Politics, open government, and safe streets. And the constant incursion of cycling.

Month: April 2008 Page 6 of 7

Forty Years After the Bullet

What’s there to say? I wish I could write a positive piece. About the progress made, about the things we can do, about the hopes I have. But the past couple of months – of seeing national networks let Pat Buchanan pontificate on someone else’s racism, watching Marvin Arrington attacked for doing his best to help young black men, and hearing Lou Dobbs get upset about those “cotton pickin'” black leaders who dare object to his ignorant emanations – I’ve got nothing. Sorry.

So I’ll just link back to this, the groundbreaking for the national MLK, Jr. memorial in DC.

Changes at Al Jazeera English

If you look to the right column and a little further down on this page, you’ll noticed that I’ve got Al Jazeera English linked. And I don’t link anything here that I don’t find useful and/or read regularly.  I’ve found it to be a good source of information and perspective,  not just on issues important to the Middle East, but globally.  For the most part, it’s been really top quality stuff, and I recommend it for regular reading/viewing.  So it’s with that background that I found this interview with Dave Marash so interesting.   Dave Marash, a former ABC correspondent (and occasional Nightline host) joined Al Jazeera English as an anchorman in 2006.  He recently left, and explains why in this interview with the Columbia Journalism Review:

[O]ver the first two years of the channel’s existence, I have made myself effectively the American face of the channel and vouched for its credibility and value. And over the last seventeen months there have been several changes at the channel which put things on the air that, frankly, I could not vouch for. If I had just been another employee I might have just dropped my head and let it all wash over, because it is the nature of our business that every place you work occasionally does things that embarrass you. But I felt an extra measure of responsibility.

He goes on to explain that he feels like the channel has retracted into being more of a regional voice, perhaps as a result of pressures to counterbalance the influence of the US.  If you’re like me, and you make a serious effort to draw your news from places with different perspectives, I think you’ll find it a fascinating (but short) read.

Friday Notes: Bikes, Bikes, Bikes

If it’s April, it’s all about bikes.  The De Ronde van Vlaanderen (Tour of Flanders) is on the schedule this weekend, but since I can’t be there (this time), I’ll focus on a few things closer to home:

The coming DC SmartBike program is getting some press.  It’s not going to be widely deployed enough to make it useful to me, but I’ll probably sign up anyway, in support of the concept.

It’s been a few weeks since the last report of a sexual assault on my local trails, so hopefully that’s the last of them.  I’m still not any less angry about it.  As I wrote over at WashCycle:

This pisses me off so much. I look at these trails with the same possessiveness that, well, probably a lot of you feel, also. They’re something I want everyone to enjoy, whether on a group ride or in the solitary circumstances of the early AM. And when I hear that some asshole is ruining it for everyone . . . gah. I suppose violence is not the answer, but it sure inspires that feeling.

There are some good comments on that thread – especially the ones pointing out that advising women not to ride alone is NOT an acceptable response.

People like their bike porn.  This post last week?  Is starting to move its way into the top search terms for this site.  Both depressing and heartening, at the same time.

Finally, don’t forget about CycleFest this weekend.   Really, I can’t emphasize enough what a friendly lot the organizers are.  If you’re at all interested in getting back on a bike, or onto a different kind of bike, come check it out.

ACLU: Defending American Values Against the Bush Administration

So the Wall Street Journal’s got a story highlighting the ACLU’s role in assembling defense teams for Guantanamo Bay detainees:

The American Civil Liberties Union is spearheading a high-profile effort to defend Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and other alleged 9/11 conspirators from conviction and execution by the Bush administration’s military commissions at Guantanamo Bay.

Backed by a slate of prominent legal figures, including former Attorney General Janet Reno and former Federal Bureau of Investigation Director William Webster, the ACLU has assembled a team of top civilian attorneys to supplement the military defense counsel assigned to represent Guantanamo’s “high-value detainees.”

I suspect that the ACLU is a little worried about the PR aspect of this, as they just mass emailed a statement about the story.  I think they put it perfectly:

The manner in which we seek justice against those accused of harming us will determine whether the United States will be seen at home and abroad as a nation of laws. We must decide whether we live the values of justice that make us proud to be Americans, or whether we will forsake those values and continue down a path of arbitrary rules and procedures more befitting those who are our enemies. Because we are a great nation, true to our founders’ vision, we must uphold our core values even in the toughest of times. The right to a speedy trial in a court of law before an objective arbiter; the right to due process; the right to rebut the evidence against you; the right not to be tortured or waterboarded, or convicted on the basis of hearsay evidence are what truly define America and our commitment to the rule of law and our founders’ aspirations.

The military commissions set up by the Bush administration for the men imprisoned at Guantánamo Bay — including those it suspects were involved in the September 11 attacks — are not true American justice. These trials should represent who we are, what America stands for, and our commitment to due process. They are not about how civilized the accused are, but how civilized we are. America does not stand for trials that rely on torture to gain confessions, or on secret evidence that a defendant cannot rebut, or on hearsay evidence.

For these reasons, the ACLU and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers have taken on the task of assembling defense teams to be available to assist in the representation of those Guantánamo detainees who have been charged under the Military Commissions Act, subject to the detainees’ consent.

We take this step because we simply cannot stand by and allow the Bush administration’s military commissions to make a mockery of our Constitution and our values. We believe in the American justice system — despite its imperfections and distortions by pundits, politicians and ideologues — and we believe we can make the system stronger by engaging it and fighting for what is right, fighting for fair trials and for America’s reputation.

Amen.

Overnight Music: Day Late

Every once in a while, I go foraging for new music.  What I turn up is usually old to the cool kids, but it’s been a while since my musical enjoyment depended on outside approval.The first is I Believe, from Simian Mobile Disco (which evolved from Simian, who lent the soundtrack to perhaps one of my favorite ever commercials):

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5mZzzZLG2pY[/youtube]

The second is just a lovely little bit of music.  Should appeal to anyone who had stacks of Echo & the Bunnymen, Mighty Lemondrops, or Cure albums around.  I’m Not Going to Teach Your Boyfriend How to Dance With You, by Black Kids:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vaa4eGOtrTg[/youtube]

Enjoy.

Really?

On China and the Olympics

I’ve a strong love/hate thing going on with the Olympics(TM).  In truth, it’s a giant scam to suck money out of the taxpayers of the host region, aggrandize the ancient old men running the governing bodies of the sports, and slap an ad on every surface visible to the human eye.  Sporting competition plays a tiny tiny role.  Certainly one that could be easily supported and conducted without the Olympics(TM).

That said, I’ll always rank living in the middle of the ’96 Olympics as one of the best times I’ve ever had.  I lived in the middle of all the major venues, and thanks to employment circumstances, had a bucket full of tickets.  I saw basketball, fencing, and badminton (the best, by far) medal matches.  Wandered around Centennial Park in the most intoxicating atmosphere – all of the crass commercialism around us couldn’t begin to dampen a collective realization that the world was hanging out together, and having a fantastic time doing it.

So I’ll rail against the Olympics in general, but I’ll show up for the personal experience in a heartbeat, given the chance.

~

All that said, I think that the world’s reaction to China hosting the Olympics is important, but I have yet to personally sort what I think is the best course of action.  I have a lot of sympathy for what Sally Jenkins is saying here.  For me, it should go without saying that China’s treatment of Tibet is appalling, and ought to be condemned (and not in that half-assed press release way). Further, I think the Olympics really shouldn’t have ended up in Beijing – it gives China (yet another) chance to fake its way into the world’s biggest markets under the guise of being Just Like Us and Nothing To Be Concerned About.

And it’s that last point that sends me in all sorts of contradictory directions. I want people to realize exactly how it is that China produces what it does for rest of the world. But I don’t want to do it in some sort of Lou Dobbs Xenophobia Special sort of way. Which then bounces me back to the other side of things – it would be good for the rest of the world to realize that China is a behemoth in world finances, and cannot be treated as some semi-relevant curiosity. I was in Shanghai a few years ago, and took an elevator up the Jin Mao Tower for a view of the city. And what did I see from the 88th floor? A city bigger than New York. China does need to be dealt with . . . and not just in a constructive manner (which is what every nation deserves, including Cuba), but a manner which takes its power and pettiness into account. While I’d personally be quite fine with the majority of Wal-Mart’s supply lines drying up overnight, I suspect it’s probably not the best thing for the US economy. So we ought to tread carefully. Just not obsequiously.

“Even worse than being a Democrat”

Someone should have told Monica Goodling that, despite the Administration’s best efforts, you still can’t fire a Federal employee for being gay.

Interview with Candidate Amit Singh (8th CD) – Part III

This is the third and final part of an interview with Arlington’s Amit Singh, who is running for the GOP nomination in the 8th Congressional District race. He’ll be vying with Mark Ellmore for the votes of 8th district Republicans on June 10th. The winner of that race will face long time incumbent Rep. Jim Moran (D) this fall. Part I is available here, and Part II is here.

Federal Disaster Relief

On your site, you gave Katrina as an example of the failures of government. [From the website – “Amit believes that the American people know what is best for this nation and know how to care for their neighbors. As demonstrated by the response to Hurricane Katrina, the federal government does not always best care for those most in need and the greatest aid comes from one’s neighbors and fellow Americans.] Wasn’t Katrina a perfect example of where you do need government? It was clear that the people were helping each other as best they could in New Orleans, but it obviously wasn’t enough. What are you trying to say?

“There were a number of issues that went wrong prior to Katrina – the levees had been ignored for years. Why? Our attention was directed elsewhere. Instead of strengthening the levees and preventing the floods from happening in the first place, we let that deteriorate and cause the entire mess to begin with. So that’s the seed of it. Then, talking about the Federal response, many of [the local volunteers and National Guardsmen that would have helped] were not in the country at the time.

We’ve weaned people onto thinking that the Federal government – FEMA – should be protecting them. They do have a role in natural disasters, no doubt, because something of that magnitude can’t be handled by the American Red Cross. So there is a roll for government to play. [But the] Federal government has lost its focus, and our resources were not invested in the country, they were invested elsewhere. We have bridges falling down, levees breaking, while we’re building the same things abroad. So the Federal response there was negative, because it just lacked the resources. And in the face of that [lack of a Federal response], people were just helping each other. Churches were going down, Wal-Mart was handing out bottled water – people really came together. It was amazing.”

Government and Privacy

What do you think of the REAL ID Act?

“I’m against it. It’s a total attack on our civil liberties. And what people don’t understand is when you have a Federal database that’s working in real time with thousands of connections to all sorts of different sub-agencies, it’s very insecure. And we’ll be lulled into a false sense of security, but in fact, we’re even more at risk.

Just today, there was a breach again at some credit card company where thousands of names were released. This information is very sensitive – it’s personal – and in the wrong hands, it can do a lot of damage. Putting it all in one place, and saying “Hello everybody, come hack our database” is a recipe for disaster. I’m definitely against the REAL ID Act.

How are you going to enforce [these ID requirements]? Maybe you look at me – do I look like an illegal immigrant? Maybe, maybe not. Are you going to test everybody who is “non-American looking”? I mean, do you start racially profiling everybody to see who’s got an ID, and who doesn’t? It’s a terrible thing.”

So, how do you explain how terrible it is to a population that doesn’t really understand REAL ID? How do you explain this situation to someone who doesn’t think that it represents an actual threat to them?

“You’re right, it’s not on the forefront of people’s minds, and it’s not the big issue of the election. But when you ask them, how many people do you know that have been a victim of identity theft, I don’t think I know anyone who’s doesn’t know at least one person who’s been a victim of identity theft. I say imagine that, but with your personal information. Not just your financial information for one credit card – a subset of your life – but for your entire life. I think that’s a much scarier prospect. I mean, Los Alamos lost nuclear technology information on laptops. If we can’t protect nuclear technology, how do think they’re going to protect your social security information or medical records?”

Is your position on this representative of a larger skepticism about government surveillance? I saw that you had a little bit of experience with everybody’s favorite program, TIA [Singh’s resume indicates that he was involved for a short time with the Total Information Awareness project, a Federal government data mining program].

[laughs] Of course, I’m against surveillance on Americans without a warrant. That’s against the law. The government does have a responsibility in protecting us against foreign threats.

[Here, Mr. Singh explains that he is limited in what he can say about his work, but that it would be fair to extrapolate his position on this matter from his general view that the Federal government should have very limited powers.]

When people go to the polls this fall, I think they’re going to be voting for a stronger Congress – one that can put a check on the Executive Branch, be it Republican or Democrat. One of the points of having a stronger Congress is being able to trust that they’ll actually conduct oversight on the Executive, and in such a manner that it might once again be possible to believe the Executive. Particularly when it says that it’s dealing with sensitive intelligence matters in a way that is consistent with the Constitution. Frankly, no one believes the President right now about anything he says regarding intelligence gathering, and no one trusts Congress to ensure that the President is telling the truth. What could Congress do to restore that public trust?

“When you’re dealing with the intelligence community, there is a level of trust. We have to protect our means and methods, because if our adversaries know them, then they’ll know how to get around them. It’s very expensive to learn how to develop these tactics in the first place. It is important to not compromise that kind of information. And tell the American public this is exactly what we’re doing, basically telling the terrorists or whoever we’re trying to defeat all the clues that they need to get around it. So it’s a difficult question.

I can tell you from the people that I work with that there’s a lot of internal oversight. Everything we do is definitely monitored – checked to the nth degree. There are, you know, perhaps situations of abuse, but they don’t go for long. People do speak up, because the people who work in these places, they are very patriotic Americans that do believe in freedom, and it just takes on person to stand up and say this is wrong, and then people are embarrassed into [doing] the right thing. I can’t talk about how we would do this publicly, but there are ways we can put internal restrictions – I can tell you that there are a lot of restrictions we can deal with.”

But does that involve actual oversight of Executive Branch by someone outside of it? I understand the internal checks, but [what you’re talking about] is still entirely within an agency, or within a project. Take the current FISA argument, for example. This Administration doesn’t even want a Federal judge – who is presumably amongst the most trustworthy of persons involved in the Federal government – involved. Which really makes you wonder how you can trust the Executive. So what about actual systemic checks?

“I would not be opposed to [securing warrants] before getting involved. Some of the reasons why people were trying to circumvent the system [is that] there’s a lot of bureaucracy involved. You know, when you’re in the hunt, you get so caught up in the hunt that you don’t want to deal with the paperwork, [and you] don’t want to deal with the things they feel are a distraction. There are smarter ways to do the same job. There can be an internal compromise that makes the hunt more efficient. Again, I can’t go into details here, but I’m a big believer that we can make this work. They will make this work. There are people I can understand, rightfully so, that they really want to protect the country, and in the hunt they feel like the paperwork gets in their way, and they know what they’re doing – they’re really trying to save our country, and it’s a distraction. But I think we can make it more efficient.”

Immigration

Turning to another favorite GOP issue – immigration. You’ve stated that you want to “implement [a] native country-based guest worker program”. What does that mean?

“The basic premise there is that you can’t stay in the country and become legal. [MB: under this proposal, any current undocumented immigrants will need to return back to their native country before applying for a guest worker visa to come back to the United States]. My parents were immigrants – they followed the rules, they followed the law, they did everything the correct way. And there are people even today who continue to do that. Granted, I don’t think illegal immigrants or migrant works are evil people who are here to “take our jobs”. But, in the interests of fairness, you can’t just grant them amnesty. But we do need them – there are realistic economic needs for surges in employment, and seasonal [shifts].”

Singh goes on to characterize the guest worker program as “a complex compromise.” He focuses on the problems caused – for everyone involved – by multiple illegal border crossings. He posits that a guest-worker program will eliminate such crossings, and that the freer movement of guest workers will result in fewer casualties along the border, less burden on US support systems (because families will not be accompanying the workers), and more flexibility for US employment needs. He continues:

“Companies have to make sure that they are offering fair wage and fair working conditions. A lot of people say that these immigrants are taking jobs that Americans won’t do, which is a farce. They’re taking the jobs that Americans won’t do for less than minimum wage and in sweatshop conditions. Look, I don’t want America to become a country of indentured servants. We have standards. We have a quality of life here.”

Isn’t a guest worker program risk creating a permanent second class?

“No. It’s the opposite. Say you’re out of work in Mexico. You need to find work to feed your family. You take great risk in crossing the board to come into the US. You come here, find a job, and send it back to your family. You miss your family. So you then have a choice between risking multiple border crossings to see them, or bringing them over. And when you bring them over, the US then bears the costs of that immigration [schooling, emergency room visits, etc.] If you have a guest worker program, now the whole border situation becomes safe. You can move back and forth without risk to see your family. It’s the best of all worlds. I disagree that a smart guest worker program would create an indentured class in America.”

Don’t you end up with a lot of people living and working here who have no real buy-in to America?

“Well, that’s exactly why with a guest worker program, they don’t have to stay here. They’re free in the winter months to go back to Mexico or wherever they come from. With a guest worker program, you don’t have to agree with American values, you don’t have to watch American Idol, or whatever you don’t want to watch. You have that freedom to go back and forth in a much easier fashion, and that will help both sides.”

Closer to Home

The representatives in the DC area have sort of taken on a secondary responsibility of giving voice to the concerns of DC residents – who don’t have their own voice in Congress. Do you have any particular thoughts on Congress’ responsibility towards DC?

“I think they should have voting rights. We would not let our US military who lives abroad not have representation – why should we let people who live in our nation’s capital go without representation? Or give them an exemption from the Federal income tax. Do one of the two, but don’t continue this taxation without representation. That’s the most un-American thing I can think of. That’s why we’re a country today.”

Facing Rep. Jim Moran

If you secure the nomination, you’ll be in the position of having to win over a sizable portion of reliably Democratic voters here in the 8th District. How do you expect to convince them to trade Jim Moran – a congressman with 17 years of seniority – for a freshman representative in the minority party?

“Well, this area is very Democratic, true. It’s also very affluent. And while a lot of the constituency doesn’t mind paying taxes for programs they believe in, they understand financials and hate waste. Again, fiscal responsibility appeals to everyone. With the current economic situation, it’s becoming more important. And the current incumbent has demonstrated, over and over, that he has no regard for a growing budget.

The economy has become the main focus of the election, and fiscal responsibility is very important. I think when they look at Moran’s record, they’ll see one of the worst abusers of power in Congress, and hopefully they’ll see an alternative in me.

This is my first foray into politics, but it doesn’t mean I don’t have the required experience. I’ve been running my company for the last 8 years, so I understand what a lot of entrepreneurs have to go through, with over-taxation and over-regulation. Really, for me, the economy is the major issue. We talk about people not having jobs, and when you think about it, the only true sustainable source for American jobs is American business. The government’s not going to create them, foreign countries aren’t going to create them. We have to foster a good economy – where everyone is employed and doing well – and then we can start taking care of each other in so many ways – through charity and other means.”

I think it’s presumptuous to come in and say that I know the answers to everything. I’m somebody that both sides – Democrats and Republicans – can work with easily. But while doing that, you can be sure I’ll stick to my guiding principles.

~

This concludes my interview with Amit Singh, candidate for the Republican nomination in the 8th Congressional District race in Virginia. Afterwards, his campaign manager Steve Bierfeldt gave me a run down on Singh’s fundraising, emphasizing that the ticker amount shown on the campaign website represented money in the bank, in contrast to the numbers announced by his competitor, Mark Ellmore, which includes $30k in “pledges.” Bierfeldt stated with confidence that the campaign would beat its goal of $25k in the first quarter. That was on March 18th. As of April 1st, it appears that the Singh campaign has secured about $34k in donations.

Shortly after the interview, Singh also became one of the first candidates to sign on with Larry Lessig’s Change Congress pledge. More about that, and my thoughts on the race, in an upcoming post.

On Edge

Zimbabwe’s still waiting (as are its neighbors):

Rigging fears were increasing in Zimbabwe on Tuesday three days after the election commission failed to release results from the presidential vote, in which the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) claims to have ousted authoritarian President Robert Mugabe.

Only partial results from the parliamentary elections that were held concomitantly with presidential and local elections on March 29 have been released, showing the opposition enjoying a slight lead over Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party.

The election has received a little bit of coverage here, but it always seems to come without any background on why this election is worth paying attention to. While the story of Zimbabwe has at times been front page news in the UK, it has barely made the back pages in the US. And what’s that story? The man went from revolutionary hero – turning Rhodesia into Zimbabwe – to a desperate old king attempting to hold his entire country hostage as a means of remaining in power. Zimbabwe is an absolute wreck of a country with no functioning economy to speak of, an outflow of refugees, and a barely functioning political system.

Or is that political system functioning? If the government actually admits defeat in this election, it would represent a previously unimaginable peaceful close to the end of Mugabe’s reign. Given his willingness to wreck Zimbabwe before, I just don’t see this happening, but news reports this AM seem to indicate it as a real possibility. Here’s hoping.

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