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CNN:

More than half of Yellowstone National Park's bison herd has died since last fall, forcing the government to suspend its annual slaughter program.

Bison's natural habitat is at high elevations, but they move lower when grass for grazing becomes scarce.

More than 700 of the iconic animals starved or otherwise died on the mountainsides during an unusually harsh winter, and more than 1,600 were shot by hunters or sent to slaughterhouses in a disease-control effort, according to National Park Service figures.

As a result, the park estimates its bison herd has dropped from 4,700 in November to about 2,300 today, prompting the government to halt the culling program early.

"There has never been a slaughter like this of the bison since the 1800s in this country, and it's disgusting," said Mike Mease of the Buffalo Field Campaign, a group seeking to stop the slaughter program for good.

Government officials say the slaughter prevents the spread of the disease brucellosis from the Yellowstone bison to cattle on land near the park. Brucellosis can cause miscarriages, infertility and reduced milk production in domestic cattle. [..]

The USDA acknowledges that bison-to-cattle transmission is difficult to document, but it says investigations indicate that bison were the likely source of infections in cattle herds in Wyoming and North Dakota.

But critics call the culling an overreaction. There is no documented case of the disease passing from bison to cattle, they said.

Let's call this another front on the War On The Environment, shall we? Since their concerted effort to gut the Endangered Species Act last year, which included de-listing the gray wolf in February, resulting in 10 wolves being killed in Wyoming alone this month, the Bush administration has been responsible for causing at least two species (the Lake Sammamish kokanee and the Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit) to become extinct. And even more are threatened as they ignore environmentalists. Further, experts are saying the construction of the ridiculous border fence is threatening to make species like jaguars, ocelots, and the Sonoran pronghorn extinct in the United States. Heckuva job, Bushie.



Countdown: GOP's Problems With Huckabee

David Sirota has catalogued just how petrified the GOP punditocracy is of Republican presidential contender Mike Huckabee's populist rhetoric, especially now that it appears to have *gasp* appeal to Republican voters. And he was right, because they're now on the attack:

icon Download | play icon Download | play (h/t Heather)

On Friday's Countdown, Keith spoke to WaPo's EJ Dionne about the rising rhetoric to get Huckabee to toe the party line of indifference to the poor and tax cuts for the very, very wealthy. The press focuses on his appeal to the evangelical voters, ignoring that Huckabee is also saying the things that matter to the average Republican.

What irony. The GOP has spent the last sixty years trying to disenfranchise the common man from feeling like they have any importance on a national platform and reinforcing that corporations supercede the individual citizens, culminating in their perfect Manchurian president GWB and this is the thanks they get? A populist Republican???

Don't look now, but Mike Huckabee looks in line to get a few more delegates today when Wyoming Republicans hold their non-RNC-sanctioned primary.



Open Thread

You too can be Wyoming's new Senator!

The Wyoming GOP has posted an application for consideration for the US Senate (.pdf) on its site. It looks a little light on qualifications, other than being a Republican.

So that's why Lynne Cheney's name keeps getting tossed in there.



Senator Cheney?

lynnecheney.jpg  With Sen. Craig Thomas (R-Wyoming) having passed away, Wyoming election law directs the state Republican Party to put together a list of three possible replacements, from which Gov. David Freudenthal (D) will chose Thomas’ successor.

Last week, without any real detail, MSNBC reported that Lynne Cheney, the VP’s wife, might be considered for the post. Today, ThinkProgress notes that the Casper Star Tribune reported that Cheney isn’t exactly going out of her way to deny the rumors.

A lot of Republicans — maybe 20, maybe more — want to replace the late Craig Thomas in the U.S. Senate, State GOP Chairman Fred Parady said Monday.

Applicants already include recently resigned Wyoming U.S. Attorney Matt Mead, state Rep. Colin Simpson of Cody, state Sen. John Barrasso of Casper, and former state GOP Chairman Tom Sansonetti of Cheyenne. […]

A spokesperson for Lynne Cheney, wife of the vice president, would not deny that she, too, was a candidate for the U.S. Senate seat, according to The Associated Press.

I can only hope that if Cheney is added to the list for Freudenthal, it’s done to make the other two candidates look reasonable.



Mike's Blog Roundup

The Gavel:  The Bush administration is drastically cutting back on satellite monitoring of global warming

The Spy Who Billed Me: The office of the nation's top spy inadvertantly revealed the keys to classified national intelligence budget.  Here's an update

My Two Sense: Civic discourse? If it's not Al Gore's clothes, it's John Kerry's wife, or John Edwards' hair. Now it's Dennis Kucinich's size...and his wife

The Brad Blog: What member of congress would vote against the banning of illegal, invisible, unverified, electronic ballots?

The Democratic Daily: 'Fleeting expletives' catch up with Bush & friends

The Rude Pundit: When Dick Cheney visted the boys at the Wyoming Boys State conference



WY Senator Craig Thomas Passes Away

Thomas-Hospital AP Via Huffpo:

Wyoming Sen. Craig Thomas, a three-term conservative Republican who stayed clear of the Washington limelight and political catfights, died Monday. He was 74.

The senator's family issued a statement saying he died Monday evening at National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md. He had been receiving chemotherapy for acute myeloid leukemia.
Gov. Dave Freudenthal, a Democrat, will appoint a successor from one of three finalists chosen by the state Republican party. Read more...

Our heartfelt condolences go out to Senator Thomas' family and friends.



Resignations at FEC Cause of Concern

Truthout:

The announcement yesterday that the top two lawyers for the Federal Election Commission had resigned helped spread an undercurrent of concern about the diminishing role of a once-prominent public voice on the intersection of money and politics.

The stated reason for the departures of FEC General Counsel Lawrence H. Norton and Deputy General Counsel James A. Kahl was that the two men had landed private-sector jobs at a large firm with offices in six states. Norton and Kahl, reached yesterday, said their resignations were not intended to send any broader message.

But those who monitor campaign finance law with some dedication said the departures coincided with a perceived shift in the way the commissioners have worked with the general counsel.

Paul S. Ryan, a lawyer who monitors the FEC for the Campaign Legal Center, said the general counsel was once free to opine publicly about pressing policy matters but that has not been the preference of the commissioners as of late.

"The influence of the general counsel has clearly been diminishing," Ryan said. The commissioners "no longer seek the general counsel's opinion publicly with respect to answering difficult questions of law."

Meanwhile, Michael Collins of Scoop Independent News gives us some good news on the election front: Three Wyoming Democrats Take a Stand for Democracy; They Ask for and Get a Recount in a Very Tight House Race. Now if we could get the same kind of concern for the democratic process in Florida.



Video Clip of the Day

Video Clip of the Day

Former Republican Senator Alan Simpson goes Zell Miller on Bill Maher!

Video

Mr Simpson from Wyoming gets a little hot under the collar while being interviewed by Bill Maher.

I think part of his meltdown was that he misunderstood what was going on in the studio.



Kurtz joins in the Falafel Wars


Keith Olbermann continued his coverage of the O'Reilly petition campaign which included a new applicant, Howard Kurtz.

icon Download | play -WMP icon Download | play -QT (hat tip Shea)

Transcript:

Olbermann: But perhaps the oddest development comes not from Fox nor MSNBC, but from CNN. Howard Kurtz‘ media program, "Reliable Sources." He spent part of a segment called the media minute covering this, that‘s right, CNN's coverage of Fox's attack on MSNBC.

Well, great. Now I've sung on all news TV networks. We also have news of a small cottage industry creating petitions. Here‘s the original one on O'Reilly‘s Web site. You could read the names of who had signed it, until they took that page down because some of the names seemed to be fictitious. Mr. Keith is Great from Faloofah, Montana, for instance, Look at My from Ratings Drop, North Carolina, someone identified simply as Falafel N from The Shower, Wyoming and Andrea Mackris from How‘s Your Cash, PW. Why did they take those down?



Conservative Truths

Conservatives Are Less Educated Than Liberals

Conservative Truths

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2003 the average percentage of people with a Bachelor’s degree or more across the United States was 26.7%. 25 out of 31 Conservative States had a lower than average percent of their population with a Bachelor’s degree or more (81% of Conservative States) versus 4 out of 20 Liberal States that had a lower than average percent of their population with a Bachelor’s degree or more (20% of Liberal States). The lowest percentage of a state’s population with a Bachelor’s degree or more in the country is found in West Virginia with 15.9%. The highest percentage of a state’s population with a Bachelor’s degree or more in the country is found in the District of Columbia with 44.4%.

Conservative:
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
Florida
Georgia
Idaho
Indiana
Iowa
Kentucky
Louisiana
Mississippi
Montana
Nevada
New Mexico
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
West Virginia
Wyoming

Liberal:
Maine
Michigan
Pennsylvania
Wisconsin

Source: 4-educ.pdf No. 231

 

  

 

 

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2003 the average percentage of people with a Bachelor’s degree or more across the United States was 26.7%. 25 out of 31 Conservative States had a lower than average percent of their population with a Bachelor’s degree or more (81% of Conservative States) versus 4 out of 20 Liberal States that had a lower than average percent of their population with a Bachelor’s degree or more (20% of Liberal States). The lowest percentage of a state’s population with a Bachelor’s degree or more in the country is found in West Virginia with 15.9%. The highest percentage of a state’s population with a Bachelor’s degree or more in the country is found in the District of Columbia with 44.4%.

Conservative:
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
Florida
Georgia
Idaho
Indiana
Iowa
Kentucky
Louisiana
Mississippi
Montana
Nevada
New Mexico
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
West Virginia
Wyoming

Liberal:
Maine
Michigan
Pennsylvania
Wisconsin

Source: 4-educ.pdf No. 231