• Supreme Court

    SCOTUS: Last Day of Term Part 2

    With today’s decisions:

    Grokster

    Ten Commandments times 2

    And last week’s decision:

    Kelo v. City of New London (04-108)

    Flaps says BLEH!

    Statist decisions by an OLD and Worn Out Court.

    SCOTUS needs new blood and NEW Law.

    Flap continues to handicap at least two vacancies on the court.

    The Court now is formally out of session until October 3, and the new Term opening. The Justices will meet in private Conference on Monday, September 26, to vote on grant or denial of new cases that have arrived over the summer recess.

    Hat Tip: SCOTUS Blog

    Update #1

    No more rumors about who the President will appoint to the court.

    After a good nights sleep, we will all know.

    Tomorrow!

  • Supreme Court

    Supreme Court of the United States: Last Day of Term

    The United States Supreme Court ends its term today with decisions on major cases and anticipated retirements of one or more justices.

    Michelle Malkin has an excellent round-up here, THE SUPREME COURT SIZZLES

    Hot day ahead for the Supreme Court as it ends its term; hands down some highly anticipated rulings (including a Ten Commandments case and the Cooper/Miller confidential sources appeal); and prepares for a likely resignation.

    Hugh Hewitt and Bill Kristol had dueling predictions last week. Hugh sez Rehnquist; Kristol sez O’Connor. We’ll know soon enough. Steve at Southern Appeal was an early betting man on successors; he’s going with Michael McConnell.

    Tons of stories speculating on successors to Rehnquist.

    Heavy lobbying campaigns already under way on both sides.

    Washington Post’s Monday morning edition reports:

    The White House gathered key political operatives at a strategy meeting Friday to prepare for a possible Supreme Court vacancy that officials believe could occur this week, leading to the first high court confirmation battle in a decade, according to Republicans informed about the session.

    The meeting, hosted by White House Chief of Staff Andrew H. Card Jr., his deputy Karl Rove and counsel Harriet Miers, was called to ensure that President Bush’s supporters are ready for the high-stakes, high-intensity, high-dollar campaign that would follow a nomination. But some participants later told associates that they were not sure if any justice would retire.

    Hmmm.

    Red State hears:

    Sources close to the White House are telling Red State that they do expect a Supreme Court vacancy in the next ten days — as soon as tomorrow is possible, but within the next ten days seems most likely.

    Robert Novak sez: No, not Gonzales!

    Flap is off to drill this morning but his handicap is here.

    For additional links, Michelle obliges:

    Court-watching blogs to bookmark:

    The Supreme Court Nomination Blog and SCOTUS blog

    Bench Memos

    How Appealing

    Southern Appeal

  • Politics

    Huffington: FLAP Over Cheney’s Health Part 2

    The Huffington Post is reporting in a follow-up that Vice President Dick Cheney had a prophylactic EKG at cardiac unit of the Vail Valley Medical Center on Friday afternoon:

    As reported here on Friday, Vice President Dick Cheney went to the cardiac unit of the Vail Valley Medical Center on Friday afternoon. The Vail Daily reported that “he dropped by to say hi to his favorite knee doctor Richard Steadman.” The Associated Press ran a similar story.

    The vice president did see Dr. Steadman, a renowned orthopedic surgeon at the Steadman Hawkins clinic. But he then proceeded to the cardiac unit of the center to see Dr. Jack Eck, sources close to the doctor told The Huffington Post. While there, Cheney had a prophylactic EKG.

    Neither the Associated Press or the Vail Daily have reported that the vice president visited the cardiac unit.

    And so what if he did?

    An EKG is a normal component of any physical examination, espeically for someone with a history of heart disease.

    But, did he stay and was he hospitalized overnight? Now this would be a story (albiet a small one) unless the Vice President’s life was in jeopardy.

    A routine medical test is not.

    And Arianna’s piece, It’s Not the EKG; It’s the Cover-up doesn’t really make the case for a cover-up.

    An EKG is a very routine medical test.

    It is not being reported that he had any invasive coronary tests or surgery.

    Arianna, perhaps he had GAS!

    Now, do you want that reported to the Associated Press every time he eats beans?

  • California,  Special Election 2005

    Governor Schwarzenegger: Not the Time to Turn Squishy

    Dan Walters of the Sacramento Bee has an excellent piece today, Now’s not the time for Schwarzenegger to turn ‘squishy’:

    As Iraq’s seizure of Kuwait escalated into war in 1991, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher reportedly cautioned President George Bush against “going squishy.”

    It’s a fundamental tenet of both military and political warfare. Once you launch a war of either variety, you’d better be ready to see it through, or you merely suffer casualties without achieving any objective.

    Arnold Schwarzenegger should remember Thatcher’s words because he may be backing away from the war he launched to change the tenor of the Capitol, and in doing so, undermining the legitimate cause of reform.

    In fact, the MSM is abuzz with the fact that the Democrats in the Legislature and the Governor are negotiating a deal which would eviscerate the Schwarzenegger reform initiatives.

    MSM pieces are:

    Schwarzenegger, Democrats Exploring Truce

    Governor, Democrats seek truce
    Both sides explore compromise on package of reforms

    Polls force governor, Democrats to talk
    Latest figures make a special election look risky for both sides, so they are negotiating over proposed reforms.

    With polls showing his once-soaring popularity dropping to Gray Davis-like levels, and his two most important ballot measures trailing, Schwarzenegger last week showed signs of squishiness. He didn’t exactly beg Democrats for a face-saving deal, but by issuing a semi-mea culpa, appeared to be heading in that direction.

    Asked by a reporter whether he accepts any responsibility for Capitol friction, Schwarzenegger replied that “all of us in this building can share blame, all of us, including myself.

    “People make mistakes sometimes, and I think that we learn. These are very clear messages that we must work together. And so I am looking forward to that. I really look forward to working together and to solve this together, because it’s the best for the people of California. They feel good when things work well, when people work together.”

    But, the Governor held this Girlie Man press conference before the next day Field Poll was released showing the Paycheck Protection Initiative and the Termination of Pregnancy Notification Initiative winning.

    The Governor was premature in his gloom but then again the MSM has been all over his ass for weeks with falling poll popularity numbers.

    Truth is, the California public often expects results from politics that are mutually exclusive, such as high levels of services and low taxes. Californians recalled Davis because he personified the unacceptable status quo, and elected Schwarzenegger on his promise to clean up the mess in Sacramento, but at the same time, paradoxically, they expect politicians to work together for change.

    Schwarzenegger could not clean up the mess if it took the cooperation of Capitol politicians who helped create it in the first place – the deficit-saturated state budget being the prime example. If he was to fulfill voters’ expectations and his own promises, he had to become confrontational.

    The mea culpa Schwarzenegger should issue is not for creating Capitol angst, but for misleading voters that reform would come bloodlessly. He finally realized his error but never admitted it as he shifted to a more confrontational mode a year ago, and ever since has confused Californians – a populist warrior one day, a teddy bear the next.

    The case for fundamental reform is crystal clear. If California’s dysfunctional state government is to have any chance at responding to the state’s many serious policy issues – transportation, water, the budget, education, energy and housing, to name but a few – it needs to radically change.

    The Truth is the Governor has positioned himself well despite transient poor popularity poll numbers but he does not seem to realize it.

    The Governator has already won this election and re-election in 2006 — if he stays the course!

    The specific reforms that Schwarzenegger has championed are not the complete answer, but their enactment would send a message that the public supports change. There is room for a genuine compromise that would make significant progress toward governability, but with Schwarzenegger’s declining popularity, any deal that the Capitol’s entrenched interests would accept would be – if history is a guide – merely a veneer that would allow the unworkable status quo to continue.

    Schwarzenegger’s dilemma, whether to battle on or retreat, is not unlike the one that his political mentor, former Gov. Pete Wilson, faced in 1992.

    Republican Wilson, like Schwarzenegger, had inherited a huge budget deficit and, to continue the parallels, had forged fairly good relations with Democratic legislators during the first year of his governorship, much to the dismay of conservatives in his own party.

    As their budget crises continued into their second years, however, both Wilson and Schwarzenegger found themselves in eyeball-to-eyeball confrontations with the Legislature. Wilson, like Schwarzenegger, was savaged in the media and saw his popularity plummet.

    But Wilson prevailed in the Legislature, and his single-minded toughness brought him a landslide re-election in 1994. When Thatcher warned the elder Bush about becoming “squishy,” she also reminded him that her political standing soared when she fought and defeated the Argentinians in the Falklands War.

    Pete Wilson did prevail and handily won a second term. Although a moderate on social issues, Wilson was a former Marine and advance man for Richard Nixon.

    He was anything but a Squishy Politician or a Girlie Man.

    Now it is time for Arnold to PROVE that he is not.

    Cross-Posted to The Bear Flag League Special Election Page

  • Humour,  Politics

    Rabid Donkeys on the Loose from WILLisms.com

    Thanks to Michelle Malkin for alerting Flap to this humorous but yet serious piece over at WILLisms.com:

    Exhibit 1: Howard “Temper Tantrum McGee” Dean

    howarddeanscreaming.gif

    Keeping tabs on each and every inflammatory and outrageous Howard Dean comment is nearly impossible, but here are some highlights–

    Dean said of the removal of tyrant Saddam Hussein, that there’s a problem with American policy

    …when we pick on dictators that are irrelevant to the United States.

    The DNC Chair asserted that many Republicans

    …have never made an honest living in their lives.

    After promising to “use Terri Schiavo” as a political issue, Dean kept his promise, noting of Republicans:

    “…their government is just big enough to fit inside Terri Schiavo’s bed in the nursing home.”

    At one point, Dean offered:

    “I hate the Republicans and everything they stand for.”

    At another point, Dean claimed that Republicans are:

    …a pretty monolithic party. They all believe the same. They all look the same. It’s pretty much a white Christian party.

    Dean hates the Republicans and everything they stand for; meanwhile, he thinks the GOP is a party of white Christians.

    It’s telling.

    And if you are a Democrat wondering why your party is in the tank, politically, look no further than Howard Dean.

    A great piece but Flap has some additions:

    Howard Dean Starts Therapy Fund for Rove

    Howard Dean: An Honest Living – Edwards Now Agrees

    Howard Dean: America Safer When Democrats are in White House

  • Criminals,  Methamphetamine

    Methamphetamine: The Criminals

    Some enforcement results on the War Against Methamphetamine: The Unnecessary Epidemic.

    Chinese drug lord Zhuang Chucheng (2nd-L) stands for trial at the Intermediate People’s Court of Shenzhen in south China’s Guangdong province June 22, 2005. Zhuang was sentenced to death and executed Wednesday for making and selling huge quantities of the drug methamphetamine hydrochloride, known as ‘ice’. Between August 1996 and July 2000, Zhuang’s ring manufactured 31.125 tons of solid and liquefied ‘ice’ in the south of China, local media reported.

    Thailand’s Public Health Minister Suchai Charoenrattanakul holds a bag of methamphetamine pills during a ceremony to destroy more than 2,700 million baht ($65.55 million) worth of narcotics in Ayutthaya province, nearly 80 km (50 miles) north of Bangkok, June 24, 2005. About 2,264 kg (4991 lbs) of drugs were destroyed. More than half were methamphetamine, marijuana, heroin, and raw opium. Thailand’s Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra launched his government’s third war on drugs in April 2005, vowing to wipe out the drug trade.

    And on the local front:

    Man Sold Iodine From Tack And Feed Shop In Fountain

    The first man convicted under a Colorado law targeting suppliers of materials used to make methamphetamine is sentenced to probation.

    62-year-old Nneil Cizek sold iodine in large quantities from his shop, Cherokee Tack and Feed, in Fountain.

    Sales from Cizek’s shop cost up to four times the going rate and prosecutors said he made $10,000 $30,000 dollars a month on the iodine sales.

    Receipts from iodine purchased at his shop turned up at more than 20 area meth labs.

    Drug enforcement agency agents had even warned Cizek about the law after discovering he was selling such large quantities.

    More precursor chemicals to methamphetamine stopped equals less potent and less quantities of Meth on the street.

    Congrats to the many law enforcement officers in many countries who are working on The Unnecessary Epidemic.

  • Media,  Politics

    Huffington Post: Deletes Cheney Comments

    Flap previously posted Huffington: FLAP Over Cheney’s Health

    Now Arianna Huggington says that some of the comments were inappropriate and has deleted them:

    Arianna Huffington

    Note on Comments

    Some of the comments posted to the Cheney news story are highly offensive, and we will therefore delete them. While we at the Huffington Post believe that the public has the right to know what the Vice President was at the Vail hospital for, we only wish him the best of health.

    So much for freedom of expression over at Huffington’s Post.

    Here are some of the new comments:

    Ms. Huffington,
    You’d be taken alot more seriously if you actually ALLOWED posts that were critical of some of your posters positions. Not offensive, but those that disagree. Right now all your are is DU lite, only without some of the intelligence tahat occasionaly slips through the filters over there.

    Posted by: mike at June 25, 2005 02:48 PM

    How much more can they be like the old Soviet Union?

    Posted by: Barry Gross at June 25, 2005 03:32 PM

    and he has health isurance,which we the working poor pay for, and those of us who have insurance have huge deductables and obscene monthly premiums! Life of the rich and Powerful, a’nt it great.

    Posted by: ken gustafson at June 25, 2005 04:12 PM

    H/T: California Conservative

  • Election 2008,  Politics

    Howard Dean: Trolling for Hispanic Votes

    Howard Dean addressed the National Association of Latino Officials yesterday in Puerto Rico and told both appointed and elected officials that the Democratic Party is losing more and more Hispanic voters to the Republicans and must cultivate them if it is to win the 2008 presidential victory.

    More than 7 million Latinos — of Central and South American, Mexican, and Puerto Rican descent — voted in the 2004 presidential race.

    But with each successive race, a higher percentage of the growing number of eligible Hispanics has voted for the Republican Party candidate. In 1996, there was a 51 percent gap between Sen. Robert Dole and President
    Bill Clinton, who won 72 percent of the Hispanic vote. In 2004, there gap narrowed to 20 percent between
    President George W. Bush and Sen.
    John Kerry, who won nearly 60 percent of Hispanic votes.

    To win Latinos back, “We need a 50-state strategy,” Dean told several hundred elected and appointed Hispanic officials belonging to the National Association of Latino Officials.

    Now, how does this pandering for voters help Hillary Clinton’s strategy for fueling border state discontent over illegal immigration?

    Does this show a sign that the Democrats will be supporting some amnesty plan for Hispanic illegal aliens?

    Democrats lost Hispanic votes in the last election because the Republican Party presented itself as the party of “moral values,” said Dean, 56.

    But “this (Democratic) party stands for social and economic justice,” he said, criticizing the Bush administration’s health, education, and social security policies.

    “We are Democrats because of our moral values,” he said.

    A majority of Hispanics are Catholics and the values of Democrats and the Roman Catholic Church coincide for the most part, he added

    But, how does this moral values strategy square with the Democrat’s platform and Hillary’s stand on abortion? Tthe Democrats do NOT line up and share the same moral values with the Roman Catholic Church on abortion! Or with Gay Marriage for that matter!

    The lefties have a long way to go to attract Hispanic voters who are social conservatives and naturally attracted to conservative and Republican candidates.