Archive for August, 2007

It’s That Time of Year Again: Football Time

 Posted by Glynn Wilson on August 31st, 2007

Editor’s Note: For better or worse, it’s that time of year again. Football time. So today, we resume our regular Friday feature from legendary columnist Knute Bryant on what’s coming up for the weekend, including TV times and stations.

by Knute Bryant

The list of things that could be foremost on the minds of people this weekend is long. Some of them include the Iraq war, global warming, the failing housing market, the failing health care system, and more.

But here in the South, most males - and a goodly number of females - will be thinking (What else?!) football. After all, this is the opening weekend of the 2007 college grid season.

Southeastern Conference fans have been looking forward to this weekend all through the long, hot summer as it looks to be a very interesting season indeed.
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A Male Ruby-Throated Hummingbird

 Posted by Glynn Wilson on August 30th, 2007
male_rubythroat1.jpg
Photo by Glynn Wilson
As the Alabama summer heat finally begins to break, it is about time to start thinking about the fall bird migration season. Armed with a new Giottos professional tripod, we finally managed this morning to get a few shots of a male ruby-throated hummingbird archilochus colubris. The females seem to be much easier to catch. The males tend to fight each other off the plants and feeders.

Bush Wants $50 Billion More for Iraq War

 Posted by Glynn Wilson on August 30th, 2007

President Bush plans to ask Congress next month for up to $50 billion in additional funding for the war in Iraq, a White House official said in yesterday’s The Washington Post, a move that appears to reflect increasing administration confidence that it can fend off congressional calls for a rapid drawdown of U.S. forces, according to the libertarian Cato Institute.

The request - which would come on top of about $460 billion in the fiscal 2008 defense budget and $147 billion in a pending supplemental bill to fund the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq - is expected to be announced after congressional hearings scheduled for mid-September featuring the two top U.S. officials in Iraq. Army Gen. David H. Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan C. Crocker will assess the state of the war and the effect of the new strategy the U.S. military has pursued this year.”

“With Iraq War costs approaching $500 billion, President Bush is expected to request at least $50 billion more. He does so while offering only more predictions of an impending breakthrough on security and political reconciliation that will eventually enable us to remove our troops from the country. The American people must be patient, he explains; the surge must be given more time to work,” Christopher Preble, Cato’s director of foreign policy studies, said in a statement released Wednesday.

“No one should be surprised that the president has yet again moved the goalposts, but the extent of this particular change is striking. When he announced the surge in January 2007, the president explained that improved security would be a catalyst for political reconciliation. It now seems certain that the Maliki government will not achieve most of its political benchmarks in the foreseeable future. It has gotten so bad that some U.S. political leaders and commentators are even calling for Maliki’s removal, a process that would only further undermine the prospects for an American withdrawal any time soon,” Preble says.

“But even the president’s claims that security in Iraq has improved are dubious. The Associated Press reports that the death toll from sectarian attacks around the country is running at nearly double the pace from a year ago,” Preble says. “It might be reasonable to expect the American people to be patient if the president’s past promises of progress hadn’t proved so disastrously wrong. As it is, the public sees no end in sight to this ruinous war.”

Cato.Org

Second Anniversary of Katrina Exposes Problems

 Posted by Glynn Wilson on August 29th, 2007

Two years ago today, Hurricane Katrina, the costliest disaster in the nation’s history, made landfall. Natural storm defenses - barrier islands, wetlands, and coastal forests - that once existed had suffered at the hand of humans, and their demise left coastal communities exposed.

The storm surge Katrina created destroyed southern Louisiana, obliterated the coast of Mississippi, and toppled levees causing catastrophic flooding in New Orleans and St. Bernard Parish. People drowned in their houses, billions of dollars of property were destroyed, and cracks in American government and society were exposed.

As the recovery continues two years later, an honest federal commitment to effective storm protection that incorporates coastal restoration and conservation, along with the proper levee alignments, is essential to rebuilding a sustainable Gulf Coast.

The Gulf Coast’s natural storm defenses can be rebuilt.

In Louisiana, river diversions can deliver freshwater and sediment to starved marshes. Man-made channels, like the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet (MRGO) must be closed. Oil and gas companies need to take responsibility for wetlands destruction by filling in old canals and funding large-scale restoration projects.

Help in implementing these changes is the best anniversary gift you can give to the future of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, according to the Gulf Restoration Network.

The non-profit group is asking people to take a moment today to commemorate the second anniversary of Katrina and help them “Flood Washington, Not Our Coast” with emails to Congress and the President urging them to make a strong commitment to the Gulf Coast.

http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/organizationsORG/GRN/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=1521

Two years after Katrina, there are still obstacles to overcome, but progress in the revitalization is being made. People and jobs are coming back; defunct political institutions, like fractured levee boards, are being restructured; and lives are being rebuilt.

“Living in New Orleans, I feel a sense of hope breaking through the gloom, but we’re paralyzed as we hold our breaths through another hurricane season. Fear of the next disaster will subside only when our levee system AND our natural storm protections are restored,” says Dan Favre, Campaign Organizer for the group. “The time to act is now.”

The Gulf Restoration Network is a diverse network of local, regional, and national groups and individuals dedicated to protecting and restoring the valuable resources of the Gulf of Mexico. The GRN has members in the five Gulf states of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida.

For more information, visit the group’s Website at HealthyGulf.Org.

Gay Republican Hypocrites Back in the Spotlight

 Posted by Glynn Wilson on August 28th, 2007

There are interesting and potentially explosive new developments breaking today concerning gay Republican hypocrites in Washington and elsewhere.

We were right in the middle of investigating claims that the real reason Bush’s chief political aide Karl Rove resigned from the White House was that he is the real bisexual lover of the gay male prostitute who was run off from the White House press room back in the spring of 2005, namely James Guckert, a.k.a. Jeff Gannon of Gannongate and JeffGannon.com.

But then Idaho Sen. Larry Craig held a press conference covered live on CNN today in which he denied being gay, in spite of pleading guilty to lewd conduct in a men’s room at the Minneapolis airport.

U.S. Senator Gets Flushed

Senate Republican leaders in Washington called for an ethics committee review into his involvement in a police sting operation this summer in the airport men’s room, after the private group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics filed a complaint with the ethics committee seeking an investigation into whether Craig violated Senate rules by engaging in disorderly conduct.

Sen. Craig: ‘I Am Not Gay’

The controversy errupted earlier today on the media Website at the Poynter Institute.

From Hearsay to Headline: Tracking the Larry Craig Coverage

And the D.C. blogger Wonkette has been covering this story and others, related to a triple murder suicide of more gay Republicans in Florida, including one who worked in the attorney general campaign of Troy King of Alabama.

Even the Alabama Associated Press had a story on this today, although they do not mention all the gay Republican connections.

Slain Florida Political Consultant Worked on Alabama Campaigns

To read the most about it, CrimeBlog.US is covering it in great depth.

The original story on Jeff Gannon was broken on Feb. 2, 2005 on America blog in a post called A man called Jeff.

Since the mainstream, corporate press and the broadcast media would not cover this story, and since the Bush royal family has a long history of being able to keep this stuff quiet either by killing people or paying them off, there was no real way to get to the bottom of the story - until now, perhaps.

Now that Craig has gone on national TV and breached the door to this sort of controversy, maybe there are other similar controversies that now may be investigated.

In the Locust Fork Journal archives on Gannongate, some of the links are broken. But a thorough check of back computer files turned up the orginal Secret Service logs that clearly show Gannon spent several nights in the White House. Knowing beyond a shadow of a doubt that gay sex was going on in the White House, the only real questions left that remained unanswered were: Who was he having sex with? And in which bedroom?

For anyone interested in making a contribution to this story, including sources who want to talk anonymously, check out the logs below.
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