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Month: October 2008

Consider Yourself Lucky

by digby

I would expect that once the election is over, the right is going to force our attention back to the quagmire by saying that the Democrats walked back a clear victory in Iraq. It will be important to remember that there was never any real success in Iraq, only temporary lessening of violence designed to get the Republicans through the election. It is barely holding right now:

Haj Ali’s family had been home for less than a month when a makeshift bomb blew off part of his garage. The message was clear: Go back to wherever you came from. Two years ago, when Sunni Muslims began killing Shiites in Ali’s west Baghdad neighborhood, he quickly gathered a few belongings and fled. Last month, his family returned home. They didn’t stay long.”We thought it was safe,” Ali said. “Now I see that for us, home means death. There are still people who don’t want us there.” Only a small fraction of the roughly 5 million Iraqis who’ve fled their neighborhoods in fear since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion have gone back, although returns have picked up since the Iraqi government last month began urging people home.In Baghdad, where most of the sectarian cleansing has taken place, about 8 percent of the people who moved within the country have gone back to their neighborhoods, according to the International Organization for Migration.Many Iraqi families have returned to their old homes in peace, but a disturbing trend already is emerging: They’re being targeted and attacked, and in some cases killed, for trying to go home. Some have been threatened. Others have found explosives tied to their front doors. Some have had their homes blown up.

It’s been a while since I’ve done the tiresome exercise of “what if it happened here” but reading this today, it struck me that while Americans are very reasonably anxious at the fact the economy is turbulent and unstable — what must it be like to be an Iraqi? They were already living in a politically repressive society, but one which allowed a kind of normal life if one didn’t interact negatively with authorities. It was bad. But for the last five years, they have been living in hell. Bombs, hunger, ethnic cleansing, death, injury, total chaos. Their futures are grim, their hopes for their children are necessarily miniscule, they are homeless and without even the most basic social services. Their country is still a war zone after all this time.

The same people who brought that carnage to the Iraqis, brought this recession to us, with its inevitable belt tightening and job losses and general sense of unease. Considering what they did over there, we should be grateful they didn’t pull out all the stops and “liberate” us too.

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Rachel Maddow v. David Frum

by tristero
I urge you to study Maddow’s performance here.

To Incoherent For the Republican Party?

by digby

Is that possible?

David Frum is having some trouble with his fellow Cornerites because he doesn’t think Sarah W. Palin is … well … quite smart enough:

Do my correspondents (and now my Corner colleagues) truly believe that – but for my pitiful media and social ambitions – nobody in America would have noticed that Sarah Palin cannot speak three coherent consecutive words about finance or economics?

[…]

Perhaps it is our job at NRO is tell our readers only what they want to hear, without much regard to whether it is true. Perhaps it is our duty just to keep smiling and to insist that everything is dandy – that John McCain’s economic policies make sense, that his selection of Sarah Palin was an act of statesmanship, that she herself is the second coming of Anna Schwartz, and that nobody but an over-educated snob would ever suggest otherwise.

Oh my. That is a problem. Frum is getting slammed by his own side for being an inconvenient truth-teller about Palin’s incoherence. How could they?

I suspect it may because Frum was positively giddy about the man who said this:

“Because the—all which is on the table begins to address the big cost drivers. For example, how benefits are calculate, for example, is on the table; whether or not benefits rise based upon wage increases or price increases. There’s a series of parts of the formula that are being considered. And when you couple that, those different cost drivers, affecting those—changing those with personal accounts, the idea is to get what has been promised more likely to be—or closer delivered to what has been promised. Does that make any sense to you? It’s kind of muddled. Look, there’s a series of things that cause the—like, for example, benefits are calculated based upon the increase of wages, as opposed to the increase of prices. Some have suggested that we calculate—the benefits will rise based upon inflation, as opposed to wage increases. There is a reform that would help solve the red if that were put into effect. In other words, how fast benefits grow, how fast the promised benefits grow, if those—if that growth is affected, it will help on the red.”—Explaining his plan to save Social Security, Tampa, Fla., Feb. 4, 2005

and this:

It means your own money would grow better than that which the government can make it grow. And that’s important.”—on what private accounts could do for Social Security funds, Falls Church, Va., April 29, 2005

I actually feel sorry for McCain on this one. He had every reason to believe that the conservative intelligentsia would support putting a functional incompetent on the ticket. After all, people like David Frum wrote glowing books called The Right Man about the current functional incompetent in the White House. How was McCain to know that these rats would scurry over the side squealing about “competence” and “intelligence” all of a sudden?

Seriously, this is just nonsense. These people supported someone who was without any intellectual capability whatsoever, for years. They extolled his “gut” like it was some sort of magical vessel filled with wisdom instead of hot dogs and candies. Their newfound concern for the intelligence of the leadership of America rings just a bit hollow in light of their absurd glorification of the fool who brought us to this place. I don’t blame the Cornerites for feeling betrayed.

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They Do It Toooo

by digby

Has anyone ever heard someone shout the words “terrorist” or “traitor” about John McCain at an Obama really? McCain claims he has:

I thought they would haul out the Palin getting booed thing as evidence that both sides were rude and unmannerly. I didn’t think he was just going to make stuff up out of whole cloth.

Or maybe he’s recalling the 2000 Republican primary, where Bush partisans were calling him a Manchurian candidate. The terrorist/traitor epithet is a very specific right wing slur, I’m afraid. They even turn a nice profit at it.

Update: Oh my goodness. The rightwingers are enraged that they are being criticized for being enraged:

Insane Rage? Look in the Mirror

“For those who have observed the lunacy that has gripped the Democratic Party and liberals generally over the last seven years, the idea that we are now witnessing ‘Republican rage’ is laughable. Michelle Malkin does a definitive job of reminding us what hate, rage and lunacy really look like. Rage has been the public face of liberalism for the last seven years.

UPDATE: Now crazed Obama supporters are throwing Molotov cocktails. Do you suppose stooges like Frank Rich and Paul Krugman will take this as a sign that Democrats are angry? No, I don’t think so either.”

The Molotov cocktails were thrown at a billboard by a couple of drunken morons, btw. But hey, that’s pretty much the same as shooting up a church full of people, right?

Malkin wrote a whole book about us unhinged liberals, you’ll recall, so she’s an expert. It’s hard to see how she finds the time what with her exposing people’s private information on the internet and stalking sick little kids to determine if they’re parents are living in a cardboard box and thus deserve health care.

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The Great Debate

by digby

I was skeptical that health care would actually be tackled in a Democratic first term without a recession driving it and now, for obvious reasons, I think it may actually happen. Polls are showing that the economy and health care are the two top issues in the election.

The fact is that they are intertwined. The American system of employer based health care is falling apart. Big companies are being squeezed by retiree health benefits and small businesses are drowning in health care costs. And needless to say, being unemployed means saying goodbye to your health insurance (or COBRA costs that are obscene.) Add that to the huge number of underinsured and uninsured and you have the makings of a full fledged emergency.

With the economy in turmoil, the question at this point is no longer if, but how. The Institute For America’s Future is featuring another in its series of series of New York Times op-ed ads to spur the debate:

The idea behind this initiative is to spur debate so, if you tag your posts
“debateweneed” (or for Twitter posts, #dwn), they will be highlighted
at http://institute.ourfuture.org , where additional background and
commentary related to the Op-Ad will be featured.

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The Liddy/McCain Connection

by tristero

Carl Bernstein moves the Liddy/McCain connection a little closer to the mainstream. It really is a remarkable: a mainstream candidate proactively sought – and recently – the approval of a convicted terrorist whom the candidate knew was a terrorist. (Obama had no idea of Ayers’ previous history.) McCain went so far as to praise Liddy’s “principles and philosophies!” I’m with Carl on this:

McCain should be asked at the debate to tell the American people exactly which “principles and philosophies” Liddy holds that he agrees with.

We Need To Be Bold

by dday

Digby pointed yesterday to David Broder’s none-too-subtle warning that the next President had better not get any funny ideas about investing in the future or giving those among the least of society a hand or anything. Obviously we need to get through the next 22 days and usher in a Democratic President. But this is an absolutely vital discussion that we need to be having right now.

Unsurprisingly, Broder’s concern trolling about the economic downturn and the debt reflects mainstream Beltway opinion of the moment. There’s a reason why the story about the US debt clock needing extra digits got so much attention. Call it neo-Hooverism, as Matt Yglesias has taken to doing. Throughout the debates serious guardians of the discourse like Jim Lehrer and Tom Brokaw have hounded the candidates about what parts of their agendas they would cut or scale back in the midst of the slowdown. Here’s Michael Scherer of TIME following their lead.

Neither candidate has the courage to speak straight with the American people about our nation’s fiscal problems. Asked about the financial crisis, McCain talked about energy independence, hitting the same talking points he used in July. Obama talked about the need to give tax cuts to the middle class, and expand spending programs, a proposal he put forward last year. Both men have proposed policies that will lead to an increase in the deficit, according to independent analysts, even without a dramatic economic downturn, which looks increasingly inevitable. Neither man has shown any clear intention to tell Americans to face head on the hard economic times that await us. This is politics. The candidates are playing it safe, not telling voters anything they don’t want to hear. They choose to demagogue Wall Street instead.

This is precisely the opposite of what needs to be done in a recession. In fact, the crisis facing the states right now is emblematic of this idiotic mindset. When the economy slows, tax revenues decrease. The demand for social services increases. So more is needed while less is earned. This leads to deficits, and because of balanced budget amendments at the state level (thank God we don’t have them federally), spending cuts are implemented. This shrinking of state and local spending shrinks the economy. Which prolongs the recession and prolongs the pain. That’s what the Beltway chattering class is RECOMMENDING.

The federal budget is not a family budget, as Brian Beutler ably explains.

When times are hard at home, after all, you scrimp and save and avoid exorbitant expenditures. You keep working hard and hold on to the belief that prosperity will return sooner than later. Maybe under different circumstances you take out a loan and start a business and hope it’s successful enough to make you rich and famous–but now you have children. You really want them to go to college. And so you can’t in good conscience take on the risk.

But countries aren’t like households. When times are tough the last thing they need is for their governments to freeze out discretionary spending. And, paradoxically, the Great Men of History who so badly want to be president wouldn’t be doing their countrymen any favors by choosing this particular moment to suddenly restrain their vision.

In response to a recession, spending to increase job creation and investment is a completely normal, Keynesian reaction. The idea that the bankers must be bailed out at all costs but that there’s no cash for the ordinary stiffs who would benefit from a thorough stimulus package is bunk. It’s also dangerous to the health of the economy and our future standard of living.

If you don’t start spending at the federal level, more bridges will collapse and more roads will become unpassable. More state unemployment funds will become insolvent. More catastrophic effects of the climate crisis will unfold. More Americans will lack quality access to health care. More Americans will be out of work and lost when they could be put to work for our collective future benefit.

The Beltway attack on the progressive agenda, through the lens of fiscal responsibility, is only the beginning. The Pentagon is going to demand a large payoff at the same time its defenders will call for budget austerity, because as everyone knows military spending is magic spending that doesn’t exist in any temporal form.

Pentagon officials have prepared a new estimate for defense spending that is $450 billion more over the next five years than previously announced figures.

The new estimate, which the Pentagon plans to release shortly before President Bush leaves office, would serve as a marker for the new president and is meant to place pressure on him to either drastically increase the size of the defense budget or defend any reluctance to do so, according to several former senior budget officials who are close to the discussions […]

“This is a political document,” said one former senior budget official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “It sets up the new administration immediately to have to make a decision of how to deal with the perception that they are either cutting defense or adding to it.”

If there’s one place where budget hawks can go to find wasteful spending and unnecessary expenses, it’s the Pentagon. But of course then “the troops” are disrespected by discontinuing weapons systems that the United States hasn’t used since the mid-1950s.

Furthermore, sometime in the next year some wingnut publisher is going to release a book with a title like The FDR Depression, arguing that Roosevelt’s policies actually prolonged the agony and deregulation and tax cuts would have been the proper answer to the country’s woes.

This is a coordinated attack. And to fight it we’re going to have to stake out some pretty solid territory right now in order to get what is desperately needed for the country and its people.

First of all, we have to have a legitimate stimulus package in place, one that’s targeted to those steps which would have the best impact on the overall economy. Nancy Pelosi is already talking about something that would provide $150 billion to state and local governments for expanding public works, extending unemployment benefits and food stamps programs. That’s not enough, but the targets are pretty solid. Investing in infrastructure provides a tangible benefit for the future while creating jobs now. Funneling money to the states stabilizes their budget and decreases the risk to program cuts. And the biggest “bang for your buck” in economic stimulus comes from spending increases like extending UI and food stamps and aiding state governments, not tax cuts which supposedly will trickle down. The White House thinks the luckie duckies can get their own job and shouldn’t be bailed out, and House Republicans want a “stimulus” as long as it does nothing to stimulate the economy:

Rep. Roy Blunt, the Missouri Republican who serves as House minority leader, said he would support a stimulus plan if it did not include massive public works spending and budget bailouts for states that overspent on health care and other social programs.

“A stimulus plan that makes sense is something that I’ll be helpful with,” Blunt said, also on ABC television.

Furthermore, you have to find big solutions that can increase economic output, create jobs that expand the industrial base so we don’t keep relying on pushing paper to make a living, and legitimately tackle the global challenges that threaten to overwhelm any short-term band-aids. Fortunately, such a solution already exists.

But in the medium to long term, once the immediate problems in the financial sector have been ironed out, we need a planned transition towards a cleaner future, not a headlong collapse into a new depression. That means – contrary to the suggestion of the “all growth is bad” school – that we need to grow our way out of this economic mess. A return to Keynesianism could be a good thing for the environment, if government-backed spending and investment drives growth in areas where it is desperately needed, especially particularly clean energy. The old days of environment versus jobs are over – we don’t need to sacrifice quality of life in order to stimulate the economy.

A green recovery providing millions of jobs and avoiding the catastrophe of unchecked global warming is our only hope of maintaining our sliding global stature. The one saving grace of the past few weeks of debates has been that this question was finally asked in front of a national audience:

Sen. McCain, I want to know, we saw that Congress moved pretty fast in the face of an economic crisis. I want to know what you would do within the first two years to make sure that Congress moves fast as far as environmental issues, like climate change and green jobs?

This must happen quickly and boldly and Senator Obama needs to be pushed. His energy policies are good but insufficient. His renewable targets must be larger – his target of 10% of all electricity from renewables by 2012 has already been exceeded this year. When energy has come up on the campaign trail, Obama foregrounds with talk of “clean coal” and “safe nuclear” power, which is fine for triangulation but terrible for the planet.

Obama’s four-part plan today to restore American jobs is solid, and also needs to be bigger. He supports immediate investments in rebuilding America’s infrastructure to create a million new jobs, extending UI and suspending taxes on benefits, creating a two-year holiday on penalties for withdrawing from 401(k) and IRA plans, LIHEAP funding supplements, and a 90-day foreclosure moratorium, among other measures. The job creation incentives in here are fine, and relief to those who need help is crucial.

But this is a time to think big. We have to grow our way out of the economic depths. We have to use the money we’ll spend wisely enough to create external benefits for the next 50 to 60 years, to wire America like we electrified America in the 1930s, to fix the roads and bridges the way we built them then, to create a new, clean energy grid to replace the old one that served us well. We can not only face the biggest challenges in the world and create a sustainable economy at the same time, but they can complement each other. And we can say “hell no” to those Wise Men of Washington and the conservatives they enable, whose ideas on budgets and fiscal responsibility and supply-side economics have been totally discredited. We need only to have courage in crisis, and a willingness to lead the way.

Who will show it, if not us?

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Heroes

by digby

They do exist, and in the oddest places. This is an amazing story of a self-described “conformist” military lawyer and Guantanamo prosecutor who finally couldn’t live with the injustices he saw being perpetrated:

Even if he had no doubt about the guilt of the accused, he wrote in an August e-mail, “I am beginning to have grave misgivings about what I am doing, and what we are doing as a country. . . .

“I no longer want to participate in the system, but I lack the courage to quit. I am married, with children, and not only will they suffer, I’ll lose a lot of friends.”

Two days later, he took the unusual step of reaching out for advice from his opposing counsel, a military defense lawyer.

“How do I get myself out of this office?” Vandeveld asked Major David J.R. Frakt of the Air Force Reserve, who represented the young Afghan Vandeveld was prosecuting for an attack on U.S. soldiers — despite Vandeveld’s doubts about whether Mohammed Jawad would get a fair trial. Vandeveld said he was seeking a “practical way of extricating myself from this mess.”

Last month, Vandeveld did just that, resigning from the Jawad case, the military commissions overall and, ultimately, active military duty. In doing so, he has become even more of a central figure in the “mess” he considers Guantanamo to be.

Vandeveld is at least the fourth prosecutor to resign under protest. Questions about the fairness of the tribunals have been raised by the very people charged with conducting them, according to legal experts, human rights observers and current and former military officials.

It isn’t just the ACLU or liberal hippie bloggers who see this as a travesty. Four prosecutors have resigned in protest. They are military professionals, the most rigid group of people on the planet, trained to take orders and do as they’re told. And yet they cannot live with what they see:

Vandeveld went to Guantanamo, where he began locking horns over the Jawad case with Frakt — a law professor at Western State University in Fullerton and a former active-duty Air Force lawyer who volunteered for the tribunals.

Frakt believed that his Afghan client was, at worst, a confused teen who had been brainwashed and drugged by militant extremists who coerced him into participating in a grenade-throwing incident with other older — and more guilty — men. He insisted that the prosecution was withholding key information or not obtaining it from those at the Pentagon, CIA and other U.S. agencies that had investigated and interrogated Jawad.

Vandeveld believed that Jawad was a war criminal who had been taught by an Al Qaeda-linked group to kill American troops and, if caught, to make up claims he had been tortured and was underage. Vandeveld insisted that he had been providing all evidence to the defense.

But by July, Vandeveld told The Times, he had grown increasingly troubled. He kept finding sources of information and documents that appeared to bolster Frakt’s claims that evidence was being withheld — including some favorable to the defense, such as information suggesting that Jawad was underage, that he had been drugged before the incident and that he had been abused by U.S. forces afterward.

Vandeveld also was having difficulty obtaining authorization to release documents in his possession to the defense.

He finally realized that he either had to step up or risk losing his personal integrity.

It shouldn’t require this kind of action on the part of military lawyers. They shouldn’t be forced to put their lives and careers on the line for such basic questions of justice. And if you want to blame someone in particular for this, blame John S. McCain, the former POW who sold his soul and fronted for the administration to pass the Military Commissions Act.

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Thrilled For The Shrill One

by digby

This makes my day.

Paul Krugman has been a stalwart liberal during these dark Bush years, taking the kinds of slings and arrows that only someone who dared to speak the truth in an international forum like the NY Times would be subjected to. He was fearless and passionate and I’m not sure the blogosphere would have developed the way it did if it weren’t for him. His column was the only major political venue for a time that validated what we were seeing. Now he is a blogger himself. (Indeed, I think he may be the first Nobel Prize winning blogger out there.)

Obviously, his work in economics is what brought him this prize and I’ve no doubt it is well deserved. But I’m sure his success there, as in everything he does, is due to his staunch intellectual integrity. In that, he is an inspiration in all fields of endeavor.

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Imprisoned

by tristero

My friend, psychotherapist KS, wrote me regarding McCain’s “My fellow prisoners” slip:

there has not been any discussion of what the hell happened here. was it a senior moment? was he traumatized as a prisoner, and was he having a flashback due to the pressures of the campaign? did he feel like a prisoner of his campaign, or of palin?
if it is second option, then what?

I can’t answer these questions, of course. I doubt even McCain knows.

But it is curious how some Republican campaign rhetoric focuses on capture and imprisonment. In fact, McCain’s new campaign speech features the line , “We’ve got them just where we want them.” And who can forget Bush’s infamous, “You can run but you can’t hide?” I’m sure that’s just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to this kind of sadomasochistic imagery. UPDATE: Let me add, as per comments, that McCain wanting to “whip” Obama’s “you know what” is also part of this imagery.

And it’s weird.