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Pre-War Briefing uses the Rosiest of Rose colored glasses

rose-colored-glasses Pre-War Briefing uses the Rosiest of Rose colored glassesFrom NYT:

When Gen. Tommy R. Franks and his top officers gathered in August 2002 to review an invasion plan for Iraq, it reflected a decidedly upbeat vision of what the country would look like four years after Saddam Hussein was ousted from power.

A broadly representative Iraqi government would be in place. The Iraqi Army would be working to keep the peace. And the United States would have as few as 5,000 troops in the country.

Military slides obtained by the National Security Archive under the Freedom of Information Act outline the command’s PowerPoint projection of the stable, pro-American and democratic Iraq that was to be.

The general optimism and some details of General Franks’s planning session have been disclosed in the copious postwar literature. But the slides from the once classified briefing provide a firsthand look at how far the violent reality of Iraq today has deviated from assumptions that once laid the basis for an exercise in pre-emptive war.

The archive, an independent research institute at George Washington University, has posted the slides on its Web site, www.nsarchive.org. (more…)

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I don’t really have much to say on this. Michael Gordon who wrote this article for the Times, covered much of this in his book, Cobra II. We knew the slides were misleading. We just didn’t know how misleading.

Michael Jackson - Billie Jean

When Michael Jackson’s Off the Wall album (yep, it was an album back then, 1979) came out, I bought it the first week it was out.  I was in college. MTV was just starting.  Off the Wall’s first hit was Don’t Stop Until you get Enough.  This was a hit.  A huge hit.  This begins Michael’s best time as a creative performer.  He does the voice track for ET.  He wins a Grammy for that. 

In 1983, Michael releases Thriller.  MTV was getting big.  Billie Jean was released.  As I recall, the song was just doing okay.  Nothing big.  Nothing huge.  Then MTV played the video.  No Black artist that I know of was on MTV before Michael.  The video was slick.  It was more than some guy with hair from here until next Tuesday stick his touch out at the camera for 3 minutes.  Was the video nuclear physics?  NO.  It was a huge breakthrough.  There was just a hint of BET at this time.  Most houses couldn’t get BET.  There was no satellite.  Cable was still really young.  WGN and TNT were the main channels on cable.  HBO and Showtime were the only movie channels that I can remember at that time.  [Read more →]

 
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Countdown: Democracy bums troops

One of the arguments that the Right uses all of the time is that discussing problems in Iraq will demoralize the troops.  Well, Keith Olbermann tackles this subject head on (as usual).  Keith gets Paul Rieckhoff who fought in Baghdad and started an organization for Afghanistan and Iraq Vets.  Paul simply tells it like it is. 

 
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Black pleads guilty

From The News Observer:

Former four-term House Speaker Jim Black admitted in federal court today to accepting approximately $25,000 in cash payments from chiropractors while pushing legislation that would benefit them. (more…)

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Corruption can be found anywhere.  Democrats.  Republicans.  Anywhere you find the powerful and those wanting to be powerful, you can find corruption. 

Variations in Regional Heart disease

heart-surgery Variations in Regional Heart diseaseFrom NYT:

West Virginia and Kentucky, states known for high levels of obesity, diabetes and smoking, have the highest proportion of people with heart disease in the nation, health officials said Thursday.

The findings, from the first study to look at the prevalence of heart disease state by state, showed that states in the Southeast and Southwest led in heart disease. Colorado and the District of Columbia had the lowest percentages.

The results line up with state-specific reports on heart disease death rates, obesity and other risk factors, said Wayne D. Rosamond, a professor of epidemiology at the University of North Carolina who leads a statistics committee for the American Heart Association.

Dr. Rosamond called the report, by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, very important. [Read more →]