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Paxson contradicts McCain, says they discussed FCC letters.

Marking the second time that statements made by Sen. John McCain’s campaign have been contradicted today, Lowell “Bud” Paxson told the Washington Post that he did in fact meet with the senator about writing letters to the FCC in 1999. McCain’s campaign said yesterday that “no representative of Paxson or Alcalde & Fay personally asked Senator McCain to send a letter.” Paxson said they met “several weeks” before McCain sent the letters:

Paxson said he talked with McCain in his Washington office several weeks before the Arizona Republican wrote the letters to the FCC urging a rapid decision on Paxson’s quest to acquire a Pittsburgh television station.

Paxson also recalled that his lobbyist, Vicki Iseman, attended the meeting in McCain’s office and that Iseman helped arrange the meeting. “Was Vicki there? Probably,” Paxson said in an interview with The Washington Post today. “The woman was a professional. She was good. She could get us meetings.”

Politics

GM exec: global warming still a ‘crock of sh*t.’

Reuters reports that GM Vice Chairman Bob Lutz defended his previous remarks dismissing global warming as a “total crock of shit.” Lutz said his views had no bearing on GM’s commitment to build environmentally-friendly vehicles. He added that those “spewing virtual vitriol” at him for disparaging climate change were “missing the big picture.” “My thoughts on what has or hasn’t been the cause of climate change have nothing to do with the decisions I make,” Lutz alleged.

Politics

Welch on NYT on McCain

Reason editor Matt Welch is also the author of McCain: The Myth of a Maverick and probably knows the details of John McCain’s record better than anyone in journalism. Here he is talking about The New York Times‘s weird attempted takedown:

I think this is about right — non-reporting of a non-scandalous non-affair aside, the Times story manages to reproduce some not-new information about McCain that most people nonetheless don’t know and should.

Yglesias

Feeling Impatient

Since Charles Krauthammer is citing Anthony Cordesman’s report on the situation in Iraq to make the point that the surge has worked, I trust nobody on the right will be upset if I quote from a different part of the same report. He says, basically, a lot of good things have happened but a lot more needs to be done. We need, he says, strategic patience. Under the circumstances, it’s worth taking a look at what he says we need to do going forward to succeed.

His report is full of things like “consolidate progress in Iraq forces: Independent for internal security by 2012; create ability to defend against foreign threats by 2018.” He outlines goals like “Create effective criminal justice system and local rule of law (2008-2010)” and “revive national infrastructure in terms of water, power, roads, rail, petroleum exports, financial institutions, communications, etc (2009-2011).” On the security front, we’re also supposed to “resolve the problem of National Police, local forces, ethnic and sectarian militias and integrate into ISF or civil economy (2009-2011).” We also need to “revise constitution to meet needs of all major factions (2008-2009).”

To me, rather than an endless continuation of the debate over whether (or in what sense) the “surge” has or hasn’t “worked” it would be highly preferable to focus instead on whether or not strategic patience of the sort Cordesman is talking about is a reasonable policy going forward. My view is that it isn’t. If you look at these kind of agenda items that lurk near the back of the report, you’ll see a bunch of things where the prospects for success aren’t particularly good, the costs are high, the time frame is both vague and long, and the benefits don’t seem particularly clear. I’m also fairly confident that if Charles Krauthammer and John McCain just put the choice between Cordesman’s approach and leaving expeditiously on the table, that most people would agree with me. Thus you’ve seen a consistent effort starting in 2002, then continuing into 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, and now 2008 to mislead people about the question at hand into thinking that “success” is something that might come soon and thus that the cut-and-run crowd should be ignored. But if Bush had told people in 2004 that four years in the future his Iraq policy would be so successful that people would be talking about Iraq taking responsibility for its own internal security in 2012 then he never would have been re-elected.

As an intellectual exercise, this sort of thing Cordesman has done strikes me as pretty useful and interesting. I’d like to see more of it. What would Cordesman do to fix Haiti’s deeply entrenched problem if we were willing to commit 120,000+ U.S. troops and $100 billion a year to the problem for an indefinite period of time? Or maybe the federal government wants to dedicate that kind of personnel (though not active duty soldiers) and money to reducing the crime rate in Washington, DC? I’m not at all sure that a forward-looking agenda that has “deal with the issue of federalism in ways that resolve Kurd-Arab-Turcoman tensions; Shi’ite power struggle in south, Sunni concerns in west, mixed areas in center, and create a stable Baghdad and Basra (2008-2010)” can possibly succeed, but I am pretty sure that I’d rather not find out.

In short, I lack strategic patience.

Politics

McCain witholds ‘judgment’ on Renzi indictment.

Rep. Rick Renzi (R-AZ), who is a member of Sen. John McCain’s (R-AZ) National Leadership Team and a co-chair of his Arizona Leadership Team, was indicted this morning for extortion, wire fraud, money laundering and more. Asked to comment, McCain refused to pass “judgment” on Renzi, claiming that he doesn’t “know enough of the details.” As TPM’s Paul Kiel notes, McCain claimed similar ignorance when it was first revealed that Renzi was under federal investigation.

UPDATE: On a blogger conference call today, McCain said that Renzi “would probably step down as co-chair of his Arizona campaign.”

Politics

Feingold for Obama

It shouldn’t really come as a surprise that Russ Feingold would vote for his fellow anti-war midwestern reformist Senator but since he didn’t offer a formal endorsement the fact that he’s gone public with this after the fact seems at least somewhat significant. Among other things, I think you see an increasing number of Democratic elites who don’t have super-strong feelings on the merits between Clinton and Obama now hoping to push Clinton out of the race ASAP before the HRC dead-enders throw too much slime in the direction of the guy who’s likely to win anyway.

Media

Jumping?

Patrick Appel writes that “The Iseman scandal coverage has been dizzying. The left jumped at the opportunity to skewer McCain, while the right equally cherished the chance to condemn the Times.” This strikes me as a pretty lazy equivalence. In a nation of 300 million people, I’m sure some people on the left have jumped at the opportunity to skewer McCain, but just about every liberal I read has taken the time to note that the Times‘ sexual innuendos were a pretty inappropriate way to frame a news story.

Have I (and others) “skewered” McCain’s interventions in the regulatory process on behalf of Paxson communications and habit of accepting free plane rides from lobbyists? Sure. Meanwhile the right, it seems to me, has basically pointed at the smear and completely ignored these more substantive elements of the case against McCain’s self-righteousness. It’s a particularly odd trend since conservatives have spent a lot of time over the past ten years complaining precisely about McCain’s self-righteousness.

Security

HBO Agrees To Air ‘Taxi To The Dark Side’ After Discovery Drops It For Being Too ‘Controversial’

Taxi to the Dark Side, a documentary about an innocent Afghan taxi driver tortured to death by U.S. officials at Bagram Air Base, has received wide critical acclaim since its debut in April at the Tribeca Film Festival. The New York Times’s A.O. Scott said, “If recent American history is ever going to be discussed with the necessary clarity and ethical rigor, this film will be essential.”

Earlier this month, ThinkProgress reported that the Discovery Channel broke its contract to broadcast Taxi prior to the 2008 elections. With plans to take the company public, executives were afraid the “film’s controversial content might damage Discovery’s public offering.”

In a press release on Thursday, HBO announced that it has bought the rights to Taxi and will show the film in September 2008. TP reader Tim received a similar response from “Viewer Relations” at Discovery Communications, who said that they may also show the film on cable in 2009:

In its first, pay tv window, HBO will debut the film in September, 2008. We are proud that Taxi to the Dark Side will make its basic cable debut in 2009 on Investigation Discovery, the network dedicated to providing in-depth programs that challenge viewers’ perceptions on important issues shaping our culture and defining our world.

ThinkProgress spoke with an HBO spokeswoman who explained why the network picked up Taxi: “It’s a great film and HBO always goes after high quality docs.”

A source told ThinkProgress that Discovery agreed to the deal with HBO after intense public criticism — including from the netroots. Discovery executives were also reportedly anxious that if Gibney received the Oscar for best documentary feature, he would make a speech denouncing the network.

How convenient for Discovery that it is now willing to show the film on its own channel in 2009…after President Bush is out of office.

Digg It!

Politics

Bush presidency immortalized at SMU.

bush382.jpgSouthern Methodist University in Dallas will be home to George W. Bush’s $200 million presidential library,” officials announced today. The decision to place the library at SMU was initially met with furious protests. “In one of its most interesting votes on the matter, [a] faculty group asked the school to request that Bush rescind his order allowing former presidents to keep White House documents secret forever,” the AP notes.

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