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Month: March 2007

Truth Hurts

by poputonian

A few commenters yesterday were unaware of why state legislative bodies are involved in impeachment resolutions. This column explains it well.

It’s the People of Washington vs. Pelosi et al

In the State of Washington, it is the people versus Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic Party leadership.

At issue is a bill, S8016, submitted in the state’s senate by freshman state Senator Eric Oemig, which would call on the U.S. Congress to initiate impeachment proceedings against President George Bush for high crimes and misdemeanors against the Constitution and the people of the United States and of the State of Washington.

The measure, which would take the form of a joint resolution by the two houses of the Washington state legislature, accords with the instructions laid out by Founder Thomas Jefferson, who, in his Manual of the Rules of the House of Representatives laid out state joint resolutions as an alternative route for initiating presidential impeachment proceedings in the House in addition to the more usual route of a member submitting a bill of impeachment.

Jefferson’s prescient thinking was that if Congress, by reason of political cowardice or inattention, ever proved unwilling or unable to initiate impeachment when it was called for, state legislators, far from Washington and closer to the people, could do it for them.

But two unprincipled and devious Democratic members of Washington’s congressional delegation, Sen. Pat Murray and Rep. Jay Inslee, are undermining Jefferson’s carefully designed fail-safe system by pressuring Democratic state legislators to kill Sen. Oemig’s bill. The Seattle Times in a March 2 article, reports that Murray and Inslee are telling Democrats in the state senate to kill the impeachment bill on the grounds that it would lead to “divisiveness” in Washington, and that it would impede the “Democratic agenda” in Congress.

Forget grave spinning! This wholly inappropriate interference in state affairs by the state’s two leading national political figures must have Jefferson shitting in his mouldered pants!

Tough medicine, I know, for institutionalized Democrats who place party above people. But these otherwise fine and respectable pols go at risk when they do their higher up’s bidding instead of the people’s bidding.

For a perfect presentation to Senator Murray, please see this framing of the issue by jman.

Tarzan, Jane and Cheetah

by digby

I think that one of the reasons the conservatives are mostly hanging tough with Coulter is at least partially due to what she specifically said. She used the word “faggot” to describe a Democrat. This is the premise that forms the entire basis of the Republican claim to leadership and lies at the bottom of the media’s continuing ridiculous assumption that the Republicans are more natural leaders than Democrats. For forty years the Republicans have been winning elections by calling liberals “faggots” (and “dykes”) in one way or another. It’s what they do. To look too closely at what she said is to allow light on their very successful reliance on gender stereotypes to get elected.

Rick Perlstein recently noted that Saint Ronnie went for it early on:

…he got the tribal stuff right, the us-versus-them stuff–as when he confronted young people harassing him with make love, not war signs. He said it looked like they were incapable of doing either.

Reagan also used to say the hippies “look like Tarzan, walk like Jane and smell like Cheetah.” That’s not so different than Coulter saying, “my pretty-girl allies stick out like a sore thumb amongst the corn-fed, no make-up, natural fiber, no-bra needing, sandal-wearing, hirsute, somewhat fragrant hippie chick pie wagons they call ‘women’ at the Democratic National Convention.”

A lot of the shrieking aversion to the dirty hippie came from all that “feminine” hair on men’s heads and “masculine” hair on women’s bodies, if you’ll recall. My brother was constantly harrassed about “looking like a girl” in 1966 Mississippi for having hair below his collar. In those days, hair was a political statement and even though forty years have passed and most of those people can only dream about all that hair they no longer have, the right successfully parlayed that gender role anxiety into a political narrative that continues to powerfully effect politics today.

Coulter is somewhat desperate so she’s articulating this stuff in a crude and obvious fashion in order to keep her stale schtick going. But this concept is so ingrained in the political culture by now that the only thing that really stands out about it is the fact that she used an obvious epithet that is out of public fashion, even at a rightwing event. Suppose she had used the silly word “girlyman”? Nobody would be calling for the smelling salts. In fact, I would imagine the press corps would have told us all to “get over it.”

As Somerby pointed out earlier today, Maureen Dowd does exactly the same thing Coulter does without the vulgarity. He also recalls that Coulter recently called Al Gore a “big fag” on Chris Matthews show and nobody said a peep. This is because it’s so internalized that unless people are paying close attention, it just slips through. After all, she even said Bill Clinton is gay and it barely made a ripple:

DEUTSCH: Before we’re off the air, you were talking about Bill Clinton. Is there anything you want to say about Clinton? No?

Ms. ANN COULTER: No.

DEUTSCH: OK. All right. Did you find him attractive? Was that what it was?

Ms. COULTER: No!

DEUTSCH: You don’t find him attractive?

Ms. COULTER: No. OK, fine, I’ll say it on air.

DEUTSCH: Most women find him attractive.

Ms. COULTER: No.

DEUTSCH: OK, say it on air.

Ms. COULTER: I think that sort of rampant promiscuity does show some level of latent homosexuality.

DEUTSCH: OK, I think you need to say that again. That Bill Clinton, you think on some level, has — is a latent homosexual, is that what you’re saying?

Ms. COULTER: Yeah. I mean, not sort of just completely anonymous — I don’t know if you read the Starr report, the rest of us were glued to it, I have many passages memorized. No, there was more plot and dialogue in a porno movie.

Hillary too. Here’s Coulter again:

Q: Does Hillary Clinton have a good chance in 2008? What are her strengths and weaknesses? What did her reaction to your “Jersey girls” comments tell you about her as a potential candidate?

A: Good chance of what? Coming out of the closet? I’d say that’s about even money.

It may seem odd to you that she would call the most notorious womanizing president since JFK and his wife gay, but there you have it. Coulter is so coarse that she has to make the claim literal in order to keep her career going, but it’s actually a mainstream view.

Here’s just a small sampling of how this has played out in just the last six years:

Al Gore needed to be taught how to be an “alpha male.” He doesn’t “know who he is.”
John Kerry “flip-flops” like a flaccid penis.
John Edwards is “the Breck girl.”
Howard Dean was “hysterical.”
Barack Obama is “Obambi.”
Bill Clinton was “a pervert.”
Hillary Clinton is a lesbian.

The underlying premise of the modern conservative movement is that the entire Democratic party consists of a bunch of fags and dykes who are both too effeminate and too masculine to properly lead the nation. Coulter says it out loud. Dowd hints at it broadly. And the entire press corps giggles and swoons at this shallow, sophomoric concept like a bunch of junior high pom pom girls.

Here’s the NY Times just a few weeks ago:

In other words, liberal moment or conservative slump?

Both, presumably, for reasons that could be explained in part by the ‘mommy party/daddy party’ cliché — that is, that voters typically favor Democrats (“mommy party”) on social issues and Republicans (“daddy party”) on national security.

This frayed old trope is just another version of the same thing. The leaders of the Democratic party (men up to now) are “mommies.” And cleverly, that makes the women daddies. But they are daddies like Melissa Etheridge is a mommy and that makes all the scared little boys and girls of the Republican rank and file either feel all icky and confused — or angry and hostile. (These gender stereotype issues seem to affect some people in a very odd emotional way.)

Coulter stepped over the line because she used a bad word. But nobody on the right and most people in the media don’t blink an eye at the implication of what she said. All this Claude Rainsing among certain rightwing bloggers and the press is just a little bit overdone, if you ask me. Being a “faggot” in common braindead GOP locker room parlance simply means being a Democrat and everybody knows it.

*Of course,it goes without saying that none of this is to say that actually being gay or being called gay is a bad thing. It’s just another dogwhistle they use to tease the lizard brains of their bigoted and repressed base (and peel off a few old people.) It’s a silly construct that is not going to work for them much longer as both gays and women take and open and equal place in the leadership of the nation. Coulter’s sad, campy threadbare show has the feel of a final tour to me.

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Privatizing Democracy

by digby

Ezra makes a good point that should be emphasized because the story is getting very muddled:

THE VA THEY AIN’T. Reader RN writes in to say:

Walter Reed is an Army hospital, not a VA facility. As an active duty soldier, the care I received at Evans Army Community Hospital (the Army hospital in Colorado Springs) was best described as mediocre; the care I’ve received at the VA Medical Center in Denver (especially after I was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis) is outstanding.

The press corps has done a very, very poor job explaining this, but Walter Reed and the other hospitals being criticized are military hospitals, not veteran’s hospitals (VA). They are run by the military, not the Veteran’s Administration, which is why the Secretary of the Army, rather than the Secretary of Veteran’s Affairs, was cut loose.

My Dad is a retired veteran who was, until recently, cared for in the military system, not the VA, as retired military folks have long been. The old men were kicked out recently and turned over to medicare, which was sort of a shame since the military system kind of specializied in old men’s diseases for years. But before they kicked him out the decline in the quality of care recently was astonishing. For decades they were very, very good and then they just — weren’t.

I was unaware of the privatizing, but I’m sure that’s the problem. It undoubtedly accounts for the fact that they 86’d the old guys. Like all health care for profit, they try to get rid of any sick person they possible can. There’s no money in it. (At least they had an alternative, unlike these poor wounded guys who probably don’t have health insurance other than the military.)

As Matt Yglesias explains today, privatizing is not some sort of magical ritual that automatically results in goodness and light. Indeed, when it comes to government services it is just a plain old patronage machine that delivers to the favored politicians at the expense of the people:

I posted on the general problem here last month — it’s not as if there are dozens of United States Armies all competing against one another to run the best hospitals and choosing among a variety of suppliers of hospital services in a dynamic marketplace where the Army that runs a bad hospital goes out of business.

You’ve got private profits, private corporations, privatization, and all sorts of other private stuff, but you don’t have a market you have a patronage mill and you have suffering soldiers. The correct way to privatize government services if you don’t think they should be provided by the government is to just have the government not perform the service. If it’s something you think the government should provide — medical care for injured soldiers would be, I think, an uncontroversial case — then the government needs to provide it.

This, again, shows what’s wrong with Republicans running government. Their policies have now been proved to be terminally flawed in virtually every area of responsibility. This one, like so many others, has ripped off taxpayers to the tune of billions of dollars that went directly into the pockets of well-heeled GOP contributors and average American have suffered for it.

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What To Tell The Children

by digby

Rudy seems to have a little problem with his kids, which isn’t surprising considering how he behaved during his marriage to their mother. And I would imagine that this didn’t help:

“I’ve always liked strong, macho men, and Rudy — I’m not saying this because he’s my husband — is one of the smartest people on the planet,” gushed the former Judith Nathan to Harper’s Bazaar in editions due out Feb. 20.

“What people don’t know is that Rudy’s a very, very romantic guy. We love watching ‘Sleepless in Seattle.’ Can you imagine my big testosterone-factor husband doing that?”

Describing Rudy, a former federal prosecutor, as “the Energizer Bunny with no rechargeable batteries,” Judi said, “One of the most remarkable things about my husband, who sleeps three or four hours a night, is his energy level and stamina.

I’m still not sure whether that was planted because of the prostate cancer issue or the transvestite issue, but his 18 and 20year old kids undoubtedly wanted to puke when they read it.

Now his son is saying he won’t be a part of the campaign:

Giuliani’s 21-year-old son, Andrew, told The New York Times that he would be too busy working on his golf game to participate in his father’s presidential campaign.

“There’s obviously a little problem that exists between me and his wife,” the younger Giuliani told the newspaper. “And we’re trying to figure that out. But as of right now it’s not working as well as we would like.”

Giuliani’s marriage to his third wife, Judith Nathan, followed his divorce from Donna Hanover, the mother of Andrew and Caroline.

In 2000, Giuliani announced during a live TV interview that he planned to divorce Hanover. She responded by publicly accusing Giuliani of adultery.

Caroline Giuliani has not spoken publicly, but the Times and New York’s tabloid newspapers reported that she was also alienated from her father as a result of his marriage to Nathan.

The New York Daily News reported that Giuliani rarely spends time with his children and that he had failed to attend many important events in their lives, including Andrew’s golf tournaments and Caroline’s school plays.

Campaigning in Southern California on Monday, Giuliani asked for privacy to deal with the strained relationship with his children.

“My wife Judith is a very loving and caring … mother and stepmother. She has done everything she can. The responsibility is mine,” Giuliani said. “The more privacy I can have for my family, the better we are going to be able to deal with all these difficulties.”

I’m sure they loved that bit about her being a loving and caring stepmother — the one who Rudy tried to move into the mayors mansion while they and their mother still lived there. He clearly doesn’t get it.

I think this is going to be of interest as long as Rudy is in the race and the press is going to love talking about it. But this I don’t believe:

Political analyst Charles Cook told Newsday that the latest twist would hurt Giuliani with the GOP’s conservative voters.

“This is just going to be one of a thousand cuts,” Cook told the newspaper. “This will just sort of fit into a whole constellation of issues that work against someone winning a conservative party’s nomination, a party that thinks of itself as a pro-family party. This just makes it really hard.”

I don’t know why everyone believes this. The “pro-family” party is a bunch of hypocrites who never hold their own leaders to the same standards as everyone else. It’s not that they don’t know who Rudy really is — it’s patronizing to keep saying that. They know, they just don’t care. As long as he blows the right dogwhistle tunes, they could not care less what he actually does.

And if he gets caught, all he has to do is repent to be forgiven (even though Bill Clinton practically crawled on his belly apologizing over Monica and they spit in his face.) It’s not about the family or the morals or anything to do with values. It’s about the loyalty to the team. That’s all they care about. Rudy can sleep with Chippendales dancers three at a time for all they care as long as he calls the right plays.

The fact is that if any of the top three Republicans win the nomination, the phony culture war is over. Not that the media or the political establishment will admit it. They’ll keep the kabuki going as long as they can until some other fake rightwing religio-patriotic nonsense comes along that the dissolute elites can glom onto to pretend they give a damn about the polloi.


Update:
Here’s an example of what I’m talking about:

BLITZER: Romney won that straw poll, which, of course, is non- binding, non-scientific, at the Conservative Political Action Conference. The “L.A. Times” had a poll out among RNC members. He came in with 20 percent, Giuliani 14, McCain 10, Gingrich eight. Everybody else sort of weighed down. Mitt Romney — some have said he’s flip-flopped on a lot of these issues, social issues that are so important to you, like abortion rights for women.

Do you accept his explanation why he’s changed his views since he ran for governor of Massachusetts?

PENCE: Well, let me say I’m — you were kind enough to mention that a — I’d like people to know I am a Christian, which means I believe in grace. I believe in conversion. I think one of the…

BLITZER: You believe him?

PENCE: I — you know, I do. I take — I’ve had a chance to sit down with Governor Romney personally and I think — I think his decision on embracing the sanctity of human life was a deeply personal decision. And however recent, I think I’m a — I’m a part of a pro- life movement that welcomes people coming to the moral rationale to (UNINTELLIGIBLE).

BLITZER: So you think his change is sincere?

PENCE: I really do. And, obviously, you know, this is an area where there’s going to be a wide range of opinions. John McCain’s great advantage on this particular issue is while he’s alienated conservatives on a few things, like campaign finance reform and other issues, this is an issue — on the right to life — where John McCain has always been, with a very few exceptions, rock solid.

BLITZER: Why is his campaign not generating the excitement among conservatives that, clearly, it’s not, given these — these most recent numbers?

PENCE: Well, look, I have great respect for Senator McCain. But you know better than almost anybody in the media that John McCain is a maverick. And he has, whether it be his opposition to President Bush’s tax cuts early in this administration or his advancement of the McCain-Feingold legislation…

BLITZER: The campaign finance reform. A lot of conservatives hated that…

PENCE: Well, I…

BLITZER: And you were one of them.

PENCE: I was the House plaintiff in the lawsuit that, with Senator McConnell, went all the way to the United States Supreme Court challenging that on first amendment grounds. And, recently, his partnership with Senator Kennedy on immigration — I had some problems with that.

BLITZER: What about Rudy Giuliani?

Because on major social issues like abortion, gay rights, gun control, his stance is very, very different than yours, historically speaking?

PENCE: Well, that’s right. And…

BLITZER: Could you vote for him if he were the Republican nominee?

PENCE: Well, let me say, you know, what I’m waiting to hear from Mayor Giuliani as a — as a pro-life conservative is, sure, I know that on a personal basis, he endorses abortion on demand. But what I’m hearing — I’m waiting to hear from him, who has a very conservative record as a prosecutor, a very conservative record as a mayor in virtually every other respect, is what will be his criteria for appointments to the federal bench.

Now, he’s indicated that he’s looking for judges like Justice Scalia and Justice Alito. If that’s the case, then that’s going to be intriguing to myself and, I think, to millions of pro-life conservatives around the country.

BLITZER: So you’re leaving the door open…

PENCE: But it’s a challenge.

BLITZER: You’re leaving the door open to supporting him?

PENCE: Well, I am, because, to that extent that a candidate for president holds pro-choice views but is willing to appoint strict constructionists to the court, I think pro-life Americans could see in that the possibility of ultimately achieving the end of dismantling “Roe v. Wade.”

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Incompetence Dodge

by digby

Josh Marshall posted a letter from one of his readers yesterday that makes an excellent point about zombie conservatism. I’m going to re-post it here in its entirety:

What’s really at issue here is the extent to which problems with the military, specifically, and the government, generally, are a result of policy. The common explanation for the catastrophic results of many of the Bush administration’s initiatives (from Iraq to New Orleans and back again) is that they are the result of “incompetence.”

Incompetence, the lack of capacity or skill, is ultimately an exculpating trope. It insinuates that the plan, or effort, was sound and could have succeeded had it been competently carried out. Moreover, the incompetent are in way less liable: their lack of ability lets them off the hook. Thus, “incompetence” insulates the actors from accountability and leaves the policy itself unscathed.

My personal opinion, which has recently been reinforced by much of what I read in Rajiv Chandrasekaran’s Imperial Life in the Emerald City, is that the Bush disasters are a result of the administration’s policies and not of some failure to effectively carry them out.

No one says, retrospectively, that Calvin Coolidge’s failure to help the victims of 1927’s Mississippi River flood was a result of incompetence. No one says that Mellon, with his inaction and insistence that the Great Depression would burn itself out through ‘liquidation,’ was incompetent. Both of these positions were wholly in keeping with the policies of the Coolidge and Hoover presidencies, policies that were not discredited until Roosevelt’s victories and the institution of the New Deal.

The problem, a problem that Waxman seems to be keenly aware of, is that as long as the government retains the same kind of policies, the nation will continue to suffer the same hardships. It is not until the beliefs that inform the ways in which the Bush administration runs the government are firmly linked to their consequences that the nation will stop voting for politicians who promulgate, and enact legislation based on, those creeds.

These policies will not (again) be discredited until they are tied to their reprehensible results. Insisting on the ‘incompetence’ of the Bush administration turns attention away from this linkage between policy and result. In fact, it insulates the policies while discrediting the men who are trying to implement them. It, thus, sets the stage for those policies to be enacted again.

I don’t think I ever thought of the word “incompetent” quite that way, even though the term “incompetence dodge” had been widely used to describe certain lame attempts to rationalize support of the Iraq war. But it’s bigger than just Iraq, isn’t it? Using that term to describe the Bush administration at all allows the “Bush is not a conservative” babblers to set forth the rationale that it was just an inability to carry out (presumably good) conservative policies that has led to such a catastrophic failure, when the truth is that the most efficient people in the world could not have made these policies successful.

This ties in with my post from last night. The problem is not that the Bush’s are unusually bad at governance, although they are. It’s that the Republicans seem to have created a con game in which they take power, steal the country blind, allow their craziest ideologues to wildly experiment with theories that only radical fringers think have a remote possibility of success and basically run amuck until they are forced to stop. Then they harrass the Democrats as they clean up the mess, setting themselves up for a resurgence by making it very clear that unless they are given another chance to mess things up they will make the political system even more ugly than it already is.

It’s the political equivalent of a toddler throwing a tantrum in the grocery store. You get to the point where you give them the candy bar just to shut them up, which is a big part of why Junior Codpiece came close enough to steal the election in 2000 and why the media and political establishment jumped on their bandwagon when they did it. Everyone knew that if the Republicans were not allowed to take power in 2000 there would be hell to pay.

Incompetence has nothing to do with it. In fact, they are quite competent at doing exactly what they want to do — gain power, do whatever they want for a few years, lose office, harrass Democrats rinse, repeat.

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Democrats Without A Conscience: Undermining A Moral Imperative

by poputonian

From the SeattlePI:

Washington Democrats Sen. Patty Murray and Rep. Jay Inslee requested last week that legislators drop bills calling for impeachment investigations of Bush and against the troop surge in Iraq.

They say such measures will increase political fighting at home while slowing the progress to get U.S. troops out of the fighting in Iraq.

Inslee and Murray are trying to tell state legislators that the efforts are a waste of time, said Inslee’s spokeswoman, Christine Hanson.

“At the federal level, impeachment talks are more distracting than productive,” added Murray spokesman Alex Glass.

State Sen. Eric Oemig, D-Kirkland, introduced the impeachment bill. Another bill that calls for the U.S. to refrain from increasing troop presence in Iraq is sponsored by Sen. Jeanne Kohl-Welles, D-Seattle.

Cheney and Bush have killed and maimed more than 700,000 people in our name, in the name of America, and Congress has better things to do?

Here’s another point of view:

Testimony for Impeachment Hearing

By David Swanson

FOR THE WASHINGTON STATE SENATE HEARING CALLING FOR THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES TO INVESTIGATE AND CONSIDER HEARINGS ON EVIDENCE THAT COULD LEAD TO THE IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH AND VICE-PRESIDENT RICHARD B. CHENEY

MARCH 1, 2007

I live in Charlottesville, Va., the home town of Thomas Jefferson, who feared we would not be able to maintain a republic and would slip into elected despotism. I am the Washington (DC) Director of Democrats.com and of ImpeachPAC.org. I am a co-founder of the AfterDowningStreet.org coalition, creator of MeetWithCindy.org, and a board member of Progressive Democrats of America, and of the Backbone Campaign, an activist organization based on Vashon Island in Washington State. I was the organizer in 2006 of Camp Democracy. I serve on the steering committee of the Charlottesville Center for Peace and Justice and on a working group of United for Peace and Justice. I have worked as a newspaper reporter and as a communications director, with jobs including Press Secretary for Dennis Kucinich’s 2004 presidential campaign, Media Coordinator for the International Labor Communications Association, and three years as Communications Coordinator for ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now. I am a member of and have served on the Executive Council of the Washington Baltimore Newspaper Guild. I obtained a Master’s degree in philosophy from the University of Virginia in 1997.

Democrats.com and After Downing Street have been keeping large lists of citizens in Washington State informed of the progress of this resolution. Generating enthusiasm has not been a problem. This is something people are passionately behind. It’s important to understand that passion, and I’m sure that many speakers today will help to communicate it. Jefferson and his colleagues in framing the Constitution intended the body of our federal government closest to the people, the House of Representatives, to have the power of impeachment in order to check abuses by the executive and judicial branches. And Jefferson’s Manual, rules used by Congress to this day, allows for a state legislature, a body still closer to the people, to petition the House to begin impeachment. Impeachment is supposed to arise from public concerns at the local and state levels. While an impeachment is merely an indictment, and initiating an impeachment hearing is only the equivalent of convening a grand jury, there is nothing more serious or solemn than this process. And my impression is that the vast bulk of the public enthusiasm for impeachment today is appropriately serious.

We must pursue impeachment of Cheney and Bush, not because of any animosity toward those individuals, and certainly not for electoral advantage. Rather, we must impeach because if we do not, we will be rewriting the rules for all future administrations. The greatest concern of those who put impeachment in the Constitution was that an executive could needlessly take the nation into war. We now face a case in which the President and Vice President began a war in secret with misappropriated funds, intentionally misled the Congress and the public about the need for war, launched a war that is patently illegal under the U.N. charter and U.S. law, began the construction of permanent military bases in a foreign nation with no consultation with Congress and continued that construction after Congress forbade it. Through the course of this war, which US intelligence and international studies conclude has made the world far more dangerous and the United States far less popular, and which has put our great grandchildren into financial debt, the Bush Administration has sanctioned illegal spying, kidnapping, extraordinary rendition, detentions without charge, torture, murder, the use of illegal weapons, and the illegal targeting of civilians, hospitals, and journalists. Numerous attempts by Congress to temper these policies have been unconstitutionally reversed by presidential signing statements.

Evidence of these crimes has been collected at afterdowningstreet/keydocuments

Please take some time to study it. No summary does it justice.

If we do not impeach, we can expect the same behavior Bush and Cheney have engaged in, and worse, from future administrations.

The President has made clear that he will not end the war or place himself under the rule of law. The Congress has made clear that it will not seriously attempt to end the war or to investigate the fraud that initiated it. The people of the United States and of the world are looking to state governments like yours for heroic leadership. And there can be no doubt that history, should our species weather the current storms, will look back on your actions as heroic if you successfully initiate the impeachment of Bush and Cheney.

Congress will not act without you. You are the people’s last recourse. If you let them down, democracy lets them down.

Please do not be like the neighbors who watch a murder out the window and all assume that someone else is phoning for help. Everyone else is failing. We are looking to you for leadership.

Please heed the warning of Congressman Abraham Lincoln, who heroically challenged President Polk’s fraudulent and aggressive war on Mexico:

“Allow the President to invade a neighboring nation, whenever he shall deem it necessary to repel an invasion, and you allow him to do so, whenever he may choose to say he deems it necessary for such purpose – and you allow him to make war at pleasure. Study to see if you can fix any limit to his power in this respect, after you have given him so much as you propose. If, today, he should choose to say he thinks it necessary to invade Canada, to prevent the British from invading us, how could you stop him? You may say to him, ‘I see no probability of the British invading us’ but he will say to you ‘be silent; I see it, if you don’t.’ The provision of the Constitution giving the war-making power to Congress, was dictated, as I understand it, by the following reasons: Kings had always been involving and impoverishing their people in wars, pretending generally, if not always, that the good of the people was the object. This, our Convention understood to be the most oppressive of all Kingly oppressions; and they resolved to so frame the Constitution that no one man should hold the power of bringing this oppression upon us.”

“Those Days Are Gone”

by digby

I am getting so tired of Republicans screwing things up so that the Democrats have to come in and clean up their messes. Tonight, I watched what could have been a vintage 1992 60 Minutes story about how the deficit is going to bankrupt the country unless somebody does something right now — which immediately translates into a story that insists we must radically scale back all spending and entitlement programs (except the military, of course) because it would be immoral to pass these bills on to our grandchildren.

And yet, in this vintage deficit fear mongering story, there is virtually no discussion of why we are in this situation. Here’s what they said:

He calls it a fiscal wake up tour, and he is telling civic groups, university forums and newspaper editorial boards that the U.S. has spent, promised, and borrowed itself into such a deep hole it will be unable to climb out if it doesn’t act now. As Walker sees it, the survival of the republic is at stake.

“What’s going on right now is we’re spending more money than we make…we’re charging it to credit card…and expecting our grandchildren to pay for it. And that’s absolutely outrageous,” he told the editorial board of the Seattle Post Intelligencer.

You have heard this before, from Ross Perot 15 years ago. You might have even thought the problem had been solved, when President Clinton announced, “Tonight, I come before you to announce that the federal deficit — will be simply zero.”

“Well, those days are gone. We’ve gone from surpluses to huge deficits and our long range situation is much worse,” Walker says.

That’s it? That’s all we’re going to hear about how this happened?

Excuse me, but where were he and 60 Minutes during the past six years when the Republicans blew a record surplus and dug us into a hole so deep he now says the republic is in danger?

Damn these people. Every single time these crooked Republicans get in power they line their pockets with taxpayer funded boondoggles and tax cuts for their rich supporters then start rending their garments over the looming fiscal catastrophe they created and demand the government stop spending on all those parasitic old people and children (whose “failure of citizenship” apparently dwarfs that of the corrupt thieves who stole the nation blind and threw buckets of money down the toilet in expensive failures like Iraq.) Oh, and raising taxes is completely unacceptable.

Republicans have proven once again that they are out of control children who completely trash the country’s fiscal integrity whenever they get a chance, requiring the Democrats to come in and do the painful things that are required to fix them. And every step of the way, they Republicans dog them with absurd “tax and spend” rhetoric.

It’s a great racket for the GOP but it’s long past time the nation put a stop to this insanity. It would be helpful if 60 Minutes at least put some of that in perspective when they get on the “responsibility” train and explain to the American people why this is. “Those days are gone” is not adequate.

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He’s Baaack

by digby

Bill Sher reports on Newtie’s little speech at CPAC which included this little gem:

There’s more to say about Newt Gingrich (who looks more like a presidential candidate after today) but let me call attention to this from his grand finale address to CPAC:

He blamed the residents of New Orleans’ 9th Ward for a “failure of citizenship,” by being “so uneducated and so unprepared, they literally couldn’t get out of the way of a hurricane.”

And he called for a “deep investigation” into this “failure of citizenship.”

Here’s the full quote:

How can you have the mess we have in New Orleans, and not have had deep investigations of the federal government, the state government, the city government, and the failure of citizenship in the Ninth Ward, where 22,000 people were so uneducated and so unprepared, they literally couldn’t get out of the way of a hurricane.

It pays to remember that the reason George W. Bush ran as a “compassionate conservative” was to try to distance himself from the discredited image of Newtie’s Republican revolution. That comment pretty much nails the problem in a nutshell. Newt is a jackass and the country as a whole has always pretty much hated him.

He’s extremely popular among the hardcore conservatives, however, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he becomes their standard bearer. They have always erroneously assumed that the rest of the nation loves his arrogant psuedo-intellectual meanness the way they do.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi continues to maintain solid job approval ratings throughout the nation, with 50 percent of adults approving of her performance in her first weeks of wielding the gavel.

According to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, Pelosi’s disapproval rating for her job performance is 31 percent, suggesting that Republican efforts at muddying the San Francisco Democrat’s image have not been successful.

The rating places Pelosi in a much stronger political position than the last time the House flipped control. Twelve years ago, Republican Newt Gingrich of Georgia became speaker and instantly became a public lightning rod.

According to a Jan. 29, 1995 Post-ABC poll, Gingrich’s approval rating was 40 percent while 48 percent of adults disapproved of his job performance four weeks into his tenure as speaker.

It only got worse. The more people saw him the less they liked him:

Gingrich proved more popular as a revolutionary than as a leader. Like Wright, he became entangled in an ethics imbroglio that eventually led to his reprimand by the House in 1997 and a $300,000 penalty.

After the Republicans in Congress shut down the government in 1995 in a showdown with President Bill Clinton, Gingrich’s popularity plunged, never to return to the heights of 1994. By 1996, nearly six in 10 voters had an unfavorable opinion of him. Some of his top lieutenants even plotted a coup against him, but Gingrich, ever the survivor, managed to keep his job.

On Tuesday, election night, Gingrich pointed to the fact that Republicans had won House majorities in three successive elections for the first time in 70 years. But each majority was smaller than the last, and his troops became restless. Exit polls showed that 58 percent of the voters had an unfavorable view of him, while just 36 percent viewed him favorably.

I’m quite enthusiastic at the prospect. He is a perfect representative of the toxic creepiness of modern conservatism. Run Newt, Run.

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Dirty Talk For Troubled Times

by digby

I can’t tell you how surprised I am that this guy only came up with 285 uses of some of George Carlin’s dirty words on my angry, unhinged, potty-mouthed blog. I honestly can’t believe it. Even factoring in the fact that my comments are on haloscan so my filthy leftist commenters weren’t counted (as they were on some other blogs), out of 5500 posts or so I know that I have used teh dirty words more than 285 times. There’s definitely something wrong with the methodology.

I have to admit that I’m even more surprised, however, that the manly warriors of the rightwing blogosphere are so genteel and restrained, which they seem inordinately proud of, as if they’ve won first prize from the Boston spinsters crochet society or something. There has always been a particular type of prissy conservative male who shares certain characteristics with fluttery Victorian ladies who get all breathless (and aroused) in the presence of muscular, earthy language. I didn’t realize that the alleged he-men of the rightwing blogosphere were like this but I suppose I should have. It certainly explains why they haven’t joined the military.

You’ll recall that a fussy little Annapolis grad named Ross Perot called on his Daddy to use his influence to cut his military career short because of all the vulgarity he was exposed to:

What a hilarious letter Ross Perot wrote the secretary of the Navy in 1955 explaining why he wanted to leave after two years, instead of the four he owed…

“I have found the Navy to be a fairly godless organization. I do not enjoy the prospect of continuing to stand on the quarterdeck as officer of the deck in foreign ports, being subjected to drunken tales of moral emptiness, passing our penicillin pills (we must assume this was not done to ward off pneumonia) and seeing promiscuity on the part of married men.”

Perot continued: “I have observed little in the way of a direct effort to improve a man morally while he is in the Navy, or even hold him at his present moral level.”
“I constantly hear the Lord’s name taken in vain at all levels,” wrote Perot. “I find it unsatisfying to live, work and be directed in an atmosphere where taking God’s name in vain is a part of the everyday vocabulary.”
— Molly Ivins
Austin American-Statesman, 27 May 1992

Dear me.

I’ll try to curb my brawny, robust language around these prudish little fellows if I find myself at one of their tea parties, but I can’t promise to do so on the blog. As far as I’m concerned, that chart shows that I have not been nearly salty enough. The state of our politics calls for big, bold angry rhetoric to express the level of outrage appropriate to the situation. Those with delicate rightwing sensibilities best cover their tender little ears.

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Family Value$

by digby

We have heard a great deal over the past few decades about how the elites are ruining the country with their libertine ways. In fact, the social conservative movement is based almost exclusively upon the idea that our society is going to hell in handbasket because the liberals are promoting immorality. And one of the main pieces of evidence is the decline of traditional marriage.

But what if the decline of marriage has little to do with a lack of traditional family values at all? And what if the salt of the earth regular working Americans who social conservatives claim as the backbone of their movement are the ones who are rejecting marriage in the greatest numbers?

Punctuating a fundamental change in American family life, married couples with children now occupy fewer than one in every four households — a share that has been slashed in half since 1960 and is the lowest ever recorded by the census.

As marriage with children becomes an exception rather than the norm, social scientists say it is also becoming the self-selected province of the college-educated and the affluent. The working class and the poor, meanwhile, increasingly steer away from marriage, while living together and bearing children out of wedlock.

“The culture is shifting, and marriage has almost become a luxury item, one that only the well educated and well paid are interested in,” said Isabel V. Sawhill, an expert on marriage and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.

So traditional family values are becoming the purview of the rich and large numbers of Americans are living in alternative arrangements. Who knew?

I suppose it might be at least partially a coincidence that this change coincides with the rise of the free market fundamentalism of the conservative movement, but whatever underlying economic conditions which were present were likely to have been at least accelerated and made worse by Republican economic policy.

“We seem to be reverting to a much older pattern, when elites marry and a great many others live together and have kids,” said Peter Francese, demographic trends analyst for Ogilvy & Mather, an advertising firm.

Much, much older. Feudal to be exact. When aristocracies form, marriage and children become important institutions for maintaining property and hence, power. Policies are enacted that favor those institutions and it becomes a somewhat superfluous institution for the rest of society. In fact, the additional economic stresses of these policies put enormous strain on marriages and they become an institution of unhappiness for many. That’s exactly what’s happening right now in this country.

As far as marriage with children is concerned, the post-World War II version of normal began to fall apart around 1970.

“Before then, if you looked at families across the income spectrum, they all looked the same: a mother, father, kids and a dog named Spot,” said Sawhill, of the Brookings Institution.

Around that time, rates of divorce and cohabitation were rising sharply — and widely publicized.

“What I don’t think the public knew then or knows now is that well-educated, upper-middle-class professionals did not engage in these activities nearly as much as less-advantaged families,” Sawhill said.

Despite what the right would have us believe about the 60’s, in those early years, the sexual revolution was not the primary reason for the change. My mother was a divorced woman with two young kids in the early 1950’s and her opportunities were almost nil. She was in her 30’s and had to live with her parents until she met a man who could support her and her children. Once the woman’s movement broke down some of those barriers in the next couple of decades, people like my mother had some adult choices in life. Of course that also changed marriage. Women like her who had been in terribly abusive or stifling marriages were finally able to live a decent middle class life on their own.

It was always mostly about economics and basic human freedom, not morals, even though in her day, my mother was considered something of a loose woman and certainly a failure by the society in which she lived — a deeply unfair characterization that the social conservatives are trying desperately to bring back with their hectoring about family values. They may say they don’t see traditional marriage as unfair to women, but in the hands of a bullying Promise Keeper, it most certainly can be.

Class, though, is a much better tool than race for predicting whether Americans will marry or cohabit, said Pamela Smock, co-author of the review and a University of Michigan sociology professor.

“The poor aren’t entering into marriage very much at all,” said Smock, who has interviewed more than 100 cohabitating couples. She said young people from these backgrounds often do not think they can afford marriage.

Arguments that marriage can mean stability do not seem to change their attitudes, Smock said, noting that many of them have parents with troubled marriages.

Victoria Miller and Cameron Roach, who have been living together for 18 months, are two such people, and they say they cannot imagine getting married.

She is 22 and manages a Burger King in Seattle. He is 24 and works part time testing software in the Seattle suburb of Redmond. Together, they earn less than $20,000 a year and are living with Roach’s father. They cannot afford to live anywhere else.

“Marriage ruins life,” Roach said. “I saw how much my parents fought. I saw how miserable they made each other.”

Miller, who was pressured by her Mormon parents to marry when she was 17 and pregnant, said her short, failed marriage and her parents’ long, failed marriage have convinced her that the institution is often bad for children. Shuttled between her mom and dad, she moved eight times before she was 16.

“With my parents, when their marriage started breaking down, my dad started to have trouble at work and we spent years on government assistance,” Miller said.

Her two young sons live with their father.

“For most Americans, cohabitation will continue to increase over the coming decades, and the percentage of children born outside of marriage is also going to increase,” Smock said.

If the Republicans want to turn this country into a feudal aristocracy they are going to have to accept what comes with that. — an unsettled and unhappy populace many of whom are mired in downward mobility, stressed out, unhappy and open to all kinds of political and social unpleasantness. It’s not their morals, it’s their dead-end futures.

(And by the way, there are no more licentious people anywhere than in the Aristocracies — including, as we know, their priests.)

I find it very interesting that nothing in our politics reflects these facts and instead we are dealing with a phony, idealized construct of middle and working class America that bears no relationship to people’s real lives. No wonder so many are apathetic. And no wonder that many of those who are interested, see politics as a sporting event — it’s just another reality show with rival tribes battling for a big prize. Like jousts, perhaps. Or Roman circuses.


Update:
If you want to see something that will add stress to a marriage, try this:

For more years now advocates have been denouncing sub-prime loans and “exotic” mortgages – adjustable rate loans, “no doc” loans, interest only loans, etc. – as often abusive and predatory, and a leading contributor to mortgage defaults and financial instability among working and middle class people. Meanwhile sub-prime lenders have been losing profits, downsizing and going out of business because their loan porfolios are crumbling under the poor or non existent underwriting criteria. And an article in the Wall Street Journal yesterday reported how while prime borrowers seem to be paying back their loans, those who fall somewhere between “prime” and “sub-prime” are also defaulting at higher rates on their mortgages. Almost as troubling and predictable as the rapid collapse of Bush’s “Ownership Society” culture, which pushed homeownership at any price, literally (See my Op-Ed making this argument here), is the extent to which the press conflates sub-prime loans with bad credit risk borrowers. Research has already shown that people of color are receiving higher priced loans, period, even after credit scores are taken into account.After a while it becomes absurdist, yet convenient, self-fulfilling prophecy. Make double-digit, interest only, loans to the people who can least afford them – or loans in which the rate suddenly shoots up, or loans in which the borrowers’ income is not verified – and then sit back and marvel at how these borrowers are falling behind on their payments. It’s like selling cars with faulty brakes to housewives and then announcing that women are bad drivers when they get into accidents.

That’s the same logic driving this campaign to make the marriage failure rate a matter of “bad values.” Create a greed based economy so filled with stress and insecurity that all social institutions are straining at the seams and then blame the people for being immoral when they reject those same institutions.

H/T to reader MK
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