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Yglesias

Blowing Whistles

Blackwater’s Iraq contracts mostly come via the State Department. The State Department, meanwhile, has an Inspector General, Howard Krongard, who’s supposed to prevent any shenanigans. Or else, as Brian Beutler reports, he could just get up to his own shenanigans:

But Waxman’s committee has long been investigating that very office, as well. Recently, seven people working for Krongard alleged that Krongard himself had, in Waxman’s words, “interfered with on-going investigations in order to protect the State Department and the White House from political embarrassment.” Two of those whistleblowers — former Assistant Inspector General for Investigations John DeDona and his erstwhile deputy Ralph McNamara — resigned specifically because of Krongard’s meddling.

How did Krongard respond? Allegedly by threatening to terminate anybody else who dared speak with congressional investigators. Two of his employees — special agents Ron Militana and Brian Rubendall — have agreed to speak publicly anyway.

There’s something breathtaking about the arrogance, corruption, and incompetence here. Bush has some basic reasons of self-interest to want the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to go well. And yet even that kind of motive seems to have no real pull, no ability to get the administration to take the job of governing seriously.

Politics

Novak: Senate Conservatives Knew About Craig’s ‘Weird Conduct,’ ‘Didn’t Do Anything About It’

On Bloomberg Television today, right-wing pundit Robert Novak revealed that “sources in the Senate” have told him that Senate conservatives had prior knowledge about Sen. Larry Craig’s (R-ID) “problem” but intentionally kept it “in the closet”:

I have talked to several of my sources in the Senate, and this came as a surprise to me…They knew about it. They knew that he had this problem, and it was in the closet. And it was not just a homosexual relationship. It was this weird conduct. They didn’t do anything about it.

Watch it:

Novak added, “So Republicans, again, as in the case of Congressman Foley, their cover-up is coming back to haunt them.” Novak did not elaborate on what “weird conduct” Craig has carried out in the past.

Recall, then-Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) “and at least three of his aides were told of allegations that then-Rep. Mark Foley (R-FL) had improper e-mail contacts with a former House page months before the incident became public.

Ultimately, at least a dozen GOP lawmakers and aides admitted to having knowledge of Foley’s lewd behavior, “some of them for a year or more,” but kept the matter secret.

If Novak’s sources are correct, then the Senate ethics investigation into Craig — which conservatives have been aggressively pushing for — should determine what Craig has done in the past and which Senators were involved in covering it up.

Politics

Paul Krugman on Bush’s SCHIP veto.

Krugman writes, “So, President Bush says that Democrats are endangering children’s health, by sending him an S-chip bill he won’t sign. Abraham Lincoln had something to say about such arguments in his Cooper Union address:”

That is cool. A highwayman holds a pistol to my ear, and mutters through his teeth, “Stand and deliver, or I shall kill you, and then you will be a murderer!”

Culture

Reggie Evans

I hadn’t realized that the 76ers acquired Reggie Evans last month. Obviously, for a team in desperate need of a power forward this becomes an any-port-in-a-storm kind of situation, but I think Evans is a pretty underrated player. Certainly, “a backup who’s being forced to start” isn’t how I’d describe a guy who had a league-leading 23 percent rebound rate last season. Obviously, five Reggie Evanses aren’t going to get you anywhere, but he seems like an extremely useful player to me — one who can really shine given the chance to start.

Photo by Flickr user thanasim25 used under a Creative Commons license

Politics

‘No to America.’

“More than a thousand Iraqis marched in west Baghdad on Saturday in a rare public demonstration to protest against a wall they say the U.S. military is planning to erect around their neighborhood. Carrying an Iraqi national flag and banners condemning the wall the marchers in the predominantly Shi’ite district of al-Washash chanted ‘No, no to the wall. No, no to America.’”

Climate Progress

Hydrogen from eggshells, China’s one-child policy, climate legislation, Brad Pitt and more

Climate Progress gets quoted on a diverse set of subjects. Here is ScienceNow on hydrogen:

Still, not everyone is convinced that eggshells are the future [of hydrogen production]. “It’s an intriguing idea, but I don’t know how this could work at a large scale,” says Joseph Romm, a physicist and author of several books on energy and the climate. Plus, he notes, the approach doesn’t address the biggest problems with hydrogen fuel: extending the life of fuel cells and developing more compact hydrogen storage tanks on board vehicles.

Here is Greenwire on “Chinese bid to cast one-child policy as emissions curb raises eyebrows” (subs. reqd.) — they called me because of this recent post on China:

Joseph Romm, a former Energy Department assistant secretary and currently of the Center for American Progress, also dismissed China’s claim.

“The fact that their one-child policy has reduced emissions against what they would’ve been is interesting,” he said. “But it doesn’t help the planet. What we need to do now is for them to develop without building a coal plant every week.”

Romm added he didn’t see the issue being taken seriously on Capitol Hill or in international talks.

“The bottom line is, ‘Could a negotiated agreement cover it?’” he said. “Frankly, it’s been hard enough just to get a regular climate agreement.”

and I was on two segments of Earthbeat radio with Mike Tidwell talking about global warming legislation and celebrity climate action, including the Clinton Global Initiative.

Media

O’Reilly Lets Loose: Says WH Reporters Need To Be ‘Wiped Out,’ Calls CNN ‘The Pagan Throne’

In an interview with Bill O’Reilly last night, former White House press secretary Tony Snow said that his future career plans may include writing a book on cancer and possibly returning to Fox News.

When Snow revealed his plans to write a book on how to deal with cancer, O’Reilly responded:

O’REILLY: You know what you can do with all respect? You can combine how I deal with cancer with how I deal with the White House press corps. Because they’re both insidious, invasive. They both have to be wiped out.

Snow also informed O’Reilly that he’s considering returning to Fox News, but that he is also open to other networks that would give him the opportunity to do a “radio/TV piece.” O’Reilly responded:

O’REILLY: But you can’t go over to CNN. I mean, that’s the devil over there. You can’t. You know. You’re a religious guy. You can’t go into the pagan throne over there.

O’Reilly warned that if CNN put Snow on the 8 pm slot as a competitor to him, “it’s going to get bloody.” Watch it:

In the interview, Snow also said he “very well may” join a Republican presidential candidate’s campaign, though he said he “has no horses in the race” at this time.

Transcript: Read more

Politics

Glenn Beck to Muslim-American guest:

“How do we know the difference between you and those that are trying to kill us?” In Nov. 2006, Beck made a similar comment to Rep. Keith Ellison (D-MN). “I have been nervous about this interview with you,” Beck said, “because what I feel like saying is, ‘Sir, prove to me that you are not working with our enemies.’”

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