Non-Stick Coating
Remember your first teflon
fry pan? Even though you heeded every warning on the label, used only those "teflon
safe" brushes to scrub it, took care not to scratch it when you cooked...
Sooner or later, scratches began to appear and you were finding flakes of teflon
in your food. Little black flecks that looked like pepper, but didn't have any
taste. "Everybody" says that eating a little teflon won't hurt you, but...
So, you went to silver stone. Supposedly "scratch proof", it just took a little
longer for you to slip up and scratch the bottom of that pan, then the coating
flaked off in a rush. Instead of black flakes in your food, they were silver
this time. Something about finding those silver flakes in your food made you
want to look for another pan.
Well...
Tue Mar 23, 2004 -
Analysis: Iraq Charges Against Bush Begin to Mount
Criticism of President Bush's motives and decision-making in attacking Iraq last
year may be acquiring critical mass with voters following criticism by former
top counterterrorism official Richard Clarke.
Political consultants and analysts said Clarke's allegation that Bush ignored
the al Qaeda threat before the Sept. 11 attacks and was obsessed by a desire to
invade Iraq were especially damaging because they confirmed other previous
revelations from policy insiders.
"Each of these revelations adds to the others so that the whole is greater than
the sum of its parts and the message gets reinforced with voters," said Richard
Rosecrance, a political scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Before Clarke, there was former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill, who asserted in
a book published in January that Bush began laying the groundwork for an attack
on Iraq from the moment he took office.
Then came the bombshell from former weapons inspector David Kay that the Iraqi
weapons of mass destruction that Bush launched the war to find and destroy
probably did not exist.
Kay on Tuesday warned that U.S. credibility at home and abroad was in grave
danger and urged the Bush administration to own up to its intelligence failures.
"We are in grave danger of having destroyed our credibility internationally and
domestically with regard to warning about future events," he said. "The answer
is to admit you were wrong, and what I find most disturbing around Washington
... is the belief ... you can never admit you're wrong."
Earlier this month, former U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix added to the fire by
accusing Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair of "exaggerating the risks
they saw in order to get the political support (for the war) they would not
otherwise have had."
The response from the White House, especially to Clarke, has been fierce and
sometimes personal. It rejects any suggestion that Bush, running for re-election
this year as a "war president," failed to take the al Qaeda threat seriously.
"The administration can huff and puff but if there are enough bricks in the
structure, they can't blow the house down any more," said American University
historian Allan Lichtman.
"Right now, you have quite a number of bricks. It's not just scaffolding any
more," he said.
Clarke's bombshell came at an awkward time for Bush. His presidential
re-election campaign was just picking up momentum after being on the defensive
for most of this year. His attacks on his Democratic opponent, Massachusetts
Sen. John Kerry, seemed to be finding the mark.
Now, he is back on the defensive again.
"Bush has chosen national security and his response to the terrorist attack as a
cornerstone of his campaign and now comes this guy Clarke, their guy, who says
that the administration was intentionally or unintentionally not paying enough
attention to the terrorist threat," said Rick Davis, a Republican political
consultant.
With the economy struggling, Bush's strongest asset is his claim to be a strong
leader best equipped to protect the country in a "war on terrorism."
"If people start to doubt that claim and if the message from Clarke and O'Neill
and others begins to stick, it would seriously weaken Bush on his strongest
point," said Fordham University political scientist Tom DeLuca.
The administration response has usually been to try to destroy the reputations
of its critics. It suggested O'Neill had illegally used classified documents and
said he was motivated by sour grapes after having been forced to resign from the
Cabinet. A Treasury probe has cleared him of misusing documents.
Similarly, White House aides said Clarke was bitter about having been denied a
promotion and "out of the loop" in the administration. They also said he was a
closet Democrat working as a proxy for Bush's presidential opponent, John Kerry.
"This administration has shown a tremendous ability to demonize its opponents.
But at some point, people start to ask themselves, could all these people be
pathological liars? At some point, they can't all be liars," said Democratic
consultant Michael Goldman.
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I don't know about you, but I went back to a cast iron skillet, seasoned with
oil, never soaked in soapy water. Nice even heat that browns hamburger or cooks
a steak with equal agility. Just don't piss your wife off when she's holding it
in her hand...
3/23/04