Anti-Bush protest

You're never too young to voice your opinion!

I spent this afternoon participating in the anti-Bush protests here in downtown Seattle. While Bush actually spent very little time here in Washington — arriving, touring a dam, having a \$2000 a plate lunch, and then leaving, all yesterday — today’s protest was one of several organized in response to Bush’s visit.

The march along Alaskan Way

The event went quite well, from what I could tell. Starting with a rally at Myrtle Edwards Park down by the waterfront, hundreds of us marched from the park up along Alaskan Way (past all the waterfront tourist attractions and businesses) until we were right by the walkway up to the Pike Place Market, and then turned around and went back down Alaskan Way until we made it back to the park. No arrests, no confrontations, and quite a lot of honks, thumbs-up, and cheers of support from people around us.

That was it for today’s hootin’ and hollerin’ for me, though — tomorrow afternoon is Howard Dean’s stop here in Seattle. I’ll be there, along with Rick, Tim, Prairie, her sister Hope, Hope’s friend Ingrid, and 2500 or so other people. Should be a good afternoon!

Iraq Intelligence – Public Forum

I wish I’d been able to go to this event — however, while I couldn’t make it, natasha has a write-up that’s well worth reading.

Congressman Jay Inslee (D-WA) held a public panel today in Shoreline, WA, on the subject of the possible mishandling of the intelligence information that was used to lead America to war. I went, and it was too good to keep all to myself. The following are the most accurate notes I could scribble down, only a few direct quotes, but I’ve tried very hard to keep to the spirit of what was said. Again, unless there are quotes around something, this is not a transcript.

The three panelists chosen by Rep. Inslee were Ambassador Joseph Wilson, Admiral Bill Center, and Professor Brewster Denny. Read on to find out which one of these distinguished gentlemen said that he wanted to “see Karl Rove frog-marched out of the White House in handcuffs.”

‘RonK’ also posted a writeup of the event over at The Daily Kos.

A worthy cause

When Sally Baron’s family wrote her obituary, they described a northern Wisconsin woman who raised six children and took care of her husband after he was crushed in a mining accident.

She had moved to Stoughton seven years ago to be closer to her children and was 71 when she died Monday after struggling to recuperate from heart surgery. Her family had come to the question of what might be a fitting tribute to her.

“My uncle asked if there was a cause,” her youngest son, Pete Baron, said.

Almost in unison, what her children decided to include in the obituary was this: “Memorials in her honor can be made to any organization working for the removal of President Bush.

(via Atrios)

Compassion

It looks suspiciously like Bush’s definition of ‘compassion’ is hanging out with minorities, as it’s something conspicuously absent in the rest of his photo album. As Lis pointed out first in Daily Kos’ comment thread, and then on her journal:

Looking at further photo albums on the site makes it more clear how anomalous the Compassion section is.

But the only non-whites in 15 Homeland Security images and 16 National Security are Powell and Rice, and I think there’s one African American park ranger off to the side in one photo of the 16 on the Environment.

In contrast, of 20 photos illustrating Compassion, 17 prominently show non-Caucasians; the other three are solo photos of Bush, but two of those are before the National Urban League and in front a map of Africa.

(via Kos, Len, and Atrios)

Good things Bush has done

Daily Kos is trying to come up with three good things Bush has done, and he’s having problems. I can’t come up with three — I can, however, come up with one. Here’s the text of comment I left over at the Go Fish:

Believe it or not, I do have one thing that I can completely seriously thank Bush and his administration for.

Thanks to his blundering incompetence, many people (myself included) are paying far more attention to politics than we used to. Bush’s otherwise disastrous presidency just may be the single strongest argument for people to actually wake up and pay attention to what’s going on in the world around them and to try to do something about it by getting involved than any ad campaign, voter registration drive, or anything else in years. More and more people want Bush out of the White House, and are realizing that for that to happen, they actually have to participate in this democracy of ours.

And for that, from the bottom of my heart, I thank President Bush.

But that’s all I can come up with.

Dean in Seattle this Sunday

Don’t forget, this Sunday is Howard Dean’s stop in Seattle!

Nipping at President Bush’s heels during his West Coast trip is former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, who will drop into Portland and then Seattle on Sunday for a rally at Westlake Park.

In the midst of a four-day, 10-city trip he’s calling the “Sleepless Summer Tour,” Dean will attend a 5 p.m. fund-raiser at the Westin Hotel and a rally at Westlake Park from 6:30 to 8 p.m. before jetting off to Spokane on Monday morning.

[…]

As part of his campaign’s use of the Internet, Dean has solicited commitments from supporters to attend each of his rallies, and so far more than 2,250 people have signed up to attend the Seattle rally, Means said.

(via Mathew Gross)

Howard Dean…spammer?

Will all due respect, someone in the Dean Team needs to get this issue sorted out quickly. There’s a growing hubbub over the apparent fact that the Dean campaign at one point contracted with two e-mail vendors who then started spamming Dean campaign e-mails to people who had not requested them.

While it appears that the Dean campaign has discontinued their contract with the vendors (according to this /. comment), a single comment left in the midst of a /. thread, which I only found because it was linked to from Joy’s post, isn’t going to be seen by many people, and I’ve seen this issue get mentioned on more and more blogs (like this one) each day.

I’d suggest that the Dean campain make an official statement on their weblog. While it may make for momentary run of slightly bad press, it won’t be nearly as bad as if the meme of ‘Howard Dean as spammer’ continues to spread.

[Update]{.underline}
[This C|Net story] on the controversy, dated 8/18/03, leads off with the statement from the Dean campaign admitting their mistake and reiterating that they have cancelled their account with the e-mail vendors in question.

Howard Dean’s presidential campaign acknowledged on Monday that it had spammed an undisclosed number of people with unsolicited political advertisements.

The campaign said Dean, the former Democratic governor of Vermont, remained opposed to unsolicited bulk e-mail and blamed the spamming on two contractors who had promised to contact only people who had specifically requested to receive the advertisements.

“We recently contracted with two vendors who made assurances that their lists were opt-in only,” the campaign said in an e-mail to CNET News.com. “On Tuesday, August 12th, Dean for America received notification from a supporter that spam was being sent. We terminated our relationship with both vendors immediately.”

Hopefully this all settles down soon. In my view, it was definitely a mistake, but mistakes happen.

Update:

Wired also has a story about this, mentioning that there were two waves of spam messages sent out, and the second didn’t seem to actually originate from the Dean campaign.

As for the Dean for America campaign, staffers there are less concerned with where the second message came from than with how to handle the aftermath of the first one.

Whiner

Bush, you whiny little git. Apparently he’s none to fond of being pushed out of the limelight. This was the exchange after a reporter asked what Bush thought of the California governor’s race, and the reporter had the temerity to call the California race the “biggest political story in the country.”

Bush: “It is the biggest political story in the country? That’s interesting. That says a lot. That speaks volumes.”

Reporter: “Means you don’t agree?”

Bush: “I don’t get to decide the biggest political story. You decide the biggest political story. But I find it interesting that that is the biggest political story in the country, as you just said.”

Pressed on the matter, Bush said, “Oh, I think there’s maybe other political stories. Isn’t there, like, a presidential race coming up?”

Yeah, George, there’s, like, a presidential race, in, like, fifteen months or so. This California thing is, like, right around the corner. Like, really, man. Do you really want us all to, like, spend all our time just, like, bashing you instead? Because we’re certainly capable of it. Especially when your English usage is so, like, impeccable and everything.

Shmuck.

(via Kirsten and Daily Kos)

Cattle Call 2004

Cattle Call '04 plot

Roughly every week or so, Daily Kos presents a Cattle Call ranking of the presidential candidates. A quick summary of his opinion of their current position in the Democratic presidential race, usually with a few notes about whether he sees them as heading up or down the chart, and why.

Having watched this for a while, I started to wonder just how the various candidates have fared over the months. So, with a little browsing through the Daily Kos archives and some tinkering in Excel, I can present a (fairly ugly) little graph of each candidate’s potential to grab the Democratic nomination, as ranked by Kos.

It’s actually fairly interesting to see. To me, the three most interesting lines are those of Richard Gephardt (light blue), Joseph Lieberman (medium blue), and Howard Dean (bright pink). Seeing Gephardt start fairly slow, then bounce around towards the top of the chart; Lieberman start strong, stumble for a couple months, then regain a top spot; and Dean’s fairly steady upward climb is a lot easier this way. I’m fairly sure that Kos will continue with the Cattle Call posts up until the Democratic nomination — I’ll keep updating my spreadsheet to see how all this turns out in the end.