Sunday, November 25, 2007
Mitt Romney's Spectacularly Sexist Attack Ad
Mitt Romney's "Willie Horton"?
Romney enjoys a comfortable lead in the polls over his two nearest rivals, Rudy Giuliani and John McCain. However, the contest is still wide open as the numbers of uncommitted Republicans and independent voters -- who can request the ballot of either party on election day -- remain in the majority among those registered voters likely to go to the polls. With the primary set for January 8, 2008, there is a little over six weeks left to campaign.
In press conference held in Allentown that Fox News and other outlets for some reason referred to as Derry, which is nearby but is NOT Allentwon (my father lived in the area once called Suncook but which as been changed to Hooksett, the nearest large town, for real estate purposes, one supposes; it is across the river from Allentown, and it IS all rather confusing) Romney addressed the question of the judge he had appointed to the Massachusetts Superior Court, who released a convicted mother-killer who subsequently migrated to Washington State, where he slew a couple.
In July 2007, Superior Court Judge Kathe M. Tuttman rejected the request of prosecutors to hold Daniel Tavares, Jr. on $50,000 bail after he was arrested on assault charges. Tavares had been released from prison in June after serving 16 years for murdering his mother, sprung early for “good behavior“ despite his assault on guards and his threats against public officials. According to the Boston Herald, http://bostonherald.com/news/regional/general/view.bg?articleid=1046369&format=text
in February 2006, Tavares had threatened to murder then-Governor Romney and other public officials, including the attorney general of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Tuttman reversed a lower court and granted Tavares a bail waiver. The convicted momslaughterer then quickly violated the terms of his parole and left Massachusetts for Washington State to go live with a woman he had met online while he was in stir. In Washington State, the irrepresible con shoot to death Brian and Beverly Mauck, who lived near him in the Tacoma suburb of Graham.
Before she was elevated to the bench, Judge Tuttman was a prosecutor from Essex, Massachusetts who then-Governor Romney appointed to the Superior Court in 2006 after meeting with her and reviewed her qualifications. After endorsing her nomination, she was approved by the Governor's Council, a state-level government organ screens and confirms gubernatorial appointees.
To avoid a “Willie Horton” incident, the likes of which helped sink the Presidential aspirations of fellow former Massachusetts Governor Mike Dukakis, Romney was quick to turn on his appointee, calling for her to resign from the bench at the press conference during his stopover in Allentown (Derry).
Never one to avoid licking a gift whore in the mouse, Rudy Giuliani, "America's Mayor", lagging far behind Romney in the polls, siezed upon the issue to question Romney’s bona-fides as a crime fighter.
The media in attendance on at the Derry (Allentown) press conference and at the Allentown (Derry) parade were quick to characterize this as a potential “Willie Horton” issue for Romney that may doom his candidacy like that of fellow former Massachusetts Governor Mike Dukakis in 1988. However, the majority of Allentown citizens who were interviewed by TV news crews said that the issue was unlikely to hurt Romney, as he was human, not perfect, and human beings make mistakes.
It is hard for a wooly-headed (brain wrapped in cotton wool, natch) to understand how the release of a Caucasian killer could turn into a full-blown Willie Horton-class wedge issue, as Mike Dukakis was a liberal Democrat who had a much more progressive attitude towards the administration of justice than does Mitt Romney, Republican. Romney, who ran during the 2001 Massachusetts gubernatorial race as a liberal Republican, revealed himself to be a conservative after assuming office, which obviated his chances for reelection. Romney stepped down rather than be defeated by a Democrat.
Like the true liberal “Rockefeller” Republican Rudy Giuliani, Romney now is running as a conservative, for the Republican nomination. Unlike Giuliani, who is running in conservative drag this time around, Romney truly is a conservative. The judge’s poor judgment in releasing a convicted killer on personal cognizance does not jibe with Romney’s stated position on crime.
The decision by the Romney-appointed judge is not congruent with Romney’s policies on crime and the administration of justice, whereas releasing Willie Horton was in line with Mike Dukakis’ policies. Furthermore, Dukakis defended the furlough program and remained a staunch opponent of the death penalty. Romney faulted his judge, if not his actual choosing of her, and is a strong proponent of the death penalty, which does not exist in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
One could fault Romney’s choice of the judge, but then again, Tuttman was a career prosecutor with a reputation for “law and order."
One could criticize the vetting process under which the judge was selected, but the fact is, Romney did not know the judge personally, and many judges turn out to rule on cases with a philosophy that was unexpected by the person appointing them to the bench. David Souter, the former attorney general of New Hampshire, was recommended to George H.W. Bush by his chief of staff John Sununu, the former governor of New Hampshire, as being reliably moderate-conservative. As an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, David Souter, the assumed moderate, turned out to be a closeted liberal . The great liberal Felix Frankfurter, appointed to the Supreme Court by Franklin D Roosevelt in 1941, turned out to be a conservative on the High Court.
A more logical candidate for nomination to become Mitt Romney’s “Willie Horton” is the tax judge Don Gorton, a Harvard Law School graduate who was essentially fired by Romney and replaced with a real estate agent with a high school diploma and no legal background. Gorton had blown the whistle on irregularities at the court by the Chief Judge.
More importantly, Don Gorton the head of the Bay State’s Gay-Lesbian Transgendered Group, was the head of the Governor’s Task Force on Hate Crimes, which was created by William Weld and funded by Weld, his successor Paul Celucci, and Celucci’s successor. After campaigning for governor as “gay friendly”, Romney eliminated funding for the Task Force after becoming governor, and gutted the Task Force’s anti-bullying initiative. He then apparently retaliated against Gorton for whistle-blowing, an action that may be attributed to homophobia.
According to sources, the Romney campaign in conservative Red States points to the sacking of Gorton to show its bona fides for being against gays.
This then is the true Willie Horton of the Mitt Romney campaign, for just as Willie Horton showed Mike Dukakis to be an unapologetic liberal and “Card-carrying member of the A.C.L.U.”, as he was denounced by then-Vice President George Bush, the sacking of the gay Gorton shows Romney to be intolerant and a hypocrite, as he pleads for tolerance from those who would question his Mormon religion. Like Willie Horton apparently elucidating the weakness of the Dukakis governorship, the sacking of Don Gorton elucidates Romney’s weakness of a penchant for institutionalized homophobia, which he is attempting to use to woo the evangelical Christian vote that has become so critical to the Republican Party.
==Sources==
Romney Calls for Judge Who Released Killer to Resign, as Issue Becomes Political Fodder http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,312683,00.html
Mom killer vowed to take out Romney
http://news.bostonherald.com/news/regional/general/view.bg?articleid=1046369
Saturday, November 24, 2007
The Dark Side of George S. Patton

Patton's greatness as a field general was his mobility, and he achieved mobility by assassinating, or murdering if you will, all Germans who tried to surrender or who had been taken POW. He was a commander of armored forces, and mobility is the key to the success or armor.
As a politician, which generals inevitably are going to dabble in, being "stupid sons-of-bitches" according to Harry S Truman*, Patton was a terrible bust. I bring this up to remind the audience that generals will get involved in politics, which is why 1.) we should involve foreign entanglements and maintaining the congressional-military-industrial complex that empowers a meddling military, and 2.) wars should be short affairs so as NOT to provide fertile breeding ground for the military & their political aspirations.
The best defense against having generals meddling is to avoid war, and the need for a large military. If we have to have a Patton, and let him loose to commit war crimes, then again, the war should be short, not an open ended, eternal "War on Terror" as justified by former-General "Colon" Powell until his will was waylaid by infectious diverticulitis of the soul from bathing in the cesspool that was the first Bush 43 Administration.
Associated Content wouldn't let me post the entire article, as some of what I wrote about had already been published by your humble narrator, anonymously, on the Internet Movie Database. Here are the juicy bits I left out:
The movie biography Patton, which reportedly was President Richard Nixon’s favorite film, won the Oscar as Best Picture of 1970. The cinematic Patton, no matter how dark, stands as a whitewash of the real man. Patton’s diaries, which were pub-lished after his death, reveal that Patton was an anti-Semite. In the movie, there is one slapping incident, but in real life, there were actually two such incidents.
After the second incident, Patton reportedly made an anti- Semitic remark, claiming that "battle fatigue" was a fake con-cept created by the Jews (a reference rooted in the percep-tion in the first half of the 20th Century that there was a predom-inance of members of the Jewish faith in the psychiatric profession). After making this injudicious remark, some
witnesses claim that Patton wept.Seen in this context, theater commander Dwight D. Eisen-hower's subsequent removal of Patton from command, which took place long after the incident, might be interpreted as con-cern with Patton's own mental health, and that the brilliant, high-strung general himself was perceived as possibly suffering from battle fatigue. This would also explain why he was subse- quently returned to command after what could be seen as a "rest." (In the North African theater, British Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill similarly had given General O'Connor a rest.)
One of the more controversial episodes of Patton's career was when he gave a speech to American G.I.s at a "Welcome Club" in Knutsford, England in mid-April 1944. Having been relieved of his command in Italy after the soldier slapping incidents, Patton was positioned as the head of fictitious com-mand, the "Quicksilver Army Group," as part of Operation Fortitude, a disinformation campaign to confuse the Nazis.
The Allies wanted to convince the Nazis that they were going to invade Europe at Calais, France and not Normandy. By positi-oning the man the Nazis believed was the Allies' greatest gen- eral at the head of this fictitious Army, the Allies did indeed help confuse the Nazis as to their actual intentions.
Still under consideration to be used as a commander in the invasion of Normandy (though his recklessness and unrelia- bility made it impossible to appoint him as overall head of the invading force; that command went to Omar N. Bradley), Patton had agreed to give a speech at Knutsford on the condition that there were no reporters present.
At the event, he was reported as saying that "...the British and the American are two people separated by a common language. Since it is evident destiny of the British and Americans rule the world, the better we know each other the better job we will do."
The speech, as reported by the press, became a major incident as Patton had failed to mention the Soviet Union, one of the Allies fighting the Nazis in Europe. Patton swore he did men-tion the Russians, and Bradley backed him up on this. The Sov-iets were outraged, and Ike, the Allied Supreme Commander, wrote to Patton saying, "I am thoroughly weary of your failure to control your tongue and have begun to doubt your all-round judgment, so essential in high military positions."
From the Pentagon, General George C. Marshall, the overall commander of the U.S. Army under Commander-in-Chief President Franklin D. Roosevelt, told Eisenhower that he would back him up if Ike chose not to use Patton in Normandy. In a letter, Marshall told Eisenhower if thought Overlord would work without Patton, "all well and good." If not, "then between us we can bear the burden." Ike decided not to give Patton a command on D-Day, and so the brilliant general remained at the head of his phantom army.
Patton believed that British reporters or even his own comman-ders had set him up. Patton wrote back to Ike, saying, "You probably are damn fed up with me...but certainly my last alleged escapade smells strongly of having been a frame-up in view of the fact that...the thing was under the auspices of the (British) Ministry of Information."
Historian Anthony Cave-Brown argues the "Knutsford Affair" was manufactured as part of the Fortitude deception campaign. It is known that the Allied high command, as part of Fortitude, had gambled not only with Patton's reputation but his career by
keeping him as the head of a phantom army when his skills as an experienced battlefield commander and brilliant strategist could have been exploited at Normandy, so they were certainly not above that kind of manipulation.Patton was put into action shortly after Normandy as the com-mander of the Third Army. As Third Army commander, Patton ordered the killing of German soldiers in the act of surrendering or taken prisoner because he said they could not be trusted. When Eisenhower reprimanded Patton for ordering his troops to kill P.O.W.s, Patton responded "If you order me not to, I will stop. Otherwise, I will continue to influence troops, the only way I know, a way which so far has produced results." Ike then informed Patton to continue any way he saw fit, but to be cau-tious lest the murder of prisoners boomerang against him.
On his part, Patton did not believe killing prisoners was wrong as he believed it saved his solders' lives.
"Some fair-haired boys are trying to say that I kill too many prisoners. Yet the same people cheer at the far greater killings of Japs. Well the more I killed, the fewer men I lost, but they don't think of that."
Referring to the fact that American soldiers and Marines fighting the "purple-pissing Japs" (as Patton so eloquently put it in his famous address to the troops on assuming command of the Third Army) took no prisoners. Giving no quarter was the modus operandi on both sides of the Pacific War, similar to the Esatern Front where the German Armies and their Axis allies were fighting to the death against the Soviet Red Army.
Patton was convinced that he was doing no wrong in calling for the calculated, cold-blooded murder of the enemy. Killing "Kraut" soldiers in the process of surrendering and the bloody dispatch of prisoners eliminated logistical problems that would otherwise have slowed down Patton's Third Army, which some-times advanced at the rate of 60 miles a day.
Eisenhower, who was given the overall Allied command in Europe as he was a masterful politician, was wary about Patton's killing of P.O.W.s as such a practice could be seen as antithetical to a democracy based on the rule of law.
The movie Patton also fails to mention one of the most controversial incidents in Patton's military career, when he diverted troops to liberate a German P.O.W. camp housing his son-in-law. As recounted in the book Raid: The Untold Story of Patton's Secret Mission, Patton sent a mobile force of about 50 vehicles and approximately 300 men to liberate the camp, which was approximately 100 kilometers (60 miles) behind enemy lines. With no air support and no additional ground support, the task force liberated 300 American officers, including General Patton's son-in-law, Captain John Waters, and 1,200 enlisted men.
This semi-suicide mission was not authorized by Patton's chain-of-command and is seen by some contemporary historians as indicating that Patton was emotionally unstable, particularly when considered in light of his two slapping incidents and his anti-Semitism.
Ike, who had know Patton since 1918 and considered him a friend, respected his military genius and leadership abilities but was wary about his inability to control his emotions. Cautiously, Ike had appointed Major General Lloyd Fredendall to command the army in North Africa instead of Patton in 1942, then had to replace Fredendall with Patton when Fredendall proved inad-equate. At the time of giving him the appointment, Ike cau-tioned Patton about avoiding "personal recklessness", and he counted on the presence of Omar N. Bradley to be a calming influence on the mercurial general. Conscious of why Bradley was assigned to him, Patton insisted that Bradley -- who had earlier commanded his own corps -- be assigned as Deputy Corps Commander. Bradley essentially was there to ensure that Patton didn't say or do anything untoward, and in tandem, they proved a great success.
By the second half of 1944, Bradley was in command of the First Army, the great force that invaded France on D-Day. Patton, free of Bradley's calming influence, was on his own as head of Third Army when he launched his foolhardy raid. The raid was uncalled for as Waters and the other prisoners were not in any danger; it likely was influenced by paranoia on Patton's part rooted in his own orders to his troops to kill German prisoners.
In an interesting sidelight, when Patton's Third Army overran its supply lines, Eisenhower (who as a military commander and as a man, allegedly disliked African Americans, though he backed up the U.S. Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Educa- tion desegregation decision with military susasion in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1957) decided to send the Red Ball Express in to supply Patton's tank army, a situation portrayed in the 1952 film “Red Ball Express“. The Red Ball Express, a transportation outfit manned by African Americans (though their officers were Caucasians), became famous during the war for braving the odds to supply Patton.
In 1979, director Budd Boetticher, at a symposium at UCLA, revealed that the U.S. Department of Defense pressured Universal to alter the film's portrayal of race relations and to emphasize an upbeat, positive spirit. Commenting on the
studio's whitewashing of history, Boetticher said, "The army wouldn't let us tell the truth about the black troops because the government figured they were expendable. Our government didn't want to admit they were kamikaze pilots. They figured if one out of ten trucks got through, they'd save Patton and his tanks."
KILL JAPS

Thursday, November 22, 2007
Stuck inside of Manchester With the N.H. Primary Blues Again
I went to Manchester a year or so ago to get a new birth certificate, my old one having worn significantly. It’s habit of getting itself misplaced was an annoyance in these days of the “War on Terror” when it is best to be carrying a passport when making a 2 A.M. run to the 7-11 for a bag of Cheetos.
So, I paid a visit to the town clerk -- the same office where my and Lisa’s request for a marriage certificate was denied as we had forgotten her divorce decree back in California before she jetted off to Moscow and out of my life (she's back in it again, as my best friend) -- and the clerk behind the desk informed me that the records were shipped back "home" to Goffstown. So, now I'm officially born in Goffstown again.
"And so it goes...."
Like Vonnegut's Billy Pilgrim, I have become unstuck in time, as history has begun repeating itself.
My father, who was born in 1926 and had memories of Herbert Hoover, died railing about how the Republicans had destroyed America again, just as they had almost eighty years in the past. Hillary Clinton, the Goldwater Girl, must be considered the front-runner for the Presidency, despite a few stumbles in the past two weeks. If she were to win, and win reelection, that would give the United States 28 years of governance by two families.
It's certainly true that the Republic of the United States of America died sometime shortly after 9/11/2001, and just like the fall of the Roman Republic, was succeeded by an Empire. Imperial America, run for the benefit of one oligarchy (one family tree) with two branches. Bill Clinton was the son George Hebert Walker Bush never had.
Could George Orwell have dreamed up this version of America/Oceania we live in now? It seems to me that Orwell's mistake was that he couldn't envision fascism in the midst of plenty. The surfeit of materialist "well-being" that is post-Reagan America is more soul-deadening, more an opiate than any other religion dreamed up by the mind of man, including Saudi Wahhabism/the Deobandi creed of The Taliban & al Qaeda.
When people are hungry, they think, even if it is thoughts of thieving or of scrounging up a bellyful of victuals or finding a place to sleep on a cold night. When they are fat, they dream.
America is in a prolonged fugue that began during the second Reagan administration and which, after rumblings and nocturnal leg-kicking during a brief nightmare after the Persian Gulf War, has returned stronger than ever. This is not the dreaming wisdom of Fergus & The Druid: This is Orwell country. Keep The Kudzu Flying! should be the motto of George W. Bush and his gang of Sunbelt Suzerains. Let's fight a jihad for the Money God! Can we set the battle hymn to the rousing strains of the Theme from "Hee-Haw"?
Doublespeak and doublethink, the language and consciousness of our subconscious-driven, socially defined reality, are the norm.
This is the wasteland, this is cactus land....
It is said that Bertolt Brecht corrected his friend Walter Benjamin one day, when Benjamin was complaining about the 20th Century being the age of fascism.
"What makes you think that the world wasn't always fascistic?" B.B. asked. "What makes you think that fascism is unique to our time?"
Welcome to the Wasteland that is early 21st Century America. Welcome to my nightmare. If your headpiece is full of straw, lean on me.
I'm back in Manchester, New Hampshire. Stuck inside of Manchester with the N.H. Primary Blues Again. Those Beat-o, Beat-o, Flat-on-My-Seato, Yet-Another-Job-Has-Been-Shipped-Off-to-Mumbai-Again, Hirohito* Blues.
It was at the Manchester town clerk’s office sometime in 1978 that I took the oath -- at least I remember it as an oath, but time has a habit of creating chiaroscuro memories, the mixture of light and dark yields three-dimensional images, but I‘m not sure if they are lifelike rather than my life itself -- the oath of citizenship when registering as a voter. I registered as a Democrat. It was the proudest day of my life, and I was so happy to declare my party affiliation in that Republican state. Why would I take an oath of citizenship when, under the 14th Amendment, I already was a citizen?
Memories are fun when not taken too seriously, and one doesn’t suffer from non-medical Munchausen syndrome (i.e., a propensity for crafting good remembrances with yourself the leading man).
Where is my party? Lost with my youth, I suppose, though -- like Walter Benjamin -- who am I to ever think that the Democratic Party was ever liberal, let alone a party of the left? Eugene McCarthy win the primary in ‘68, which was mostly a rejection of L.B.J. and his infernal war, but George McGovern came in second in ‘72 and Jimmy Carter, the conservative, beat a field of liberals in ‘76.
These are the primaries I know best, as I left Manchester in ‘78. But I’ve
been back several times, just never in primary season.
* If you know Hoagy Carmichael, and the fact that my father was in the Third Fleet during WWII, you might get the reference.