Read the whole post, including the quoted testimony so you understand the evil plot twist at the end. Will this AG’s testimony really tell us how he’ll be on the job? Kabuki…
In some sort of cosmic convergence today, my favorite nerdy show (Heroes) actress, Brea Grant, pointed me at my other favorite nerdy movie (Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy) actress’s band, She & Him. That actress is Zooey Deschanel. The track above is their VMA nominated video for Why Do You Let Me Stay Here?.
I like I Thought I Saw Your Face Today better, so here’s a live recording of them performing this track:
Good stuff. Today has been a music bonanza. The album is Volume One. Click through to buy the album.
I have CNN on in the office this morning and have been watching the coverage of Gonzales’s resignation for the last hour or so. The one thing that strikes me is that the legal correspondent who’s also covering the Vick trial, is simply making stuff up. The White House hasn’t said anything officially and yet this guy is saying that the Bush administration is taking this action to accomplish the important things they have planned for the remaining 17 months. Where is he getting this stuff from?
On top of that, Chertoff is the presumed nominee to replace him. Is it just me, or does this administration promote internally more than any other in recent history.
This seems to obviously cross the line between politics and duty. From the Post:
The night before the government secured a guilty plea from the manufacturer of the addictive painkiller OxyContin, a senior Justice Department official called the U.S. attorney handling the case and, at the behest of an executive for the drugmaker, urged him to slow down, the prosecutor told the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday.
John L. Brownlee, the U.S. attorney in Roanoke, testified that he was at home the evening of Oct. 24 when he received the call on his cellphone from Michael J. Elston, then chief of staff to the deputy attorney general and one of the Justice aides involved in the removal of nine U.S. attorneys last year.
Brownlee settled the case anyway. Eight days later, his name appeared on a list compiled by Elston of prosecutors that officials had suggested be fired.
Brownlee ultimately kept his job. But as Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales confronts withering criticism over the dismissals, the episode in the OxyContin case provides fresh evidence of efforts by senior officials in the department’s headquarters to sway the work of U.S. attorneys’ offices.
The article contains responses from the DOJ, so it’s worth reading. The explanations from the DOJ only seem to reinforce that McNulty was at the center of all of this. It seems amazing to me that Gonzales still is AG.
Just in case you hear otherwise, here’s the reality: The Constitution allows for the impeachment of Alberto Gonzales. Read the linked post.
This is, quite frankly, amazing. I can’t believe someone could stand in front of a microphone as the spokesperson for the President of the United States and simply lie continuously. He is literally stating the opposite of the truth in EVERY statement. Snow is getting close to the reality denial of Saddam’s old spokesman.
It comes as no surprise how Joe Lieberman voted on the Gonzales motion yesterday, but I was surprised to read this on CTLP:
Despite co-sponsoring the resolution Dodd missed the vote entirely.
Sen. Dodd, you have some explaining to do. I hope you had a good reason for missing this vote, as it is one of the key issues of the day.
This administration is the worst on record ever.
Can they even be corrupt competently? This is horrible, and pathetic at the same time. F’ing idiots, all of them. They really don’t believe in our form of government or the rule of law.





