An answer or more questions in anthrax mystery?
The mystery of the anthrax attacks may be solved in what U.S. News and World Report labels “An Unsatisfying End … “ Of course, would there ever be a satisfying outcome to this shocking saga in our post-9/11 history? Will history be the judge?
Just when you have the possible answer to one question up arises another.
Wishing upon a contemptable star
It is unlikely Karl Rove will ever be “frog-marched out of the White House in handcuffs,” for which Joseph Wilson, a former U.S. ambassador and ex-CIA operative Valerie Plame’s husband, had expressed hope. Rove no longer works at the White House so that scenario is probably toast. But could Rove be locked in shackles and given a perp walk eventually?
In the real world, no. But it’s a nice thought and a federal judge’s ruling today makes such a wish at least a bit more possible.
U.S. District Judge John Bates in Washington ruled that congressional subpoenas for former White House counsel Harriet Miers and current Bush chief of staff Josh Bolton must be honored. Congress wants to hear what the two top Bush aides have to say in ongoing investigations into whether politics were responsible for firing federal prosecutors in 2006. The decision, which will probably be appealed, did not include Rove but might eventually depending on which judges hear what. (Oh and the law, wink, wink.) Sigh. I shouldn’t be so cynical should I?
This comes as the House Judiciary Committee voted Wednesday 20-14 to hold Rove in contempt of Congress for ignoring his subpoena and failing to show for a hearing on the sacking of the prosecutors.
While the act of contempt of Congress seems like a trivial matter — not to mention that many Americans hold certain congressional members in contempt — a conviction could ultimately land one in the slammer for up to one year. The last person to be convicted was former EPA official Rita Lavelle, who received six months in prison, five subsequent years of probation and a $10,000 fine for lying to Congress, according to an article about the statute on Wikipedia.
Rove will likely never go to jail because he has the White House and probably a majority of the Supreme Court on his side (See Bush v. Gore.) But always remember that our great land was built on dreams by dreamers and sometimes dreams (and so one hears, fairy tales) can come true. They can happen to you …
Planes, fires and cold, hard facts
An interesting Los Angeles Times article Tuesday points to dual cold-hard facts of life. The story by the Times’ Julie Cart and Bettina Boxall, unearths the revelation that these big air tankers one sees on TV or in real life dumping water or retardant upon wildfires are sometimes used for political show.
The article tells how right-wing Republican Rep. Duncan Hunter was frustrated when his area near San Diego, Calif., was going up in flames. Hunter, who under the GOP control of the House chaired the Armed Services Committee and failed in an attempt this year to gain the GOP presidential nomination, tried to persuade a U.S. Forest Service official to bring in air tankers to fight the fire. However, the official pointed out, quite prudently, that the winds at the time were too high and visibility was too poor in which the tankers could safely operate.
Hunter suggested the forest service official to call, on a private phone number Hunter had, then-Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Gen. Richard Myers. When the forestry guy declined, Hunter called Myers and, of course, tankers were on the way. That points out the other cold, hard fact of life: Power produces action.
Never mind that putting air tanker crews up in the air costs out the wazoo and flying in bad conditions endangers more lives. Having those giant planes up trailing pink dust behind it looks good to constituents of those such as Duncan Hunter. Political show and political power all wrapped up in one.
If you take that argument over the hill and around the bend you might just find the dirty little secret that I discovered when I worked as a firefighter. Sometimes, the act of putting out a fire itself is the more significant act than actually extinguishing the fire. For instance, sometimes it is more advantageous because of insurance considerations to just let a house burn rather than stop the fire and have a heavily damaged home.
But taxpayers don’t pay taxes for firemen to stand around, smoking cigarettes (yes, I used to do that but am happily 8 years removed from the habit), drinking water and the s**t while a home burns into nothing. Those same taxpayers don’t provide those bright, pretty fire trucks just so firefighters can drive them with lights and sirens blazing.
So there we have some cold, hard truths. What is the real bone in the biscuit here is when people such as Rep. Hunter use their power without consideration of the danger involved. Despite the PR aspect of it all politicians need to listen to the experts who do their job day in and day out rather than order others around like little toy soldiers. Of course, that brings out a third cold, hard fact: Politicians behaving sensibly is about as rare as Halley’s Comet.
No let up on mosquito battle
With high gasoline prices helping make for higher everything at least one important service to my area’s taxpayers will not falter. The Jefferson County (Texas) Mosquito Control District says they will not cut back on spraying for the biting devils despite increased prices in fuel, according to an article in our local Beaumont Enterprise.
When I first moved back here three years ago I was a little taken aback by the fast-moving, low-flying twin engine plane that delivers mosquito spray for the control district.
But knowing how this area is a magnet for mosquitoes and the fact that diseases like West Nile and malaria are no fun at all I am glad to see the mosquito plane and spray trucks especially after days such as those last week in which five inches of rain fell.
So knowing that the mosquito district is not cutting back definitely qualifies as good news. And that, of course, is better than bad news as well as being somewhat identical to no news at all. Is that crystal clear?
