I hope Bush lied

Because if he isn't lying this:

Rebel Leader Forms New Kyrgyzstan Government
By David Holley
Times Staff Writer
9:58 AM PST, March 25, 2005

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan —  Kyrgyzstan's new authorities moved swiftly today to assert power a day after taking over the institutions of government, but local media reported a statement by ousted President Askar A. Akayev denouncing his political foes and vowing to return to this Central Asian nation.

Kurmanbek Bakiyev, appointed acting president and prime minister today by the former opposition, said that swiftly restoring order in the country was the top priority.

"We have to form a government which is going to resolve all the problems," Bakiyev told reporters. "Above all we need to preserve stability. You can see what kind of unrest started yesterday, and we cannot allow this."

Bakiyev announced appointments of Cabinet ministers later today. Roza Otunbayeva, another key former opposition leader, was named acting foreign minister. Bakiyev and Otunbayeva indicated that new presidential elections could be expected in June.

...requires a response.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 3:39pm :: War
 
 

When you have to use trickery to balance the budget there's a fundamental problem

Medicaid Deal Worth $66 Million To Iowa
Associated Press
Friday, March 25, 2005; Page A07

DES MOINES, March 24 -- Iowa has struck a deal with federal officials that allows the state to retain $66 million in Medicaid funding it would have lost this summer because of a crackdown on an accounting gimmick.

Donna Folkemer, a Medicaid specialist with the National Conference of State Legislatures, said Iowa is the first to strike an agreement that replaces money lost by the accounting change. "There are discussions going on between many states and the federal government," she said.

For years, Iowa and other states used an accounting practice -- awarding state money to hospitals and nursing homes, and then moving it back again -- to boost federal Medicaid matching funds. But Medicaid officials have told states that such transfers will not be allowed past July 1.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 12:17pm :: Economics
 
 

You should know better than to believe the first report by now

Quote of note

Noting that an Islamic militant group had said 11 insurgents were killed, Goldenberg said: "I would tell you that somewhere between 11 and 80 lies an accurate number."

Sounds like twelve.

Anyway...

Doubts Surface On Iraq Raid Toll
Claim of 85 Rebel Deaths Questioned

By Steve Fainaru
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, March 25, 2005; Page A13

BAGHDAD, March 24 -- New details about an intense battle between insurgents and Iraqi police commandos supported by U.S. forces cast doubt Thursday on Iraqi government claims that 85 rebels were killed at what was described as a clandestine training camp.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 12:01pm :: War
 
 

Barbara Coulter Edwards, the Ohio Medicaid director, gives Congress far too much credit

Quote of note:

Barbara Coulter Edwards, the Ohio Medicaid director, estimated that her state would have to pay the federal government $340 million in 2007. This, she said, exceeds the expected savings by $55.7 million.

"To come up with that money," Ms. Edwards said, "we are having to take benefits away from other people. I don't think it was deliberate by Congress, but the consequences are painful for states and for our beneficiaries."

Cost-Cutting Medicare Law Is a Money Loser for States
By ROBERT PEAR

WASHINGTON, March 24 - In passing the new Medicare law, Congress intended to relieve states of prescription drug costs for low-income elderly people. But as states do the arithmetic, many find that they will lose money, because they will have to give back most of the savings to the federal government.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 5:35am :: Economics | Health
 
 

Now add all the money in Bush's hoped-for private accounts to the capital market

Too Much Capital: Why It Is Getting Harder to Find a Good Investment
Published: March 25, 2005

THERE is too much capital in the world. And that means that those who own the capital - investors - are in for some unhappy times.

That thesis may sound inherently unlikely, but it explains a lot. Those with capital find they must pay high prices for investments that are likely to produce only a little income. The relative importance of things other than capital, like commodities and cheap labor, has grown.

Evidence of the capital glut can be seen in interest rates. Market rates are low, and even when central banks set out to raise short-term rates, longer-term rates are slow to move. Little additional yield is available to those who buy very risky bonds. For the same reason, stock prices are high. Profit disappointments may not cause the stock market to plunge, since the capital will have to go somewhere. But the return on the underlying investments is likely to be below what investors have expected.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 5:22am :: Economics
 
 

Gamblers Anonymous should be a lot busier than it is

Trading Places: Real Estate Instead of Dot-Coms
By MOTOKO RICH and DAVID LEONHARDT

Real estate-crazed Americans have started behaving in ways that eerily recall the stock market obsession of the late 1990's.

In Naples, Fla., some houses have been bought twice in a single day, an early-21st-century version of day trading. Buying stocks on margin has morphed into buying homes with no money down. The over-the-top parties of Internet start-ups have been replaced by flashy gatherings where developers pitch condos to eager buyers.

Five years ago, the cable channel CNBC sometimes seemed like a backdrop to daily American life. Its cheery analysis of the stock market played in offices, in barbershops, even in some bars. Today, "Dude Room," "Toolbelt Diva" and other home-improvement shows are the addictive fare that CNBC's exuberant stock shows once were.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 5:17am :: Economics
 
 

The horns of a dilemma

Okay, so I stole a Tom Toles cartoon.

I should have moved on, but there were two more too good not to share. Having stolen one already though, I have to do the work of making thumbnails and links.

bush-hustle-thumb.gif

Only you have to go see this one today before it disappears behind the financial firewall.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 4:57am :: Cartoons
 
 

There IS room for it now...

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 4:25am :: Cartoons
 
 

He has a lock on the zombie demographic

Quote of note:

If you think it's silly to put so much weight on a close textual analysis of conservative punditry, bear in mind that this is how conservatives chose George W. Bush as their 2000 nominee. It may have seemed to the outside world that we all woke up one day, long before the first Republican primary, to discover that the entire GOP establishment had coalesced all at once around Bush. In fact, Bush's anointing resulted from just the sort of subterranean machinations that we're seeing today.

That Rumbling Is Cheneymania
The columns hyping the VP seem to plead for Bush's OK.
Jonathan Chait
March 25, 2005

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 4:12am :: Politics
 
 

So when do the penalties for frivilous law suits kick in?

Why Schiavo's Parents Didn't Have a Case
By Andrew Cohen
Andrew Cohen is CBS News' legal analyst.
March 25, 2005

Terri Schiavo's parents did not lose their federal case because they didn't try hard enough. They didn't lose their case because everyone conspired against them. They didn't lose it because Congress ticked off the judiciary over the weekend with its over-the-top custom-made legislation. They didn't lose it for lack of money or because they failed to file a court paper on time. They didn't lose it because the laws are unfair or because bureaucrats sometimes can be arbitrary and capricious.

The Schindlers lost their case and their cause —  and soon probably their daughter —  because in the end they were making claims the legal system has never been able or willing to recognize. They lost because they long ago ran out of good arguments to make   those arguments having been reasonably rejected by state judge after judge   and thus were left with only lame ones. And they lost because in every case someone has to win and someone has to lose. That's the way it works in our system of government. It isn't pretty, and sometimes it's unfair. But it's reality.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 25, 2005 - 4:06am :: Justice
 
 

Welcome to Jurrasic Park!

Scientists Find Soft Tissue in T-Rex Bone
Thu Mar 24, 2005 05:22 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A 70-million-year-old Tyrannosaurus rex fossil dug out of a hunk of sandstone has yielded soft tissue, including blood vessels and perhaps even whole cells, U.S. researchers reported on Thursday.

Paleontologists forced to break the creature's massive thighbone to get it on a helicopter found not a solid piece of fossilized bone, but instead something looking a bit less like a rock.

When they got it into a lab and chemically removed the hard minerals, they found what looked like blood vessels, bone cells and perhaps even blood cells.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 24, 2005 - 5:37pm :: Seen online
 
 

The point of the whole circus

For various reasons I've been spending a little more time at The American Street than I have in the past. Recently Dave Johnson sensed something wrong in the discussion about the biomass.

You're doing it again. You're not seeing what is really going on. You are missing the bigger picture. You are looking at trees and missing the forest. Do you really, after all this time and all these defeats, think the Right is stupid?

You mock the Republicans for blatantly acting politically, and ignore that they ARE ACTING POLITICALLY. In other words, they're acting in the way that will in the long term gain them more support for their candidates and issues.

You mock their politicians for flocking to this because of a Republican talking points memo telling them this will gain them a political advantage, yet you do not see that THIS WILL GAIN THEM POLITICAL ADVANTAGE.

You re nitpicking details and ignoring the larger narrative. They are  trying to save this poor woman.  They are  defending this poor woman s family.  Meanwhile, you are pointing out discrepancies in the finer details.  What about her husband?  you ask when they talk about her parents.  She can t feel pain,  you say, when they accuse Democrats of starving her to death. How many people hear that they are trying to save this poor woman? Everyone. How many people, over time, will pay attention to the nitpicking details?

CNN sounds like Fox on this issue. They're playing in the background and their coverage has crossed the line into sensationalism. I just had to say that.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 24, 2005 - 11:25am :: For the Democrats | Politics
 
 

You know what?

I'm getting pretty fucking tired of these idiots invoking the civil rights movement to support everything from invading countries to keeping an iconic biomass alive.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 24, 2005 - 10:51am :: Race and Identity
 
 

As well they should

The Supreme Court denied the stupid appeal without comment.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 24, 2005 - 10:30am :: Justice
 
 

Everybody want to get into the act

Klayman and Keyes to Ask Governor Bush to Grant "Pardon" to Terri Schiavo
Use of Executive Power Appropriate Under the Circumstances

To: National Desk

MIAMI, March 23 /Christian Wire Service/ -- Larry Klayman, former Chairman of Judicial Watch and 2004 U.S. Senate Candidate in Florida and owner of The Klayman Law Firm, and Alan Keyes, former Presidential Candidate, are asking Florida Governor Jeb Bush to use the powers he has been granted by the citizens of the state of Florida, under its Constitution, to save Terri Schiavo's life.

Larry Klayman stated, "Since Governor Jeb Bush is the supreme executive power of the state of Florida, he has the right and duty to step in and, in effect, pardon Terri Schiavo from the death sentence that has been unduly placed upon her by the court system."

The Schiavo case presents a vacuum for the judicial system -- because it failed to act to save Terri's life -- and Klayman and Keyes and all
Americans that want to see justice done would like for that vacuum to be filled before it is too late.

Larry Klayman will be meeting with the General Counsel to Governor Jeb Bush at 2:00 PM, today. During this meeting, he will lay out the legal justification for Governor Jeb Bush to act, and in so doing, will present what is in effect a legal brief prepared by Alan Keyes and approved by Klayman. In addition, Klayman will request a meeting with Governor Jeb Bush, which he and Alan Keyes would attend. Klayman will stress that time is of the essence, that Terri can die at any moment.

Larry Klayman represents RightMarch.com and Declaration Alliance, which has been very active in supporting life for Terri Schiavo.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 24, 2005 - 10:24am :: Media
 
 

My money is on the second option

Close the Spigot
Thursday, March 24, 2005; Page A18

EMBARRASSED BY revelations of the program's true price, Congress acted last fall to temporarily close loopholes in student loan laws that were costing taxpayers an unnecessary $1 billion every year. With a certain amount of fanfare, both House and Senate education committee chairmen declared their intention to stop "shortchanging students," in the words of Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), and to stop paying out huge, unnecessary sums to banks and other financial intermediaries that disburse student loans. At the time, we congratulated the lawmakers but nevertheless worried that the loose wording of the bill had ensured that some of the techniques banks had used to siphon money out of government coffers -- using an outdated law that once guaranteed lenders 9.5 percent interest rates -- would remain legal.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 24, 2005 - 10:23am :: Economics | Education
 
 

After this I'm taking credit for finding this article

In case you didn't know, frequent commentor cnulan blogs at Vision Circle, where, in discussing the discussion about Roland Fryer's promotion in the NY Times, points out an article on the development of cooperation in humans.

The article in its entirety focuses on the structural and functional basis of cooperation. It's economics alrighty, or game theory at least, but anytime you add the fMRI data and watch what the old noodle is up to whilst the sapiens are sapienting, BLAM!!! it kicks it up just that extra little notch required to give me a mental buzz and make me feel like we're no longer in the land of just-so storytelling, but have meandered into the domain of an objective science..., oh, and I very much respect the Punisher role itself..., I think we'll see more and more of this as we enter the twilight of the western era..., and that's a good thing!!!

Damn good article. How good? Check the category assigned to this post.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 24, 2005 - 9:25am :: About me, not you
 
 

Rule of law? What's that?

Jesus, the rule of law just definitively lost out to oligarchic kakistocracy in California.

Gov. Wins Initiative Fundraising Case
A preliminary ruling lets Schwarzenegger raise unlimited money to push ballot measures.
By Robert Salladay
Times Staff Writer
March 24, 2005

SACRAMENTO   California politicians can raise unlimited amounts of money to promote ballot initiatives, a judge said Wednesday, handing Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger a significant victory as he promotes his political agenda this year.

In a preliminary ruling, Sacramento Superior Court Judge Shelleyanne Chang said forcing Schwarzenegger to abide by fundraising limits for initiatives would unfairly trample on his right to free speech and would not subdue "the demons" of political corruption.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 24, 2005 - 7:48am :: Politics
 
 

Why am I linking this blatantly obvious report?

So I can mention a little anecdotal evidence.

I know for a fact that in San Francisco Black and Latino students that have almost any difficulty at all ate actively encouraged to "test out"...which means leave the school and take the GED test. I suspect those students represent the gap between the drop out rate reported by California (those that pass have "graduated") and Harvard's study.

Harvard again...

Nearly Half of Blacks, Latinos Drop Out, School Study Shows
By Duke Helfand
Times Staff Writer
March 24, 2005

Nearly half of the Latino and African American students who should have graduated from California high schools in 2002 failed to complete their education, according to a Harvard University report released Wednesday.

Posted by Prometheus 6 on March 24, 2005 - 7:37am :: Education