Jimmy Carter

Jimmy Carter

 

I really don’t want to pick on ex-President Jimmy Carter. Frankly, I am sure that what bothers him most is that no one really takes him seriously… even those I know who “like him.”

He’s not the kinda guy you would want to take with you as protection walking through a dark alley. At the first sign of danger, you’d know you were a dead man.

Every time I pick up the paper or peek into the web, I see Jimmy dissing some person here or there and you can’t help but feel sorry for the guy who no one will trust with anything scarier than a rabbit.

My wife is related to President Van Buren, the founder of the Democratic party and labled by many as the country’s worst president. However, I think her ancestor is off the look because Jimmy has closed the distance.  Anyone who has lived through the ‘Jimster’ years of double diget inflation or the ‘walk softly and carry a big petticoat’ years of foreign policy will remember how we all hoped and prayed for a vigorous America. So, I have a hard time taking  Jimmy Carter very seriously,  he’s just so wrong.

What others are saying:

Iran Loves Jimmy!
Jimmy Going to Bangladesh
Off to Nepal

Judges have  selected Jimmy as this century’s big weenie award winner!

Roger Freberg
(PS. there has been some talk about renaming the award ‘the Jimmy’)

University Campuses Need Oversight

Administrators and other forms of life

It appears that Evan Maloney’s long awaited documentary on what goes in college campuses is finally peeking out for the rest of us to see. “indoctrinate U” is nothing new for most of us who had to endure the rants of the great unwashed on campuses during the ’60’s, but it is amazing how institutionalized it has become. The dumbing down of college curricula has had the effect of rewarding ‘compliance over achievement’…. which I don’t think is a good thing.

In a review entitled ‘Academic Thuggery’ that also appeared on the Drudge Report an interesting background is presented on the making of ‘Indoctrinate U’… check out the trailer.

Congrats, Evan.

Roger Freberg

George Tenet

Beware of men and women who begin to explain their failures with the word “we”… and their successes with the word “I”.

I had already heard enough about George Tenet to believe that buying his book would not shed any new light, but there it was staring at me at Costco…. and priced so cheaply. Although I try to follow both sides of any discussion, I came away from Reading his book thinking that it was just “Fahrenheit 911” in a different form.

When I read or listen to someone, I look for the subtle little things that the authors omit that might be revealing about their motives, purposes and objectives. Although Mr. Tenet’s book drowns in minutia, one can’t help but come away with the conclusion that his learning curve regarding today’s realities was decidedly slow…. way too slow.

 It just seemed like he thought that everything could be negotiated and that all men and women can be reasonable. I thought he said he was Greek? He should know better. Although as human beings go, he appears to be the kind of warm fatherly type you might enjoy as an in-law, but to me, he just seemed hopelessly naive for the job he accepted.

Some folks distort their record with outright falsehoods, but I seem to sense that Mr. Tenet is prone to leaving something out that might change the readers evaluation of his performance or perspective. He talks about cutting his teeth as a Senatorial Staffer but he fails to tell you WHO he worked for and I can only wonder why? You can’t even find a mention of his mentor in Mr. Tenet’s index. For the record, George Tenet worked for the late Senator John Heinz. This name should sound familiar… John Kerry married into that family.

Do you see where George may have an ax to grind?

In no particular order, here is my listing of some of the major difficulties I had with George Tenet’s explanation of his time in the CIA:

1) He would say that he “assumed” this or that about someone or a situation. Doesn’t he remember the old “ass-u-me”… when you assume you make an ‘ass’ out of ‘u’ and ‘me?’

2) When managers use the word ‘we’, they often use it to deflect any criticism of themselves. It reminds me of the California ‘Governators’ credible opponent in his first election who explained the runnaway spending by saying,” I guess we spent too much.” The people responded to that wisdom in the election by electing Arnold by a huge margin.

3) Any street kid with a level of credibility wouldn’t fall for what this George bought. Tenet never recognized that he was ‘being played’ until a lot of wasted time passed by. His entire experience with Arafat was darkly amusing. I am reminded that George Tenet’s real experience was the softness of political life, which I am sure he thought was pretty tough.

4) To George Tenet’s credit he positions himself as a ‘people person.’ However, what is really necessary at the CIA is the dispassionate, logical and strategic thinking of James Bond’s legendary MI-5’s “M”. We needed “M” and we got “Mr. Rodgers.”

5) Probably George Tenet’s blinding fault is his belief in the political process in negotiations with terrorists. Negotiation is a sign of weakness, not a ‘first resort.’

6) He credits the Clinton Administration with too much. Under Bill Clinton’s administration, they were only proactive in attacking American Citizens. Ruby Ridge and Waco are two very sad reminders.

7) He criticized the Bush Administration from trying to distance themselves from the Clinton Administration’s positions, strategies and tactics. So, George, maybe you don’t know, but that was a really good idea. 

8) George is fond of saying that he ( excuse me… “WE” at the CIA) are ‘policy implementers’ and not ‘policy makers.” This doesn’t sound like an organization that rewards initiative… just compliance. Maybe that is why Dick Chaney sat in many of the regular meetings, to keep an eye on things. Did you feel ‘shadow managed?’

9) There is a lot of complaining in the book about being asked to get ‘involved in this and that’ and the implication was that George felt that certain things weren’t part of the CIA’s mandate. Well, sometimes– like in the private sector — it includes ‘duties as assigned.’ Not taking responsibility and initiative is less of a problem than sitting back and ‘reacting’. You can’t get the ‘bad guys’ by waiting for every order to cme from ‘the hill.’

11) I won’t argue about the naughty, dirty little business that the world of the CIA finds itself, but to complain about not wanting to get into an ‘Iran-Contra Mess’ is the type of inside-the-box thinking that made the Vietnam War and Clinton’s Administration a joke.

12) On Page 318 of your book, you quote a memo that you fired off and now proudly recall as a warning of the consequences of an invasion of Iraq. Hmmmm, first, the results are not as you portray them and the last time I looked at a map, the ‘good guys’ are on four sides of Iran. Enough said.

13) Your priorities seem to mirror your politics. You hardly mention the threat of Iran or ever talk about Cuba, although you seemed preoccupied regarding North Korea as long as it distracted us from discussing the possible invasion of Iraq. You seemed to relish the fact that the new administration under Jimmy Carter dismissed the CIA head George H.W. Bush.

14) Probably one of the biggest failings of George Tenet’s tenure in the CIA was that he never ‘got personal’ with Osama Bin Laden. The fact is that — unless you care to talk about it — I don’t think you ‘got personal’ with anyone.

In summary, I find it discouraging to find a virtually untrained person to head up the CIA for so long. George Tenet is a man without any military or real field experience that sat in a lot of meetings in Washington and allowed his ignorance of the world to leave us all unprepared. I do question why he wrote a book that so clearly displayed his flaws and limitations. I will say that George Tenet seems like a fine man… just not the one for which he was appointed. In the end, he was merely a politician when something more was needed.

Roger Freberg

PS. My critique is not ment as a criticism of the CIA or the men and women who serve there… only a criticism that a politician with limited real world experience was chosen to head such a central position to our nation’s security with predictable results.

“Ilse…. but we’ll aways have Paris and Katie and MSNBC”

And the weeeeener is.......

A funny thing has pulled virtually all Americans together… and that is a ‘distaste’ for Paris Hilton. This overshadows the bovine antics of Katic Couric ( who in an unusually weird ethical twist seemingly won’t cover any ‘news’ about Paris) .  Many Republicans are heaping on the high partisan MSNBC…. which is no surprise to me … I had my own publicized battle with an MSNBC ‘Newsy” and lets just say… I won, he lost and soccer still sucks.

Anyway, if ‘Weenie’ awards (the full one incher) need to be given here’s mine:

  • Paris Hilton for “Baby Needs to be spanked”
  • Katie Couric for ” I need to learn how to bake cookies and care for my family and stop worrying about what my daughter discovers about me on the Internet”
  • And finally the coveted “Dan Rather Award for Objective Journalism” to the supporting cast and clowns of MSNBC News.

Roger Freberg

USC Crushes UCLA with Style!

new Trojan Banner I've seen around a lot lately

Well… in all my memory, I can’t remember a USC-UCLA dual meet that wasn’t fraught with controversy. Last year, it was the ‘lost’ long jump results that would have given USC the win… this year it was the long jump again… but it went USC’s way. Although it was a USC home meet, there was some talk about a former UCLA hurdler turned judge who disqualified the USC athlete who was the big winner… and it goes on and on. Naturally, UCLA had their own take on the subject. I’d have more sympathy for my former team if I hadn’t watched the circus of deliberate distractions happening while my daughter was trying to throw last year for ‘SC… Karen’s tough and she won anyway. We got a big chuckle later watching and listening to the film of folks trying to razz Karen. Champions don’t beat themselves.

In issue 176 of Karen’s Blog… she writes about the USC-UCLA meet… “It doesn’t get better than this!”.

One of the things people ask you about this duel … and I was asked three times at the meet… “How did you do when you competed in it?” In those days, UCLA won so infrequently against ‘SC that they passed out silver track shoes if you scored any points! They stopped this after 1972. As for me, I only lost once against the now former Trojan record holder in the shot… and only lost once to a Trojan as a freshman in the discus. One kindly older gent asked me why I wasn’t on the all-time Trojan list… some nice folks forget. Yep, I threw for the other guys.

It is always a great meet.

Fight On!

Roger Freberg

PS. UCLA needs someone (Nigel, perhaps) to help them design better uniforms… the old ones were much better….. and the sweats were very cool.

Oh yes... the old uniforms were much better