Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Too Busy To Go To Congress?

Republican Rep. Deborah Pryce (OH-15) is proving once again that she doesn't give a damn about her constituents. Pryce, who has decided to skip Monday sessions, has once again gone AWOL. According to the Washington Post, Pryce missed votes on Monday, October 1st. Pryce has now missed 87 votes since January.

>Bloomberg has been sizing up chances for Republicans to gain seats in next year's election. Unfortunately it doesn't look very good for the GOP. With retirements, scandals, and empty campaign chests, Republicans are finding that their prospects look dim. Read the Bloomberg article here.

>>> Here is what Salon found out Blackwater:
When Blackwater contractors guarding a U.S. State Department convoy allegedly killed 11 unarmed Iraqi civilians on September 16, it was only the latest in a series of controversial shooting incidents associated with the private security firm. Blackwater has a reputation for being quick on the draw. Since 2005, the North Carolina-based company, which has about 1,000 contractors in Iraq, has reported 195 "escalation of force incidents"; in 156 of those cases Blackwater guns fired first. According to the New York Times, Blackwater guards were twice as likely as employees of two other firms protecting State Department personnel in Iraq to be involved in shooting incidents.

On Tuesday morning, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA), chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, will be holding a hearing on the U.S. military's use of private contractors. When Waxman announced plans for the hearing last week, the State Department directed Blackwater not to give any information or testimony without its sign-off. After a public spat between Rep. Waxman and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, the State Department relented. Blackwater CEO and founder Erik Prince is now scheduled to testify at 10 a.m. Tuesday.

But the attempt to shield Prince was apparently not the first time State had protected Blackwater. A report issued by Waxman on Monday alleges that State helped Blackwater cover up Iraqi fatalities. In December 2006, State arranged for the company to pay $15,000 to the family of an Iraqi guard who was shot and killed by a drunken Blackwater employee. In another shooting death, the payment was $5,000. As CNN reported Monday, the State Department also allowed a Blackwater employee to write State's initial "spot report" on the September 16 shooting incident -- a report that did not mention civilian casualties and claimed contractors were responding to an insurgent attack on a convoy.....

Blackwater is a private army and it was founded by a right wing, religious conservative. It continues to receive protection from Republicans. Gee, why would these right wingers feel the need to have a private army?