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."
Ever notice the smart rats jump first from the burning ship?
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!
Apart from the blatent click-whoring of the pointless "Politics" section, why is this on /. at all?
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
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
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.
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.
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. http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:pRvic62nhFoJ:
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
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?
Any ideas?
The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
He's most definately a nerd. He's so much of a nerd, even the geeks beat up on him in high school.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
Power corrupts. Powerpoint corrupts absolutely.
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.
The movies did not cover "The Scouring of The Shire," so, no, you don't get it....
e
Maybe this will help:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scouring_of_the_Shir
WARNING!!! SPOILER!!!
"All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
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.
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.
Obviously you've never tasted dove. It's delicious, tastes almost like kitten.
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.
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 /.
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.
"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?
No, no, the "doves" are those pesky anti-war activists hanging around Crawford.
I am officially gone from
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.
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.
Certainly. It comprises a slush in a prius and a hag named tipper.
Disgraced??? Ha! He will go down in history as the most celebrated, most successful deputy cheif-of-staff in American history.
Right, because exposing Kerry as a disingenuous and dishonorable buffoon, is pretty much as evil as Mao murdering 50-odd million people.
I feel like death on a soda cracker.
Certainly covered better elsewhere.... LIKE ON EVERY NEWS CHANNEL.
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
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
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:
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.
What political agenda? It links to a CNN article.
Eternity is a time bomb.
he's a level 42 politician with a +3 against democrats
----------
Trying to fix or change something only guarantees and perpetuates it's existence
Now that he's retiring maybe he can spend even more time on troll accounts on slashdot.
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.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?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.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
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.
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
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.
Hillary Rodham Clinton was allowed to order 10 cattle futures contracts, normally a $12,000 investment, in her first commodity trade in 1978 although she had only $1,000 in her account at the time, according to trade records the White House released yesterday.
The latest Slashdot meme.