Home
Forums
New posts
Search forums
Articles
Latest reviews
Search resources
Members
Current visitors
Newsgroups
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Home
Forums
Newsgroups
Windows Vista
Windows Vista General Discussion
Gates Plans Leave Admid Great Change
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
[QUOTE="Chad Harris, post: 10740292"] July 30, 2007 Microsoft's Gates Plans His Leave Amid Great Change By JOHN MARKOFF REDMOND, Wash., July 27 - Microsoft is beset with competition from all sides, unlike any it has seen in decades, and Bill Gates, who co-founded the company 32 years ago, still intends to step away next year as planned. But so far, Mr. Gates, Microsoft's 51-year-old chairman, shows no sign of fading away. One year into a planned two-year transition, there are few visible cues that Mr. Gates is ready to leave the world's technology stage to devote his energies principally to the $33 billion foundation he established seven years ago with his wife. Indeed at the company's annual financial meeting last week Mr. Gates spoke first, outlining a decade-long agenda, not a mere 12-month outlook. He described a world in which the widespread availability of broadband networks would reshape computing, giving rise to what he said would be "natural user interfaces" like pen, voice and touch, replacing many functions of keyboards and mice. Mr. Gates has stayed deeply engaged in the company's technology strategy. He still frequently participates in high-level strategy planning sessions with Microsoft's closest partners, like Intel, according to executives who have attended the meetings. During a wide-ranging interview last week exploring his diminished role at Microsoft, the company's challenge and its competitors, Mr. Gates insisted that he really has begun stepping back. "I am in a lucky situation of having way more things that seem interesting to do and very exciting and important, and working with smart people, and highly impactful, way more than a 24-hour day will fit," Mr. Gates said. To be sure, there is widespread skepticism in the industry about the possibility of Mr. Gates genuinely disengaging. Microsoft's dominance is being challenged as never before by Google in particular, and Wall Street refuses to believe the company will regain its edge. The company's stock has largely remained flat since the end of the dot-com era. "It's very hard for someone at his age, who has built a company with that much success and with continuing challenges to really walk away," said David B. Yoffie, a professor at Harvard's business school. "He will never be a titular leader." As he spoke in his office, Mr. Gates was joined by the two Microsoft executives, both veteran technologists, who are succeeding him. Craig Mundie, the chief research and strategy officer, and Ray Ozzie, chief software architect, agreed with Mr. Gates that despite significant industry challenges from all directions, Microsoft is at a perfect historic juncture for Mr. Gates's departure and the first stage of his withdrawal from Microsoft has been reasonably seamless. "The weaning process inside the company is inevitable," said Mr. Mundie, a computer scientist who began his career developing minicomputers and supercomputers before joining Microsoft in 1992. The greatest danger, according to all three executives, would be if Mr. Gates continues to make decisions while not staying deeply involved. He will remain chairman. "It can't be a situation where he's expected to suddenly, magically come up to speed," said Mr. Ozzie, a software designer who developed a software collaboration tool called Notes for Lotus and then started Groove Networks, which was acquired by Microsoft in 2005. "You know, did you see the 20 announcements last week that Google did, Yahoo did, Cisco did?" For his part, Mr. Gates said he planned to remain deeply involved in a few areas indefinitely. "Other than board meetings, there's not much in terms of regular meetings," he said. "It's much more sitting down a couple hours a month with Craig, sitting down a couple of hours a month with Ray." On Thursday, Steven A. Ballmer, who took over the chief executive role from Mr. Gates seven years ago, said the company's overall performance had never been stronger. Microsoft, he noted, has doubled its revenue and almost doubled its profits in the half decade that he has been at the helm. Despite that growth, the stock price has remained vexingly flat in the period. Although smooth leadership transitions are infrequent among high tech firms, it appears that Mr. Gates has had the freedom to begin stepping away gracefully because Mr. Ballmer has been largely successful in shouldering the burden of running Microsoft. Mr. Gates no longer attends senior leadership team meetings, and earlier this month he made what company executives described as a farewell appearance at the annual Microsoft sales force meeting in Orlando, Fla. When Mr. Gates finished his speech to the thousands of sales people at the meeting, they gave him a five-minute standing ovation, underscoring the bond the company still retains with its co-founder, according to a person who attended the event. But as he cedes Microsoft's technology leadership to Mr. Mundie and Mr. Ozzie, the company is struggling with a radical transition in the computer industry. Six months ago, Microsoft shipped its long-delayed Windows Vista operating system, and there is widespread belief within the industry that the era of such unwieldy and vast software development projects is coming to an end. Ubiquitous broadband networks and high speed wireless networks have for the first time given rise to meaningful alternatives to bulky and costly personal computers. In their place are a proliferating collection of smart connected devices that are tied together by a vast array of Internet-based information services based in centralized data centers. The industry is rushing to "software as a service" models ranging from Salesforce.com, a San Francisco company that sells business contact software delivered via Web browsers, to Apple's iPhone, which is designed as a classic "thin client," a computer that requires the Internet for many of its capabilities. It is a vision that Microsoft itself has at least partially embraced. Microsoft, in contrast, is calling its strategy "software plus services," an approach that is intended to protect the company's existing installed base. During the interview, all three executives indicated that Microsoft is now moving quickly to offer new Internet services for personal computer users. Centralized data storage will make it possible for PC users to gain access to most or all of their information from all of the different types of computers they use, whether they are desktops, laptops or smartphones, and wherever they are located. During the transition, Mr. Gates has also stayed closely involved in shaping Microsoft's strategy in the search market where it has been assiduously attempting to catch Google and Yahoo. "We made all the structural changes we were going to make, and we rode in tandem last year," said Mr. Mundie. "In the last few months Bill has transitioned to what I start to think of as special project mode." If he is stepping away from Microsoft, Mr. Gates has shed none of his trademark combativeness. He rejected the Silicon Valley view that Microsoft has begun to exhibit the same sclerotic signs of middle age that I.B.M. did when it dominated the computer industry, but failed to respond effectively to the challenge of the personal computer. I.B.M. is no longer at the center of the computer industry, he asserted, for two reasons. First, the industry is now centered on personal computing. "As much as I.B.M. created the I.B.M. PC, it was never their culture, their excellence," he said. "Their skill sets were never about personal computing." Second, the center of gravity in the computer industry has dramatically shifted toward software, he said. "Why do you like your iPod, your iPhone, your Xbox 360, your Google Search?" he said. "The real magic sauce is not the parts that we buy for the Xbox, or the parts that Apple buys for iPhones, it's the software that goes into it." During the interview Mr. Gates rejected the notion that Google could become a successful competitor in the smartphone software market, where Microsoft has about 10 percent market share. The Silicon valley search engine provider has been widely reported to be preparing to enter the cellphone market with its own software and a host of services springing from that software. Microsoft's chairman said it was unlikely that Google would be able to make inroads into the Microsoft's share of market for mobile phone software. "How many products, of all the Google products that have been introduced, how many of them are profit-making products?" he asked. "They've introduced about 30 different products; they have one profit-making product. So, you're now making a prediction without ever seeing the software that they're going to have the world's best phone and it's going to be free?" Again, the ability to create compelling software will determine the winners. "The phone is becoming way more software intensive," he said. "And to be able to say that there's some challenge for us in the phone market when its becoming software intensive, I don't see that." The new, less central role for Mr. Gates was first formulated more than a year ago at a June 2006 meeting in which the three men worked out how they would divide responsibilities for guiding the technology direction of the $51 billion company, according to Mr. Ozzie, who was a longtime rival of Mr. Gates at companies like Lotus and I.B.M. before joining Microsoft two years ago. They decided at that meeting that Mr. Mundie and Mr. Ozzie would divide Mr. Gates's role at the company along three axes. Along one of these lines, Mr. Mundie, who has been described as Microsoft's "secretary of state" and who is deeply involved in federal government and international policy issues, would take a more public-facing role, while Mr. Ozzie would focus more closely on internal company matters. In another, Mr. Mundie has tackled the company's long-range strategic decisions, while Mr. Ozzie has taken over the near-term challenges of weaving together the product development issues. Finally, Mr. Mundie has taken responsibility for software that sits closer to the computer hardware, like the Windows operating system, while Mr. Ozzie has shaped Microsoft's response to the growing challenge of network software. "There's been a very natural shift in the past year where I will engage with a particular software team and Bill will disengage," said Mr. Ozzie. Mr. Gates insists that his new world of philanthropy will be just as compelling as software has been. "I'll have also malaria vaccine or tuberculosis vaccine or curriculum in American high schools, which are also things that, at least the way my mind works, I sit there and say, 'Oh, God! This is so important; this is so solvable,' " he said, "You've just got to get the guy who understands this, and this new technology will bring these things together." CH ___________ The apathetic US is drifting into total mud. The media like Tweety Bird (Chris Mathews) is totally stupid and coopted by the delusional moronic Bush and his pathetic and stupid administration. LOL if not talking to other countries works so well, why is the US at the nadir of its popularity. I can find people who do maintainance at MacDonald's who have more sophisticated diplomacy skills than the moron, Condi Rice. FRANK RICH: Who Really Took Over During That Colonoscopy THERE was, of course, gallows humor galore when Dick Cheney briefly grabbed the wheel of our listing ship of state during the presidential colonoscopy last weekend. Enjoy it while it lasts. A once-durable staple of 21st-century American humor is in its last throes. We have a new surrogate president now. Sic transit Cheney. Long live David Petraeus! It was The Washington Post that first quantified General Petraeus's remarkable ascension. President Bush, who mentioned his new Iraq commander's name only six times as the surge rolled out in January, has cited him more than 150 times in public utterances since, including 53 in May alone. As always with this White House's propaganda offensives, the message in Mr. Bush's relentless repetitions never varies. General Petraeus is the "main man." He is the man who gives "candid advice." Come September, he will be the man who will give the president and the country their orders about the war. And so another constitutional principle can be added to the long list of those junked by this administration: the quaint notion that our uniformed officers are supposed to report to civilian leadership. In a de facto military coup, the commander in chief is now reporting to the commander in Iraq. We must "wait to see what David has to say," Mr. Bush says. Actually, we don't have to wait. We already know what David will say. He gave it away to The Times of London last month, when he said that September "is a deadline for a report, not a deadline for a change in policy." In other words: Damn the report (and that irrelevant Congress that will read it) - full speed ahead. There will be no change in policy. As Michael Gordon reported in The New York Times last week, General Petraeus has collaborated on a classified strategy document that will keep American troops in Iraq well into 2009 as we wait for the miracles that will somehow bring that country security and a functioning government. Though General Petraeus wrote his 1987 Princeton doctoral dissertation on "The American Military and the Lessons of Vietnam," he has an unshakable penchant for seeing light at the end of tunnels. It has been three Julys since he posed for the cover of Newsweek under the headline "Can This Man Save Iraq?" The magazine noted that the general's pacification of Mosul was "a textbook case of doing counterinsurgency the right way." Four months later, the police chief installed by General Petraeus defected to the insurgents, along with most of the Sunni members of the police force. Mosul, population 1.7 million, is now an insurgent stronghold, according to the Pentagon's own June report. By the time reality ambushed his textbook victory, the general had moved on to the mission of making Iraqi troops stand up so American troops could stand down. "Training is on track and increasing in capacity," he wrote in The Washington Post in late September 2004, during the endgame of the American presidential election. He extolled the increased prowess of the Iraqi fighting forces and the rebuilding of their infrastructure. The rest is tragic history. Were the Iraqi forces on the trajectory that General Petraeus asserted in his election-year pep talk, no "surge" would have been needed more than two years later. We would not be learning at this late date, as we did only when Gen. Peter Pace was pressed in a Pentagon briefing this month, that the number of Iraqi battalions operating independently is in fact falling - now standing at a mere six, down from 10 in March. But even more revealing is what was happening at the time that General Petraeus disseminated his sunny 2004 prognosis. The best account is to be found in "The Occupation of Iraq," the authoritative chronicle by Ali Allawi published this year by Yale University Press. Mr. Allawi is not some anti-American crank. He was the first civilian defense minister of postwar Iraq and has been an adviser to Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki; his book was praised by none other than the Iraq war cheerleader Fouad Ajami as "magnificent." Mr. Allawi writes that the embezzlement of the Iraqi Army's $1.2 billion arms procurement budget was happening "under the very noses" of the Security Transition Command run by General Petraeus: "The saga of the grand theft of the Ministry of Defense perfectly illustrated the huge gap between the harsh realities on the ground and the Panglossian spin that permeated official pronouncements." Mr. Allawi contrasts the "lyrical" Petraeus pronouncements in The Post with the harsh realities of the Iraqi forces' inoperable helicopters, flimsy bulletproof vests and toy helmets. The huge sums that might have helped the Iraqis stand up were instead "handed over to unscrupulous adventurers and former pizza parlor operators." Well, anyone can make a mistake. And when General Petraeus cited soccer games as an example of "the astonishing signs of normalcy" in Baghdad last month, he could not have anticipated that car bombs would kill at least 50 Iraqis after the Iraqi team's poignant victory in the Asian Cup semifinals last week. This general may well be, as many say, the brightest and bravest we have. But that doesn't account for why he has been invested by the White House and its last-ditch apologists with such singular power over the war. On "Meet the Press," Lindsey Graham, one of the Senate's last gung-ho war defenders in either party, mentioned General Petraeus 10 times in one segment, saying he would "not vote for anything" unless "General Petraeus passes on it." Desperate hawks on the nation's op-ed pages not only idolize the commander daily but denounce any critics of his strategy as deserters, defeatists and enemies of the troops. That's because the Petraeus phenomenon is not about protecting the troops or American interests but about protecting the president. For all Mr. Bush's claims of seeking "candid" advice, he wants nothing of the kind. He sent that message before the war, with the shunting aside of Eric Shinseki, the general who dared tell Congress the simple truth that hundreds of thousands of American troops would be needed to secure Iraq. The message was sent again when John Abizaid and George Casey were supplanted after they disagreed with the surge. Two weeks ago, in his continuing quest for "candid" views, Mr. Bush invited a claque consisting exclusively of conservative pundits to the White House and inadvertently revealed the real motive for the Petraeus surrogate presidency. "The most credible person in the fight at this moment is Gen. David Petraeus," he said, in National Review's account. To be the "most credible" person in this war team means about as much as being the most sober tabloid starlet in the Paris-Lindsay cohort. But never mind. What Mr. Bush meant is that General Petraeus is famous for minding his press coverage, even to the point of congratulating the ABC News anchor Charles Gibson for "kicking some butt" in the Nielsen ratings when Mr. Gibson interviewed him last month. The president, whose 65 percent disapproval rating is now just one point shy of Richard Nixon's pre-resignation nadir, is counting on General Petraeus to be the un-Shinseki and bestow whatever credibility he has upon White House policies and pronouncements. He is delivering, heaven knows. Like Mr. Bush, he has taken to comparing the utter stalemate in the Iraqi Parliament to "our own debates at the birth of our nation," as if the Hamilton-Jefferson disputes were akin to the Shiite-Sunni bloodletting. He is also starting to echo the administration line that Al Qaeda is the principal villain in Iraq, a departure from the more nuanced and realistic picture of the civil-war-torn battlefront he presented to Senate questioners in his confirmation hearings in January. Mr. Bush has become so reckless in his own denials of reality that he seems to think he can get away with saying anything as long as he has his "main man" to front for him. The president now hammers in the false litany of a "merger" between Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda and what he calls "Al Qaeda in Iraq" as if he were following the Madison Avenue script declaring that "Cingular is now the new AT&T." He doesn't seem to know that nearly 40 other groups besides Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia have adopted Al Qaeda's name or pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden worldwide since 2003, by the count of the former C.I.A. counterterrorism official Michael Scheuer. They may follow us here well before any insurgents in Iraq do. On Tuesday - a week after the National Intelligence Estimate warned of the resurgence of bin Laden's Qaeda in Pakistan - Mr. Bush gave a speech in which he continued to claim that "Al Qaeda in Iraq" makes Iraq the central front in the war on terror. He mentioned Al Qaeda 95 times but Pakistan and Pervez Musharraf not once. Two days later, his own top intelligence officials refused to endorse his premise when appearing before Congress. They are all too familiar with the threats that are building to a shrill pitch this summer. Should those threats become a reality while America continues to be bogged down in Iraq, this much is certain: It will all be the fault of President Petraeus. July 29, 2007 Editorial Mr. Gonzales's Never-Ending Story President Bush often insists he has to be the decider - ignoring Congress and the public when it comes to the tough matters on war, terrorism and torture, even deciding whether an ordinary man in Florida should be allowed to let his wife die with dignity. Apparently that burden does not apply to the functioning of one of the most vital government agencies, the Justice Department. Americans have been waiting months for Mr. Bush to fire Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who long ago proved that he was incompetent and more recently has proved that he can't tell the truth. Mr. Bush refused to fire him after it was clear Mr. Gonzales lied about his role in the political purge of nine federal prosecutors. And he is still refusing to do so - even after testimony by the F.B.I. director, Robert Mueller, that suggests that Mr. Gonzales either lied to Congress about Mr. Bush's warrantless wiretapping operation or at the very least twisted the truth so badly that it amounts to the same thing. Mr. Gonzales has now told Congress twice that there was no dissent in the government about Mr. Bush's decision to authorize the National Security Agency to spy on Americans' international calls and e-mails without obtaining the legally required warrant. Mr. Mueller and James Comey, a former deputy attorney general, say that is not true. Not only was there disagreement, but they also say that they almost resigned over the dispute. Both men say that in March 2004 - when Mr. Gonzales was still the White House counsel - the Justice Department refused to endorse a continuation of the wiretapping program because it was illegal. (Mr. Comey was running the department temporarily because Attorney General John Ashcroft had emergency surgery.) Unwilling to accept that conclusion, Vice President Dick Cheney sent Mr. Gonzales and another official to Mr. Ashcroft's hospital room to get him to approve the wiretapping. Mr. Comey and Mr. Mueller intercepted the White House team, and they say they watched as a groggy Mr. Ashcroft refused to sign off on the wiretapping and told the White House officials to leave. Mr. Comey said the White House later modified the eavesdropping program enough for the Justice Department to sign off. Last week, Mr. Gonzales denied that account. He told the Senate Judiciary Committee the dispute was not about the wiretapping operation but was over "other intelligence activities." He declined to say what those were. Lawmakers who have been briefed on the administration's activities said the dispute was about the one eavesdropping program that has been disclosed. So did Mr. Comey. And so did Mr. Mueller, most recently on Thursday in a House hearing. He said he had kept notes. That was plain enough. It confirmed what most people long ago concluded: that Mr. Gonzales is more concerned about doing political-damage control for Mr. Bush - in this case insisting that there was never a Justice Department objection to a clearly illegal program - than in doing his duty. But the White House continued to defend him. As far as we can tell, there are three possible explanations for Mr. Gonzales's talk about a dispute over other - unspecified - intelligence activities. One, he lied to Congress. Two, he used a bureaucratic dodge to mislead lawmakers and the public: the spying program was modified after Mr. Ashcroft refused to endorse it, which made it "different" from the one Mr. Bush has acknowledged. The third is that there was more wiretapping than has been disclosed, perhaps even purely domestic wiretapping, and Mr. Gonzales is helping Mr. Bush cover it up. Democratic lawmakers are asking for a special prosecutor to look into Mr. Gonzales's words and deeds. Solicitor General Paul Clement has a last chance to show that the Justice Department is still minimally functional by fulfilling that request. If that does not happen, Congress should impeach Mr. Gonzales. Saturday July 28, 2007 09:51 EST by Glenn Greewald What Beltway media stars mean by "centrism" and "extremism" (updated below) As always, when wielded by Beltway media stars, the terms "centrist" and "moderate" and "mainstream" mean "whatever views I personally happen to hold on a topic, regardless of how many Americans actually share it." Hence, the unanimous, wise Beltway wisdom was that Barack Obama "blew it" in the last Democratic debate by proclaiming his willingness to meet with leaders of hostile countries, while Hillary Clinton scored a big victory. As but one example, from Thursday's Chris Matthews Show, discussing the Clinton-Obama debate: MATTHEWS: I share your sentiments. But as a journalist, I have to look at the politics of this thing. Your last words? [Weekly Standard's Stephen] HAYES: I think if [Obama] continues down this course I think he's in serious trouble because it's unsustainable. MATTHEWS: Too far left? HAYES: Absolutely. Matthews went on to pronounce, with regard to the exchange with Obama, that it shows why Hillary "will win this thing." And what of polling data that shows exactly the opposite? Who cares? Beltway wisdom is more representative of what Americans believe than what Americans actually believe. From the latest Rasmussen Reports poll: Forty-two percent (42%) of Americans say that the next President should meet with the heads of nations such as Iran, Syria, and North Korea without setting any preconditions. The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 34% disagree while 24% are not sure. That question came up during last Monday's Presidential Debate with Illinois Senator Barack Obama saying he would commit to such meetings and New York Senator Hillary Clinton offering a more cautious response. Democrats, by a 55% to 22% margin, agree with Obama. This is precisely the same process that causes one to hear endlessly from Beltway pundits about how Democrats will be in big, big trouble if they keep up with these investigations because "Americans" sure don't like that, even though polls continuously show that Americans overwhelmingly want Congress to investigate the Bush administration even further. The claim that Congress is "going too far" or "neglecting the people's business" or "engaged in witch-hunts" are actually embraced only by minorities. But that is what the government-defending Beltway media believes; hence, they repeatedly assert as a mantra-like chant, based on nothing, that opposition to more investigations is the "centrist position," that Americans do not like Congressional probes and see them as unjustifiably obstructionist. It is not difficult to understand why Americans are supportive of Obama's pro-diplomacy instincts. It is because they have seen the alternative for the last six years and know that it is a petulant refusal to speak to the Bad People that is the real fringe, dangerous, extremist position. Indeed, the actual fringe extremism on this issue was vividly illustrated on the same Chris Matthews Show, by the very same Stephen Hayes, the Serious right-wing national security scholar and all-around tough guy: MATTHEWS: Cheney is the kind of guy who represents to me the hard case. He's not going to go negotiate with anybody. Is it fair to say that Cheney would take the position, you don't deal with Ahmadinejad, for whatever reason, you don't deal with Castro, you don't deal with Kim Jong il or any of these guys. You stiff them. Is that the Cheney view? HAYES: To play off of what Sally [Quinn] said, it actually is for the opposite point. You don't play with them precisely because it gives them respect. It gives them stature on the world stage that they don't deserve. Ahmadinejad, as Howard said several times-he's a holocaust denier. That's crazy talk -- ridiculous, insane position. MATTHEWS: Does that mean never talk to them? HAYES: Yes, absolutely. MATTHEWS: Then what do we do? How do we negotiate? HAYES: We don't negotiate somebody who's denying the holocaust, with somebody who's killing our soldiers. MATTHEWS: What do you do with them? HAYES: I think you confront them. I think you confront them in a stronger way. MATTHEWS: How do you do that? What should we do with Iran? HAYES: Certainly we should be having units, at the very least, taking out the Iranian Revolutionary Guards who are killing our soldiers. MATTHEWS: So we should cross the border? HAYES: I think if we need to cross the border, we should cross the border? Yes. MATTHEWS: You think we should be acting aggressively towards Iran? HAYES: Yes. That is the only extremist national security mentality that has any degree of influence or significance in our political landscape. There simply is no idea that could ever be uttered by a national, viable Democratic candidate that can even compete with the extremism, radicalism and fringe nature of this view. The Weekly-Standard/Giuliani/Lieberman position is a view that is overwhelmingly rejected by the American mainstream; it is a true fringe position: A majority of adults in the United States believe their federal administration should not wage war against Iran, according to a poll by Opinion Research Corporation released by CNN. 63 per cent of respondents would oppose the U.S. government if it decides to take military action in Iran. Yet while Obama-like calls for diplomacy are almost immediately labelled "too left" or "extreme" despite polling data that shows the opposite, people who advocate insane military attacks on Iran are virtually never labelled as such even though polling data shows how fringe they are. That is because "centrism" and "extremism" and "fringes" designate nothing other than what Beltway media stars personally believe, and anyone who favors war -- old ones or news ones -- is inherently mainstream, responsible and . . . serious. That, more than anything else, is why we are still in Iraq, and why withdrawal is universally depicted as the "extreme" leftist position even though most Americans favor it. While on the subject of Chris Matthews' Thursday show, one would be remiss by failing to note this bit of wisdom from him: MATTHEWS: Who's right? Doesn't it look like Hillary will win this thing simply because she's better at playing to the concerns and sensitivities of people who vote Democrat? This holocaust denial thing is brilliant. They're putting this guy, whose middle name is Hussein, out there, saying he wants to go play in the sandbox with a holocaust denier. That's brilliant politics if you're a Democrat. And now he's got to deny it. To the extent that this can be understood, Matthews seems to be saying that there are many Jews in the Democratic Party ("playing to the concerns and sensitivities of people who vote Democrat") and so it is "brilliant" of the Clinton campaign to associate her rival who is saddled with the middle name of "Hussein" with the Israel-hating "Holocaust denier." Hence, in Matthews' mind, this episode shows why Hillary "will win this thing" even though "Democrats, by a 55% to 22% margin, agree with Obama." Media pundits are so suffuse with narcissism and self-importance that they automatically think that their own views on any topic are, by definition, held by "most Americans," on whose behalf they speak, even when they don't. * * * * * On an unrelated note, I had expressed the view several times this week that I believed the perjury case against Alberto Gonzales was weak to the extent it was grounded in his answers about whether the Comey/Ashcroft dispute applied to the "Terrorist Surveillance Program," as opposed to "other intelligence activities." My view arose, in part, from e-mail discussions I had on this topic throughout the week with Anonymous Liberal, a very smart and insightful lawyer who has developed a real expertise in the NSA scandal. Throughout the week, he and I shared the same view on Gonazles' defense to this particular perjury charge. But over the last couple of days, A.L. went back and reviewed all of the testimony given by Gonzales to the Senate Judiciary Committee back in February, 2006. He now conclusively believes the perjury charge against Gonzales would be very strong, and he has put together a compelling evidentiary case proving Gonzales' perjurious intent. His post has certainly changed my view, and I hope someone on the Senate Judiciary Committee takes notice of the virtually irrefutable proof he has compiled. UPDATE: As Andrew Sullivan has been recently realizing and pointing out, spending your life and career rooted in Beltway media and political circles inevitably warps one's perspective, no matter one's ideological leanings -- especially (though by no means only) with regard to "how Americans think." From long-time Beltway political correspondent David Corn of The Nation and now also Pajamas Media: I can see the ad now: Kim Jong Il, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Fidel Castro, Bashar al-Assad, and Hugo Chavez all strolling into the White House, and a grinning Barack Obama greeting them with a friendly "Welcome, boys; what do you want to talk about?" If Obama gets close to the Democratic presidential nomination, pro-Hillary Clinton forces could air such an ad. If he wins the nomination, the Republicans could hammer him with such a spot. And the junior senator from Illinois will not have much of a defense. . . . [T]his moment illustrated perhaps the top peril for the Obama campaign: with this post-9/11 presidential contest, to a large degree, a question of who should be the next commander in chief, any misstep related to foreign policy is a big deal for a candidate who has little experience in national security matters. He goes on to compare Obama to Dean in 2004, whom he said made a series of "dumb gaffes" which supposedly exposed that Dean "had not spent years talking and doing foreign policy" and that he was "not ready for prime time regarding national security matters" -- even though he "had the foreign policy positions that resonated most with Democratic voters." But the "flubs" and "gaffes" were important only to Beltway media types, who then used it to depict Dean as "weak" and "inexperienced" on national security, which then became conventional wisdom. That is how this works perpetually -- media elites repeatedly masquerade their own conventional wisdom and biases as "American centrism" and any deviation as "extremism" or "unseriousness" or even "craziness." That is how their Beltway orthodoxies are enforced. As Prairie Weather says: "this kind of media falsehood becomes a self-confirming prophecy. Establishment wins; you lose." To be clear, none of this is about whether I personally believe it is a good idea to commit to face-to-face meetings in the first 12 months of a presidency with every hostile world leader regardless of the circumstances. I doubt that Obama actually intends to embrace such a specific commitment even though (as Bob Somerby fairly notes) he did say "I would" when asked (though sysprog makes what I think is the more convincing argument about what Obama actually said). The point here, though, is that it is being almost universally depicted as some sort of politically damaging reply -- a terrible "gaffe" -- all because media stars disagree with it, not because American voters do. -- Glenn Greenwald [/QUOTE]
Verification
Post reply
Home
Forums
Newsgroups
Windows Vista
Windows Vista General Discussion
Gates Plans Leave Admid Great Change
Top