dimanche 1 octobre 2006

Watching a pack of wild dogs devour each other

Grab your popcorn, as the Party of Personal Responsibility not only tears off its mask to reveal the perverts and enablers within, but also starts devouring itself.

WaPo, today:

House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) was notified early this year of inappropriate e-mails from former representative Mark Foley (R-Fla.) to a 16-year-old page, a top GOP House member said yesterday -- contradicting the speaker's assertions that he learned of concerns about Foley only last week.

Hastert did not dispute the claims of Rep. Thomas M. Reynolds (R-N.Y.), and his office confirmed that some of Hastert's top aides knew last year that Foley had been ordered to cease contact with the boy and to treat all pages respectfully.

Reynolds, chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, became the second senior House Republican to say that Hastert has known of Foley's contacts for months, prompting Democratic attacks about the GOP leadership's inaction. Foley abruptly resigned his seat Friday.

House Majority Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) told The Washington Post on Friday that he had learned in late spring of inappropriate e-mails Foley sent to the page, a boy from Louisiana, and that he promptly told Hastert, who appeared to know already of the concerns. Hours later, Boehner contacted The Post to say he could not be sure he had spoken with Hastert.

Yesterday's developments revealed a rift at the highest echelons of House Republican ranks a month before the Nov. 7 elections, and they threatened to expand the scandal to a full-blown party dilemma.

Only after Reynolds's definitive statement did Hastert concede yesterday that he may have been notified of some of the questionable activities of Foley, 52, who had co-chaired the Congressional Missing and Exploited Children's Caucus. Hastert said, however, that he knew nothing of the sexually explicit instant messages that became public Friday when ABC News and other news outlets reported them. The messages apparently were exchanged with youths other than the 16-year-old.

Hastert's aides learned in the fall of 2005 only of e-mail exchanges that House officials eventually deemed "over-friendly" with the Louisiana teenager, the speaker's office said yesterday in a lengthy statement. "While the Speaker does not explicitly recall this conversation" with Reynolds, the statement said, "he has no reason to dispute Congressman Reynolds's recollection that he reported to him on the problem and its resolution."

Boehner and Reynolds said their offices learned of the Foley e-mails months ago from Rep. Rodney Alexander (R), who sponsored the page from his northeastern-Louisiana district.

"Rodney Alexander brought to my attention the existence of the e-mails between Mark Foley and a former page of Mr. Alexander's," Reynolds said yesterday. "Despite the fact that I had not seen the e-mails in question, and Mr. Alexander told me that the parents didn't want the matter pursued, I told the speaker of the conversation Mr. Alexander had with me."

GOP leaders have said they referred the matter promptly to Rep. John M. Shimkus (R-Ill.), who heads a three-lawmaker panel that oversees the House page program.

Shimkus questioned Foley, but at that time, he had seen only suspiciously friendly e-mails, not the explicit instant messages revealed recently. In one e-mail to the former page, for example, Foley asked for a picture of him. The boy reportedly told an associate that he considered the request to be "sick," but Foley convinced Shimkus that the exchanges were innocent, Shimkus and Republican leaders said.

Republicans appeared to have kept the matter under wraps. Rep. Dale E. Kildee (Mich.), the only Democrat on the House Page Board, said yesterday: "I was never informed of the allegations about Mr. Foley's inappropriate communications with a House page, and I was never involved in any inquiry into this matter."


And as the game of "Not me, him" continues, we finally have a Republican scandal that involves sex instead of mass death, policy lies, and plans to blow up the entire world for U.S. hegemony -- so perhaps now Americans will take their eyes off of Dancing with the Stars long enough to pay attention. And this one involves not just the perpetratrator, but a Republican House leadership that enabled this pedophile to prey on house pages and head up the Caucus for Missing and Exploited Children.

I give it four days before we start seeing a tearful Hastert and an equally tearful John Boehner standing before a microphone apologizing for "bad judgment" before saying that they know Jesus has forgiven them because they are Christians. And I give it another week before the spin on this becomes a "gay predator" scandal, even though it is not a "gay predator" scandal, it is a pedophile scandal. People who have a brain in their heads know this, but it's going to be so much easier to scapegoat gay Americans than to face the fact that a quite open pedophile was hiding in plain sight in the House of Representatives.

Meanwhile, while Alberto Gonzales is warning the Supreme Court that if they dare to vote down the George W. Bush Dictator-For-Life bill that just passed both houses of Congress, he's in no hurry to investigate the House Pedophile:

At the Justice Department, an official said that no investigation was under way but that the agency had “real interest” in examining the circumstances to see if any crimes were committed.


I love that verbiage: "real interest". Oh, I'll just bet they have real interest. The only question is whether they're going to jerk off in the same room while they "examine the circumstances."

None of this should come as a surprise to anyone. The Republican Party has proven again and again these last five-plus years that the party trumps everything -- the needs of the party trump common human decency, they trump the good of the country, they trump the good of the world, and they certainly trump any obligation to put your money where your mouth is while you accuse Democrats of "coddling terrorists." The bottom line here is that the House leadership knew Mark Foley was using the House page system -- and for all we know, the people he came in contact with in his Missing and Exploited Children caucus capacity -- as his own personal "escort service".

Ask your Republican friends if they are aware that they are planning to vote for a bunch of pedophile-enablers in November.

UPDATE: The House of Representatives is looking more and more like the Roman Catholic Church every minute. According to a report in the Palm Beach Post (hat tip: Josh Marshall), now that the Foley scandal has broken, more House pages may come forward:

Sexually explicit messages from former Rep. Mark Foley to one former congressional page might be just the tip of the iceberg, the leader of an alumni association for former congressional pages told Scripps Howard News Service on Saturday.
While Foley resigned this week after published reports of "friendly" e-mails to one 16-year-old male page and the pending broadcast of more sexually explicit instant messages, similar graphic messages from him were received by at least three other teenage boys who once worked in the page program, said Matthew Loraditch, a Maryland college senior who runs the U.S. House Page Alumni Association's Internet message board.

"I've known about them (messages) for several years now," he said Saturday.
"It was more like, 'Hey, look at this,' " said Loraditch, 21, who served in the page program in the 2001-02 session. "I don't think the people in question felt that uncomfortable. It was more, 'Ooh, look at that creepy guy.'

"It was definitely crossing-the-line stuff. The instant message stuff, and stuff I've seen and heard about, definitely couldn't be misconstrued" as merely "friendly" or innocent, Loraditch said.

Loraditch said during his time on Capitol Hill, Foley was one of the members of Congress who expressed what appeared to be a sincere interest in the young pages, often visiting the areas where they congregate in the corner of the House of Representatives chamber to chat or offer stories and advice.

Loraditch said he and other pages viewed Foley as gregarious and "flaky" at the time, and that he offered several of them, not including Loraditch, his personal e-mail when they were graduating from the program and saying goodbyes.

After Loraditch returned to Maryland and began attending college at Towson University, several male former pages told him they had received Internet messages that were similar to the graphic messages first reported by ABC News last week.

"At the age we were when those things happened, 16 or 17, when you see that kind of stuff, most people our ages know what's going on and know what's happening," Loraditch said. "You're not like a little kid who can be roped into that."

Loraditch said his friends all thought the messages were disturbing, but they did not report them, either because they did not think the messages posed a serious threat or because they might have worried about career consequences.

He added all his friends received the questionable messages only after they had graduated and left the program, when, theoretically, that would not raise the same in-house sexual harassment issues as if they had been sent when the former pages still worked for Congress.

"This all happened after we were outside the protective umbrella of all our supervisors, not when we were there," Loraditch said. "To me, that indicates some sort of thought process going on in Foley's mind."


You bet it does. It means that Foley was very well aware of the potential consequences of his actions, and deliberately set up his correspondence so as not to trigger an investigation within the House. Talk about parsing the definition of "is" ...

It also means that House leadership knew of Foley's penchant for House pages, and essentially decided to pimp them to him.

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