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Politics

Huckabee: Bush’s role in Plame leak should be ‘investigated.’

In an interview on MSNBC’s Hardball yesterday, former Republican Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee called Scott McClellan’s revelation that “the President himself” was involved in the Valerie Plame scandal “stunning.” “They deserve to be thoroughly examined, investigated, and the truth brought to the American people,” he said, adding that President Bush should personally respond to the charges. Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2007/11/huckabeemcbu.320.240.flv]

View Plame’s response to McClellan’s statement HERE.

Transcript: Read more

Security

Military Charity Responds To O’Reilly: ‘If You Really Want To Help U.S. Troops, Set The Record Straight’

oreillyphone.jpg Last week, Fox News host Bill O’Reilly visited U.S. troops in Afghanistan. After his trip, he sharply criticized the United Service Organizations (USO) for not sending more celebrities to the country. AP reported:

[T]he cantankerous Fox News Channel commentator told The Associated Press that he’s disappointed that the United Service Organizations “doesn’t put anybody out there (in Afghanistan).”

“I went to thank these guys on behalf of me and my audience,” he said in an interview from Istanbul, Turkey. “As far as I know, the only famous people in the past year were (country music singer) Toby Keith and me.

At our request, USO provided ThinkProgress with its letter responding to O’Reilly’s inaccurate charges, urging him to “set the record straight.” USO has already sent seven entertainment tours to Afghanistan this year, and expects to send approximately 19 celebrities total in 2007. From the USO letter:

Just through September of this year, we produced 37 overseas tours with 241 performances for 98,000 troops in 14 countries, 9 stateside tours, 15 celebrity education events for military dependents, and 48 celebrity visits to military hospitals. … For 2007, we expect to take approximately 19 celebrities to Afghanistan and more than 35 to Iraq.

If you really want to support America’s service men and women and their families, please set the record straight (both on your show and with the AP) on the work the USO is doing right now on behalf of the nation’s troops and encourage your viewers to support the USO.

Additionally, providing entertainment is just 20 percent of USO’s work supporting the troops. It also operates 132 service centers around the world (including one in Afghanistan) and coordinates amenities such as phone cards, care packages, and more.

USO Vice President of Communications Mark Phillips told ThinkProgress that they are in talks with O’Reilly’s producers to come on the show and discuss the organization’s work. “We’re doing some great work over there, and we’d like folks to know about what we’re doing, and would certainly like to do more,” Phillips said.

Find out more about how you can support America’s troops HERE.

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Yglesias

The Case for Doing Nothing

Doing nothing about Kosovo independence — “freezing its status” as they say — would be the right thing to do, and demonstrate an unusual dose of prudence and good sense on the part of the Bush administration. There’s nothing wrong, in my view, with the idea of Kosovo being independent, but obviously Serbs don’t like it and it’s become an important point of pride and whatnot for Russia. Under the circumstances, a unilateral Western recognition of Kosovo independence would do relatively little to help Kosovars in concrete terms and a great deal to worsen US-Russian relations with potentially bad consequences for our policy in the Caucuses and Iran.

Politics

Bush: Musharraf has not ‘crossed the line.’

Last night in an interview with ABC News, President Bush “offered his strongest support of embattled Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf,” nearly three weeks after Musharraf declared emergency rule. Bush said that Musharraf hasn’t yet “crossed the line” and insisted Musharraf has “advanced democracy in Pakistan.” Watch it:

[flv http://video.thinkprogress.org/2007/11/bushpakdc.320.240.flv]

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Joseph Biden (D-DE) responded, “What exactly would it take for the president to conclude Musharraf has crossed the line? Suspend the constitution? Impose emergency law? Beat and jail his political opponents and human rights activists? He’s already done all that. If the president sees Musharraf as a democrat, he must be wearing the same glasses he had on when he looked in Vladimir Putin’s soul.”

Transcript: Read more

Climate Progress

Five climate events to be thankful for

Lynn Englum, one of the interns at the Center for American Progress, has been doing some brainstorming in preparation for this year’s Thanksgiving feast. She’s come up with this list:

turkey.jpgLet this Thanksgiving be a time for reflection, as there are several events within the past year worth reminiscing. These five occurrences have increased awareness on climate change and moved the U.S. closer to achieving targeted greenhouse gas reductions. Hopefully, these events will prove to be catalysts in creating sustainable energy use and a stable climate for future generations.

1. IPCC & Al Gore won the Nobel Peace Prize for their contributions to bringing awareness to the climate change problem.

2. The 1st CAF‰ standard in 22 years was passed in the Senate–still waiting on the House to approve.

3. All the democratic presidential frontrunners (Obama, Edwards, and Clinton) have proposed a comprehensive energy plan, asking for large carbon dioxide emission reductions (80% by 2050).

4. The 4th IPCC Synthesis report was released providing a blunt and urgent call for action.

5. Public opinion is shifting: Polls are showing an increased international and domestic desire to mitigate the effects of climate change.

While there is still a long way to go, the progress and recognition of climate change as a serious problem has improved enormously from just a few years ago. So as we sit down this Thanksgiving, remember where the climate change movement stood then and be grateful that the nation and the world are finally starting to wake up.

Yglesias

Actual Crime Control

Speaking of the crime issue, I should say that while I think the United States has gotten unduly complacent about crime since the big “crime drop” of the 1990s. There’s no reason we shouldn’t be able to get the murder rate back down to 1950s levels if we try, and I think there’s pretty good reason to believe that sustained further reductions in crime levels can help create a situation where our ludicrously high prison population can start coming down. What’s more, I think we actually learned a lot during the 1980s and 1990s about effective crime control strategies. McMegan waxes vague:

On the other hand, “culture matters” doesn’t get you very far as a poverty eradication program; no matter how much money you give welfare mothers, they’ll still be on welfare. And “they’re poor” has proven to offer little in the way of crime-reduction strategies; we’ve been much more successful with things like more police on the beat.

And, indeed, there is good evidence that more police officers helps reduce crime. What’s more, though I really, really, really don’t think Rudy Giuliani should be elected president, the Compstat system he and William Bratton implemented appears to be a helpful way of deploying the cops you have more effectively. And, indeed, Bratton is currently following up his successful runs in Boston and NYC with successes in Los Angeles and all this presumably has something to do with his methods (i.e., things that can be copied) rather than with his Batman-style crime fighting abilities.

What’s more, as I somewhat reluctantly concede in this article, mass incarceration, though cruel and expensive, is somewhat effective as a crime-control strategy. Meanwhile, another big part of the 1990s story is that while welfare handouts may not reduce crime (this is a bit unclear, since welfare goes overwhelmingly to women and crime is committed overwhelmingly by men — the gender gap also being a good reason to doubt that objective material need is the key variable here) wages for unskilled workers are an important determinant of crime rates in a way that’s pretty intuitive — if there’s more money to be made working, you’re ceteris paribus more likely to spend time working, and when you’re behind the desk at CVS you’re by definition not robbing anyone.

Relatedly, while I don’t really believe that improved educational attainment is the key factor in curbing inequality, better performance at the bottom end — fewer high-school drop-outs in particular — could do a lot to reduce crime. Similarly, high-intensity early childhood interventions seem to work.

Last, while we spend a fortune on locking people up in prison, we also have all these parolees who are being supervised in a very bare-bones and largely useless manner. Something more expensive than traditional parole — something like “Coerced Abstinence” — would be way cheaper than full-time incarceration but way more effective than what we’re doing now.

Photo by Flickr user Hisgett used under a Creative Commons license

Politics

ThinkFast: November 21, 2007

webbceiling.jpg

Fearing that President Bush would again use a Congressional recess to install executive branch appointees without Senate confirmation, Sen. Jim Webb (D-VA) gaveled in a 30-second Senate session yesterday. “This is an exercise in protecting the Constitution and our constitutional process,” Webb said.

MoveOn.org Civic Action is taking on Facebook for infringing user privacy. “MoveOn is objecting to a new advertising technique that Facebook announced a few weeks ago that posts members’ purchases and activities on other websites in their Facebook profiles.” Take action here.

Americans enter the holiday season in a dark mood, with economic worries, security fears and a lack of confidence in government fueling growing pessimism, according to a Reuters/Zogby poll released on Wednesday.” The number of Americans who believe the country is on the right track fell from 26 percent to 24 percent in the last month, with about two-thirds believing it is headed in the wrong direction.

Two groups of scientists yesterday revealed that they “succeeded in turning human skin cells into cells that are very similar — but not identical — to embryonic stem cells.” Experts, however, cautioned that it is unclear “whether the new cells will be as effective as conventional embryonic stem cells may prove to be against certain disease.”

Glenn Greenwald sets Joe Klein straight on his factual misrepresentations about FISA reform. Klein writes in Time that Democrats’ proposal fix to FISA would require “every foreign-terrorist target’s calls to be approved by the FISA court.” Greenwald responds, “Everyone — from Russ Feingold to the ACLU — agreed that FISA never intended to require warrants for foreign-to-foreign calls that have nothing to do with U.S. citizens.” Read more

Yglesias

On The Road

Traveling today, should be relatively light, weekend-esque levels of posting. There’s be some stuff out throughout the day, though, if you’re still stuck at the office. Otherwise, happy Thanksgiving.

Culture

Blatche Breaks Out

Back last season when he wasn’t getting any burn, I’d be yelling “Blatche!” at opportune moments from my seat whenever the game wasn’t looking very competitive. Well, thanks to the departure of Calvin Booth and the injury to Etan Thomas it looks like this season is Andray’s chance to play, and everyone in the Verizon Center was going wild last night at his beautiful line of 26 points on 12-14 shooting plus eight boards and a block in 29 minutes. Breakout game, woo! And, yes, he still can’t really play defense, but this is still the Wizards.

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