Kaus takes another swing at

Kaus takes another swing at the Bob Greene situation and makes a very poor argument. Kaus compares the Chicago Tribune not releasing all of the details to Nixon. This is an absurd comparison. Nixon was President and had a public duty. The Chicago Tribune is a private company with fiduciary responsibility to its stock holders. This means that personnel decisions are generally private matters that are kept private to avoid legal liability.

Second, it has a relationship with its reader based on its credibility. I’d prefer to believe that the paper frowns upon reporters sleeping with subjects of stories. Call me old fashioned.

Third, this respects the privacy of the woman and Greene. We know the relevant details from Kass’s column. This doesn’t stop other reporters at other institutions from looking into the issue, but the Tribune has been clear on the standards it expects from its employees to its readers. That is all they should be expected to divulge barring some ACTUAL information that contradicts any of this.

Kaus then takes on Jim Warren’s argument about special privileges and says it is absurd. It is not. A journalist in the position of Greene has the ability to use that position to take advantage of a high school student. And he did. That privilege may not be some formal privilege, but most people understand it and understand using that privilege is wrong.

The Tribune has a code of conduct as Don Wycliff points out. Greene violated that code of conduct.

As Kass points out:

“I don’t care about sex lives of reporters or politicians. That’s not my business or yours either, as long as they’re grown-ups and as long as they don’t use the institutions they represent to close the deal.”

This was an abuse of power.

Was Clinton an abuse of power? Yes. Being fired (or accepting a resignation in this case) from a newspaper is a lot different than removing the President of the United States.

The Times has an article

The Times has an article on the politics of Forest Fires. I find the administration policy silly, but one very positive note, is no one is debating that fire is essential to healthy forests anymore and that is a huge step forward. In the short term we need to do some maintenance to reduce extreme fire risks–not necessarily logging of the type Bush envisions, but in the longterm fire is essential to keeping forests healthy.

The press is rolling over for the administration on the claims concerning the number of projects stopped by lawsuits. This quote tells a very interesting story:

“Exactly how many fire treatment programs are snagged by citizen appeals is unclear. The General Accounting Office said in a report that fewer than 1 percent of fire prevention projects were delayed in such a way. The Bush administration says the number is closer to 50 percent, though that includes some logging plans that have little to do with fire prevention.

Joe Walsh, a spokesman for the Forest Service, said the agency did not know how many of the projects in the forests most in need of fire treatment had been blocked by appeal.”

Some notes on Iowa and

Some notes on Iowa and elsewhere:

Dean has been heard joking that he can’t raise a damn dollar from anyone who is straight. This is strange because Dean really didn’t want to deal with the issue of gay marriages, but once presented it he handled it with class and restraint.

The buzz in Iowa is that Dean is coming on strong amongst the quirky intellectual activists. Much as Bill Bradley took communities like Fairfield and Mt. Vernon, Dean is making inroads in such places as well. He is a straight shooter and people naturally like the guy. And Iowa and Vermont face similar issues in both health care and education. The real question is how well he can handle Iraq. To date he is the most skeptical of the Dems running. Of course, he is no more skeptical than Jim Leach has been. If he were to make it to the General Election, this might become an issue.

Gephardt is in full swing from the sounds of it and the consensus (of a small group of friends) seems to be regardless of whether he takes back the House or not, he is going. Part of this may be that if he wins House, he will be barely able to govern anyway. Spending your days trying to cajole Ralph Hall over his hearing aid isn’t anyone’s idea of fun.

This creates an interesting problem for Edwards. If Gephardt is in the race, unions go to him and possibly Gore (more in a sec). Dean potentially takes the activists and quirky intellectual crowd–a not so small crowd in caucuses in Iowa. That leaves little space for anyone else. Making it more difficult is New Hampshire where Kerry and Dean have natural inroads and Gephardt and Gore get the organization people. Where does Edwards go? Dean has the NRA record on top of all of this and the gun nuts in New Hampshire are Republicans who backed Smith.

Edwards, probably the strongest in the general is squeezed out if he doesn’t come up with a strategy to neutralize some of these factors.

Gore both is and has an interesting problem. And he is a problem besides being a pedantic pain in the ass. He beat Bradley with unions. With Gephardt in the race, he can’t do as well with them and his biggest supporter last time was Harkin who has already backed away a bit. So who does Gore target? And he performed poorly in New Hampshire. Save John McCain’s upset and he comes out in a battle. Instead, Bradley contemplated robbing a bank to get attention.

Overall, this leaves Gore and Edwards out for now. They may well find a niche, but in Gore’s case that is good news for the Democrats. In Edwards case it means a new strategy has to be devised that can pull atypical caucus goers into the caucus. I’m not betting on this working, but combatting hog lots, a North Carolina issue as well, would almost have to be at the center of any Democratic rural strategy. Or Jesse Ventura, but I don’t think Edwards can be that inappropriate that often.

And Dean will be giving the keynote at the Iowa AFL-CIO meeting. I suppose he was a good compromise so as to not offend the other potential competitors.

Kerry isn’t getting anywhere from what people can tell. He is aloof and culturally a bad fit for a Midwestern state that bases its decisions on how many times you meet the candidate and whether they remember you. He also may have problems attracting a staff that never could meet his expectations. Given he has a natural advantage in New Hampshire, this may not matter too much–except his aloofness doesn’t play well out of the Northeast.

In Florida, rumor is Ed Diaz is going to win his race North of Orlando

Bingo! Brazen lying eventually gets

Bingo! Brazen lying eventually gets discovered. The ‘energy crisis’ was a sham and now there is actual evidence of it. Why would the government enter into an agreement to keep it secret? Things that make you go hmmmmmmmmm…..

Perhaps this would have been more clear if Governor Blowhard wasn’t mucking up the whole debate, but the Bush and Cheney were lying. How do we know they were lying? Well they are competent businessmen in the energy industry. If they got it wrong, they couldn’t have been mistaken because they were competent, right?

But no, they had to push the Murkowski Solution? What is the Murkowski solution? Feet Stink? Drill ANWR

The Great Illinois Republican Civil

The Great Illinois Republican Civil War has started. Circle up and fire folks. O’Malley and his clan have decided to committ hari kari in the same fashion as Republicans in California and New Jersey.

As a Democrat, I suppose this should make me happy. It doesn’t. I grew up in Illinois and always admired the moderate Republicanism of Jim Thompson and Jim Edgar. They provided a great check excesses of the left and still respected education funding, infrastructure and individual liberties. Jim Thompson provided the infrastructure that makes Illinois an ideopolis now. Without him, Illinois may well be Missouri with good farmland and a big crumbling city. Instead, Chicago is a world class city (Washington and Daley deserve credit for this as well), education is good in most areas (see posting on Blog St. Louis about rural ed), and Illinois is relatively good on social issues.

No more. Now there will be a huge blow-up in the Republican Party between those moderates who have a motto of “Let’s not get excited,” and the jihad wingnuts who are more worried about homeschooling and abortion than infrastructure. I imagine the wing-nuts will eventually win and we’ll see the Democrats take over the state for years to come. Wingnuts are bad for bidness and Illinois is a bidness state.

That is too bad. Many Democratic leaders in the State of Illinois need to be checked. I like Madigan for what he gets done, but he is all too happy to use state resources to further his political goals (separate from policy goals). Republican cronieism provides a check on that. But it won’t if there aren’t any Republicans left in office.