Life During Wartime

Oh, pity the poor Washington insiders – the poor loves, how they suffer:

Tightening the Beltway, the Elite Shop Costco

[…]

Entertaining in Washington has gone decidedly casual. No one has stepped in to duplicate Pamela Harriman’s or Katharine Graham’s elegant soirees, and the Iranian Embassy, which once served free-flowing Champagne and caviar, is long shuttered. “There used to be so many black-tie dinners at private homes,” said Buffy Cafritz, an honorary Kennedy Center trustee who also is known in Washington hostess circles. “Now everything is so much more informal, and we serve meatloaf instead of beef Wellington.”

[…]

Against the backdrop of an unpopular war, rising oil prices and a subprime mortgage crisis, a certain thriftiness seems to have crept into the city’s dining rooms.

“I don’t think anyone would dare serve caviar as a first course today, and instead of filet mignon, there are a lot of other beef dishes,” said Letitia Baldrige, the etiquette writer who was Jacqueline Kennedy’s social secretary. “Embassies don’t have the pocketbooks they used to. And to have these opulent menus for these parties here, it looks bad.”

In that sense, catering by Costco is a style statement, like drinking Pabst Blue Ribbon beer.

More…

The Washington Post, reporting without any apparent irony on the new trend for multimillionaire DC insiders – shopping at big box stores, in the hope of not finding themselves up against a strictly metaphorical Georgetown wall should the strictly metaphorical revolution come.

No doubt the grandees are sniffing the revolutionary ire of the betrayed middle and working classes on the wind, hence their ostentatious poormouthing of themselves. It’s highly amusing that the article is illustrated with a picture of former arriviste media party girl turned DC social grande dame Sally Quinn, wife of former post editor Ben Bradlee, hardly one of the new poor.

Inside Blackwater’s Mercenary Training Centre

From Liveleak:

This video was recorded with the co-operation of Blackwater so don’t expect revelations; nevertheless it’s fascinating to see just how close the supposedly publically accountable armed forces, federal officers, sheriffs’ departnments and state and local police are to this private army and its commanders – and how beholden the country is to an unaccountable, well-armed private corporation as a consequence . There are very few areas of the military or law enforcement in which Erik Prince and his paramilitary company do not have an interest. [UPDATE: In addition to Prince’s own political ties, Joseph Schmitz COO and general counsel of Blackwater’s parent company the Prince Group is Jeb Bush’s brother-in-law.}

Part of the purpose of this training is to build loyalty. Who exactly is it that these troops, federal officers, sherriffs and local police are training to be loyal to?

Asked and Answered. Next?

US tv pundit Bill Maher asks in the Huffington Post:

Idiocracy
Bill Maher, 10.11.2007

Have too many Americans become gullible, ill-informed idiots who have elevated feelings over facts and replaced critical thinking with a blind sense of trust for authority?

From his keyboard to Tristero’s ear:

Just How Bad Is Our National Discourse?
by tristero

This is the week Al Gore won the Nobel Peace Prize. This is also the week where plausible allegations surfaced that the Bush administration had sought illegal wiretapping within at least 5 weeks of Bush’s installation in the White House. So what is the lead article in the print edition of the NY Times Week in Review (the Sunday editorial/op-ed section)? Are you stting down? Believe me you need to.

Reporters and their cats

.

What the market wants, the market gets.

Read and Inwardly Digest

where the traffic flows

These two Wired articles may give you some idea of the depth and scope of the NSA unauthorised wiretapping scandal: yet again (although they think it is) it’s not just about Americans.

We in Europe are also being spied on as though we were enemies: but unlike them we don’t have even the figleaf of the Fourth Amendment to protect our nakedness in the eye of the US’ paranoid, unchecked security services. As if Echelon wasn’t bad enough

NSA’s Lucky Break: How the U.S. Became Switchboard to the World

After reading that, you may be concerned that the NSA is spying on you. Want to find out? Then read The Newbie’s Guide to Detecting the NSA, which shows you how.

Here’s our own traceroute back to nsa.gov from Amsterdam. (munged slightly to protect our privacy):

Traceroute from RRC00 to nsa.gov.

traceroute to nsa.gov (12.110.110.204), 30 hops max, 38 byte packets

1 gw.dev.nsrp.ripe.net (193.0.0.14) 0.937 ms 0.891 ms 72.475 ms

2 GigabitEthernet3-2.core2.ams1.level3.net (195.69.144.110) 14.957 ms 11.381 ms 18.267 ms

3 ae-0-54.mp2.Amsterdam1.Level3.net (4.68.120.98) 15.807 ms 25.059 ms 14.290 ms

4 ae-0-0.bbr2.NewYork1.Level3.net (64.159.1.42) 89.496 ms as-0- 0.bbr1.NewYork1.Level3.net (4.68.128.106) 84.947 ms ae-0-0.bbr2.NewYork1.Level3.net (64.159.1.42) 93.431 ms

5 ae-43-99.car3.NewYork1.Level3.net (4.68.16.197) 96.202 ms ae-33-
89.car3.NewYork1.Level3.net (4.68.16.133) 77.086 ms 75.008 ms

6 ggr2-p360.n54ny.ip.att.net (192.205.33.93) 75.179 ms 77.331 ms 75.146 ms

7 tbr2.n54ny.ip.att.net (12.123.0.94) 77.908 ms 77.606 ms *

8 gbr5.n54ny.ip.att.net (12.122.11.26) 76.793 ms 75.358 ms 75.558 ms

9 ar4.n54ny.ip.att.net (12.123.214.57) 75.155 ms 76.423 ms 76.305 ms

10 12.126.221.90 (12.126.221.90) 84.946 ms 12.126.221.94 (12.126.221.94) 86.016 ms

12.126.221.90 (12.126.221.90) 86.830 ms

11 12.110.110.132 (12.110.110.132) 95.132 ms 126.533 ms 102.358 ms
12 * * *
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Read that last Wired article (and the comments) then come back and look at the traceroute again. You’ll see exactly what I mean.

Cry Me A F****ing River

Meghan O'Sullivan. former model and Bush Iraq adviser, wants your sympathy

I read this article by uber Beltway insider Peter Baker in the Washington Post yesterday and I was astonished and angry at its effrontery. The enablers of George Bush and Dick Cheney’s homicidal madness want us to feel sorry for them because they feel a bit bad about what they did? And Baker thinks this is reasonable?

I don’t think so.

It had been four days since Meghan O’Sullivan left her job at the White House. Just four days since she gave up her Secret Service pass, her classified hard drive and her entree to the president. Four days since she gave up any day-to-day responsibility for Iraq.

Too soon, evidently, for the dreams to end. “In fact, I was dreaming about Iraq last night,” she said. “And I woke up and thought, ‘When do you think this will stop?’ ”

Well for some, it never will – and I hope it never stop for you either, Meghan.. I hope you never have a quiet night’s sleep ever again.

Personally I’d like to see every member of the White House staff appointed by this administration strapped to spiked chairs 24/7, with their eyelids propped open, made to watch the Abu Ghraib tapes and listen to the screams of tortured children, the children whose shrieks of agony they are responsible for – but I think there’re too many of them that would enjoy it.

Karl Rove feels guilty for leaving in a time of war, yet he wants to reinvent himself as more than simply “the Bush guy.” Peter H. Wehner rues lost friendships with those estranged by the war. Dan Bartlett is relieved to shed the burden of worrying that any day could bring another terrorist attack.

They left for different reasons — new professional opportunities, a gentle or not-so-gentle nudge, young kids, the hope of having young kids — but the cumulative exodus of so many key people at once has transformed the White House as it heads into the dwindling months of the Bush presidency. Rove and Bartlett are gone, and so are their fellow Texans, Harriet E. Miers and Alberto R. Gonzales. Tony Snow, Sara M. Taylor, Rob Portman, J.D. Crouch, Peter D. Feaver, J. Scott Jennings and a host of others have left.

There is so much turnover that on one recent Friday there were four farewell parties or last-day exits. Bush poses for so many Oval Office photos with departing aides it feels like an assembly line. Officials said the transition is a function of so many aides having stayed longer than in past White Houses. “When you look at the people who are leaving, these are people who have been here since the beginning,” said Liza Wright, who herself left last month as White House personnel director. “And it’s a killer of a job.”

I think the author may have got those words garbled. Not “it’s a killer of a job” – more like ‘the killers are on the job”.

What the hell is this article? Is it not the job of the fourth estate, the other check and balance, to hold government to account? Since when has it been the job of the Washington Post to curry sympathy for war criminals?

One former senior official said nearly everyone who has left the administration is angry in some way or another — at the president for making bad decisions, at his staff for misguiding him, at events that have spiraled out of control

They’re angry? Sheesh.

But then what can you expect from one half of yet another Washington Village insider power couple, but an apologia for this gang of murdering redneck yahoos in suits? As the first to break the story Baker certainly advanced their cause during the Clinton/Leinsky affair: why should now be any different? As we all know, a blowjob is worse, much worse, than a million dead – a million dead’s a mere bagatelle that you can just feel a little bitter about – compared tio actual White House fornication, it’s nothing.

Baker served as the Post’s White House correspondent covering the Clinton Administration. During this time he co-wrote the original story on the Lewinski investigation and went on to become the Post’s lead writer on the scandal and impeachment battle. Baker went on to author the New York Times bestseller, “The Breach: Inside the Impeachment and Trial of William Jefferson Clinton.” Baker started with the Washington Post in 1988 as part of its Virginia staff. Prior to the Post, he worked at the Washington Times.

[My emphasis.]

Well, there you go: yet another beltway insider making his own reality. There have been questions asked about not just the tone but the substance of Baker’s reporting, not only on Clinton/Lewinsky but on the current administration and its lies. The man just sucks up Bushco spin like it was mother’s milk.

But as always, the DC Village looks after its own, even it means denying reality.

To have to publicly admit that what Bushco has done and what Baker’s condoned with his reporting, well, the cognitive dissonance alone could make Baker’s head explode. Therefore he appears to feel compelled to sanitise the record with an appeal to sympathy, a human interest story – in asking for undersanding for the war criminals, he’s asking for understanding and sympathy for himself, their enabler.

Matt Yglesias, though I’m not generally a fan of his, does have an apt phrase for this kind of revisionism on the fly: he calls it legacywashing.

But there’ll be no legacywashing at the Hague, not if we the electorate have anything to say about it, which remains to be seen – but if we have our way, useful idiots and propagandists like Baker and his ilk will be right up there on the stand with the criminal Meghan O’Sullivans and David Addingtons, as co-accused.