Rove would say Jesse has a pre-9/11 mindset.
I'm crazy that way. I still think the president should follow the law, and if they want to be able to say "We HAVE to! It's a WAR!" then it should be a congressionally-declared war, like that one document says. What was that document again? Oh yeah -- the CONSTITUTION.
Christ.
There are definitely some Republicans who think the administration has gone too far in claiming powers and I imagine Cheney is busy twisting arms these days with threats of withdrawing campaign support.
Having finally gotten in to the site (hellooooooo Slashdot!), I find zillow's price for my house really very funny.
You can't overestimate the importance of turf in government activities. It's impossible.
Well, I hope I'm proved wrong. But right now - I don't have that faith anymore. And when you can't even believe in craven self-interest, what the hell can you believe?
What was that document again? Oh yeah -- the CONSTITUTION.
Bush has called the Constitution "just a piece of paper." And on three separate occasions he's been heard to joke that he'd like to be dictator.
Zillow appears to be unaware of my neighborhood
ION,
Alias
will return in the spring to finish its final season: [link]
(I think Susan W. found an agent this week as well as the amazing David and Allyson news.)
Plus Corwood got his contract this week too, I expect.
It's NOT A REAL WAR.
It's a NotReal war that will never be over. Executive Uber Alles! It is - as Betsy's long ago tagline posited - the very premise of
1984.
"We have always been at war with EastAsia."
My feeling about Bush is that he isn't a really important person in the administration. There are a few things he wants to do and does work on, but generally just likes being the President a lot more than actual Presidenting and doesn't cercern himself a lot with what the administation is doing except at the most superficial level.
And when you can't even believe in craven self-interest, what the hell can you believe?
This is the city that pays $200 for a hammer. (Actually, when I lived in DC and worked for a government contractor, somebody finally explained to me how this is so. Not that the hammer costs $200, but there are two factors:
1) Unrealistically low budgets during the bidding process require funny receipts later. (I think this has decreased, as the Reagan era has gone by.)
2) If you request one hammer in November, you'll get 12 of them the following August. Because the US budget closes in the third quarter of the year, and nobody wants to come in under budget at the end of the year, or else they'll get less next time.
That's just hammers. When it comes to who is allowed to get all up in whose business? Bigger deal.