Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Torture: Another Attempt To Rewrite History By The Republicans

The Bush administration tried to rewrite the history of why we went to war in Iraq when no WMD were found and now former V.P. Dick Cheney is in the forefront of trying to rewrite the history of torture that occurred on his and Bush's watch in connection with the war on terror.  Republicans Mitch McConnell and John Boehner in congress along with former representative Newt Gingrich are joining the battle.  They introduced a new twist.  It is ok to torture as long as useful information is gathered from torture.  It does not matter to them that the U.S. is party to the Geneva Convention and other treaties that forbid torture, period.
 
Fox news and other cable news have also joined the battle and are trying to change the nature of the torture debate by accusing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as being involved because she was briefed by the CIA on the interrogation being used.  She denied she was told waterboarding and torture were used.  It should be noted that the republican party controlled congress when congress was briefed.
 
I wrote in a post here when Karl Rove left the White House and went to work for Fox news he would be trying to rewrite the history of the Bush administration and the damage done to the country.  He has been doing just that on Fox news and will soon publish a book to do the same thing.  The torture flap is a continuation of how republicans operate.
 
Why are they trying to rewrite the torture problem now.  Well simply because information has been recently made public by the White House and the Justice Department.  Also former administration officials who were connected with the torture memos are singing like birds on national T.V.  The people who are responsible for torture and the use of torture are those who authorized the practice and those who knew it was torture and still carried it out.  Republicans in Bush's administration have a history of lying to conceal the administrations illegal activities and their operating in secret.
 
Nancy Pelosi is being used as a distraction from the real problem concerning torture.  Republicans will be in the mode to rewrite the history that happened on their watch for a long time because more and more is being revealed little by little as time goes by of just how the Bush administration operated and the damage done to our country.
 
Only cowards try to rewrite history and a lot of them are coming out of the wood work.  They are really a sorry bunch.

Louisiana's Budget Woes

Governor Bobby Jindal and his administration are trying to address a $1.3 billion short fall in the budget.  Major cuts in spending has been proposed by Jindal to make up for the revenue shortage he and the legislature failed to anticipate.  Governor Jindal inherited a $2 billion surplus from the previous administration.  The reader will remember how Bush inherited budget surpluses from the Clinton administration and then failed to balance one budget in his 8 years in office.  However, the state of Louisiana  is required to balance its budget.
 
Republicans seem to have a problem balancing budgets especially after they inherit surpluses from the previous administration.  If one listens to what Jindal says, the fault lies in fallen oil and gas prices and the condition of the national economy.  Not so says former Republican Governor Buddy Roemer.  As reported in the Times Picayune of May 17, Roemer in a sit down with representative Dan Claitor said, Jindal can not separate himself from the budget shortfall.  Roemer said Jindal was part of the problem and is a result of Jindal's miscalculation in the last budget.  Jindal's spokesman, Kyle Platkin blamed it on the national economy and a decrease in oil and gas revenue.  The usual disclaimer by republicans.  Always passing the buck.
 
The big problem is how and where Jindal wants to cut the budget and spending.  Lt. Governor Mitch Landrieu in a letter to the editors dated 5/19 to the Times Picayune pointed out how the $2 billion surplus Jindal and the legislature inherited from the previous administration and then decided to increase spending over $1.3 billion.  Those decisions Landrieu said forced them into a position this year of cutting 87 academic programs at our colleges and universities.  Plus budgets cuts to health care funding across the state.
 
Landrieu also pointed out we should invest our money in education, health care, critical infrastructure and other programs that offer substantial return on taxpayers dollars.  In other words every situation has a priority.  You do not cut the budget programs that produce revenue. 
 
I recall what Bob Woodward, the Washington Post journalist wrote in one of his many books.  He said that in Bill Clinton's first year in office he knew more about the federal budget than the members of congress did even though most of them had been in congress for many years and had to deal with the budget every year.  The republicans were especially astonished by Clinton's knowledge about the federal budget.  That explains why Clinton's fiscal and economical policies reversed the 12 years of deficit spending by the Reagan-Bush years.  It also explains what is going on with the Louisiana budget.  Jindal and the legislature are all over the place because they really don not understand how budgeting works and managing the peoples money. 
 
Mitch Landrieu's letter to the editors was right on target.