Quote of the day

No one doubts that arbitrary torture is wrong. Were we to pull random American citizens from their homes and drag them into a cell for a bit of waterboarding, we would undoubtedly be destroying our own moral fiber and discrediting our history. We would be no better than the Islamists we fight. But there is a fundamental difference between our treatment of non-citizens and our treatment of citizens. There is a fundamental difference between how we treat our friends and how we treat our enemies.

What distinguishes us from our enemies is not how we treat our enemies, but what we fight to ensure for our friends.

Ben Shapiro, conservative columnist for several right wing sites, explaining why torture in the service of Western civilization is a good thing.

Monarchy? No. Dictatorship? Yeppers!

Wowee Zowee, Batman! A Rethug tells Il Chimpster off!...but who are we kidding?...

White House surrender on NSA spying program may not mean what you think it does

So the fearless leader and his personal Gonzo at the Justice Department have backed down on the NSA warrantless spying program, which will now operate with oversight by the FISA court.

White House: lower student loan interest rates are bad for students

If you don't laugh at these jackasses, you'll go crazy.  The House of Representatives votes to cut interest rates on student loans, and the White House opposes the bill because (I swear I'm not making this up) "the bill would encourage more student borrowing...encouraging more student debt can also fuel today's upward tuition spiral."

Dissent is fine...as long as you don't disagree???

Tony Snow, Tony Snow, Tony Snow.  Maybe if you say it three times in a row, real fast, you can get back to the reality side of the mirror.  

Hey, axis of evil, wanna buy a nice used weapon part?

This will come as no surprise to anyone who really understands bureaucracy and capitalism, but it's still infuriating--when "security" meets "marketing," guess which one wins?

The Aldi generation

Madison Avenue gave us the Pepsi Generation, pop culture gave us Generations X and Y, and WWII gave us the long and exhaustingly chronicled Baby Boom generation. A quarter of a century of Reaganism, globalization, and free marketeerism have given us "The Aldi Generation."

A surge, but no surge protector

Apart from the very real possibility that Iraqis are now so anti-American that no policy supported by the U.S. could possibly get Iraqi public support, and that no Iraqi politician seen as really supporting the U.S. could possibly manage to survive in Iraqi politics, I think all of us need to ask the President and all our elected federal officials a single question:  What if the new "surge" goes as badly as all our other policies have gone?

What Happened To The Voices Of The Voters?

Someone wrote in to the editor/opnion section of The Arizona Republic newspaper, expressing a concern many of us have of late...

Quotes of the day:

As years go it has hardly been a great commercial for the idea that religion is balm for the soul.

Depressingly it has rather reinforced the impression, developed over the centuries, that religious belief only deepens and strengthens Man's propensity for hatred and self-destruction.

Gerard Baker, in The Peninsula, Qatar's English language daily.

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Criminalizing statistically normal behavior trivializes lawbreaking.
Mark A.R. Kleiman (full text available only to subscribers), in Dopey, Boozy, Smoky--and Stupid, from the January/February issue of The American Interest, discussing the foolishness of the "war on drugs."