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Month: March 2006

Outlaw Party

by digby

It has been a while since I have weighed in on the particulars of the illegal NSA spying scandal, mostly because Glenn Greenwald has this story covered so thoroughly and so well (and I’m sure you are all reading him every day.) But today we are reminded just how pernicious this scandal is: the Bush Justice department has asserted their right to ignore any law that congress makes, and which a former president signed, under a theory of executive power so sweeping that it essentially declares that this nation is a constitutional, elected monarchy (the elected part being debatable since the president could theoretically assert his unfettered powers to cancel elections.)

Glenn writes:

There are numerous noteworthy items, but the most significant, by far, is that the DoJ made clear to Congress that even if Congress passes some sort of newly amended FISA of the type which Sen. DeWine introduced, and even if the President “agrees” to it and signs it into law, the President still has the power to violate that law if he wants to. Put another way, the Administration is telling the Congress — again — that they can go and pass all the laws they want which purport to liberalize or restrict the President’s powers, and it does not matter, because the President has and intends to preserve the power to do whatever he wants regardless of what those laws provide.

I was digging around in my archives the other day and came across this post from three years ago as the Iraq war began:

Julia points out this article in the Washington Post that clearly reveals the Bush administration’s only governing principles are loyalty to the President and strong arm tactics. Period.

As the United States wages war this week following a pair of ultimatums to the United Nations and Iraq, the airwaves and editorial pages of the world have been full of accusations that President Bush and his administration are guilty of coercive and harrying behavior. Even in typically friendly countries, Bush and the United States have been given such labels this week as “arrogant bully” (Britain), “bully boys” (Australia), “big bully” (Russia), “bully Bush” (Kenya), “arrogant” (Turkey) and “capricious” (Canada). Diplomats have accused the administration of “hardball” tactics, “jungle justice” and acting “like thugs.”

At home, where support for the war on Iraq is strong and growing, such complaints of strong-arm tactics by the Bush administration nonetheless have a certain resonance — even among Bush supporters. Though the issues are vastly different, Republican lawmakers and conservative interest groups report similar pressure on allies at home to conform to Bush’s policy wishes.

Although all administrations use political muscle on the opposition, GOP lawmakers and lobbyists say the tactics the Bush administration uses on friends and allies have been uniquely fierce and vindictive. Just as the administration used unbending tactics before the U.N. Security Council with normally allied countries such as Mexico, Germany and France, the Bush White House has calculated that it can overcome domestic adversaries if it tolerates no dissent from its friends.

In recent weeks, the White House has been pushing GOP governors to oust the leadership of the National Governors Association to make the bipartisan group endorse Bush’s views. Interest groups report pressure from the administration — sometimes on groups’ donors — to conform to Bush’s policy views and even to fire dissenters.

Often, companies and their K Street lobbyists endorse ideas they privately oppose or question, according to several longtime Republican lobbyists. The fear is that Bush will either freeze them out of key meetings or hold a grudge that might deprive them of help in other areas, the lobbyists said. When the Electronic Industries Alliance declined to back Bush’s dividend tax cut, the group was frozen out when the White House called its “friends” in the industry to discuss the tax cut, according to White House and business sources.

[…]

Conservative interest groups get similar pressure. When the free-market Club for Growth sent a public letter to the White House to protest White House intervention in GOP primaries for “liberal-leaning Republicans,” the group’s president, Stephen Moore, picked up the phone at a friend’s one evening to receive a screaming tirade from Rove, who had tracked him down. On another occasion when Moore objected to a Bush policy, Rove called Richard Gilder, the Club for Growth’s chairman and a major contributor, to protest.

“I think this monomaniacal call for loyalty is unhealthy,” Moore said. “It’s dangerous to declare anybody who crosses you an enemy for life. It’s shortsighted.” Leaders of three other conservative groups report that their objections to Bush policies have been followed by snubs and, in at least one case, phone calls suggesting the replacement of a critical scholar. “They want sycophants rather than allies,” said the head of one think tank.

Corporations are coming under increasing pressure not just to back Bush, but to hire his allies to represent them in meetings with Republicans. As part of the “K Street Project,” top GOP officials, lawmakers and lobbyists track the political affiliation and contributions of people seeking lobbying jobs.

In a private meeting last week, chief executives from several leading technology firms told Rep. Calvin M. Dooley (Calif.) and other moderate Democrats that they were under heavy pressure to back the Bush tax plan, even though many of them had reservations about it. “There is a perception among some business interests there could be retribution if you don’t play ball on almost every issue that comes up,” Dooley said.

Read the whole thing. (And the editor’s note at the beginning.) It is now out in the open. No excuses. Any real libertarian or conservative who continues to back these Mafiosi is complicit. These people are undemocratic and intolerant of dissent. They openly use threats to intimidate their allies and strike fear into their enemies. This is not business as usual. We are seeing more elements every day of a new and unique American form of totalitarianism.

There have been signs of this coming for the last 10 years. The propaganda machine, the intense partisanship, the trumped up impeachment … an unelected court deciding a presidential election and now an illegitimate and illegal war being pursued under a doctrine of preventive war in pursuit of American hegemony. And, we are operating under de facto one-party rule within which no dissent is tolerated.

That is the administration that created this illegal spying program — an administration that had no compunction about strong-arming its own allies, issuing threats and insisting on blind fealty to the white house. It is mind-boggling that anyone would believe that an administration that behaves this way should be trusted to spy on Americans without a warrant. The fourth amendment was written with a future Karl Rove explicitly in mind.

Glenn quotes Madison in Federalist #47 in his post on this this morning. I’ll turn to #51:

… the great security against a gradual concentration of the several powers in the same department, consists in giving to those who administer each department the necessary constitutional means and personal motives to resist encroachments of the others. The provision for defense must in this, as in all other cases, be made commensurate to the danger of attack. Ambition must be made to counteract ambition. The interest of the man must be connected with the constitutional rights of the place. It may be a reflection on human nature, that such devices should be necessary to control the abuses of government. But what is government itself, but the greatest of all reflections on human nature? If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.

The assumption here is that each branch of government would jealously guard its perogatives. In a one party government that answers to Karl Rove, that is not likely to happen. The discipline is finally breaking down, as the president becomes dramatically unpopular, the war drags on and 2008 ambitions assert themselves. But if we are to redeem our system, the Democrats must take power and they must hold Republicans accountable for what they’ve done. It cannot be otherwise, or the entire system is in jeopardy:

Asked if spying on the American people was as impeachable an offense as lying and having sex with an intern, Fein replied:

“I think the answer requires at least in part considering what the occupant of the presidency says in the aftermath of wrongdoing or rectification. On its face, if President Bush is totally unapologetic and says I continue to maintain that as a wartime President I can do anything I want – I don’t need to consult any other branches – that is an impeachable offense. It’s more dangerous that Clinton’s lying under oath because it jeopardizes our democratic dispensation and civil liberties for the ages. It would set a precedent that – would lie around like a loaded gun, able to be used indefinitely for any future occupant.” — Bruce Fein, Constitutional Scholar and former Deputy Attorney General in the Reagan Administration (Diane Rehm Show, 12/19/05)

The president continues to say that as a wartime president he can do anything he wants, openly and without any sense of shame. He has loaded that precedent and unless somebody puts a stop to it, it will lie there waiting for the next time a despotic president and his party want to use it.

The congress explicitly dealt with warrantless spying on Americans when it wrote the FISA law. It did this in response to abuses that were exposed in the aftermath of Watergate. But many of the people who were in the Nixon administration never accepted these limitations on executive power and simply waited until they took power again to reinstitute the practices. (Then, they needed to usurp the constitution because of the communist threat. Now it is terrorism. It’s always something.)

Peter Beinert, in an otherwise uncharacteristically politically savvy essay in last week’s TNR (on which I’ll comment later) wrote:

Was Bush’s surveillance program illegal? Absolutely. (As George Washington University’s Jonathan Turley notes, “It’s not a close question. Federal law is clear.”) Did Bush lie about it? You betcha. (“When we’re talking about chasing down terrorists, we’re talking about getting a court order before we do so,” Bush declared on April 20, 2004, while doing exactly the opposite.) But other presidents have lied, broken the law, and trampled civil liberties, too, especially during wartime. That doesn’t mean Congress shouldn’t investigate Bush’s surveillance program. It should probe mercilessly. But censuring Bush–right after the Republican Congress tried to impeach Bill Clinton–could make such efforts a normal part of partisan conflict, which they have not been throughout U.S. history. That’s a depressing prospect, no matter what your politics.

On the other hand, there is something highly unsatisfying about saying that, because the Republican Congress tried to impeach Bill Clinton for lying in a civil suit about sex, Democrats can’t censure George W. Bush for lying–and breaking the law–on an issue of national security. It’s a little like telling someone who has just been punched in the face that he can’t hit back because that would perpetuate the cycle of violence. Or, put another way, if Republicans really still think they were right to impeach Clinton–if they’d do it again–then there’s no reason for Democrats to abandon censure in the name of civility. After all, if you don’t punch back, and the other side keeps hitting you, your efforts to stop the cycle of violence have failed.

So Democrats should only eschew censure if, by so doing, they can make censure and impeachment what they historically have been: constitutional weapons wielded in only the rarest, gravest of circumstances. And that depends on the GOP. Prominent Republicans don’t talk much about Clinton’s impeachment today; it doesn’t quite square with their more-in-sorrow-than-in-anger fretting about Bush hatred. But I don’t know of a single major Republican politician or conservative pundit who has admitted the obvious: that impeaching Clinton was a farce and a disgrace, the likes of which we should pray never to see again.

They will never admit that. And these are the gravest of circumstances. There is nothing to be gained by Democrats abandoning anything in the name of civility Republicans will simply impeach the next Democratic president for double parking without so much as a second thought if they have the chance. They play the hardest of hardball and they do not see such minor setbacks as losing a few seats as any kind of repudiation. In fact, they see nothing as repudiation, not even Nixon’s disgrace. They waited patiently for 30 years for the opportunity to reinstitute the imperial presidency and were operating under it even before 9/11. (See: energy task force.)

The only thing that might make them repudiate Bill Clinton’s impeachment would be George W. Bush’s impeachment and I doubt that we will see either. But what we should see, and I dearly hope we will see, is a Democratic congress that puts the bright light of investigations on what this administration and its GOP allies have done — and if we should get a Democratic president in 2008, a justice department that seeks out and punishes those who broke these laws. I don’t think we should shut up for one minute about demanding accountability for what these people have done.

Back in 1974, I was in favor of pardoning Richard Nixon. I thought that it was wise to “bind up the country’s wounds.” I was wrong. The Republicans barely missed a beat and just went right on with the program. Whether George W. Bush can be charged with a crime, I don’t know. But I have no doubt that it would be good for the country, not bad, if the Republicans were held to account for their undemocratic actions once and for all. They’re impeaching, stealing eleactions and starting unnecessary wars now. What is it going to take before people realize that we are dealing with an outlaw political party?

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Big Issues

by digby

Wow.

Joining what some are calling the nation’s largest mobilization of immigrants ever, hundreds of thousands of people boisterously marched in downtown Los Angeles Saturday to protest federal legislation that would crack down on undocumented immigrants, penalize those who help them and build a security wall on the U.S. southern border. Spirited crowds representing labor, religious groups, civil-rights advocates and ordinary immigrants stretched over 26 blocks of downtown Los Angeles from Adams Blvd. along Spring Street and Broadway to City Hall, tooting kazoos, waving American flags and chanting “Si se puede!” (Yes we can!). The crowd, estimated by police at more than 500.000, represented one of the largest protest marches in Los Angeles history, surpassing Vietnam War demonstrations and the 70,000 who rallied downtown against Proposition 187, a 1994 state initiative that denied public benefits to undocumented migrants.

[…]

n recent weeks, hundreds of thousands of people have staged demonstrations in more than a dozen cities. The Roman Catholic Church and other religious communities have launched immigrant rights campaigns, with Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony taking a leading role in speaking out against the House bill and calling on his priests to defy its provisions that would make felons of anyone who aided undocumented immigrants. In addition, several cities, including Los Angeles, have passed resolutions against the House legislation and some, such as Maywood, have declared itself a “sanctuary” for undocumented immigrants.

This issue is huge. It’s splitting the GOP right up the middle. So what are Democrats going to do about it?

Here’s one idea.

These huge protests all over the country show that Tom Tancredo and the Minutemen are not going to be the only game in town. Politicians had better start thinking about how they are going to deal with this.

The first thing on the agenda might be to give Pete Wilson a call. And then take a look at demographic trends.

From Ruy Texeira:

As two recent reports document, the Hispanic population of the United States continues to increase rapidly, especially in areas that we now think of as “solid red.” The Pew Hispanic Center report describes and analyzes the extraordinary growth of the Hispanic population in six southern states, Arkansas, Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee, down to the county level. The Census report shows that Texas has now become a majority-minority state (joining New Mexico, California and Hawaii), primarily due to its burgeoning Hispanic population.

The political impact of this demographic trend should generally favor the Democrats. But the extent to which this is true will be limited if Democratic margins among Hispanics continue to be shaved, as they were in the 2004 election.

However, according to a useful new report by the indefatigable folks at Democracy Corps, the Democratic margin among Hispanics seems likely to expand in the future, not contract. If so, the pro-Democratic impact of Hispanic population growth should be very substantial.

The Democracy Corps report is based on a June survey of Hispanic voters, whose basic results I previously summarized. There is much rich detail in this report, but here are some of the most important observations:

Democrats witnessed the loss of a small though significant portion of their Hispanic support to George Bush in 2000 and 2004, but by no means were these dislodged voters an advance party for a greater flight of Hispanics from the Democratic Party. Hispanic voters remain instinctively very Democratic, but more important than that, they hold values, views of society, the economy and the role of government, as well as issue priorities and hopes for America, that put them deep inside the Democratic world. The Democrats will stem the erosion of the Hispanic vote, not by chasing the defectors or waving the partisan banner, but by rediscovering their own values and beliefs. The route to a national Democratic majority goes right through the Hispanic community, where Democrats will find the themes that best define the modern Democratic Party. . . .

[Hispanic] voters were disappointed and dislodged; they did not defect. In this survey just completed, Hispanics had swung back to the Democrats with a vengeance, giving them a 32-point margin in a generic race for Congress (61 to 29 percent). The Republican vote today is 10 points below what Bush achieved just six months earlier. These voters are deeply dissatisfied with the Bush economy and Iraq war; they are socially tolerant and internationalist; they align with a Democratic Party that respects Hispanics and diversity, that uses government to help families, reduce poverty and create opportunity, and that will bring major change in education and health care. This is even truer for the growing younger population under 30, including Gen Y voters, who support the Democrats by a remarkable 46 points (70 to 24 percent). All together, this paints a portrait of a group that respects Bill Clinton, indeed giving him higher marks than the Catholic Church, and that embraces his vision of the Democratic Party. . . .

[…]

That values issues were part of the erosion in 2004 and 2000 is not the same as saying that addressing those issues directly is the best way to rebuild the Democrats’ majority. Majorities of Hispanics believe we should be tolerant of homosexuality, would keep abortion legal, and support stem cell research, even with church opposition. This is especially true among the large younger and more middle-class segments of the community. . . .

[Hispanics’] views on values, family, the economy, the poor, working people and the middle class, community and government, and how best to expand opportunity and realize the American dream put these voters in the center of a Democratic world-if the Democrats would remember what it means to be a Democrat in these times. (emphases added)

Do I detect a theme here? Just as Democrats-see the post below-will do best among difficult, contestable voter groups by making clear what they stand for, they will maximize their potential gains among Democratic-leaning Hispanics by doing the very same thing. Sounds like a winner to me.

Me too.

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The Voice Of Truth

by digby

In case anybody’s wondering which left wing bloggers accused Lil’ Benji of incest with his mother, be advised that it was none other than our Supreme Leader, heterosexual Republican and all around man’s man, General J.C Christian, Patriot. Let there be no doubt that like our Dear President, when the General speaks, he means it.

Once again: they can’t help it.

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Weekend Voting

Koufax Awards finals are closing this Sunday — last chance to vote for all your favorite bloggers. Do it. It’s fun.

If the servers are slow, you can also vote via email at wampum @ nic-naa.net. (subject: Koufax)

Here’s a list of categories (and links to list of nominees for each category) to cut and paste into your e-mail:

Best Blog (non-pro):
Best Blog Community:
Best Blog (pro/sponsor):
Best Group Blog:
Best Post:
Best Series:
Best Writing:
Best Expert Blog:
Best Single Issue:
Most Humorous Blog:
Most Humorous Post:
Best state and local Blog:
More Deserving of Wider Recognition:
Best New Blog:
Best Commenter:

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Smothering The Baby

by digby

Responding to Adam B’s post on Kos about how the Domenech affair impacts bloggers, Garance Franke Ruta says that blogs shouldn’t be afraid of regulation:

Adam B and Atrios are right in noting that nothing about the need for members of the press to make distinctions between online personalities who are also journalists and those who also work in politics implies anything about the F.E.C. But after a week in which liberal blogs and organizations, such as Media Matters for American, repeatedly called on the Post to make such distinctions, it’s a little peculiar to turn around now and say such lines are impossible to draw.

Nor ought concern for regulation to be considered “an elitish fetish.” Regulation has been at the heart of progressivism since early in the last century, and the regulatory state is something Democrats have been desperately trying to preserve over the past five years in the face of a Republican onslaught, because it is what has given America back its rivers and lakes, its national bird, and the ability to breathe clean air — among many, many, many other things.

This is true. But I think this blogging regulation proposal may be the first time anybody’s tried to regulate a problem before it even exists. I don’t get it. It’s theoretically possible that something nefarious could happen with blogs and money and politics, but so far it’s been nothing but citizens donating small amounts to politicians and causes at the behest of other citizens — which seems to me to be the essence of democracy.

Nobody was saying that Ben Domenech should not be writing for the Washington Post because bloggers should not be considered press. It’s because the Washington Post should not be hiring political activists to balance non-partisan journalists. Surely everyone understood that. If the Post had been smart enough to hire a “Blue State” blogger from among the ranks of activist blogs along with Domenech, I would imagine this would have taken much longer to unfold. (He would have been found out eventually.)

Let’s not lose sight of the fact that this issue is fundamentally about money in politics not whether certain uncredentailed people are qualified to call themselves “journalists.” And the problem with money in politics isn’t the money itself. It’s the concentration of big money and special interests buying off politicians that McCain-Feingold was designed to mitigate. There is simply no mechanism currently by which this is likely to happen on blogs. And might I make the bold suggestion that we wait until there is evidence that it has before writing legislation to stop it?

Why the big hurry on this? They haven’t even gone after internet commerce yet even though states have been lobbying for years that they are losing tax revenue. The reasoning has always been that nobody knows yet where the internet is going and nobody wants to smother the baby before it even opens its eyes. The same is true here. There will be plenty of time to assess the impact of online activism and partisan speech on elections. Leave it alone. All will reveal itself eventually.

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Tribal Ethics

by digby

Lil’ Benji strikes back and unwittingly reveals the working ethos of the modern Republican party:

Asked about the voluminous amount of documentation cited by left-wing bloggers and some conservatives’ decision to believe it, Domenech said: “In a lot of this stuff, it’s based on who you believe. And if you believe the lefties are right or if you believe someone who you know and who you’ve worked with is right, I guess the thing I would point out is that I’ve done my best to never do anything to raise any kind of question about this sort of thing. And if you look at the overwhelming bulk of everything I’ve written, you’ll find there is no question about it. The questions are about small things, a lot of them easily explainable, especially the things that come after college.”

Domenech believes in epistemic relativism (as well as moral relativism.) He thinks that truth is contingent upon who is delivering it. And he’s right as far as the right is concerned. They have proved that they will believe anything if it emanates from the tribe.

President Bush believes this. For instance, inspectors and Iraq. You can choose to believe him or you can choose to believe what you saw and heard and remember in acute detail, which was that inspectors were in Iraq before the invasion and found nothing at which point Bush pulled them out and invaded — an act he now says was precipitated by Saddam’s refusal to accept inspections. Anyone who sees this differently is a partisan leftist. As Rob Corddry sagely observed, “the facts are biased.”

Iraq is full of good news! The economy is great! George W. Bush is a brilliant leader on the scale of Winston Churchill and Alexander the Great! Who’re you gonna believe, the Republicans or your lyin’ eyes?

Lil’ Benji never studied much it appears. He was engaged in GOP partisan politics from about the age of 15. Apparently, he didn’t even have time to see the movies and listen to the CD’s he was assigned to review. All he knows is modern Republican ethics:

“While I appreciated the opportunity to go and join the Washington Post,” Domenech said, “if they didn’t expect the leftists were going to come after me with their sharpened knives, then they were fools.”

That’s true enough. They were fools for not expecting the left blogosphere to find out that Domenech was a phony and a plagiarist. And they were fools for assuming that the blogger from the racist RedState blog, the editor for the sleazy Regnery publishing, and the speechwriter for the unprincipled John Cornyn was anything but an unethical GOP operative. When will they ever learn?

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Good News

by digby

Memo to the news media:

The mere fact that reporters must risk their lives every time they attempt to report the “good news” means that the news, by definition, cannot be all that good. It means that all those new schools and soccer games and litters of adorable puppies exist in the shadow of horrible violence.

Don’t be fooled. The fact that life goes on in Iraq, even during a violent occupation, doesn’t mitigate the death and destruction that makes Iraq a daily story of unimaginable terror. Bush and his minions would like to make Americans believe it does, but it isn’t true. All we have to do is imagine if we would agree that a new school being opened in St Louis was newsworthy on a day when 30 people were killed while shopping at the Safeway down the street and four Catholic churches around the country were blown up.

It’s the violence, stupid. Until that stops, there is no good news.

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Terminal Dork

by digby

Oh hell. Lil’ Benji resigned. And just when it was starting to get fun.

I did want to make one last point before the Post hires a disgraced South Korean scientist to clone David Brooks and the kid fades into obscurity. This sad homeschooled little fellow, who failed to learn how the world works the way the rest of us do — in high school — was evidently considered quite the arbiter of popular culture in his crowd. His “Red Dawn” obsession gave us all quite a few laughs over the past few days. But it is no surprise that he plagiarized huge numbers of film and album reviews and stole outright a humorous essay from PJ O’Rourke (the only funny conservative on the planet) on how to party. These are things a true wingnut cannot understand.

The vast majority of right wingers are simply incapable of cool, even the frat rats like Junior, although the bonafide dorks always believe they are. (Karl Rove, mesmerized by the 23 year old Junior’s insouciant chewing and bubble blowing, says his first impression was “He was …. cool.”) They can’t help it. I don’t know why. Look what’s happened to Dennis Miller.

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The Moral Relativism Of The Right

by tristero

Like gambling and cheating on your wife, plagiarism’s a moral disgrace, except when rightwing conservatives do it:

And now those opposed to Ben have googled prior writings that on the surface appear suspicious, but only because permissions obtained and judgments made offline were not reflected online by an out dated and out of business** campus newspaper. But that’s all the opponents want – just enough to sabotage a career, though in the process they will sabotage themselves. Facts have no meaning. Only impressions have any bearing on this. The charges of plagarism [sic] are false, meant to bring down a good and honest man. The presented facts to prove plagarism are specious — products of shoddy work.

Don’t you love the Austin Powers “This is not my Swedish Penis Enlarger” defense? Because the paper is out of business and nobody can produce any possible agreements, therefore the charges are specious, shoddy work. Y’can’t prove they didn’t have those agreements, can you? Riiiiiiiight.*

Well at least our Red State comrade got this right:

Facts have never been debate winners among the haters. This is another example.

Indeed, and that is why it is so deplorable that a hater like Domenech has a job at the Washington Post. Domenech called Coretta Scott King a “communist” surely knowing the communist canard was code among racists to vilify the Kings.

Of course, it goes without saying the Red Stater will claim those remarks of poor Ben were decent, intelligent, and fact-based. Which just goes to show how deeply far right wing hate will corrupt one’s soul.

*Oh, if only this amount of proof was something the right demanded from God’s Avatar Here On Earth, the man they call “Commander-In-Chief” whenever they can, to emphasize we owe HIm unthinking obedience.

[Update: Corrected and expanded after original post.]

**{Update: Thanks to our intrepid gang of commenters, I’ve learned this is a lie. The paper is not out of business. Go here for an editorial on Domenech mess. The extent to which the rightwing will lie never ceases to amaze me. The moral of the story is this:

If a rightwinger says, “Gee, the sun is shining, gonna be a beautiful day!” grab your galoshes and umbrella.

Monument To Pro-Life

by digby

A nude Britney Spears on a bearskin rug while giving birth to her firstborn marks a ‘first’ for Pro-Life. Pop-star Britney Spears is the “ideal” model for Pro-Life and the subject of a dedication at Capla Kesting Fine Art in Brooklyn’s Williamsburg gallery district, in what is proclaimed the first Pro-Life monument to birth, in April.

Dedication of the life-sized statue celebrates the recent birth of Spears’ baby boy, Sean, and applauds her decision of placing family before career. “A superstar at Britney’s young age having a child is rare in today’s celebrity culture. This dedication honors Britney for the rarity of her choice and bravery of her decision,” said gallery co-director, Lincoln Capla. The dedication includes materials provided by Manhattan Right To Life Committee.

“Monument to Pro-Life: The Birth of Sean Preston,” believed Pro-Life’s first monument to the ‘act of giving birth,’ is purportedly an idealized depiction of Britney in delivery. Natural aspects of Spears’ pregnancy, like lactiferous breasts and protruding naval, compliment a posterior view that depicts widened hips for birthing and reveals the crowning of baby Sean’s head.

The monument also acknowledges the pop-diva’s pin-up past by showing Spears seductively posed on all fours atop a bearskin rug with back arched, pelvis thrust upward, as she clutches the bear’s ears with ‘water-retentive’ hands.

“Britney provides inspiration for those struggling with the ‘right choice’,” said artist Daniel Edwards, recipient of a 2005 Bartlebooth award from London’s The Art Newspaper. “She was number one with Google last year, with good reason — people are inspired by the beauty of a pregnant woman,” said Edwards.

Britney responds.

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