http://select.nytimes.com/2006/05/26/opinion/26krugman.html?th&emc=th

A Test of our Character
By PAUL KRUGMAN
NY Times Op-Ed: May 26, 2006

In his new movie, "An Inconvenient Truth," Al Gore suggests that there are
three reasons it's hard to get action on global warming. The first is
boiled-frog syndrome: because the effects of greenhouse gases build up
gradually, at any given moment it's easier to do nothing. The second is the
perception, nurtured by a careful disinformation campaign, that there's
still a lot of uncertainty about whether man-made global warming is a
serious problem. The third is the belief, again fostered by disinformation,
that trying to curb global warming would have devastating economic effects.

I'd add a fourth reason, which I'll talk about in a minute. But first, let's
notice that Mr. Gore couldn't have asked for a better illustration of
disinformation campaigns than the reaction of energy-industry lobbyists and
right-wing media organizations to his film.

The cover story in the current issue of National Review is titled "Scare of
the Century." As evidence that global warming isn't really happening, it
offers the fact that some Antarctic ice sheets are getting thicker - a point
also emphasized in a TV ad by the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which is
partly financed by large oil companies, whose interests it reliably
represents.

Curt Davis, a scientist whose work is cited both by the institute and by
National Review, has already protested. "These television ads," he declared
in a press release, "are a deliberate effort to confuse and mislead the
public about the global warming debate." He points out that an initial
increase in the thickness of Antarctica's interior ice sheets is a predicted
consequence of a warming planet, so that his results actually support global
warming rather than refuting it.

Even as the usual suspects describe well-founded concerns about global
warming as hysteria, they issue hysterical warnings about the economic
consequences of environmentalism. "Al Gore's global warming movie: could it
destroy the economy?" Fox News asked.

Well, no, it couldn't. There's some dispute among economists over how
forcefully we should act to curb greenhouse gases, but there's broad
consensus that even a very strong program to reduce emissions would have
only modest effects on economic growth. At worst, G.D.P. growth might be,
say, one-tenth or two-tenths of a percentage point lower over the next 20
years. And while some industries would lose jobs, others would gain.

Actually, the right's panicky response to Mr. Gore's film is probably a good
thing, because it reveals for all to see the dishonesty and fear-mongering
on which the opposition to doing something about climate change rests.

But "An Inconvenient Truth" isn't just about global warming, of course. It's
also about Mr. Gore. And it is, implicitly, a cautionary tale about what's
been wrong with our politics.

Why, after all, was Mr. Gore's popular-vote margin in the 2000 election
narrow enough that he could be denied the White House? Any account that
neglects the determination of some journalists to make him a figure of
ridicule misses a key part of the story. Why were those journalists so
determined to jeer Mr. Gore? Because of the very qualities that allowed him
to realize the importance of global warming, many years before any other
major political figure: his earnestness, and his genuine interest in facts,
numbers and serious analysis.

And so the 2000 campaign ended up being about the candidates' clothing,
their mannerisms, anything but the issues, on which Mr. Gore had a clear
advantage (and about which his opponent was clearly both ill informed and
dishonest).

I won't join the sudden surge of speculation about whether "An Inconvenient
Truth" will make Mr. Gore a presidential contender. But the film does make a
powerful case that Mr. Gore is the sort of person who ought to be running
the country.

Since 2000, we've seen what happens when people who aren't interested in the
facts, who believe what they want to believe, sit in the White House. Osama
bin Laden is still at large, Iraq is a mess, New Orleans is a wreck. And, of
course, we've done nothing about global warming.

But can the sort of person who would act on global warming get elected? Are
we - by which I mean both the public and the press - ready for political
leaders who don't pander, who are willing to talk about complicated issues
and call for responsible policies? That's a test of national character. I
wonder whether we'll pass.

###

( From a list member: "Ed,  There's so much going on this weekend but
to your list could you possibly add: go to a showing of "An Inconvenient
Truth"? Distributors and other powers that be are going to look at the
Memorial Day weekend box office see if this film has any legs. As the film
is only opening in LA and NYC, I feel an obligation to encourage people to
see the film sometime between now and Monday. It's showing at only a few
theatres, though it is on three screens at Arclight.

I saw the film last night and it is extremely powerful, very moving and
ultimately astonishing. I and many others gasped at several points. Many
people were moved to tears. If the reactions are any reflection of its
quality, I think it could be a smash hit on the lines of "Farenheit 911."
But even more important -- by magnitudes -- it does have the potential of
really making a difference. It could be that "100th monkey" that will
finally get the paradigm to shift -- away from short-term considerations to
the long-term view of what's needed to quite literally save the entire
planet, and the sentient beings that call it home, from utter devastation.

To ensure that as many people see this as possible, we need to push for a
strong showing for it's debut. While it is scheduled to open "wide" next
weekend, the fact is that it is only scheduled for 400 screens. I believe we
could double or triple that commitment if the LA and NYC box office is
boffo.

Thanks for all that you do.

Keta")

***

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/052506J.shtml

Playing the Impeachment Card
    By William Rivers Pitt
    t r u t h o u t | Perspective
    Thursday 25 May 2006

  All in all, the framers would probably agree that it's better to impeach
too often than too seldom. If presidents can't be virtuous, they should at
least be nervous.    - Joseph Sobran

    Representative John Conyers Jr. of Michigan is a small and soft-spoken
man. One gets the definite sense upon meeting him that here is a man who
could probably have made a fortune in Hollywood, had he chosen a different
direction in life, playing the role of the wise and kindly grandfather. He
wound up in public service, and today - if you listen to Karl Rove and the
GOP - he is easily the most terrifying man in America.

    Back on May 10th, Howard Fineman wrote for MSNBC: "Then there is the
attention being paid - and it's just starting - to obscure Democratic
characters such as Rep. John Conyers of Michigan. As of now, only political
junkies know that Conyers, an African-American and old-school liberal from
Detroit, would become chairman of the Judiciary Committee if the Democrats
regain control of the House. Few know that Conyers has expressed interest in
holding hearings on the impeachment of the president."

    A direct-mail piece from Senator Elizabeth Dole (R-NC) popped up several
days ago. In the mailer, Dole warned that unless the faithful donate money
for the midterm elections, rampaging Democrats were going to, "increase your
taxes, call for endless investigations, Congressional censure and maybe even
impeachment of President Bush."

    A Fox News online editorial acknowledges the very real possibility of a
Democratic takeover of the House, and proposes several steps the Democrats
should take in such an event, in order to do right by the country. "Step
one," reads the Fox editorial, "would be for the Democratic leadership to
definitively put to rest any loose talk of impeaching President Bush. They
should say in one and two syllable words that impeachment will not happen
once they are in the majority and thus take away a potential rallying cry
for the beleaguered Republicans."

    This may be, when all is said and done, one of the funniest moments in
time in all of American political history.

    Approval ratings for the Bush administration are at historic lows, and
approval ratings for the Republican Congressional majority currently
languish in a root-cellar beneath those historic lows. There are 159 days
until the November 7th midterm elections, and the Republican majority has
absolutely nothing to run on. The economy? They say it is strong but no one
believes them, and rising gas prices don't do their arguments any favors.
Immigration? This is a self-inflicted brawl that has ripped a wide rift down
the middle of the Republican coalition. National security? Iraq.

    On top of this big three, the White House and the Republican
Congressional majority are also walking around with NSA domestic spying, the
investigation into the outing of Valerie Plame, the now-axiomatic belief
that Bush left New Orleans to die, and a half-dozen other millstones hanging
around their necks.

    The White House can't shed these millstones, because just about all of
these catastrophes came out of 1600 Pennsylvania. The Republican
Congressional majority can't shed them, because they stapled themselves to
this White House a long time ago, and there are no pliers in the world large
enough to extricate them from that association.

    The abandonment of Congressional oversight is a lot of the reason we are
in such a sorry state, and that abandonment was authored by Republicans who
were stupid enough and opportunistic enough to trust that Bush and his
people would lead them to the promised land of a permanent majority. This
won't be forgotten by November.

    Beyond that, few people are going to rise in response again to the
waving of the bloody shirt of September 11. The Cunningham and Abramoff
scandals continue to grow, chopping down Republicans left and right. The
GOP's usual electoral strengths - morality and security - are gone, and the
Republican base is abandoning them. The cupboard is just about empty.

    What's left? Vote for us, or else we'll be held accountable! That's just
funny.

    Usually, the Republican National Committee has to roll out horror
stories about mandatory abortions, the planned annihilation of every Bible
in the land, and the prospect of Jack and Joe's civil union eviscerating the
sanctity of millions of unhappy marriages everywhere. To be sure, these
themes will be played throughout the upcoming election seasons, but clearly
the GOP overmind is not confident that the masses will dance to the tune.

    Thus, the warning: if the Republicans lose in November, Bush will be
impeached, and the Earth will immediately thereafter hurtle into the sun.
This isn't just a lot of smoke and scare-tactics, however. The Republicans
are genuinely worried about what will happen if the Democrats re-take the
House in November. They have ample cause for concern.

    Beyond the specter of John Conyers doing an impersonation of Peter
Rodino should Conyers become chairman of the House Judiciary Committee - in
an interesting historical quirk, Conyers sat on the Judiciary Committee when
Rodino shepherded it through drafting the three articles of impeachment
against Nixon, and voted "Yes" on all three articles - lie a number of other
House Democrats whose rise to a chairmanship would be devastating to the
White House.

    Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) sits on the Committee on Government Reform,
and will become chairman should the Democrats re-take the House in November.
Waxman, in 1998, founded the Special Investigations Division within the
minority offices on this committee, "to conduct investigations into issues
that are important to the minority members of the Government Reform
Committee and other members of Congress."

    There are more than fifty investigations that have been performed and
continued to be performed by Waxman's Special Investigations Division. Among
these are investigations into the torture at Abu Ghraib, Cheney's notorious
energy task force meetings, a variety of Halliburton payoffs, electronic
voting, the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina, and the vast
scandal surrounding administration abuse of Iraq intelligence and the
exposure of CIA agent Valerie Plame.

    There is enough meat on that bone to keep Rep. Waxman, armed with
subpoena power, busy as a beaver for the foreseeable future. It is also
worth noting, when considering the formidable arsenal of information Waxman
can bring to bear against the Bush White House, the legacy of Dan Burton.

    Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.) became notorious as chairman of Government
Reform during the Clinton administration. He fired off enough subpoenas to
fill an oil tanker, almost all of them inspired by baseless and scurrilous
accusations. Without actually proving much of anything, beyond the fact that
subpoena power is an astonishingly large stick to hand to someone, Burton
managed to keep the Clinton administration tied in knots for years.

    Burton was throwing mud. Waxman will be throwing fire, if handed the
opportunity. Beyond Waxman and Conyers, there will be Barney Frank chairing
the House Financial Services Committee. There will be Louise Slaughter
chairing the House Committee on Rules. There will be Charlie Rangel chairing
the Ways and Means Committee. This list goes on, and on.

    As amusing as the GOP's fear of impeachment is, the truth is that this
Constitutional doomsday device is the least of their worries. Conyers does
not have to impeach George W. Bush to throw a few torpedoes into the side of
the Republican battleship. All he has to do, along with Waxman and the other
chairs, is investigate with subpoena power. Tell the truth in public
hearings with the principals under oath. Let the facts come to light in a
way we have not seen for many years.

    The result of this would be an even greater Democratic Congressional
victory in 2008, and an incredible series of obstacles for any Republican
presidential nominee to overcome. A drumbeat of truth about Iraq, Katrina,
Abu Ghraib, Halliburton, Plame and all the rest of it would have every
Republican who has ever uttered Bush's name in public fleeing for their
lives. The long-sought permanent majority lusted after by the GOP would be
transformed into a cemented minority, reminiscent of the shattered state of
the Republican party in the aftermath of Watergate.

    All of this only comes to pass, of course, if the Democrats re-take the
House. What was considered an incredible long-shot even a few months ago has
become an even-money proposition. Nothing is guaranteed by any stretch, and
events may well transpire that swing the electorate back in favor of Bush
and his Congressional allies. The fiasco that is electronic voting and the
Help America Vote Act will stand in favor of the GOP come November, as it
always has. If the Democrats want to win in November, they will have to work
harder than they ever have before.

    For now, it is enough to be amused by the smell of fear emanating from
the GOP. This newest tactic - warning people about the potential for
impeachment - begs one simple question: if they have nothing to hide, what
are they afraid of? The answer, clearly, is John Conyers. He is, you'll hear
soon enough, a terrifying man.


    William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and internationally bestselling
author of two books: War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know
and The Greatest Sedition Is Silence.






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