More Color-Coding

Buoyed by the overwhelming success of its terror-threat alert system, the Bush administration is planning to start color-coding American citizens:

The Washington Post reports the Bush administration is expected to order as soon as next month the first step in setting up databases on all air passengers, to be used to color-code each air traveler according to his or her potential threat level.
Passengers coded red would be stopped from boarding; yellow would mean additional screening at security checkpoints; and green would mean an only standard level of scrutiny.

There’s more:

Airlines and airline reservation companies would reportedly be forced to turn over all passenger records to U.S. government officials, who struck out in a trial program was based on voluntary surrender of airline industry data.
Not a single airline agreed to turn over data voluntarily.

Good for the airlines. Things are starting to get out of control in our terror state. People need to challenge the war on civil liberties.

American Dynasty

Kevin Phillips writes on his new book, American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune and the Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush (registration required):

Dynasties in American politics are dangerous. We saw it with the Kennedys, we may well see it with the Clintons and we’re certainly seeing it with the Bushes. Between now and the November election, it’s crucial that Americans come to understand how four generations of the current president’s family have embroiled the United States in the Middle East through CIA connections, arms shipments, rogue banks, inherited war policies and personal financial links.

I caught a few minutes of Mr. Phillips yesterday on Book TV. He was recounting how prior to Gulf War I the Bush administration made accusations against Iraq (the removal of Kuwaiti babies from hospital incubators) which were totally bogus. Yet after the war the press virtually ignored how pre-war claims had been trumped up.
Funny how history repeats itself, isn’t it?

War Against Ten-Year-Olds Terror

Be careful what you ask for:

A mother’s enquiry about buying Microsoft Flight Simulator for her ten-year-old son prompted a night-time visit to her home from a state trooper.
Julie Olearcek, a USAF Reserve pilot made the enquiry at a Staples store in Massachusetts, home to an earlier bout of hysteria, during the Salem witch trials.
So alarmed was the Staples clerk at the prospect of the ten year old learning to fly, that he informed the police, the Greenfield Recorder reports. The authorities moved into action, leaving nothing to chance. A few days later, Olearcek was alarmed to discover a state trooper flashing a torch into to her home through a sliding glass door at 8:30 pm on a rainy night.
Olearcek is a regular Staples customer and schools her son at home. The Staples manager simply explained that staff were obeying advice. Shortly before Christmas, the FBI issued a terror alert to beware of drivers with maps, or reference books.
At one time it was rare to find US citizens, in the safest and most prosperous country in the world, jumping at their own shadows. Now we only note how high.

Via WizBang!, which reprints the full-length Recorder story.

Water Conservation

Shows what I know about the world. I assumed that as warm-climate islands, the Philippines had plenty of water. Apparently not:

Couples in the Philippine capital have been asked to start sharing the tub at bath time as part of a conservation drive.
“Start sharing baths with your partner to conserve water,” the environment department advised the parched capital’s 12 million residents.
Unseasonably dry weather has depleted water levels in the main reservoirs supplying the metropolis and officials were meeting on Friday to consider rationing and other measures.

O’Neill Spills the Beans

The “60 Minutes” segment with former Treasury Secretary John O’Neill was great. Granted, O’Neill is a loose cannon who’s likely out for a little pay back. So his account must be taken with a little skepticism. Still, most of what he says has been corroborated or at least is not inconsistent with what many other people have said. So I tend to accept the jist of what he says.
I took three things in particular from the “60 Minutes” piece:
(1) Bush’s lack of intellectual curiosity on policy:

At cabinet meetings, he says the president was “like a blind man in a roomful of deaf people. There is no discernible connection,” forcing top officials to act “on little more than hunches about what the president might think.”
This is what O’Neill says happened at his first hour-long, one-on-one meeting with Mr. Bush: “I went in with a long list of things to talk about, and I thought to engage on and as the book says, I was surprised that it turned out me talking, and the president just listening . . . . As I recall, it was mostly a monologue.”
He also says that President Bush was disengaged, at least on domestic issues, and that disturbed him. And he says that wasn’t his experience when he worked as a top official under Presidents Nixon and Ford, or the way he ran things when he was chairman of Alcoa.

How can Bush sit in an hour-long meeting with the treasury secretary and not have questions? I have no policy-making responsibilities at all, yet pure curiosity would prompt me to ask plenty of questions if I had access to someone of O’Neill’s stature. What’s more, it doesn’t say much of the “moral clarity” of our leader if his cabinet members are leaving meetings unclear of what Bush thinks about things.
(2) Iraq. Most of the media buzz has centered on the revelation that planning to invade Iraq began immediately after inauguration, not as a response to 9/11 terrorism. I found this nugget similarly interesting:

During the campaign, candidate Bush had criticized the Clinton-Gore Administration for being too interventionist: “If we don’t stop extending our troops all around the world in nation-building missions, then we’re going to have a serious problem coming down the road. And I’m going to prevent that.”
“The thing that’s most surprising, I think, is how emphatically, from the very first, the administration had said ‘X’ during the campaign, but from the first day was often doing ‘Y,'” says Suskind. “Not just saying ‘Y,’ but actively moving toward the opposite of what they had said during the election.”

Not only that, but the fact that this reversal apparently went on with little debate. It’s almost as if the insiders all understood that the 2000 campaign had been a sham.
(3) O’Neill’s Naivete’:

“You’re giving me the impression that you’re just going to be stunned if they attack you for this book,” says Stahl to O�Neill. “And they’re going to say, I predict, you know, it’s sour grapes. He’s getting back because he was fired.”
“I will be really disappointed if they react that way because I think they’ll be hard put to,” says O�Neill.
Is he prepared for it?
“Well, I don’t think I need to be because I can’t imagine that I’m going to be attacked for telling the truth,” says O�Neill. “Why would I be attacked for telling the truth?”

Ha Ha, Paul. That’s a good one.