August 5, 2007 (LPAC)--A Sunday Washington Post headline screams that impeachment is "The Dumbest Thing the Democrats Could Do." Timed with the moment Congress returns home to face overgrown public fury at the Administration, lengthy arguments are presented to back up the concluding statement, "...impeachment is exactly the wrong step to take at exactly the wrong historical moment." It would fail, divide Democrats, rally Republicans, alienate "non-ideologicals," create a martyr president, lose the 2008 elections, on and on. Conspicuously, there are no citations of the leading fronts of the Impeach Cheney leadership, namely Lyndon LaRouche, or Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), and his H.Res. 333 for impeachment proceedings, nor any other specifics of the many state and local resolutions, petitions, etc.
This is consistent with the pedigree of the author of the article, and the years-long black operations of this media nexus. The writer is Michael Tomasky, American Prospect executive editor, who on May 7, 2007, was appointed to be editor of the London Guardian's newly created United States-based website, opening next month. The Guardian reported that Tomasky is the "Guardian America editor ... responsible for developing the Guardian's online presence in America."
The Guardian was the first British paper to print the Jeremiah Duggan slanders against Lyndon LaRouche. The Guardian's chairman, financier Paul Myners, is a Bank of England director, close ally of Prime Minister Gordon Brown, and the British government's leading spokesman for the looting of pension funds by hedge funds and budget cutters.
Michael Tomasky is highly qualified for the Guardian assignment, and for doing the Washington Post's dirty work. Among his deployments against Lyndon LaRouche, is an slander article he wrote for New York magazine, Feb. 14, 2000, that Roy Innis had "testified in a federal court that he'd seen no evidence of anti-Semitism in the Lyndon LaRouche organization, well after LaRouche's Holocaust denial [!] was a matter of public record."