So what?

OK, so Dubya & Co. knew beforehand that their claim about Iraq’s buying uranium from Niger was bogus.

It’s part of a larger pattern of deception the administration engaged in in the leadup to the war. Does it matter?

Objectively, of course it does. But does it matter to the voters? Will this become WeaponsGate, or will it just slide off Dubya’s back like so many other things have?

I think it depends on how things go in Iraq. If, by this time next year, we’re still losing a soldier a day to Iraqi insurgents, Hussein’s still at large, no WMD have been found, and we’re not really any closer to some kind of peaceful democratic Iraqi state, then how we got into the war will become a matter of greater concern to the public.

From the beginning with Iraq, there was a debate about the war’s necessity. Dubya & Co. knew that Americans traditionally are very reticent to fight unnecessary wars. So they lied — about the Al Qaeda connection, about nukes, about WMD, about pretty much everything — to convince the booboisie the war was crucial to U.S. security.

The elites knew better. They knew it was an entirely optional war. Wouldn’t it be nice to get rid of Hussein once and for all? Sure, why not. Let’s do it. What the heck?

Those against the war stood strong on the ground that every war is a gamble with fate and shouldn’t be fought unless absolutely necessary to avert greater tragedy. And on the basis of the evidence, such as it was, Iraq certainly didn’t meet that test.

Now it appears that the United States is, if not losing the gamble on Iraq, definitely stretching the odds. Our horse is struggling to place. Where that horse is down the stretch next year will determine to a great extent what role Iraq plays in the 2004 presidential election.

Who the Democrats nominate for president is also crucial. Though I sense that Kerry is calculating enough to turn against Dubya on Iraq if and when necessary for political advantage, it may take someone with Dean’s tenacity to really keep the issue in the forefront of the news and to really hammer home on Iraq if the bad news keeps rolling in.

The problem is Dean is already being brushed off by the news media as a hot head. So, if the one presidential candidate who’s been hardest on Dubya on Iraq and has momentum (unlike Graham and Kucinich) is already being tagged as a fringe character, what chance does the anti-war crowd really have to make some progress on the war front — to get out of Iraq and to bring the troops home?

The fourth estate won’t do it on its own — it just can’t keep up the pressure for that long. And with Republicans controlling Congress, any Congressional investigations will be scuttled at the president’s pleasure.

For all these reasons, I’m pessimistic that all the news of Dubya’s deception on Iraq will gain any traction, unless Iraq gets really bad and the Democratic candidate has not only the cojones to take on Dubya on foreign policy but also some measure of sympathy from the news media reporting on the race.

(Also posted to Stand Down: No War Blog.)

I don’t usually agree with Josh Marshall …

… but the man knows how to write. “Everything changes. Everything.” is a fantastic post about his search for a dented light pole in the Southern California town where he grew up. He writes:

Twenty-two years ago, late in the evening one night in March of 1981, to be specific, my mother was killed in an auto accident on Foothill Boulevard in a town called Claremont. This was one town over from ours. She was on her way home. She was killed instantly — at least in every meaningful sense of the word. And the impact of her car left a softball-sized dent in the foot-thick metal pole that held up the street lights at the intersection where she died.

Read it all. I wish I could write that well.

Now that’s one spunky pup

The (Beckley, W.Va.) Register-Herald is all over this story:

Since there’s no veterinary clinic on Stanaford Road, an injured dog opted for the next best thing — a hospital for humans.

The black lab mixed breed, apparently hit by a car about 10:30 p.m. on the Fourth of July, limped up to the sliding glass doors at the front of Beckley Appalachian Regional Hospital. The canine triggered the automatic sensors and sought help in the hallway between Admissions and the pharmacy.

All righty, then.

I bought a copy of RedEye yesterday

That’s right, I actually paid 25 cents for Tribune Jr., aka News for Dummies.

The situation was this: I was walking Sportoboy and he did something I did not expect him to do. That is, I was unprepared — and so did not have the customary plastic bag in my back pocket for scoopage purposes.

Fortunately, Sporto did his business not too far from a RedEye box — you know, the obnoxious red boxes with the big ball on top; I guess that’s an eye, I don’t know.

The cover of the tabloid suited my scoopage purposes just fine, thank you very much. RedEye may not be better than looking out the window, but it’s better than getting yelled at by an angry neighbor.

When I’m right, I’m right

At least the Tribune’s Phil Rogers agrees with me in his column, “Cubs should keep top kids.”

The brutal truth:

More than likely the Cubs will be making sucker bets if they trade away the legitimate prospects other teams desire — pitchers Juan Cruz, Francis Beltran, Todd Wellemeyer, Andy Sisco and Jae-Kuk Ryu — for short-term help, especially if such help does not answer to the name of Mike Lowell or Carlos Beltran.

Their lineup isn’t going to be good enough to win without a major overhaul. Not only do they have voids at third and now in center, they also must cope with Sammy Sosa’s downturn in production and a first-base platoon that is on track to deliver a Mark Grace-like 80 RBIs.

Factor in a disappointing bench and the strikeout propensity of Alex Gonzalez, Damian Miller, Hee Seop Choi and newcomer Jose Hernandez, and you have a team that isn’t going to score enough runs to win no matter how strong a pitching staff it might have.

Exactly. Try to do the best you can with what you’ve got now and retool in the off-season.

By the way, the real outrage about Dusty Baker is not his dubious views about blacks and Hispanics’ superior ability to play in hot weather, but his insistence on batting Eric Karros against righthanders (instead of Choi) and his irrational love of Lenny F. Harris and his .170-area batting average.

Oh, what a tangled Web we weave

Oh, how I recall those simpler days (back in March) when I first suggested to Karen that she start her own blog at LiveJournal. I thought she would enjoy how easy it is, and thought she’d get a kick out of the neat little features like moods, user icons, communities and the like.

And she did. But it wasn’t enough. Soon she hit the harder stuff, nabbing a domain name and now using Blogger, which she plans to only use for a transitional period before moving on to Movable Type.

Which explains why she’s barely looked up from her laptop for the last two nights while setting everything up. So this is what it’s like …

Cross Skokie off the list

So here’s another place Karen and I can’t hang out anymore. Skokie, a Chicago suburb, has banned smoking in:

  • Shopping malls
  • Workplaces
  • Sports stadiums
  • Restaurants
  • Walk-in closets

OK, so the last one’s a joke, but you definitely get the idea. The original proposal would have banned smoking in bars, but then the village’s trustees came to their senses.

It’s not enough for crusading Skokie Mayor George Van Dusen, though:

To those who have sought a complete ban of smoking in all public places, I challenge you to continue your crusade. Your work has only begun this evening. I challenge you to persuade the Illinois General Assembly …

What’s especially alarming is that these smoking bans are becoming viewed as a stamp of progressivity. Once that happens, they’ll get passed out of a kind of jurisdictional peer pressure rather than on their dubious merits. To wit:

“I’m really proud of Skokie today,” said Village Trustee Randall Roberts, who voted for the law. “It’s a giant leap forward for our village.”

Ugh.

This is a major blow

As if losing nine out of the last 12 wasn’t bad enough, now Patterson’s out for the season. The Cubs may now be especially tempted to trade away the farm for a slugger, any slugger, maybe even the slugging third baseman Mike Lowell. But I think the opposite is called for.

Patterson is a big part of the Cubs’ future, and there’s no point trying to desperately make up for his absence the rest of this season, when the team has clearly demonstrated it doesn’t have the stuff to make the playoffs anyhow.

The Cubs should be looking to unload Alou, Alfonseca (though who would take him?), Juan Cruz, etc. to teams in the mix with weaknesses at those spots.

Bass ackwards

Andrew Sullivan is seriously deluded:

One of the many layers of the arguments for invading Iraq focused on the difficulties of waging a serious war on terror from a distant remove. Being based in Iraq helpsus [sic] notonly [sic]because of actual bases; but because the American presence there diverts terrorist attention away from elsewhere.

By confronting them directly in Iraq, we get to engage them in a military setting that plays to our strengths rather than to theirs’ [sic]. Continued conflict in Iraq, in other words, needn’t always be bad news. It may be a sign that we are drawing the terrorists out of the woodwork and tackling them in the open.

It’s true that Hussein was a big financial supporter of Palestinian terrorist groups, but the people attacking U.S. forces in Iraq right now may be many things, but they’re not the terrorists who attacked us on Sept. 11 and they’re not the terrorists we had any cause to take over a country for.

And to say that we’re actually in a better position now is absolutely ludicrous. A base in Iraq might make it easier for the United States to wage war on terror in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, etc., but U.S. occupation is itself the proximate cause of Iraqi terrorism — in this case, perhaps legitimately labeled rebellion — against the men and women who came to win a war, and now want to go home.

(Also posted to Circle Bastiat.)