Toto Is Eyeing The Curtain With Bad Intent

Another day, another and another and another and another scandal that highlights the incompetence, hypocrisy, corruption, or greed of the current Administration.

We can has impeechment naow? Mebbe not. We can has outrage? Yesh.

First of all, let’s have a moment of silence for Lt. Colonel Ted Westhusing. I’ll remember him and his family in my prayers. He’s a victim of the corruption scandals (subset: Iraq) too.

TPM Muckracker: Officer’s 2005 Suicide a Painful Reminder of Corruption in Iraq

With the Pentagon’s inspector general set to arrive in Iraq in a few weeks to personally investigate allegations of corruption in, among other places, the training of Iraqi security forces, it’s worth remembering that suspicions of wrongdoing in the command led one officer to take his own life out of apparent shame. In a suicide note left on his bed in Baghdad, Lt. Colonel Ted Westhusing wrote, “I didn’t volunteer to support corrupt, money grubbing contractors, nor work for commanders only interested in themselves.” Westhusing, 44, killed himself on June 5, 2005.

NYT via BoingBoing – Iraq: weapons focus of criminal inquiry

Several federal agencies are investigating a widening network of criminal cases involving the purchase and delivery of billions of dollars of weapons, supplies and other matériel to Iraqi and American forces, according to American officials. The officials said it amounted to the largest ring of fraud and kickbacks uncovered in the conflict here.The inquiry has already led to several indictments of Americans, with more expected, the officials said. One of the investigations involves a senior American officer who worked closely with Gen. David H. Petraeus in setting up the logistics operation to supply the Iraqi forces when General Petraeus was in charge of training and equipping those forces in 2004 and 2005, American officials said Monday.

More on this from Marketplace: Iraqi Task Force targets contract fraud

John Dimsdale: The military’s contracting with private companies for services in Iraq and Afghanistan has been plagued by reports of no-bid sweetheart deals, inflated prices, lost or stolen equipment and weapons and kickbacks.

The task force’s target, the contracting office in Kuwait, disbursed $3 billion for military support services over the past four years.

David Mulholland looked into the Kuwait-based contracts when he was business editor for Jane’s Defense Weekly. He alleges the Pentagon was using the contracts to reward powerful Kuwaiti allies.

David Mulholland: Some of it, I have pretty good reason to believe, that it was directed corruption from the Bush Administration to essentially grease the palms of high-ranking Kuwaiti officials. Some of it just pure corporate greed and corruption. Some of it just pure incompetence. My guess would be it’s a combination of all three.

Via The Economist’s View: A rigged report on U.S. Voting?

Yet, after sitting on the draft for six months, the EAC publicly released a report — citing it as based on work by me and my co-author — that completely stood our own work on its head.

Consider the title. Whereas the commission is mandated by law to study voter fraud and intimidation, this new report was titled simply “Election Crimes” and excluded a wide range of serious offenses that harm the system and suppress voting but are not currently crimes under the U.S. criminal code.

We said that our preliminary research found widespread agreement among … experts from all points on the political spectrum that allegations of fraud through voter impersonation at polling places were greatly exaggerated. … The commission chose instead to state that the issue was a matter of considerable debate. And while we found that problems of voter intimidation were still prevalent in a variety of forms, the commission excluded much of the discussion of voter intimidation.

We also raised questions about the way the Justice Department was handling complaints of fraud and intimidation. The commission excised all references to the department that might be construed as critical — or that Justice officials later took issue with. And all of the suggestions we received from political scientists and other scholars regarding methodologies for a more scientifically rigorous look at these problems were omitted. …

What was behind the strange handling of our report? It’s still unclear, but it is worth noting that during the time the commission was holding our draft, claims about voter fraud and efforts to advance the cause of strict voter identification laws were at a fever pitch in Congress and the states. And it has been reported that some U.S. attorneys were being fired because they failed to pursue weakly supported voter fraud cases with sufficient zeal.

Lions, tigers, and bears. Oh, my.

For a somewhat more local angle on the Larry Craig bass-ackwards sex scandal, see Mullentown. Most people plead innocent first, Senator.

Is anybody keeping a list, with all the different categories all nice and neat (Iraq, DOJ, TXANG, Abramoff, Foley, Election 2004, Election 2000, etc. etc. etc.? )

Salon: The scandal sheet from two years ago needs to be updated. O hai, they has a pifanee. Wait, nother pifanee.

Slate’s got an illustrated guide to Republican scandals from May. The text version is like a greatest hits compilation.

At least we don’t have former Olympus High (boo!) pocket-protectored nerd Karl Rove running things.

No Toto! Get away from that curtain! Bad mans behind thar!

The name remains the same

Flickr

So after all of that, we literally cast ballots (polished stones) into 4 baskets with 4 possible names:

Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd

St Mary Magdalene Episcopal Church

One Bread One Body Episcopal Church

and a late contender, which wasn’t even considered as a choice before a “straw poll” last week

St Nicholas (with or without “Holy Innocents” added to the name). Previously, there had been a lot of sentiment towards a completely new name, especially (and surprisingly) from the former St Nicholas people. The former Holy Innocents people were all for a completely new identity, or almost all of us were.

Over the course of the summer, we thought about the choices and got through the very successful rummage sale, where for the first time some of us started working together and relating as one community without bothering to remember who was previously a St Nick’s person and who was previously from the closed Holy Innocents building. We were all in it together.

When the straw poll indicated, out of the blue, a strong preference for some form of the St Nicholas/Holy Innocents name to be retained after all, Father Steve decided we’d better be given a fourth choice, and then decide if we were going “short form” or “long form” on the name if the basket with St Nick/Holy Innocents held the most votes.

We even had a polling booth – a little bamboo screen that looked like it had been liberated from a sushi joint. Before coffee hour, we lined up and were offered a basket of polished stones to cast as our ballot into one of the four voting baskets, behind the screen. I voted for my previous first choice, because I had some affection for the “One Bread, One Body” name, which also was the name of the new combined website.

We came back after about 10 minutes of coffee and visiting to get the preliminary results, and what a surprise they were – the St Nicholas/Holy Innocents basket held far more stones than the other three choices combined.

After some discussion from the floor – the Holy Innocents people were polled on whether the name needed to include the name of the former community. “Not really,” was the consensus – and it was pretty strongly stated by several of us that “St Nicholas” was who we felt we were now, with a couple of people who weren’t ready to lose the former name entirely.

I was thinking “But we’re building the addition – that could be named ‘Holy Innocents Hall’ or something…” at the same time Ethan had raised his hand and Patty had obtained the floor. “Why can’t we name the new addition ‘Holy Innocents Hall’ or dedicate it in the name of the Holy Innocents?”

I  was dumbfounded. Ethan looked like he’d had the rug pulled out from under him – he’d had the exact same thought. And there was an undercurrent of “yes…yes…yes, that could work.” There was more discussion from a couple of people, who stated that they either thought we should just be “St Nicholas” or were reluctant to say goodbye to old name, but they were fine with the idea of dedicating the addition. Steve thought that artistically, an icon or something (that didn’t emphasise the slaughter-and-sword imagery somehow) would be needed in the new building if we dedicated it that way.

And we voted, and the consensus was definitely “We are St Nicholas Episcopal Church.”

This means we can go forward and get some things done that we’ve held off on doing while waiting to see if we were going to change our name, our identity and our focus.

It was an interesting process but it served to crystallize for us who we are and what we’re about – like our patron St Nicholas, we’re working to feed the hungry, support the poor, and help children (yes, even me, the curmudgeonly childfree person).

There was a lot of discussion afterwards, but there was also a lot of excitement – and now we go forward.

[tags]St Nicholas Episcopal Church[/tags]

Via: Flickr Title: The name remains the same By: GinnyRED57
Originally uploaded: 26 Aug ’07, 12.30pm CDT PST