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In today's pages: Eric Holder, pirates, Fannie Mae and World Toilet Day

November 19, 2008 |  6:27 am

Barack Obama, Eric Holder, Alberto Gonzales, Attorney General, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, bailout, Somalia, pirates, Gulf War syndrome, World Toilet Day The Times' editorial board gets right to it, blasting President-elect Barack Obama's first choice for his cabinet. According to the board, Eric H. Holder Jr. has the resume to be Attorney General, but not the perceived independence:

[I]n the aftermath of the reckless politicization of the Justice Department under George W. Bush, the wisest course for Barack Obama would be to choose an eminent lawyer who shares the administration's legal philosophy but can't be caricatured as a presidential insider.

For all of his impressive qualities, former Deputy Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. doesn't fit that description.

Wow, a two-fer -- going after Obama and Bush in the same piece! Now that's editorial gold. Elsewhere in the stack, the board urges Congress and the incoming administration to start thinking now about how to eliminate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are due to emerge from federal conservatorship in a little more than a year. And with Somali pirates now attacking oil tankers, the board says it's time for the rest of the world to tackle the problems in the buccaneers' home country.

Over on the op-ed page, columnist Tim Rutten writes about a new federal report that confirmed the existence of a chillingly widespread ailment long denied by Republican and Democratic administrations: Gulf War syndrome. Science writer Margaret Wertheim observes World Toilet Day -- oddly enough, it doesn't coincide with World Newspaper Day -- by noting some the benefits that flushable chamber pots have produced for society (while also lamenting that many communities have yet to obtain them). And author Dave Zinn writes about the increasing politicization of U.S. athletes brought about by Obama's campaign against John McCain:

Howard Cosell called it "rule No. 1 of the Jockocracy": the idea that sports and politics must never mix. This last election season though, that iron wall separating the two worlds wasn't merely breached, it was flattened.

2001 file photo of Eric Holder is by Mark Wilson/Newsmakers.


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Comments
1.

Talk about nit picking! The man's record is outstanding, there is no other way to describe it! His decision to go along with the White House on this Rich Pardon is the only thing that is remotely negative about his career. If this is the standard the Times will use in the future to determine worthiness one can only ask where was this steadfastness in the past, and who does the Times think will qualify in the future?

2.

I will forgive Eric Holder for pardoning Marc Rich if he will redeem himself and prosecute George W Bush and Richard Cheney for war crimes. Thousands of American soldiers and millions of Iraqi civilians have died as a result of Bush/Cheney using lies and deceit to mislead the American people and invade a sovereign foreign country. They have admitted to torturing prisoners. They have squandered a staggering amount of money through mismanagement and incompetence. Their associates and business partners have gotten fat on contracts awarded outside of normal channels.
It's tempting to say, oh not now - let's put all this behind us. But If the lives of American soldiers are worth anything - then they are worth prosecuting the people who unjustly caused their deaths.



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