So Dick Cheney went to remember the Holocaust yesterday. Why didn't Bush go? I guess he was busy. Why did Cheney wear a green parka, brown boots, and a ski cap with decorations when the other guests were dressed in all black as a symbol of mourning? That I don't know.

Cheney stood out in a sea of black-coated world leaders because he was wearing an olive drab parka with a fur-trimmed hood. It is embroidered with his name. It reminded one of the way in which children's clothes are inscribed with their names before they are sent away to camp. And indeed, the vice president looked like an awkward boy amid the well-dressed adults.

Like other attendees, the vice president was wearing a hat. But it was not a fedora or a Stetson or a fur hat or any kind of hat that one might wear to a memorial service as the representative of one's country. Instead, it was a knit ski cap, embroidered with the words "Staff 2001." It was the kind of hat a conventioneer might find in a goodie bag.

It is also worth mentioning that Cheney was wearing hiking boots -- thick, brown, lace-up ones. Did he think he was going to have to hike the 44 miles from Krakow -- where he had made remarks earlier in the day -- to Auschwitz?
As Lizz Winstead noted on Unfiltered this morning, wearing a cap that says "STAFF" to a concerntration camp has got to be one of the dumbest accessory choices ever. Does one really want to be associated with the staff of human incineration factories?

On a related note, here's another clipping from the Washington Post:
More than two dozen presidents, prime ministers, members of royalty and other leaders sat in the bitterly cold open air into the night to remember the 6 million victims of the Holocaust, most of them Jews.

ELEVEN MILLION. BIG DIFFERENCE. Over 6 million Jews were killed, but over 5 million black people, Gypsies, homosexuals, handicapped, and other non-aryan human varieties were also exterminated by the Nazi machine. How does a major international newspaper get such an important detail so very wrong?

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