“It did not take Kaelynn Adams-Haack long to decide she wanted to support the re-election campaign of Representative Tammy Baldwin, Democrat of Wisconsin. The two met at a dinner party, talked for part of the evening and by the time Kaelynn left she had decided that she wanted to give the congresswoman a $1,000 contribution.
[…]
“‘I knew not to give her too much and not to give her too little, so I gave her $1,000,’ said Kaelynn, who is now 8 and says she hopes to make more donations in the future.'”
Too Young to Vote, Old Enough to Donate, by Glen Justice, The New York Times, Feb. 10, 2004
Adorable!
Category: Grave
Wait, where were you, Mr. President?

President Bush in the Oval Office
From the transcript of Tim Russert’s interview with President Bush on Meet the Press, Feb. 8, 2004:
“…I’m a war president. I make decisions here in the Oval Office in foreign policy matters with war on my mind… ”
“…It’s important for people to understand the context in which I made a decision here in the Oval Office…”
“…They’re not going to develop that because right here in the Oval Office I sat down with Mr. Pachachi and Chalabi and al Hakim, people from different parts of the country that have made the firm commitment, that they want a constitution eventually written that recognizes minority rights and freedom of religion…”
“…I have shown the American people I can sit here in the Oval Office when times are tough and be steady and make good decisions, and I look forward to articulating what I want to do the next four years if I’m fortunate enough to be their president…”
W.M.D. (Weapons of Maureen Dowd)
It’s easy to criticize Maureen Dowd. She gets a lot of guff from the Right for being too liberal, and jabs from the Left for being too nasty. Pundits of all political stripes pretty much think she’s superficial and too in love with her own references and puns.
Yes, her record is spotty (a Pulitzer one year, a series of columns about Barneys the next). Every time she gets up to bat, she’s under a cloud: will she hit a homerun, or will mighty Maureen strike out? That’s why when she knocks it out of the park, you gotta stand up and cheer.
This Sunday’s column, Murder Most Fowl (Feb. 8, 2004) is a great achievement, both rhetorically, and stylistically. Dowd frequently errs too far on the side of style over substance, but writing about Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney this week, she marries (or at least civilly unionizes) the two impulses beautifully:
Now, with the White House looking untrustworthy and desperate; with the national security team flapping around and pointing fingers at each other and, of course, Bill Clinton; with even the placid Laura getting testy; and with Newsweek reporting that the Justice Department is reviewing whether Halliburton was involved in paying $180 million in kickbacks to get contracts in Nigeria at a time when Dick Cheney was chairman, anybody else would be sweating.
Not deadeye Dick. His heavy lids didn’t blink when it turned out he’d blown up a half-century of American foreign policy alliances on a high-level hallucination.
Here he was, fresh from presenting a crystal dove to an obviously perplexed pope, stolidly waiting for the club’s pheasant wranglers to shoo the doomed birds into his line of fire. He had killed only 70 or so the last time out. But this time he was convinced that the bird population could sustain more casualties. Quack and Awe.
“This is our due,” Dick said. He fired a shot: BLAM!
That “BLAM!” (and “This is our due”) is repeated throughout the column, like some angry/resentful incantation by an administration under siege. This is our world, our time, our choices, they seem to be saying. We want the world and we want it NOW!, as Jim Morrison, the deepest poet I read in eighth grade used to say. Dowd may be imagining the thoughts in Cheney’s head while he hunts (domesticated) pheasants, but what emerges are the increasingly desperate—sad, even—rationalizations of a sitting duck who has no idea which way to run.
Dowd’s no birdbrain: she knows Cheney’s goose is cooked, and she’s not afraid to crow about it.
Holden Caulfield, older and still bitter

“Oh, [John Kerry] sometimes pretends that he doesn’t care about our special interests. He puts on that callous populist facade. But deep down he cares. Maybe he cares too much. When he’s out on the stump saying otherwise, he’s just being a big old phony.”
—David Brooks, Kerry’s Special Friends, The New York Times, Feb. 7, 2004
Whistlestop in the Village of the Damned
“I wish I could take my children out into the rain, shrink them back to babies and start over. I loved being a mother.”
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), mother of NBC News producer Alexandra Pelosi, revealing in the March issue of Glamour magazine one of the “Five Things You Don’t Know About Me.”
The Naked and the Dead
Kerry a tune

John Kerry: Yep, you guessed it: he was “Born in the USA.”
With John Kerry emerging from as the Democratic frontrunner, it’s time to turn our attention to an important aspect of his campaign. Since we live in a country where a washed-up pop star’s almost entirely obscured nipple being exposed by a soon-to-be washed-up pop star dominates the news cycle more than, say, the death of 20 year-old 3rd Squadron soldier on the same day in Haditha, Iraq (that’s 527 Americans, if you’re still keeping count), perhaps this is the most important aspect of the campaign.
John Kerry’s campaign song.
The Clinton/Gore boomer-juggernaut did very well with Fleetwood Mac’s “Don’t Stop”, using the ambiguously inspirational lyrics “Don’t stop, thinking about tomorrow/ Don’t stop, it’ll soon be here,/ It’ll be, better than before/ Yesterday’s gone, yesterday’s gone” to good effect.
On the flipside, Al Gore went bust in 2000 with Paul Simon’s “You Can Call Me Al”, which makes some sense since that song’s grumpy, middle aged tone is off-putting in the extreme. Who’d vote for someone who sings (metaphorically speaking):
“A man walks down the street
He says why am I soft in the middle now
Why am I soft in the middle
The rest of my life is so hard
[…]
Mr. Beerbelly Beerbelly
Get these mutts away from me
You know I don’t find this stuff amusing anymore”
Neither did the voters, apparently.
Ross Perot failed when he ironically appropriated Patsy Cline’s “Crazy”, which just goes to prove that a good song is a candidate’s key to victory. Here are some suggestions with notes and clarifications.
Before California Dies, It sees…

How do you ward off evil Democrats and keep illegal immigrants at bay? Use a talisman, perhaps a magical ring the size of beetle… Not the insect, the car.
Beeb Sky Beeb

“Next time you hear the BBC bragging about how much superior the Brits are delivering the news rather than Americans who wear flags in their lapels, remember it was the Beeb caught lying.”
Click here to view this wholly entertaining editorial snippet from a recent FOX News broadcast, featuring news host John Gibson waxing rhapsodic on last week’s resignation by the BBC’s director general Greg Dyke in the wake of Lord Hutton’s report on editorial misconduct in the network’s coverage of aspects of the British buildup to Iraq and, specifically, the network’s usage of the now infamous “sexed up” terminology.
While editorials certainly occur with some restrained degree of frequency on a number of local news outlets across the country, and usually only in events of great compelling interest, can anyone recall having seen such an editorial stance having been adopted by news hosts on other national cable news networks, e.g. CNN and NWI? The one minute of airtime devoted to the BBC matter comes off as especially ironic, given the fact that the Hutton inquiry was largely a distinctly non-American issue; it’s almost as though Gibson is gloating when he says above, “…remember it was the Beeb caught lying.”
The operative word, of course, being “caught.”
One thing’s for sure; ITV and BSkyB would never have behaved in such a crass fashion.
(Previous–and very relevant–reflections on FOX News.)


