"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

The Trial Of Saddam Hussein

Today's NYT:

[Mr. Muhammad] described in harrowing detail a night spent at a military police building with 350 other captives, where he saw people being tortured with burns and electric shocks. Seven of his 10 brothers disappeared or were killed after the arrests, he said. He was only 15 years old at the time, he said, but he was tortured and kept in prison for almost four years.

Mr. Hussein interrupted Mr. Muhammad's narrative at least once, saying "these are not our ethics," after Mr. Muhammad described the torture he had witnessed.

A few weeks ago:

Bush did not confirm or deny the existence of CIA secret prisons that The Washington Post disclosed last week, and would not address demands by the International Committee of the Red Cross to have access to the suspects reportedly held at them.
...
The U.S. government is aggressively taking action to protect Americans from terrorism but "we do not torture," President Bush said on Monday, responding to criticism of reported secret CIA prisons and the handling of terrorism suspects.

UPDATE: another instance via Digby: you hear a stray reference to someone being taken to Abu Ghraib and abused. Is your first assumption that this is something we did, or something done by Hussein's regime?

I'm not trying to exculpate Hussein here in any way shape or form, just noting a disturbing parallel. I hope the people in Iraq are able somehow to come to terms with what he did to their country and their families and move on.

I have the same hopes here in the US w/President Bush.

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Kos Humor/Election Fraud

A problem we have on the Left is that many of our most ardent activists have no sense of humor.

For the record, "having no sense of humor" here means trying to rationally respond to the diary with an argument about the probability that the 2004 election was rigged electronically.

It's a big debate that's gone on there (and elsewhere) for quite a while. My take is that the possiblity is quite distinct given that the systems Dibold sold the government were ludicrously insecure and downright faulty in a lot of cases. However, no hard evidence exists that anything went on that might have swung 100k votes in Ohio. While I recognize the potential for widespread fraud -- and I absolutely hate the fact that there were actual, measurable, voter supression activites that were actively witnessed -- I'm not about to accuse the Bush administration of subverting democracy in the 2004 election.

Nor am I willing to call for the heads of any members of their campaign other that Kenneth Blackwell, who served as both Ohio Secretary of State (thus overseer of all election-related activities) and Ohio Chair for Bush/Cheney'04. Last person who did that was... Katherine Harris, who more or less did steal the 2004 election by purging 30,000 elegeble voters, overwhelmingly African Americas, from the rolls. A turnout of 5% among those voters would have swung the election in favor of Al Gore. Yeah. She stole it, just like Kenneth tried to do.

But Kenneth's state wasn't within the margin of error for that sort of skullduggery. The reality is that the GOP, the "conservative movement" and the religious right put together a politlcal machine which turned out more votes than the Democrats and their coalition were able to match.

Or rather, that's what I believe. I believe it because there's nothing solid pointing to another reality, and this is the world you have to play in if you want to participate in the politlcal process. Even though there was the potential for electronic fraud, and we all know the people in charge are ethically challenged, you can't call the other party illegitimate -- essentially guilty of treason -- without some sort of hard evidence implicating specific individuals.

Otherwise there's no bottom. It's just a war of all against all. I don't believe in that kind of reality.

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Big News

Frank and Laura are ENGAGED.

We had a grand potluck over at their place last night; I had a 52-minute work-related phone call in the middle, but whatever, a good time was had by all. Apparently it was good enough for Frank to propose the next morning.

Congradulations, kids!

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9 New Messages

Confession: I don't like checking my voicemail. I find it oppressive.

This is highly unprofessional and needs to stop.

Anyway, have a good Friday. I'm goin' potlucking.

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