wrong purpose.
      Wrong again, as you would know if you actually read the article I linked which discussed the findings of the ethics committee, instead of disgorging some half-remembered Republican talking point (that I also remember from the relevant period of history.)

      Gingrich admitted that he brought discredit to the House and broke its rules by failing to ensure that financing for two projects would not violate federal tax law and by giving the House ethics committee false information.

      Far be it from me to hold up the rest of Congress as an ideal of purity, but Gingrich is still a lying hypocrite. And especially so, given his stance as a "reformer."

      --
      Tags != Comments, and -1 (Troll) != -1 (I Would Respond Angrily To This Poster So They Must Be Trolling)
    35. Re:Ever notice? by Sunburnt · · Score: 2, Interesting

      that speech she gave about 2 years ago about "We're going to have to take some things away from you for the common good" smacked of communism.

      Seeing as she was addressing a group of hundreds of wealthy supporters, and referring specifically to the Bush tax cuts, I don't see your point. Unless you consider progressive taxation to be "communism", in which case, I hear the Birchers are always looking for members.

      --
      Tags != Comments, and -1 (Troll) != -1 (I Would Respond Angrily To This Poster So They Must Be Trolling)
    36. Re:Ever notice? by E++99 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hillary's a what? A Moderate? Her political philosophy and practice is a combination of Mussolini, Stalin, and Chavez. I suppose if there's anything that would get her called a moderate, it would be refusing to promise to remove all troops immediately from Iraq. No one is going to do that if elected. No one running is that insane. She's just smart enough to know better than to try to benefit now at the expense of her political power once in office, by promising to do something that's, a key issue to many in her base, that she knows she won't follow through on.

      If you think comparing her to Mussolini, Stalin and Chavez is "trolling" you probably missed the video on youtube where she told a Democratic audience (to cheers) how she planned to confiscate the profits of the oil companies. The profits of military contractors are no doubt next. Take a look at the Fascist Manifesto sometime, and let me know how it differs from Hillary's positions.
    37. Re:Ever notice? by tbannist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually in what is obviously a hideous mockery of what was going to happen, they did try to read it aloud to the President but he decided it wasn't important enough to listen to the briefing on it before his vacation. After all, who would have thought a National Secuirty briefing on an imminent threat would be need urgent attention. Certainly not Bush.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    38. Re:Ever notice? by Sunburnt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your response is typical of what I bemoaned in my original post,

      And yours is typical of what I regularly bemoan on /. - people linking in "support" of their argument without reading the entirety of the linked materials. I would say the article's citation link pointing out Mr. Paul's failure to apologize for these statements, as well as his attempt to dismiss these racist remarks as "within the context of current events and statistical reports of the time," doesn't exactly make your case.

      And for the record, I'm registered as an independent and vote for candidates based on what I have researched, not just D or R like many mindless party drones. I would rejoice at ANY other political party being nationally recognized on ballots as it might finally break the stranglehold of the current (imho failed) two party system.

      I'm with you. I think it would be great if right-wingers had to divide their political affiliations between "have the government give money to shareholders" (traditional Republican right-authoritarianism) and "get rid of the government" (right-libertarianism.) Of course, I also think it would be great if left-wingers divided theirs between left-libertarian and left-authoritarian parties, so that all the elections were a toss-up.

      And, while I'm at it, I'd really like a pony.

      --
      Tags != Comments, and -1 (Troll) != -1 (I Would Respond Angrily To This Poster So They Must Be Trolling)
    39. Re:Ever notice? by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 2, Funny

      202-456-1111 - ask for George

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    40. Re:Ever notice? by careysub · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hey, it could happen. It's just hard to remember, as for the last 16 years we've had no one but Clinton and Bush. I remember the first time I really paid attention to Bush on TV, after he won his first nomination. I remember thinking, "holy cow, the lefties are going to hate this guy every bit as much as we righties hate Clinton." And I was right. But it doesn't have to be that way.

      So far, so good.

      Of course it would be with Hillary. With Obama, I think it would just be a general disgust at his incompetence, like with Carter. The key is whether the person will polarize or unite the center. Someone like Fred Thompson, I think would likely win them over, the way Reagan did. If Newt runs, it's hard to say. He eventually lost the center to Clinton as house speaker, but first he masterminded the Contract with America and won Congress for the Republicans by winning them over. But if he had the machinery of a presidential campaign with which to respond and react to the MSM, who knows?

      And now we get content-less denigration of four Democrats, and praise for three Republicans (plus a quick dig at the "main stream media").

      This type of party-line thinking is just exactly why it currently happens to to "be that way".

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    41. Re:Ever notice? by cyber-dragon.net · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, a man stands up for what he believes in and keeps his word. I seem to recall the President swears to uphold and defend this little document called the Constitution when he is sworn into office. Bush has taken a paper shredder to it.

      To be a man is not to be afraid, to defend the weak and your ideals. Bush is the school bully who uses fear to get what he wants. American's should not be afraid, we should not cower and we should not give up the liberty that MEN like George Washington and Benjamin Franklin risked everything to win for us. Those were men, Bush is a coward and a bully who sells the beliefs and principles we fought so hard to gain for a bit of power.

      Have you ever been to a High School that has one of those nosy people that wants to be in every bit of your business and can't stand it when you tell them to go away you want some privacy? Yeah... that is Bush if that same person was also the school bully who made you do what he wanted out of fear and intimidation and then runs to the principle to cry foul if he doesn't get what he wants. The guy who was so macho but under knew he was really weak and pathetic so he would not stand up to anyone unless 20 people where there to back him up against the one. A man stands up for himself no matter what.

      Soldiers risk everything to defend what they believe in. The founding fathers of the US of A risked hanging and their homes to create this country and the rights people today so easily let go. Tell me one thing Bush has done that shows he is willing to risk ANYTHING so much as someone disagreeing with him?

      A man as you say... would not use fear to control. He would not use fear to get his people to let him spy on them. He would not use fear and threats to intimidate people into doing what he wanted. A man does not do these things. Bush is a coward, a bully and an idiot that has violated his oath to the American people. Colin Powell was a man, and he would not sacrifice his own personal honor to give Bush credibility.

    42. Re:Ever notice? by Copid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, except that the trend of "peace" was only Clinton doing nothing about the growing threat of Al-Qaeda.
      A sensible person might say that starting a war in Iraq also counts as doing nothing about the growing threat of Al Qaeda.
      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    43. Re:Ever notice? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I can see it in her eyes and her expressions.
      Her "eyes and expressions"? I suppose Mitt Romney's strong chin makes you trust him and Fred Thompson's masculine smell makes you feel all secure inside.

      If you really can tell so by watching a person's eyes and expressions (over the television no less), I bet you can play some kick-ass Texas Hold 'em.

      If Hillary's eyes and expression give you cause to worry, what in the name of baldheaded Jesus did you think of Dick Cheney's sneer or George Bush's dopey stare?

      Just a bit of advice: A person's words and actions are a much more reliable demonstration of their character than the look on their face. I can take you upstairs to the Math Department and show you a half-dozen past and future Nobel nominees who look like total bozos or psychopaths.

      One has to be careful of making judgments based on people's looks or expressions. It's only a step or two away from judging based on other cosmetic features, say, skin color.
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    44. Re:Ever notice? by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Congress still has the power to reign a president in, as Clinton constantly discovered. The problem has been that Congress somewhere along the way lost the balls to stand up to executive stupidity and say "No!" There was a day and an age when Congress had no problem whatsoever making a President's life grief. Heck, Woodrow Wilson was forced to go to his allies and tell them that there was no way in hell that the United States would join the League of Nations.

      The problem is that in this age of big money, Congressional candidates are under an enormous amount of pressure to sell their souls for victory. When they get into office, they are now expected to behave precisely as all the strategists and special interests tell them. Congressman and woman ought to read the Constitution really hard to understand the concept of checks and balances. It's their job to offset the President, whether or not he happens to cloak himself in the same colors or not.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    45. Re:Ever notice? by catbutt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Does anyone know if intrade allows short selling? Yes, half the people are "short selling" on each market.

      But as I said, good luck predicting better than the market. If it was easy, smart people with money would be all over it until the price stabilized at a level where it wasn't easy anymore.
    46. Re:Ever notice? by fingusernames · · Score: 2, Interesting

      While I agree with you in:

      How about the one where the government can now IN SECRET, presenting no evidence or holding no hearing or trial as GUARANTEED by the Constitution, seize your assets? How is that "protecting the constitution?

      This does seem a rather natural progression given what we've been doing to our rights for A LONG TIME. Ever heard of civil forfeiture? It's been in use for a long time before Bush.

      http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/95-345.ZS.ht ml

      Gotta love cases like United States v. One Assortment of 89 Firearms.

      Bush may be doing things that are quite objectionable to quite many, but the funny thing is, things that would have been clearly unconstitutional in the past (such as, oh, a federal minimum wage, or federal workplace safety laws) suddenly become constitutional when expedient, with no substantive changes in the underlying text or intent. I always tell people, a constitution subject to interpretational whim is a slippery slope. If you let politicians and judges decide how our fundamental legal foundations change without the bother of amendments and the entire associated process, then odds are it will change in ways you both like and do not like. You can't have it only your way. Unless you try to pack the Court. Like FDR.

      Larry

  2. Kudos in advance by daveschroeder · · Score: 5, Funny

    I just wanted to take a moment to thank the slashdot community, in advance, for what I am certain will be yet another discussion that will be the picture of decorum and civility. If there is anything I have learned about slashdot over the years, it is its ability to conduct a mature discussion about any topic, devoid of paranoia, rage, or ignorance.

    In fact, I believe it would be fair to say that it was slashdot that single-handedly relegated the old connotation of "tinfoil hat" to the dustbin, leaving instead something that could only be termed fashionable, if unique, headwear in its wake. I know of no other web site that could have accomplished this return to such a balance and due consideration of all sides of an issue in its discourse.

    Only on slashdot can such a discussion be guaranteed to be free of cynicism that dominates other venues of debate. Here, opposing viewpoints will be examined and considered, and not snuffed out. Nor will the community elevate viewpoints which only serve to reinforce their preconceived notions; indeed, slashdot, especially its comments, is the place to come for an evenly weighted consideration of any issue, especially issues of a political nature.

    Neither will commenters fall to the common fallacy of "recentism", believing that a recent event must necessarily be the worst such case of an event in the history of mankind; instead recognizing that the internet can simply deluge us with an increasingly unprecedented level of information about any person or group which may pique our interest, allowing a wide range of ever more specific issues and minutia to be amplified to levels never witnessed in the past.

    Moreover, I can tell by the (current) article title - "Politics: Carl Rove Resigning Aug 31" - that this discussion will have the highest regard for accuracy not only in content, but in spelling and grammar, as regular slashdot visitors will no doubt recognize to be the status quo. This level of accuracy can only be achieved by the tireless work of slashdot's editors, who carefully review each submission to the site.

    So, bravo, slashdot - not only for what you have accomplished for political discussion in the past, but for the discussion you are about to have. It is exactly this kind of level-headed discussion that keeps people coming back for evenly balanced news and careful interpretation on nearly any topic.

    Bravo, indeed!

    1. Re:Kudos in advance by my+sig+is+bigger+tha · · Score: 2, Funny

      jeez dude, way to intimidate people. who's going to feel up to your sarcasm after that?
      (this is nice: Neither will commenters fall to the common fallacy of "recentism", believing that a recent event must necessarily be the worst such case of an event in the history of mankind; instead recognizing that the internet can simply deluge us with an increasingly unprecedented level of information about any person or group which may pique our interest, allowing a wide range of ever more specific issues and minutia to be amplified to levels never witnessed in the past.)

      my favorite sentence from TFA: "Rove said the first thing he plans to do after leaving the White House is "go dove hunting..."

    2. Re:Kudos in advance by nagora · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I just wanted to take a moment to thank the slashdot community, in advance, for what I am certain will be yet another discussion that will be the picture of decorum and civility.

      Well, if it's a discussion about Rove, decorum and civility would be highly inappropriate.

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    3. Re:Kudos in advance by o'reor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I just wanted to take a moment to thank the slashdot community, in advance, for what I am certain will be yet another discussion that will be the picture of decorum and civility. If there is anything I have learned about slashdot over the years, it is its ability to conduct a mature discussion about any topic, devoid of paranoia, rage, or ignorance.
      You are absolutely right, and I think that Slashdot is an example of civility that should be taken as a model by LittleGreenFootball, the DailyKos, Alternet and so on.

      Wait... forget about that. They already did.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, our new overlords are belong to all your base.
    4. Re:Kudos in advance by roystgnr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...a balance and due consideration of all sides...

      Ironically, in the middle of your effort to point out what's wrong with political discussion in the USA, you're encouraging one of the more insidious flaws in mainstream media coverage: the idea that "due consideration" will always be "evenly balanced". Sometimes the right way to "Teach the Controversy" is just to point out the objective facts which make the fringe side of the controversy look stupid, not to fill 50% of your story with flat-earther quotes and title the whole thing "Shape of Earth: Views Differ".

      Most online discussion is even worse, since people have ten thousand popular blogs to choose from and so naturally gravitate to the ones that reinforce their pre-existing beliefs - so instead of reading stories that don't challenge our objectively questionable views, we get to read stories that don't challenge any of our views. By this standard, Slashdot's political discussions are actually pretty good - the tech crowd skews more libertarian than average, but because Slashdot is not inherently a political site there's still enough liberals and conservatives and socialists and such in the crowd to make things interesting, most of whom aren't just trolls. The nested comments are lightyears ahead of most sites for encouraging constructive debate, and if you set your threshold to 4 or lower you'll even get to read the most well-written anti-groupthink side of that debate.

    5. Re:Kudos in advance by mosch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is a man who had a well-known dream of creating a permanent Republican electoral majority and who really perfected the use of wedge issues to obtain and hold power.

      The contention that we should be respectful towards him is absurd. He spent decades working as hard as he could to ensure that everyone's interests were not represented equally or fairly, and helping to destroy the middle ground, to make the "us versus them" vision of politics more deeply entrenched.

      Sure, there have been power plays for a long time; Machiavelli wasn't born yesterday, nor was he the originator of all his described tactics. But that said, the fact that something is old does not make it desirable or excusable.

      As such, I say "FUCK YOU" to Mr. Rove, and I sincerely hope that one of those dove's that he's planning on killing drops a turd right in his eye.

      And a "FUCK YOU" to you too, you righteous asshole. This is a man who perfected the modern use of hate as a political lever. He shall reap what he was sown.

    6. Re:Kudos in advance by MarsDefenseMinister · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When you make a statement, you imply the inverse. When you say that Karl Rove, in his evil ways, wanted to create a permanent Republican majority, you're implying that there is no idea in liberal minds of creating a permanent Democrat majority.

      I don't think that's really true, so it's a bit hypocritical for you to criticize Rove for doing well what Democrats would love to do. Remember, Rove is where he was because of the outcome of an election. I don't really understand what your crying about interests not being represented fairly is all about then. If you don't like it, good luck in the next election. That's called democracy.

      --
      No weapon in the arsenals of the world is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men.-Ronald Reagan
    7. Re:Kudos in advance by Xonstantine · · Score: 2, Informative

      This is a man who had a well-known dream of creating a permanent Republican electoral majority and who really perfected the use of wedge issues to obtain and hold power.

      I'm sure there are plenty of people on the Democratic side that dream of cementing a permanent Democratic electoral majority too. Neither objective is evil, unless of course, you consider the Democratic or Republican party as innately evil. And if you do, honestly, you have no business discussing politics.

      The contention that we should be respectful towards him is absurd. He spent decades working as hard as he could to ensure that everyone's interests were not represented equally or fairly

      My, aren't we naive. No one pursues "everyone's" interest, they pursue their own interests. In the case of political operatives, this usually (but not always) means following their base's interest. It's manifestly impossible for any one person to represent everyone else's interest. The fact that you would bring this up in a character assessment of Rove suggests that you aren't thoughtful enough to assess people. Why don't you be honest and say "I don't like Rove because he didn't represent me and he was successful"? That's why I don't like Rove.

      One of the problems with political discourse is the inherent dishonesty like the parent's. Do we really think the parent wants folks like gun owners or trailer park residents fairly represented? No? Then stop acting like fairness is at issue here, because it isn't.

      and helping to destroy the middle ground, to make the "us versus them" vision of politics more deeply entrenched.

      Give me a break. Left-wing Democrats have been attacking the "middle ground" since the New Deal. Electoral ads against Bush in 2000 suggested he wanted to roll back the clock to slavery. And that's not hyperbole. Those were the ads. I don't like Rove (mainly because he's been disasterous for conservatives), but Rove was hardly some grand architect of "us versus them". If anything, he's a "big tent" Republican and tried to make the party more inclusive to traditionally Democratic voters like Catholics and Latinos. If anything, liberals, leftists, and Democrats should love Rove since, in the end, he's been the grand architect of the fracturing of the Republican party and the conservative base.

    8. Re:Kudos in advance by daveschroeder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not talking about information that is provably incorrect, like whether the Earth is flat. I'm talking about philosophical and ideological differences on whether, e.g., promoting the development of democracies in the Mideast - for myriad reasons - is or isn't a good idea, and what the arguments are for each.

      Some editorial discussion is also an issue of severely misplaced priorities. A greater disservice is done to the population being served by a particular media outlet when they disproportionately represent threats from, e.g., our own government, versus radical Panislamic terrorists or longer term from China.

      There are many supposedly intelligent and well-educated individuals who literally and fervently believe that the Bush administration is the single greatest threat to the American people that has existed in the history of the nation, and any other current or historical external threat is either manufactured or pales in comparison to the present "internal" threat. Further, any media outlet that does not represent the situation in this fashion is therefore not reporting the "truth".

      Then again, a disappointingly - and increasingly - large number of these people also genuinely believe that 9/11 was executed (or at the very least "allowed to happen") by the United States government as an excuse to warmonger in the Mideast, so I suppose I should not find this surprising. I do, however, find it extremely disheartening.

      It's almost not so much what the media is reporting; it seems a great deal of people have already chosen their ideological "side", as it were, in many of these debates, and will simply seek out "news" that supports their point of view, and discount any other source that doesn't.

    9. Re:Kudos in advance by mosch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      One more note: I really wish that politicians of all sorts would stop using moral equivalence to justify their actions.

      It's sickening how often I see somebody justifying bad actions by saying that the other side has done the same thing, or as is the case in your post, that the other side might want to do the same thing.

      This moral equivalence argument has become so common that you even followed it up by calling me a hypocrite for not granting the argument against a pure hypothetical.

      Two wrongs don't make a right. They never will.

      Again, this is not a party-specific complaint, but the fact that you would make these comments, seemingly sincerely, goes a long way to showing how many people view democracy as nothing more than an "us versus them" game in which one side wins and the other must lose.

    10. Re:Kudos in advance by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't like Rove (mainly because he's been disasterous for conservatives), but Rove was hardly some grand architect of "us versus them".

      Sure, he wasn't. He only pitted the entire country against each other on the issues of terrorism, same-sex rights, Iraq, immigration, abortion... every even election year, the Republicans trotted out another dead horse to beat righteously in a desperate attempt to attract blacks, fundamentalist Christians, anyone they could, to the Republican party.

      If anything, he's a "big tent" Republican and tried to make the party more inclusive to traditionally Democratic voters like Catholics and Latinos.

      Cubans aren't the only Latinos on the planet. They were, however, the only Latinos Rove cared about, as they're a huge block of the voting population in Florida metropolitan areas. Note how lightly the right treaded regarding the Elian Gonzalez incident, as opposed to their outright frothing hatred for Mexican Latinos.

      Also, fundamentalist Christians are not Catholics. I don't remember any overt attempts by the Republicans to attract the vote of anyone who is Christian and, unlike fundamentalists, also sane.

      If anything, liberals, leftists, and Democrats should love Rove since, in the end, he's been the grand architect of the fracturing of the Republican party and the conservative base.

      Yes, he was an evil son of a bitch who ought to die slowly in a horrible grease fire, but he was also not very smart. For that, I am thankful.

      --
      "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
    11. Re:Kudos in advance by Control+Group · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, the American Civil War leaps to mind as a greater threat to the health of this nation.

      The War of 1812 also suggests itself as a possibility.

      Let's not forget Prohibition, which - it could be argued - led to the rise of organized crime, an immense expansion of federal law enforcement power (which we're seeing the fallout of currently), and even (arguably, but at a bit more of a stretch) the War on Drugs.

      And, speaking of the War on Drugs, which predates the Bush administration by quite a bit, I'd think if you're going to point fingers at single causes for loss of liberty in the modern era, this would have to be number one on your list. This is where we get no-knock warrants and asset forfeiture, to name the two most egregious offenses.

      Slightly further back, I suspect that the US sitting out all of WWII (as we were apt to do pre-Pearl Harbor) might have led to a world that was much less conducive to the economic strength we've enjoyed since then. Not to mention that Japanese internment camps weren't exactly the peak of American liberty.

      Then there's McCarthyism (and may I take this opportunity to say "hooray" for my great state of Wisconsin), which had an entire nation living in fear of being convicted of thought crime.

      If we'd like to talk about sheer human damage, all the politicians involved in perpetuating the Vietnam War(from the Kennedy administration through the Nixon) certainly caused more death and suffering than our current administration.

      Or further back again, one might question an awful lot of the politics surrounding seizing lands from American Indians, especially policies coming out of the Andrew Jackson administration.

      And speaking of the Jackson administration, had the nullification crisis fallen out the other way - that is, had Andrew Jackson sympathized a bit more with the South's tariff concerns than with the notion of a union of states - the country would probably have fallen apart by the end of the 19th century.

      Note that I do not say this to excuse anything the Bush administration has done, simply to point out that the GPP is right. There is a tendency, especially among - though certainly not limited to - the yound and idealistic, to fervently believe that the current crisis (whatever it is) is The Worst Thing That's Ever Happened.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    12. Re:Kudos in advance by mosch · · Score: 2, Funny

      It's kind of refreshing to see a Republican just come out and admit that they're fascist.

      People call the modern GOP fascist all the time, but it's rare to see one of you actually come out and claim proudly that yes, you are fascist and that you're proud of it.

      Personally, I see no source of pride.

    13. Re:Kudos in advance by daveschroeder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Good point, I wasn't thinking of other interal threats that the U.S. had produced for itself.

      There have been greater external threats as well. I hope - I really hope - we don't have to enumerate them.

      If we do, that implies that the US is the likely only nation to never have any external threats, and to only be a threat to itself, which is ridiculous.

      I hope against hope you're not one of those people who genuinely believes that.

  3. "News For Nerds" indeed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3

    Apart from the blatent click-whoring of the pointless "Politics" section, why is this on /. at all?

  4. i don't get it by circletimessquare · · Score: 3, Insightful

    yes, the man is a slimeball

    and this thread will get about 10,000 cheers for his departure and exclamations of his slimeball status

    regardless, neither the comments nor this story has anything remotely to do with slashdot

    "news for nerds", right?

    yes, this is news, but not slashdot news

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:i don't get it by PJ1216 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If this slashdot post results in that many responses, then obviously this something we'd deem "stuff that matters."

    2. Re:i don't get it by linguizic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I thought what makes someone a nerd is having an odd penchant for publicly stating unwarranted opinions on everything.

      --
      Does this sig remind you of Agatha Christie?
    3. Re:i don't get it by cybermage · · Score: 3, Insightful

      yes, this is news, but not slashdot news

      And that, my friend, is the problem.

      Politicians in both parties are ruining this country because people have divorced themselves from the political process. Politicians will continue to take your money and spend it as they see fit, get us into wars, and commit attrocities in your name whether you're involved in the process or not.

      Voting is not just a right: It's a responsiblity. Being informed about the issues allows you to take that responsiblity seriously.

      I know many nerds who get all the news they want from Slashdot, DZone, etc. I'm glad some of the Slashdot editors occasionally slip in news they need. Whether you care about politics or not, it is "stuff that matters."

    4. Re:i don't get it by Bemopolis · · Score: 2, Funny

      Of course it's relevant to Slashdot — he uses an iPhone. Which just goes to show how great a product it is; I mean, who knew it could handle that level of fire and brimstone?

      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
    5. Re:i don't get it by TopShelf · · Score: 2, Informative

      But, as someone else stated once, Slashdot is the place where I come for tech related news, if I wanted politics news I would go to BBC/politics, if I wanted entertainment news I would go to eonline or yahoo enterntainment...

      If you truly can't handle political stories on /., adjusting your personal preferences is a much quicker way to solve that problem than wading into the discussion for the sole purpose of expressing your disinterest.

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
  5. Rove Responds by Himring · · Score: 5, Funny

    According to CNN current Bush Administration political advisor Karl Rove will be resigning his post as senior political advisor at the end of August [CC] to spend more time with his family.

    "When asked for comment Mr. Rove stated, 'I believe we will be settling down in this place called The Shire. I understand great opportunity exists there to squash more insurgency....'"

    Naturally, you'd have to have read the actual LoTR to get that and not just seen the movies....

    --
    "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  6. Rove gone == good or bad? by amigabill · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm not sure if I should rejoice or freak out. I'm glad to see him out of there, as I'd like to see the whole administration gone. But at the same time, while I'm not a mega-tinfoil-hat kind of guy, I do wonder if he's leaving because he's now completed whatever he wanted to do there, and how afraid should I be of whatever that might be.

  7. Trade off by DarkAudit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, he's leaving the White House, but that in no way means he's done working *with* the White House and the Republican Party. All it really means is that he'll be free of the restrictions on doing political work out of a government office.

    Then again, if or when it hits the fan, any work he may have done after that date would not have the protection of his White house job or "Executive Privilege".

    In any event, expect the dirty tricks to continue as usual.

  8. Turd Blossom! by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Google it. Revealing.

    This man says he's leaving "for his family".

    Thant's because they have the evidence of his cruising activities with D.C.'s gay hustlers.

    Karl Rove: Known in Gay Circles as 'Miss Piggy'
    by jo swift at 12:10PM (CET) on November 2, 2006 | Permanent Link | Cosmos

    In Washington's more 'discreet' gay bars Karl Rove is well-known as a frequent visitor. Witty gays have given him the nickname 'Miss Piggy, after the character on 'The Muppets'. Whether this refers to his appearance ['the doughboy'] or his sexual preferences is open to speculation.
    http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:pRvic62nhFoJ:w ww.radicalleft.net/blog/_archives/2005/8/2/1100109 .html+Rove+Gay&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=fir efox-a
    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  9. I am sure many others have noticed this... by Noryungi · · Score: 4, Insightful
    But what is it with Republicans (and also Democrats) quitting "to spend more time with their families"?

    I mean, this simple sentence has practically become equivalent with "I need to resign in a hurry, to organize my legal defense", for Pete's sake!

    So, let's start the rumor mill: why is Karl Rove really resigning?
    • Because he wants to go work for one of the Republican candidates, like Giuliani.
    • Because he has been offered a nice cushy position at a Republican think-tank, like the American Enterprise Institute.
    • Because he has heard some MSM journalist has finally done his/her job and was about to blow the whistle on (insert nefarious activity here).
    • Because it's time to cash in his Halliburton/Carlyle Group options and retire.
    • Because Congress is, slowly but surely, getting closer and closer to him in a gazillion different scandals.
    • Because he has found his true calling: ministering to the lost souls at Slashdot and other "liberal" blogs to bring them back to Jesus.


    Any ideas?
    --
    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    1. Re:I am sure many others have noticed this... by rbanffy · · Score: 4, Funny

      Obviously he regards his lawyers as family.

      That's not surprising at all.

  10. Have you ever seen Karl Rove? by sheldon · · Score: 4, Funny

    He's most definately a nerd. He's so much of a nerd, even the geeks beat up on him in high school.

  11. implications for boths sides by jaldot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One of the best political campaign advisers in the history of politics, has been released into the wild to prepare for next year's elections. In other words, this story has implications for both sides of the political aisle and it's not simply a 'ding dong witch is dead' deal.

    1. Re:implications for boths sides by Jeremi · · Score: 2, Insightful
      And I wonder, can he be beaten? Is America going to have another Republican president?


      I'd say the Democrats are likely to win, because the Republican Party has been using too many "by any means necessary" political strategies that helped them in the short run, at the cost of completely ruining their credibility in the long term. Maybe by 2012 the American people will have forgotten enough of the crap they've suffered through over the last few years, but I seriously doubt they will have by next year. People no longer pay much attention to the Republican smear machine, they just take it for granted that the Republicans will do or say anything to demonize their opponents.


      To quote Abraham Lincoln: "You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can not fool all of the people all of the time". At this point, the Republicans only have the support of that first group remaining.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  12. Respectfully, I disagree. by HerculesMO · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is news for nerds, when the top advisor of an administration who has supported topics like changing the fight on global warming, letting the FCC let lobbyists write its daily agendas, encouraging telcos to say that the internet is "theirs" and that they can charge a premium to different internet sites around the globe if they want 'increased' bandwith.

    It is news for nerds, when an administration is guilty of supporting failing industries like airlines, stopping the path for new airlines to make headway into the arena. It is news for nerds when we remove the advisor who played the "Wizard of Oz" with what should be the most powerful man in the world.

    In reality though, it won't change a thing. Rove's departure is too little, too late. My hope is that charges are brought upon him for the firing of the US Attorneys and making it politically motivated, for helping cherry pick intelligence to make a case for a war of choice, for re-writing documents written by climatologists to show that global warming is a hoax, and on and on. The intelligent folks would start the indictment towards the end of Bush's term, and have it run through after he is out of office. No sentence should be passed while George Bush is in office. This way, when faced with SOLID jail time, Karl Rove will show how his underhanded life will play against George Bush and Co when he starts blathering about every bad thing he and his buddies in the White House did during his tenure. And you can bet that it would happen if he did face jail time.

    For an administration so bent on war, almost all of them deferred multiple times to stay out of Vietnam, or flew aircraft that were obsolete and had no chance of being used in battle. When they are faced with the violent fact of jail -- you can bet they will try to "defer" yet again.

    --
    The price is always right if someone else is paying.
    1. Re:Respectfully, I disagree. by Shajenko42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The intelligent folks would start the indictment towards the end of Bush's term, and have it run through after he is out of office. No sentence should be passed while George Bush is in office. This way, when faced with SOLID jail time, Karl Rove will show how his underhanded life will play against George Bush and Co when he starts blathering about every bad thing he and his buddies in the White House did during his tenure. And you can bet that it would happen if he did face jail time.
      Bush can pardon Rove even if no sentence has yet been passed. For precedence, see the pardoning of Richard Nixon.
    2. Re:Respectfully, I disagree. by E++99 · · Score: 2, Funny

      It is news for nerds, when an administration is guilty of supporting failing industries like airlines, stopping the path for new airlines to make headway into the arena. It is news for nerds when we remove the advisor who played the "Wizard of Oz" with what should be the most powerful man in the world.

      In reality though, it won't change a thing. Rove's departure is too little, too late. My hope is that charges are brought upon him for the firing of the US Attorneys and making it politically motivated, for helping cherry pick intelligence to make a case for a war of choice, for re-writing documents written by climatologists to show that global warming is a hoax, and on and on. The intelligent folks would start the indictment towards the end of Bush's term, and have it run through after he is out of office. No sentence should be passed while George Bush is in office. This way, when faced with SOLID jail time, Karl Rove will show how his underhanded life will play against George Bush and Co when he starts blathering about every bad thing he and his buddies in the White House did during his tenure. And you can bet that it would happen if he did face jail time.

      And so you see, kids, that while pot will leave you delusional, mean-spirited and paranoid, it will at least leave your fantasy life intact.
  13. Uh, elections ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ever notice the smart rats jump first from the burning ship?

    Uh, no, once Bush won reelection the ship "Bush II" was home free. Perhaps you heard about an upcoming election season? Rove is a political consultant specializing in getting Republicans elected and advancing conservative initiatives. It is simply time from Karl to get involved in the elections and he can't do that from the White House anymore.

  14. Well here goes by phoenixwade · · Score: 3, Informative

    To start - I'm a libertarian, I'm very opposed to the current administrations handiling of a number of items, not the least of which is the impinging of my right to privacy, the handling of the "War on Terror", and getting us into a war in Iraq that I still fail to see how it benefits the US citizen. I have taken a bit of criticism from my friends by asking that question, but my response is and has been "When you spend US solders lives and Billions of US dollars, it seems to me that there should be an answer to the 'What did we purchase?' question."

    That said, Karl Rove's handling of the 2000 presidential election was excellent, but the 2004 presidential election was masterful. Granted, the democrats helped some (and appear to be helping again now, for that matter), but there is no way Bush would have been re-elected without his help. In any normal situation the incompetency of any of those three items would have cost Bush the 2004 elections. I'm kind of sorry to see him go, regardless of my opinion of the administrations polices, Karl Rove is a master of politics and for good or for badad, I think he should have stuck around to see it though, there is only another 18 months in the administration, after all, and I'm sure he's on the short list of blanket pardons that Bush is going to write as he exits his term in office.

    Besides that, who is left for the media to target? Dick? He is already a target, and doesn't care. He has so much "clout" in Washington that he can, and does, ignore everyone and do his own thing.

    --
    A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    1. Re:Well here goes by Tony · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That said, Karl Rove's handling of the 2000 presidential election was excellent...

      If Rove's tactics are considered "excellent," no wonder the political scene in the US is so fucked up. Rove successfully manipulated public opinion, yes, but he did so with innuendo, lies, and manipulation. I'm not saying Presidential campaigns are known for their insightful debate and mutual respect, but Rove brought it all to a whole new level.

      His handling of the 2004 election might've been "masterful," in the same way that a monkey with particularly accurate aim is masterful at shit-flinging.

      Come to think of it, that's a rather apt analogy.

      --
      Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
  15. Lets vote rationally. by cliffski · · Score: 5, Insightful

    you vote for someone based on their eyes and expressions?
    Here in the UK, we had a blind home secretary for a while. his eyes went crazy all the time. I guess he would have lost your vote?
    I'd be happy never to see a politician, or hear them, so I'm not influenced by such trivialities. What matters is what they propose, what they have done, and what they will do. Looks, Age, voice, style, I couldn't give a damn. the main job of a president or PM is to make the right decisions. You can be a 400 pound ugly son of a bitch who dribbles constantly and sounds like fozzy bear, but if you make the right decisions, I'll vote for you, and I won't care about your race, your gender or your looks.

    --
    DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    1. Re:Lets vote rationally. by wperry1 · · Score: 2, Funny

      But the pretty people LOOK so good on the TV.

    2. Re:Lets vote rationally. by lymond01 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What matters is what they propose, what they have done, and what they will do. Looks, Age, voice, style, I couldn't give a damn. the main job of a president or PM is to make the right decisions.

      True enough, though any president or PM is relying heavily on research and advice from hundreds of other people. A leader needs to sound confident more than feel confident. His decisions are in the background and people feel the tremors of them, but when he or she stands at the podium and tells the people how things are going or why he's doing something, looks, timbre, and eyes do count. (See the Nixon vs Kennedy debate: TV-goers decided Kennedy won. Radio-listeners were for Nixon.)

      Now there are lots of people with great ideas, but if you're too short, too heavy, don't look good in a suit...then you're already a step behind. People want heroic stature in their leaders. It's not mandatory and can be gleaned over by intelligence, humor, wise words. But it helps as it has always helped. Barak Obama is a good looking, well spoken guy, and it's not hurting him.

  16. Re:Absolute by JeanBaptiste · · Score: 2, Funny

    Power corrupts. Powerpoint corrupts absolutely.

  17. Oh Please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is really stretching to say that this is news for nerds. Plenty of political news happens every day from both sides, yet the only ones that seem to matter to slashdot is when it only concerns Republicans?

    This politics section is a joke. This is not news for nerds. This is raw meat for the digg/kos crowd. Remember when CmdrTaco said they would be fair? It's not even close. Trolls like kdawon and Zonk use this section as their personal soapbox. It's ridiculous when anyone says it's anything but.

  18. Re:Actually... by Himring · · Score: 2, Informative

    The movies did not cover "The Scouring of The Shire," so, no, you don't get it....

    Maybe this will help:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scouring_of_the_Shire

    WARNING!!! SPOILER!!!

    --
    "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  19. My take by Orange+Crush · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1.) K, it's not exactly tech news, but I still think it's very relevant to us news-reading nerds. Love or hate, discussions about this administration fueled a great deal of the web 2.0/blog explosion. Granted, that would've happened regardless of who was in the white house, but U.S. politics has had its nose in lots of issues directly related to technology. It's also correctly filed under "politics" so I don't have a problem with it.

    2.) Love him or hate him, Rove is a brilliant and cunning political strategist. His president cannot be re-elected and is effectively a lame duck. Bush will wane in the public mind, take lots of vacations, and shoo away congressional investigations like irritating flies for his remaining term--he really doesn't need Rove anymore and would prefer he go off and do what he's proven himself so good at--campaigning for the Republican party in what will doubtlessly be a very difficult upcoming election. I doubt Rove will jump in head first as an official political advisor to anyone anytime soon, but I also doubt he'll be able to resist helping out in an unofficial capacity--it's what he does best.

    3.) The "Miss Piggy / Gay bar" bit is just silly. Even if he was gay (which I doubt) he's far too clever to fall into a trap remotely like that. Let me know when there's a vaguely credible source for that goofy rumor and maybe I'll bother to give it more thought.

  20. Voter Caging by Kirgin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I haven't heard much on the voter caging scandal. If anything is an abuse of data mining its the 3 million or so registered voters denied their rights. The Attorney Generals, the resignation of his assistant and now his resignation are probably all smokescreens for the continued practice of challenging minority votes.

  21. Re:Gunslinger Karl by Sesticulus · · Score: 4, Funny

    Obviously you've never tasted dove. It's delicious, tastes almost like kitten.

  22. Re:Actually... by HerculesMO · · Score: 2, Funny

    Inference is best -- hobbits live in the Shire... it was enough for me to chuckle :)

    --
    The price is always right if someone else is paying.
  23. Re:Actually... by Fex303 · · Score: 4, Funny
    I see what you did there. Hidden out in the open like one of the three...

    On a side note, I couldn't believe that the OP had to mention that you needed to have read the books to get the Scouring of the Shire refernce. I mean, this is /.! But of course someone came along and not only hadn't read the books, but then went on to argue with them... Which I guess means that this really is /.

  24. "swiftboated" by dpilot · · Score: 2, Informative

    The thing that stunned me about the whole "swiftboating" of John Kerry was that allegations were made, did their damage, and there was never any apparent followup. Well, the key word in that sentence was "apparent." Google was my friend on this matter, though it was some 6 months ago, so my memories may not be precise, at least I can't remember which news agency. Reporters went to to Viet Nam, to the vicinity of the battle cited for Kerry's Silver Star, to interview the locals. The locals did not remember Kerry, because "all of those American GIs look alike." But they remembered their people who participated in the battle, their side of the story. All relevant facts which could be verified with the locals resident at the time of the interview were consistent with the "official" version, under which Kerry was given the Silver Star. For instance, the fighters on the Viet Namese side were able soldiers, not children or infirmed seniors.

    The swiftboating was a stunning success, considering that it smeared mud all over a candidate, and there was never followthrough to assess its validity.

    Our press is really doing its job.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  25. Umm... by ZoneGray · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "Mr Rove is one of the chief architects of the Republican Revolution"

    Don't you mean he's one of the people responsible for ending it? As far as I can see, the Republicans have been winning less and less over the last 8 years, to the point where most pundits believe the Dems will win the presidency and both houses of Congress in '08. The only people happy about Rove's departure should be Republicans.

    On the other hand, since so many Democrats think he's some sort of genius... what does that say?

  26. Re:Gunslinger Karl by dkleinsc · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No, no, the "doves" are those pesky anti-war activists hanging around Crawford.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  27. Karl Rove equated to Harry Haldeman (Fox News) by montey · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I find it quite bemusing that Fox News says there hasn't been a Chief of Staff like Karl Rove since Harry Haldeman, Nixon's Chief of Staff.

    I am sure I am revealing my opinion of the Bush administration/Presidency somewhat, but its one heck of a coincidence that arguably the two most corrupted Presidency's of the United States 20th/21st centuries have the two most similar Chiefs of Staff.

  28. Ugly SOB who sounds like Fozzy Bear... by MsGeek · · Score: 4, Funny

    A second, wait you! A good president of the US Yoda would make! No shit does Yoda take from any man! Size matters not! Osama bin-Laden's ass, he will kick!

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  29. Re:spend more time with what? by E++99 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    satan HAS a family?

    Certainly. It comprises a slush in a prius and a hag named tipper.

    seriously, that's the most transparent excuse in modern politics. when you are disgraced, you leave and tell the world 'its time to spend more time with my family.'

    bollocks.

    Disgraced??? Ha! He will go down in history as the most celebrated, most successful deputy cheif-of-staff in American history.

    but at any rate, the damage has already been done. who knows how long we'll be 'paying' for the effect this bastard left on the world. yes, the world - he affect way more than just the US, of course.

    what an evil evil man. one of the worst of the last 50 years, if I may be so bold.

    Right, because exposing Kerry as a disingenuous and dishonorable buffoon, is pretty much as evil as Mao murdering 50-odd million people.
  30. Re:Yeah, no one EVER complains about the President by Evilest+Doer · · Score: 4, Funny

    Those older than me might be able to trace this trend back further.
    Yeah, I'm still pissed off about that fucker Millard Fillmore! "God knows that I detest slavery, but it is an existing evil ... and we must endure it and give it such protection as is guaranteed by the Constitution," he said. Pansy-assed little bastard!
    --
    I feel like death on a soda cracker.
  31. Why is this on Slashdot??? by BarnabyWilde · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Certainly covered better elsewhere.... LIKE ON EVERY NEWS CHANNEL.

  32. Powell's a Liar by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Powell sat in front of the UN and lied about Iraqi WMD to get us to invade.

    Powell kicked off his career whitewashing the My Lai massacre in Vietnam.

    He has no integrity, but he's so slick that millions of people still believe he has credibility. So he has credibility, though he's dishonest. He's a Republican yesman.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  33. innuendo, lies, and manipulation by Ranten_N_Raven · · Score: 2, Informative

    Rove successfully manipulated public opinion, yes, but he did so with innuendo, lies, and manipulation.
    As if the other side never does that? Please.

    As a retired Captain (USAF), I took great offense at Al Gore's election-2000 team explicitly trying to get them to throw out the absentee votes of GIs stationed overseas. What was the usual reason? No postal cancellation. Much mail sent by those on ships doesn't get cancelled. There was one especially grevious case--a guy serving on one of the ships helping rescue the USS Cole after it was boat-bombed managed to track it down. His vote had been thrown out.

    During the news this morning, there was Hillary talking about the need to count every vote and make every vote count.

    You hate Rove & Republicans? Fine. But please recognize that yours is not a side made up of angels, pure and bright. Thou hast thy blemishes, too.
    --

    READ the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the other amendments! http://lcweb2.loc.gov/const/const.html
  34. I find this highly odd by Dracos · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This move doesn't make any sense. Just when the Bushites need him the most, he "quits"? Here's a list of reasons why this is bizarre:

    • Bush's approval ratings are approaching Nixon's low-point record
    • Few are buying the Gonzales Defense anymore (ie, "I can't recall")
    • Congress has begin waving big sticks, who knows if they will actually use them
    • "The Surge is working", even as
    • The Iraqi government is collapsing

    Like so many before, "spending time with his family" is a polite lie. Just because he's leaving his official post doesn't mean he won't still be pulling the puppet strings from backstage.

    Something else, really big, is going on.

  35. Re:/. should stay out of politics or cover it fair by Xybre · · Score: 2

    What political agenda? It links to a CNN article.

    --
    Eternity is a time bomb.
  36. Rep. dnd by ItsLenny · · Score: 2, Funny

    and celebrated for pioneering district level up campaigns

    he's a level 42 politician with a +3 against democrats
    --
    ----------
    Trying to fix or change something only guarantees and perpetuates it's existence
  37. his life's work ahead of him... by doom · · Score: 2, Funny

    Now that he's retiring maybe he can spend even more time on troll accounts on slashdot.

  38. Re:Mod Parental Unit Up! by cheezedawg · · Score: 2, Informative

    short term deficits are not that big an issue. However, we've run a deficit for the vast majority of my lifetime. The magic thing is that deficits accumulate into debt. Add the extra magic of compounding interest and you're in for a real treat. The debt is my primary concern.
    Well, first, I don't know where you got the idea that the interest on our debt is compounding. It is straight simple interest. Somebody buys a new security from the treasury, and the government pays him fixed interest payments every six months until maturity, at which time the principle is paid off. It never compounds.

    Of course deficits add to the debt. The question is, as long as the economy is growing, why do we need to pay the debt off at all?

    Secondarily, I am worried by the methods the government use to come up with the figures you mention without citations. I am more disturbed, however by the means the government use to hide deficit and debt, namely "borrowing" from the "separate, never to be touched" social security funds and highway trust. Both of those funds are dramatically underfunded for their obligations, and those underfundings are only going to be exacerbated with time. Where I'm from, we call it "robbing Peter to pay Paul."
    Yes, Social Security will be underfunded starting in about 40 years, but that has absolutely nothing to do with intragovernmental debt. Just like any treasury security that you or I buy, the securities held by the Social Security trust fund are backed by the full faith and credit of the US government, and have the same 0% chance of being defaulted on. No, Social Security's problems are more systemic with it promising more benefits to more retirees, but fewer workers are paying into the system to fund the benefits.

    Oh, and these intragovernmental debts are not at all hidden. The Treasury Dept includes them in their published numbers.

    In addition to a legitimate fear of impending hyperinflation (get out from under your rock and look into the current state of the money markets)
    I've happily poked my head out from under my rock, and I see that inflation is still low, the market-determined yields on US Treasury securities are still below historical averages (meaning the market still considers them very low risk), and although the value of the dollar is off from its peak, the dollar is still stronger today than it was 10 years ago (trade weighted currency index of 103 this month compared to the Jan 1998 baseline of 100). I also see that our currency has appreciated significantly over the past 3 years compared to 2 out of our 4 top trading partners. Again, where is your fear of impending hyperinflation coming from?

    I am deeply concerned with the direct threat to our sovereignty it represents. Just look at the Chinese trial balloon with respect to shorting our debt. They *can* do it. It would hurt them. At this point in their development, it would hurt us worse.
    The Chinese currently own about 4% of our debt (source). They aren't even the biggest foreign holder of US debt. They could probably do some damage to our currency if they liquidated all of their dollar holdings, but there is no way that would hurt us more than it would hurt them. In the meantime, lets be happy that they are helping to subsidize our low tax rates and helping our economy.

    BTW: the unspoken part of your signature is "and we will throw out previous definitions of just war in order to satisfy our urge to spread "freedom" through tyranny."
    This is pretty OT, so suffice it to say that I really don't understand how toppling one of the most brutal dictators that this century has seen, followed by helping the Iraqi people chose a constitutional committee, write a democratic constitution, ratify that constitution, and elect a democratic parliament- all by free national elections- would fall under anybody's definition of "tyranny".
    --
    "The defense of freedom requires the advance of freedom" - George W Bush
  39. Hillary Clinton would be one of the best ever by theolein · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm not an American and therefore can't vote, but my personal opinion (and it's not the evil, liberal foreigner crap) is that, of all of the current crowd of goons running for president, Hillary Clinton would be, by far, the best, and very possibly one of the best presidents you've ever had.

    Of all of the current candidates, left and right, she is the only one who has consistently, from what I can tell, maintained her positions, even if they weren't always popular. For instance when she was discussing lobbyists with bloggers at the DailyKos, she didn't pander to the popular opinion then. She has, I think, a fairly clear idea of what she wants and what her platform is. She isn't naive (Obama's bullshit about Pakistan was enough to disqualify him), and she has, by virtue of her years with Bill and a state senator, a decent amount of experience. She doesn't have wacky shit like Romney or Giulliani, and she isn't scared of dissenting opinion, which, given the facsist crap that is happening in yuor country, should be a breath of fresh air for everyone.

    In fact the only thing that really is not in her favour is that there are one fuck of a lot of Americans that are somehow terrified of women, who spend a whole bunch of energy making hysterical, wildly paranoid prophecies about how bad she would be. I find it difficult to believe that anything could be worse than the incompetent evil clowns in power right now, but there you have it.

    1. Re:Hillary Clinton would be one of the best ever by skarphace · · Score: 3, Insightful

      For instance when she was discussing lobbyists with bloggers at the DailyKos, she didn't pander to the popular opinion then.
      Pandering to the 'popular opinion' could also be construed as 'representing'.
      --
      Bullish Machine Tzar
  40. Re:Mod Parental Unit Up! by conspirator57 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hmm... an argument to every point except the erosion of freedom in America... Well, I'll at least address your arguments as they stand.

    "Well, first, I don't know where you got the idea that the interest on our debt is compounding. It is straight simple interest. Somebody buys a new security from the treasury, and the government pays him fixed interest payments every six months until maturity, at which time the principle is paid off. It never compounds.

    Of course deficits add to the debt. The question is, as long as the economy is growing, why do we need to pay the debt off at all?

    Yes, Social Security will be underfunded starting in about 40 years, but that has absolutely nothing to do with intragovernmental debt. Just like any treasury security that you or I buy, the securities held by the Social Security trust fund are backed by the full faith and credit of the US government, and have the same 0% chance of being defaulted on. No, Social Security's problems are more systemic with it promising more benefits to more retirees, but fewer workers are paying into the system to fund the benefits.

    Oh, and these intragovernmental debts are not at all hidden. The Treasury Dept includes them in their published numbers."

    What you say is true only if the government is not also borrowing money from you to pay me the interest and will in turn have to borrow still more from me in order to pay you interest... ad nauseam. Besides, if the government gives me my money back and it's worth half as much as it was when I put it in... I've lost money. I believe in charity, but let's call it what it is. As to current valuation of the dollar, are all media outlets including (probably your favorite) FOX wrong when they report the dollar to have dropped "dangerously close to historic support value"? And the figures are hidden because they are not discussed because both parties want to spend like it's going out of style.

    "I've happily poked my head out from under my rock, and I see that inflation is still low, the market-determined yields on US Treasury securities are still below historical averages (meaning the market still considers them very low risk), and although the value of the dollar is off from its peak, the dollar is still stronger today than it was 10 years ago (trade weighted currency index of 103 this month compared to the Jan 1998 baseline of 100). I also see that our currency has appreciated significantly over the past 3 years compared to 2 out of our 4 top trading partners. Again, where is your fear of impending hyperinflation coming from?"

    Remember the S&L collapse during the 80s? Our current debt/financing of mortgages combined with a similar arrangement in "Private Equity" is deeply reminiscent of the debt for investment trends in the 1920s that the Great Depression was blamed on and which led to the creation of the SEC. Tell me, why should I personally be unable to borrow more than a certain percentage of the money I invest when a publicly traded "private equity" company can do so? http://money.cnn.com/2007/08/06/markets/privateequ itybubble.fortune/index.htm

    "The Chinese currently own about 4% of our debt (source). They aren't even the biggest foreign holder of US debt. They could probably do some damage to our currency if they liquidated all of their dollar holdings, but there is no way that would hurt us more than it would hurt them. In the meantime, lets be happy that they are helping to subsidize our low tax rates and helping our economy."

    The Wall St. Journal and other media outlets seem to think your source underestimates the debt holdings. Their estimates run in the $1-1.3 Trillion range. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/m oney/2007/08/07/bcnchina107a.xml My guess would be that they only consider the govern

    --
    "If still these truths be held to be
    Self evident."
    -Edna St. Vincent Millay
  41. Wish I could mod you Insightful. by FrameRotBlues · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As funny as it sounds, you hit one of the nails square on the head. I don't think half the previous US Presidents would've been elected if there was TV back then.