A Conversation It Would Have Been Fun To Overhear

I don’t think the Air Force One overflight of Lower Manhattan has any great significance, except as a reminder of how foolish it is to assume that government bureaucrats are always wise and far-seeing. The White House Counsel’s Office has now investigated the incident and placed blame where it is due, with the result that the Director of the White House Military Office–just one of the thousands of federal offices of which pretty much everyone was unaware–has resigned. You can read the White House Counsel’s report here.

There isn’t anything especially newsworthy in the report, but I enjoyed this understated narrative of how the Director of the WHMO learned that there was a problem, from President Obama’s Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel. As you read this dry account, bear in mind Emanuel’s reputation for hot temper and profanity:

Later, the Director left his office to meet with Mr. Messina in the West Wing. According to the Director, it was during this meeting that he first learned the flight had caused problems. He stated that White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel entered the room, described the controversy created by the flight, and asked whether the White House knew about the flyover in advance. … According to the Director, this was the first time he learned that the flight reminded people of 9/11 and there was a jet fighter trailing the 747 aircraft.

It would have been fun to be a bug on the wall and hear the language in which Emanuel “described the controversy created by the flight” and “asked whether the White House knew about the flyover in advance.”


Video: In the Womb: Extreme Animals

For Mother’s Day tomorrow, the National Geographic Channel has a fascinating show in the works, titled In The Womb: Extreme Animals, exploring the reproduction of four different animals with real-time 4D ultrasound images. Here’s a video clip of the section dealing with a penguin fetus and its extraordinary method of getting oxygen from its eggshell:

[Video]


The intersection of cynicism and animus

It has been clear all along the President Obama does not intend to take meaningful action to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons. In fairness, though, it must be added that President Bush never took any such action either. And, unlike Obama, Bush probably cared about the issue.

The main difference between Bush and Obama when it comes to Iran is Obama’s skill in constructing excuses for inaction. One ready-made excuse is the Iranian election to be held later this year. Obama can plausibly argue that it makes sense to wait for these elections and then deal with the winner. Moreover, as Jonathan Tobin points out, if Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is defeated by another candidate (albeit one pre-approved, as almost certainly would be the case, by the ayatollahs), Obama can proclaim that the emergence of this “moderate” leader obviates any threat to Israel and any need to confront Iran.

But Obama isn’t relying just on the hope that Ahmadinejad is defeated. As Tobin explains, Obama also intends to make Israel, which until now has been viewed as a major reason for dealing with the Iranaian threat, into his excuse for ignoring it.

This strategy was in evidence this week when Assistant Secretary of State Rose Gottemoelle called on Israel to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The idea is (a) to shift attention away from Iranian nukes to Israeli nukes and (b) to promote an inference of moral equivalence (Obama can’t make the argument explicitly) under which Iran’s possession of nukes seems reasonable enough. Never mind that Iran favors the elimination of Israel, while Israel has never questioned Iran’s right to exist.

Even more cyncially, Obama apparently intends to make the “Palestinian track” a higher priority than the Iranian track issue. His absurd pretext is that only if the Palestinians get their state will Obama, Europe and the grateful Arab world be able to pressure Iran into abadoning its nuclear program. By giving himself a pass on dealing meaningfully with Iran until such time as the Israeli-Palestinian dispute is resolved, Obama virtually guarantees that he will never have to tackle Iran.

As I say, there is plenty of cynicism here. But I doubt that cynicism is the only force at play. I suspect that, like his spiritual mentor Jeremiah Wright (though of course not nearly to the same degree) and like much of the American left from which he springs, Obama, while entirely indifferent about Iran, affirmatively dislikes Israel.


Overnight open thread, which is suddenly binary-curious NTTAWWT (genghis)

Update on the tipline: For now just keep using the old gmail tipline at the bottom of the post. Something went screwy when I tried to get the new earthlink tipline up and running, so I deleted that account and…

AKGovSarahPalin: As summer approaches the Great Land, so do AK visitors. We welcome you to visit us in the Land of the Midnight Sun!

AKGovSarahPalin: As summer approaches the Great Land, so do AK visitors. We welcome you to visit us in the Land of the Midnight Sun!

Quote of the day

“‘May I change the subject,’ said a prominent Washington theologian at a recent dinner. [...] Read the rest »

Big wedding and other musings

One of Mrs Pico’s friends was getting married today, so that’s where we’ve been since noon. It was a really nice, old church — church architecture fascinates me — in an older section of Allentown. We had a little time to kill between the wedding and the reception, so a quick stop at Home Despot to pick up a needed item, and then on to the reception. Open bar — though I didn’t partake — tons of pre-dinner munchies, and then a really good sit-down dinner.

We’re home now, and I’m still stuffed.

Because Mrs Pico has to work tomorrow, on Mother’s Day, she opened her Mother’s Day present today. I got her a Kindle 2 from amazon.com, and she loves it. The only problem: the Harry Potter series isn’t available for Kindle download. :(

PFC Pico called: Sgt Vader changed her mind and let the unit have weekend off-base passes. The girls had to wear their Class As while on base, including departing the base, so some of them got a hotel room just to have a place to change to civvies.

She wrote:

I’m at the Comfort Inn and have good internet connection, so hopefully I can actually send email. Sooooo, here’s some pictures….

Anyway, I’m off post!!!!!! YAY!!!!!! I’m in comfy civilian clothes. I just went swimming, and then I chilled (or warmed) in a hot tub. Later I’m going to a club with everyone. Then I’m going to sleep for a long time on my very comfy bed. It’s amazing.

I guess she can’t get fire guard duty off-base! :)

The younger Miss Pico wanted to join the Army Reserve, and do BCT in between her junior and senior years in high school. She actually had been thinking of doing this even before her sister joined up — she had a friend in high school who did it — but seeing her sister, standing and marching proud at her graduation from BCT sort of set a fire under her. She contacted the recruiter, the same one who signed up her sister, but it is kind of late in the recruitment year, and there simply weren’t any openings remaining; the Army Reserve is about 40,000 recruits ahead of their goals. Come the end of July, she’ll be able to sign up, though she’d have to wait until after graduation to go to BCT. Further, if she enlists early in the cycle, the full range of jobs in the Reserves will be open to her.

Along those lines, Scott Jacobs, a frequent commenter on Patterico’s Pontifications, and a contributor to his “sideblog” Jury, is enlisting in the United States Marine Corps. Mr Jacobs isn’t fresh out of high school or college; he’s 31 years old. Good going, Mr Jacobs!

Discover: Why Does the Vaccine/Autism Controversy Live On?

Discover Magazine has an excellent article by Chris Mooney on the anti-vaccination insanity that crosses political boundaries, and is now becoming a major risk to public health: Why Does the Vaccine/Autism Controversy Live On?

Vaccines do not cause autism. That was the ruling in each of three critical test cases handed down on February 12 by the U.S. Court of Federal Claims in Washington, D.C. After a decade of speculation, argument, and analysis—often filled with vitriol on both sides—the court specifically denied any link between the combination of the MMR vaccine and vaccines with thimerosal (a mercury-based preservative) and the spectrum of disorders associated with autism. But these rulings, though seemingly definitive, have done little to quell the angry debate, which has severe implications for American public health.

The idea that there is something wrong with our vaccines—that they have poisoned a generation of kids, driving an “epidemic” of autism—continues to be everywhere: on cable news, in celebrity magazines, on blogs, and in health news stories. It has had a particularly strong life on the Internet, including the heavily trafficked Huffington Post, and in pop culture, where it is supported by actors including Charlie Sheen and Jim Carrey, former Playboy playmate Jenny McCarthy, and numerous others. Despite repeated rejection by the scientific community, it has spawned a movement, led to thousands of legal claims, and even triggered occasional harassment and threats against scientists whose research appears to discredit it.

You can see where the emotion and sentiment come from. Autism can be a terrible condition, devastating to families. It can leave parents not only aggrieved but desperate to find any cure, any salvation. Medical services and behavioral therapy for severely autistic children can cost more than $100,000 a year, and these children often exhibit extremely difficult behavior. Moreover, the incidence of autism is apparently rising rapidly. Today one in every 150 children has been diagnosed on the autism spectrum; 20 years ago that statistic was one in 10,000. “Put yourself in the shoes of these parents,” says journalist David Kirby, whose best-selling 2005 book, Evidence of Harm, dramatized the vaccine-autism movement. “They have perfectly normal kids who are walking and happy and everything—and then they regress.” The irony is that vaccine skepticism—not the vaccines themselves—is now looking like the true public-health threat.

Read the whole thing…


Worshipful Amps are Now at Eleven UPDATED

The guns of a mother. The mother of us all. Michelle Obama’s arms, we determined, were transformational. Her arms are representative of a new kind of woman: young, strong, vigorous, intelligent, accomplished, sexual, powerful, embracing and, most of all, loving….

Rotten Egg Presidency Co-opts Easter Celebration

Some traditions should be so hallowed that they should not be sullied by political controversies or used as a vehicle to manipulate the participants into embracing perspectives and policies they might not otherwise be exposed to or willing to accept.  As a celebration of profound cultural significance at one of America’s most solemn and historic [...]

Obama’s Newest BFF: Oops, I Did It Again [Komrad Vinnieovich]

In trade for the book he gave President Teleprompter, I guess he gets American property in his latest nationalization scheme. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has sent troops to take over companies that provide services for the oil industry. “This is…

Criminal misconduct at the Obama-Holder Justice Department

The Washington Post editorial board purports to call for “fairness in the torture probe.” I’ll have more to say about this editorial later, but for now I want to focus on this passage regarding the Justice Department’s investigation, through its Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR), into legal analysis performed by Jay Bybee and John Yoo:

Investigations of this type are usually kept secret unless and until the investigating entity determines that wrongdoing has occurred. There’s a certain logic and decency to this: Mere news that someone is under investigation is often enough to tarnish that person’s reputation — even if charges ultimately are not brought. Yet the existence of the investigation and many details of the OPR report have already found their way into the public arena. For example, The Post and other news outlets have reported that the OPR will recommend that Judge Bybee and Mr. Yoo be referred to their respective bar associations for possible sanctions.

The Post makes it sound like the leaks of the OPR report, which is still a preliminary document, are nothing more than a deviation from the usual way of doing things. In fact, they are a violation of OPR’s rules and, it would appear, a criminal violation of the Privacy Act.

As Bill Otis has pointed out to me, the Justice Department has clear rules governing the circumstances under which OPR’s findings may be publicly disclosed:

Public Disclosure of OPR Findings

OPR’s findings in certain cases may be publicly disclosed. The Department may consider disclosing the final disposition, after all available administrative reviews have been completed, of any matter in the following categories:

A finding of intentional or knowing professional misconduct in the course of litigation or investigation where the Attorney General or Deputy Attorney General finds that the public interest in disclosure outweighs the privacy interest of the attorney and any law enforcement interests;

Any case involving an allegation of serious professional misconduct where there has been a demonstration of public interest, including referrals by a court or bar association, where the Attorney General or Deputy Attorney General finds that the public interest in disclosure outweighs the privacy interest of the attorney and any law enforcement interests;

Any case in which the attorney requests disclosure, where law enforcement interests are not compromised by the disclosure.

If a matter appears to meet these criteria, OPR prepares a summary of the matter including the attorney’s name, sufficient facts to explain the context of the allegation, and the final disposition. This summary is submitted to the Department’s Office of Privacy and Civil Liberties, which determines whether the Privacy Act permits disclosure of the included information and whether revisions should be made to the summary prior to disclosure. If Office of Privacy and Civil Liberties advises that the statement is appropriate for disclosure, the summary is sent to the attorney and the appropriate supervisory official, and both are given the opportunity to make written comments and objections to the proposed disclosure on grounds of privacy or law enforcement concerns. Any such objections are reviewed by Office of Privacy and Civil Liberties.

OPR forwards the proposed summary to the Deputy Attorney General with its recommendation regarding release and attaches all comments that were received. The final decision as to whether to release a summary is made by the Attorney General. If the Attorney General decides that disclosure is appropriate, the summary is forwarded to the Office of Public Affairs for release. (emphasis added)

Here, the key conditions for disclosure have not been satisifed. For example, the draft was leaked before Bybee, Yoo, or their lawyers had an opportunity to comment and before the Department of Justice determined that the preliminary report should become final.

The leaks also appear to consititute a criminal offense under the Privacy Act. 5 U.S.C. section 552a(i)(1) provides:

Criminal Penalties.– Any officer or employee of an agency, who by virtue of his employment or official position, has possession of, or access to, agency records which contain individually identifiable information the disclosure of which is prohibited by this section or by rules or regulations established thereunder, and who knowing that disclosure of the specific material is so prohibited, willfully discloses the material in any manner to any person or agency not entitled to receive it, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined not more than $5,000.

Agency “records” are “any item, collection, or grouping of information about an individual that is maintained by an agency, including, but not limited to, his education, financial transactions, medical history, and criminal or employment history and that contains his name, or the identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to the individual, such as a finger or voice print or a photograph.” 552a(a)(4).

DOJ regulations make it clear that the Privacy Act’s strictures apply to exactly the class of OPR records that were leaked to, and used, by the Post. (I understand that there have been some minor modifications to the regs, but none that would change the analysis here). Thus, the leaking of such documents under circumstances that violate DOJ/OPR rules would appear to be a criminal offense.

The “fairness” the Washington Post calls for is, I assume, out of the question on this issue with this administration. But is it too much to ask that the Obama-Holder Justice Department comply with the law?

It seems to me that DOJ should consider the appointment of a Special Counsel to look into this matter. Surely this is what the Democrats, and the Washington Post, would be calling for if leaks like these had occurred under a Republican adminstration.


Hugh Hewitt: For Your Weekend Reading Pleasure: Mark Steyn and Meg Whitman

Here’s the transcript of my Thursday chat with columnist-to-the-world Mark Steyn, which includes a comparison of Canadian, British and Bulgarian health care.And here is the transcript and here the podcast of the first…

Open thread: Elite gather in D.C. to celebrate their own importance

Politicians, movie stars, media handmaidens, and a few subversives who can’t stand any of them (the boss went a few years ago): It’s the most obnoxious Beltway event of the year, and C-SPAN, bless its heart, will be covering all of it. [...] Read the rest »

New LGF-Related Blog: Defending the Defensible

Here’s a new blog that will be of interest to LGF readers: Defending the Defensible.

(Kudos to whoever is responsible for this one. Stinky and I appreciate the support.)

Also see:

Wild Irish Rose: Charles Johnson is right: defending the defensible.

UPDATE at 5/9/09 5:17:20 pm:

Here are two of the people responsible for the stalker site referenced at “Defending the Defensible:”

Marc Thomas Donato (“savagenation,” also registered as “cutestguy,” banned from LGF for posting multiple threats of violence and other insane extremist comments)

Rick Martinez (aka “Jay Pagan,” registered at LGF under the names “Rodan,” “The Joker,” “Hateful Hater,” “Conquistador,” and most recently “AV2025”)

UPDATE at 5/9/09 5:48:08 pm:

Marc Donato (aka “savagenation”) also has an account at Facebook, and if you click on “View Friends,” look who pops up: Robert Spencer and Pamela Geller (Facebook account required): Facebook | Search: marc donato.


What Ever Happened to Dignity: The Itching of America

How inspired is the race in the Congress to protect all the sexual orientations that have emerged of late. Are they really threatened? Shouldn’t someone tell the Congress that most Americans have not even heard of most of them yet?

Depending on who is breaking down the list the news is reporting between 30 and 50 distinctive sexual behaviors that are to be protected under the newly proposed Hate Crimes Bill H.R. 1913. Have we gone from the moral majority to the immoral majority all in about a mere thirty years? What happened? (more…)