Fri
Mar 9 2007
02:28 am
By: rikki

Dupree stomps Saddam hysterics scurrying across the pantry floor.

I would like to say, however, that most coyotes would resent the suggestion they belong to merely one landowner. The ones where I live probably cross hundreds or thousands of human parcels in their travels. Of course, that just means they are my coyotes as well as the coyotes of everyone in Tarklin Valley. They are our coyotes.

In defense of roaches, they don't all need to be killed. The giant ones might infest a dumpster, but not your house. They can be trapped and released outside or kept as pets. The really dark ones with no wings are wood roaches, and if they are in your house, it was an accident, and they would be grateful for a fling back to their leaf litter, subsoil universe. The tiny ones are bad news, and the ones with spots or lines behind their head.

If it's a big roach and uniformly colored, cleaning up a squashed one is likely more trouble than trapping it under a glass and tossing it outside. Plus, squashing them raises your exposure to bacteria or viruses inside the roach. Trap and release. The littles one, the fast ones you could never catch, those are the ones you must smash like pathetic rationalizations to not impeach the worst infestation the White House has ever suffered.

cafkia's picture

I love that Dupree guy

Dupree is smart and goodlooking. His writing is incredibly insightful and informative. The man is positively godlike. Puppies and kittens throng to him.

He would most likely graciously admit the points you make about the fauna he mentions and, in general, defer to your superior knowledge of non-domestic things.

That's just how Dupree is.

CAFKIA

----------------------------------------------------------- 

It is impossible to defeat an ignorant man in argument.
  - William G. McAdoo

Tamara Shepherd's picture

Zeus

Cafkia: "The man is positively godlike. Puppies and kittens throng to him."

...and teenage girls, too, at least until he's 60, it appears. Look for him in the midst of that sort of halter-topped huddle at any Sundown concert ;-)

rikki's picture

again an American

Puppies and kittens throng to him.

You've got the story confused. It's that Dupree is part puppy, part kitten.

So what do you figure should be done about the deafening silence from the parties and MSM about the profiteering during this trumped-up war? What should be done about National Guardsmen being immediately pressed into service by a commander who bailed from the Guard when the federal government started requiring drug tests for pilots? What about the soldiers made to serve time for human rights abuses they were trained and ordered to perform in military prisons?

I'm not sure this country has ever needed impeachment power exercised as much as it does now. Certainly it wasn't needed when the underlying crime was a blowjob. Perhaps in 2002 when Bush first started lying about Iraq and the Democrats were too cowardly to seek out Republicans like Jimmy Duncan who might have had enough respect for the facts to see the need to remove thieves from power. Maybe in late 2003 as it became obvious to the average, informed joe that the threat posed by Iraq was tiny compared to what Bush, Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld, Powell, Ashcroft, Card, Rove, Libby, Feith and the rest had cooked up.

By invading, Bush made good on his sales pitch. Iraq is now a credible threat to the U.S. So is Iran.

Impeach Cheney, rescind the war powers resolution, call the Pentagon contractors who worked in the torture prisons to testify, whatever needs to be done to bring the troops home the Democrats need to start doing. Cutting the war budget will not cut it. Henry Waxman has some interesting drips hardening under the candle he is shining on military corruption.

Republicans seem to be losing even the will to retch up cheap partisan distractions. It has been years since they've been willing to address facts, and now even their limp counter-volleys are fading. They are now posing as Hillary supporters on Democrat blogs!

Soon the shame will overtake them and they will get the courage to admit torture in our overseas prisons was a disgrace on America's spirit, that a trillion dollars to invade two countries without planes, ships, hardly even tanks and horses leaves a lot of room for graft and theft, that a violent and unwise overreaction to a tragedy is exactly what terrorists hope to get from a far more powerful foe.

Soon Republicans will wake up and no longer be a roach, but again an American, and freedom of speech will liberate their tongues from all they have been unable to speak.

JaHu's picture

and the Democrats were too

and the Democrats were too cowardly to seek out Republicans like Jimmy Duncan who might have had enough respect for the facts to see the need to remove thieves from power.

If it weren't for Duncan's major flaw... He's a republican! I'd vote for him for prez, and I still might would.

Adrift in the Sea of Humility

Tamara Shepherd's picture

Waxman

Rikki: "Henry Waxman has some interesting drips hardening under the candle he is shining on military corruption."

Rikki, I was optimistic to read in today's paper that Plame will testify next week for Waxman and the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, and that they have asked Fitzgerald, as well, citing "questions about whether senior White House officials, including the vice president and Senior Advisor to the President Karl Rove , complied with the requirements governing the handling of classified information." Plame has confirmed, the story said, and Fitzgerald hasn't (yet).

I had imagined it was a start. What do you make of the opportunity?

(It isn't clear to me whether Fitzgerald may exercise a perogative to decline...)

rikki's picture

Questioning Plame is a

Questioning Plame is a start. It will be interesting to hear her speak about the damage caused by her outing, but really there are much more important matters about which we know less. If Waxman can leverage that into exposure of the WHIG, strongarming of intelligence analysts by Cheney and Rumsfeld, and the sabotage of the intelligence infrastructure the Office of Special Plans represents, it would be a great start indeed.

If, as Don Williams points out in his latest column, we fixate on the 16 words or just on Plame, we risk missing the forest for the trees.

I still think torture is the critical leverage point for Democrats. Not only does revealing the role of private contractors in management of abusive prisons expose the cronyism that has cost Americans billions under Bush and the Republican Congress, it also illustrates Rumsfeld's perverse micromanagement and the immorality of both the abuses themselves and of pinning the blame on low-level soldiers, some of whom were merely Guardsmen.

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