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Mitt’s Money

Marc Ambinder notes Mitt Romney’s decision to release some financial information in the form of a Friday dump. In particular, “now we know why ex-MA Gov. Mitt Romney wrote himself a ‘nightmare’ $5M check at the end of the second quarter: he spent more than five million more than he raised. Put together, Romney’s burn through about 99% of his receipts.” Good news for Fred Thompson?

Victory NH photo used under a Creative Commons license

Yglesias

Post-Jewish Poland

Dana Goldstein linked the other day, to a fascinating New York Times article about a revival of interest in judaica in today’s more-or-less judenrein Poland. She analogizes this to:

[H]ow the United States has appropriated a certain vision of Native American culture. We name our sports teams after tribes and turn Native people into face-painted mascots. We consecrate a holiday (Thanksgiving) that ignores most historical evidence to mythologize non-coercive friendship between European settlers and Native Americans. In the town where I grew up, where the local Sint Sinck tribe was deplaced by white settlers into the Connecticut River valley, a middle class neighborhood of Cape Cods is referred to as “Indian Village,” with street names such as “Mohawk,” “Ramapo,” and “Mohegan.”

There is a certain similarity here, but the people the NYT talks about seem to have a level of sincere interest in Ashkenazi Jewish culture that’s substantially deeper than what’s implied in the United States’ appropriation of Native American place names. After all, there not only used to be a lot of Jewish people in Poland (10 percent) but they were a substantial and integral element of the cultural, political, and economic life of the country even if they were never fully integrated or accepted.

Yglesias

The Iraqi View

While arguing the other day that Iraqis want us to leave their country, it was necessary to concede that the Iraqi government seems to enjoy having the US military at its disposal. Now, though, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki seems to be saying he can get along without us, though he wants more of our heavy military equipment (possibly a bad idea, but a discussion for another day).

Security

The Ever Changing Definition of ‘Mission’ In Iraq

In June 2005, ThinkProgress noted the Bush was constantly revising the definition of our “mission” in Iraq.

Reporting on his escalation strategy this week, President Bush claimed “satisfactory” progress in many areas of the “new mission” in Iraq. Bush has changed the definition of our “mission” in Iraq so many times, he has made it impossible for the American public, U.S. forces, and the Iraqi population to have any confidence that the mission will be ever completed.

THE PRE-WAR MISSION WAS TO RID IRAQ OF WMD

Bush: “Our mission is clear in Iraq. Should we have to go in, our mission is very clear: disarmament.” [3/6/03]

AFTER THE WAR BEGAN, THE MISSION EXPANDED

Bush: “Our cause is just, the security of the nations we serve and the peace of the world. And our mission is clear, to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction, to end Saddam Hussein’s support for terrorism, and to free the Iraqi people.” [3/22/03]

Bush: “Our forces have been given a clear mission: to end a regime that threatened its neighbors and the world with weapons of mass destruction and to free a people that had suffered far too long.” [4/14/03]

THEN THE MISSION WAS COMPLETE

Bush: “On Thursday, I visited the USS Abraham Lincoln, now headed home after the longest carrier deployment in recent history. I delivered good news to the men and women who fought in the cause of freedom: Their mission is complete, and major combat operations in Iraq have ended.” [5/3/03]

BUT THEN IT CONTINUED AGAIN

Bush: “The United States and our allies will complete our mission in Iraq.” [7/30/03]

THEN THE MISSION WAS TO DEVELOP A FREE IRAQ

Bush: “That has been our mission all along, to develop the conditions such that a free Iraq will emerge, run by the Iraqi citizens.” [11/4/03]

Bush: “We will see that Iraq is free and self-governing and democratic. We will accomplish our mission.” [5/4/04]

AND TO TRAIN THE IRAQI TROOPS

Bush: “And our mission is clear there, as well, and that is to train the Iraqis so they can do the fighting; make sure they can stand up to defend their freedoms, which they want to do.” [6/2/05]

Bush: “We’re making progress toward the goal, which is, on the one hand, a political process moving forward in Iraq, and on the other hand, the Iraqis capable of defending themselves. And we will — we will complete this mission for the sake of world peace.” [6/20/05]

THEN IT SHIFTED TO ADVANCING DEMOCRACY

Bush: “We will stay as long as necessary to complete the mission. … Advancing the ideal of democracy and self-government is the mission that created our nation — and now it is the calling of a new generation of Americans.” [11/30/05]

AND PROTECTING AMERICA FROM TERRORISTS

Bush: “In the coming days, there will be considerable reflection on the removal of Saddam Hussein from power and our remaining mission in Iraq…By helping the Iraqi people build a free and representative government, we will deny the terrorists a safe haven to plan attacks against America.” [3/11/06]

Bush: “We will finish the mission. By defeating the terrorists in Iraq, we will bring greater security to our own country. And when victory is achieved, our troops will return home with the honor they have earned.” [3/18/06]

THEN THE MISSION WAS PROVIDING SECURITY FOR THE IRAQI POPULATION

Bush: “In fact, we have a new strategy with a new mission: helping secure the population, especially in Baghdad. Our plan puts Iraqis in the lead.” [1/13/07]

Bush: “[I]t’s the combination of providing security in neighborhoods through these joint security stations, and training that is the current mission we’re going through, with a heavy emphasis on security in Baghdad.” [4/10/07]

AND NOW?

Bush: “It’s a new mission. And David Petraeus is in Iraq carrying it out. Its goal is to help the Iraqis make progress toward reconciliation — to build a free nation that respects the rights of its people, upholds the rule of law, and is an ally against the extremists in this war.” [6/28/07]

Jordan Grossman

Climate Progress

The Carbon Market Takes Off

The global carbon market is exploding. From 2oo5 to 2006, the market tripled, from $10 billion to $30 billion.

$25 billion came from trading European permits, and the other $5 billion from the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) or a Joint Implementation (JI) projects.

One firm predicts that the market could be worth $100 billion within three years…

The big question: When will we join what promises to be the biggest job-creating market of the 21st century?

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