2008 Presidential Race
The most provocative 2008 Presidential Candidate stand-off that no-one is talking about... yet: Al Gore vs. Jeb Bush. It would be incredible.
The most provocative 2008 Presidential Candidate stand-off that no-one is talking about... yet: Al Gore vs. Jeb Bush. It would be incredible.
Posted by Wang at 2/23/2007 12:16:00 AM 1 comments
Labels: 2008 election, democrats, President, Republicans
It is really a gift that YouTube exists. Nowhere outside of the internet has there been such an open forum for holding political pundits accountable for what they have said. Whether it be Joe Biden calling Barack Obama the "first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy", former Senator George Allen calling S.R. Sidarth, an Indian man, "macaca", etc, everyone's verbal gaffes get their time in the sun. Open forums like YouTube and Google Video have largely done what the mass media has been afraid to do the last decade, hold people accountable for lies and hypocrisy and internally regulating their own misdoings.
It is always amusing to watch conservative firebrands like Michelle Malkin and Ann Coulter taken to task for journalistic irresponsibility and fallacious logical arguments. I have a hard time believing that Republicans take Malkin and Coulter seriously, there is just no way. I have an even harder time believing that these two women are products of American higher education; Malkin graduating from Oberlin College and Coulter from Cornell University and later University of Michigan Law School. How can it be that such prestigious universities produced two such individuals that have little regard for fact checking. It is especially surprising in Coulter's case given that she graduated Cornell cum laude and was the editor of the Michigan Law Review. Two very bright women. You have to wonder if they sacrificed their own credibility for the sake of being outspoken and prominently featured on FOX News.
Watch as Malkin and Coulter both get caught up and trapped by their own non-nonsensical speech.
Posted by Wang at 2/20/2007 02:42:00 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ann Coulter, internet, loudmouths, Michelle Malkin, YouTube
From the years 1993 to 2001, President Bill Clinton worked alongside four different Congresses; the 103rd, 104th, 105th, and finally the 106th. During three out of four congresses, both the House and the Senate were presided over by a Republican majority. It is interesting to examine how a Republican majority Congress worked/fought against a President of the other party, especially during war time and on issues of the Constitution and the War Powers Act of 1973. It is in my opinion, a good window of time to examine the failure (56-34 with 17 Republicans joining the Democrats) of today’s non-binding measure which sought to rebuke President George W. Bush’s plan of escalating the number of troops deployed in
Article I- Section 8 of the United States Constitution provides that while the President is the Commander in Chief of military forces when called upon to do so, the Congress retains the power to:
In order to understand how the balance of power is struck throughout the course of a war, we must look at Article I in conjunction with the War Powers Act which requires the President to gain the approval of Congress before the commencement of any sort of hostile acts. This Act, whose legality has never been formally challenged through the Supreme Court, gives the Congress a set of teeth, as declaring war can be interpreted as a formality that does not give Congress a role in actually authorizing military action. Congress can authorize a war, but can it end one? Congress can end a conflict if war has not been formally declared within 60 days conflict. However once it authorizes a war, as it did in
In 1992, the US as well as NATO were convinced that it was time to take action against
It was during this time that Democrats and President Clinton began to be heavily criticized by some in the military and by the Republicans. In a 1996 editorial, John T. Correll, Editor in Chief of the Air Force Magazine, blasted Clinton for not observing the Weinberger Doctrine –
“In 1984, Secretary of Defense Caspar W. Weinberger proposed six tests to determine whether US forces should be sent into combat: Is a vital national interest at stake? Will we commit sufficient resources to win? Will we sustain the commitment? Are the objectives clearly defined? Is there reasonable expectation that the public and Congress will support the operation? Have we exhausted our other options?
…the Clinton Administration, which came to office imbued with the idea that the instrument of military power could be and should be applied with fewer restrictions. President Clinton's first Secretary of Defense, Les Aspin, said that under the Weinberger rules, the armed forces would be employed "only very, very rarely" and that "people may not be willing to pay $250 billion or even $200 billion a year for a military that is not very useful."
To my knowledge Correll, even as far as 2003 (when he discontinued his role at the Air Force Magazine), supported the efforts that the Bush administration had made in
[Correll commenting on G.W. Bush] “He promised to review the open-ended deployments: “Sending our military on vague, aimless, and endless deployments is the swift solvent of morale. ... I will work hard to find political solutions that allow an orderly and timely withdrawal from places like Kosovo and
Reflecting from 2007, Bush's words ring hollow as the criticisms he reserved for Clinton are those that he is also facing now. As we can see, Bush was heavily critical of the way
11/9/1995- H.R. 2606
Title: To prohibit the use of funds appropriated to the Department of Defense from being used for the deployment on the ground of United States Armed Forces in the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina as part of any peacekeeping operation, or as part of any implementation force, unless funds for such deployment are specifically appropriated by law.
[Passed 243-171; 214 “AYES” votes were by the Republicans; failed in Senate 22-77]
12/13/1995-H.Res 302
Title: Relating to the deployment of United States Armed Forces in and around the territory of the
Reiterates serious concerns and opposition to the President's policy that results in the deployment of 20,000 members of the
Calls for: (1) the President and the Secretary of Defense to rely on the judgment of, and ensure the provision of appropriate resources and support to, the commander of the U.S. armed forces that are deployed in and around the territory of the Republic in all matters affecting the safety, support, and well-being of such forces; and (2) the U.S. Government to be impartial and evenhanded with all parties to the conflict as necessary to assure the safety and protection of such forces.
[Passed 287-141; 221 “Yeas” votes were by the Republicans]
12/13/1995- H.Res.304
Title: Providing for debate and for consideration of three measures relating to the deployment of United States Armed Forces in and around the territory of the
[Passed: 357-70; Majority opinion of both parties]
Title: To prohibit Federal funds from being used for the deployment on the ground of United States Armed Forces in the
[Defeated 210-218; 190 “YEAS” votes were by the Republicans]
Title: Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives regarding the deployment of United States Armed Forces to
Supports the men and women of the
[Defeated 190-237; 219 “NAYS” votes were by the Republicans]
Posted by Wang at 2/17/2007 07:15:00 PM 3 comments
Labels: Clinton, george w. bush, hypocrisy, Iraq, Kosovo, Non-binding resolution, Republicans, War Powers
I just returned from a week long trip to NYC, where I bought clothes, ate lots of food, and hung out with all of my friends that didn't and probably won't ever leave New York City (one of the few cities in the world that actually matters).
One of the coolest new things that I discovered was Uniqlo. If you walk on Broadway, right in between Spring and Prince, you will find a brightly lit clothing store that is the Japanese equivalent of H&M (except the quality is a lot better). Actually, the way I originally thought of it was the up-scale Ikea of clothing. The quality of clothing is in ratio with price on a margin of about 5:1. The idea is simplicity, clothing pieces that you can pick up and instantly mesh together with your existing closet of stuff. The next time you are in the city, take a pit stop here.
They also have a nice catalog type book they call Uniqlo Paper. It pairs together spreads of the clothing alongside featurettes that are similar to GQ's now semi-defunct "Seen on the Street" section, where they chat up artsy fartsy folks on the streets of New York wearing Uniqlo. Pair that with interviews ranging from Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth, Chef Morimoto (the Iron Chef, yes that's right), to various foundational blocks of the Uniqlo brand like its textile masters and interior designers.
http://www.uniqlo.com/us/uniqlopaper/
Posted by Wang at 2/03/2007 01:18:00 PM 0 comments