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Month: July 2009

We’re Not Kidding: They Really Are Extremists.

by tristero

Jeff Sharlet continues his brilliant reporting on the bizarre christo-fascist cult called “the Family” which counts among its members some of the most powerful people holding elected office in the United States. How bizarre and extreme is the Family?

Attempting to explain what it means to be chosen for leadership like King David was — or Mark Sanford, according to his own estimate — [Doug Coe, son and heir-apparent to Family leader David Coe] asked a young man who’d put himself, body and soul, under the Family’s authority, “Let’s say I hear you raped three little girls. What would I think of you?” The man guessed that Coe would probably think that he was a monster. “No,” answered Coe, “I wouldn’t.” Why? Because, as a member of the Family, he’s among what Family leaders refer to as the “new chosen.” If you’re chosen, the normal rules don’t apply.

And just who are known to be members of the Family?

Men under the Family’s religio-political counsel include, in addition to [John] Ensign, [Tom] Coburn and [Chip] Pickering, Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Jim DeMint and Lindsey Graham, both R-S.C.; James Inhofe, R-Okla., John Thune, R-S.D., and recent senators and high officials such as John Ashcroft, Ed Meese, Pete Domenici and Don Nickles. Over in the House there’s Joe Pitts, R-Penn., Frank Wolf, R-Va., Zach Wamp, R-Tenn., Robert Aderholt, R-Ala., Ander Crenshaw, R-Fla., Todd Tiahrt, R-Kan., Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., Jo Ann Emerson, R-Mo., and John R. Carter, R-Texas. Historically, the Family has been strongly Republican, but it includes Democrats, too. There’s Mike McIntyre of North Carolina, for instance, a vocal defender of putting the Ten Commandments in public places, and Sen. Mark Pryor, the pro-war Arkansas Democrat responsible for scuttling Obama’s labor agenda. Sen. Pryor explained to me the meaning of bipartisanship he’d learned through the Family: “Jesus didn’t come to take sides. He came to take over.” And by Jesus, the Family means the Family…

The Family sponsors missions overseas

[But] the Family missionaries aren’t representing the United States. They’re representing “Jesus plus nothing,” as Doug Coe puts it, the “totalitarianism of God,” in the words of an early Family leader, a vision that encompasses not just social issues but also the kind of free-market fundamentalism that is the real object of devotion for Ensign, Coburn, Pickering, Wamp and Sanford, along with Family insiders such as Sens. DeMint, Sam Brownback and Chuck Grassley…

When they arrive in other countries, on trips paid for by the Family, at the behest of the Family, they are still traveling under official government auspices, on official business, with the pomp and circumstance — and access — of their taxpayer-funded, elected positions. Here’s how a former National Security Council official who traveled with Family leader Doug Coe on a tour of Pacific nations described the Family effect in small nations where a visitor like John Ensign is a major event: “It reminded me of the story in World War II, where the British sent an OSS type into Borneo … And this guy parachuted out of the sky and they had never seen anything like this so they looked on him as — he had blonde hair and white skin and he was a white god who had come out of the sky to mobilize them. Obviously his side was going to win so they had no trouble aligning themselves.”

And their megalomania knows no bounds:

Counseling Rep. Tiahrt, Doug Coe offered Pol Pot and Osama bin Laden as men whose commitment to their causes is to be emulated. Preaching on the meaning of Christ’s words, he says, “You know Jesus said ‘You got to put Him before mother-father-brother sister? Hitler, Lenin, Mao, that’s what they taught the kids. Mao even had the kids killing their own mother and father. But it wasn’t murder. It was for building the new nation. The new kingdom.”

Every once in a while, someone tries to make a case that American democracy does not face any real threat from christianists and theocrats, that it’s all overblown.

Thanks to Jeff Sharlet, among others, we know that that is just whistling in the dark. These people are seriously demented, seriously un-Democratic, and seriously fanatical. Most importantly, they are not seeking positions of great power. They are in positions of great power.

Memories Of The Moon

by digby

I’m not one to reminisce too much about the wonder years, but I do have a little story about the moon landing that might be slightly amusing.

Like most 12 year olds I watched it on TV. But I was in Oaxaca Mexico and I watched it on a small set that was rigged up above the bandstand of the town square. And I watched it in the company of a crowd of Zapotec and Mixtec Indians, many of whom hadn’t seen TV much at that time, much less something as momentous as man landing on the moon. There were townspeople there too, of course, and traveling foreigners, but I recall that everyone had the same awestruck look on their faces.

We all watched it and then there was a big fiesta. In Mexico everything is cause for celebration. But this one was special. Everyone was patting each on the back and congratulating them as if we’d all accomplished something spectacular together. And from the perspective of humankind, we had.

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Secrets And Lies

by digby

This is interesting because it has absolutely nothing to do with terrorism and cannot be said to show that civil libertarians want to let terrorists kill us all in our beds:

A federal district judge ruled Monday that the CIA repeatedly misled him in asserting that state secrets were involved in a 15-year-old lawsuit involving allegedly illegal wiretapping.

U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth also ordered former CIA director George Tenet and five other CIA officials to explain their actions or face potential sanctions.

Lamberth also questioned the credibility of current CIA Director Leon Panetta , saying that Panetta’s testimony in the case contained significant discrepancies, and rejected an Obama administration request that the case continue to be kept secret. He released hundreds of previously secret filings.

“The court does not give the government a high degree of deference because of its prior misrepresentations regarding the stated secrets privilege in this case,” Lamberth wrote. “Although this case has been sealed since its inception to protect sensitive information, it is clear . . . that many of the issues are unclassified.”

This case is about a DEA agent spying on a diplomat over an inter-agency turf battle. But the Clinton, Bush and Obama administrations claimed the state secrets privilege to keep the case from going forward. That sort of puts the lie to the whole idea that the new blanket state secrets doctine is a national security necessity, doesn’t it?

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Debunk And Deprogram

by digby

Dday recaps the president’s call with bloggers today below, (here’s the recording) but there were a couple of things he said that dday didn’t mention. Obama had two specific things he thought the blogs could be helpful with: countering the lies and misinformation about costs and keeping pressure on members of congress. Those are actually two things the blogs are currently doing pretty well, so somebody is paying attention.

As for the first problem with the cost misinformation, it’s almost too late. They should have anticipated that Cokie and Company would be nearly orgasmic with delight if some accountant uttered the prophesy that the health care plan would break the bank. It’s exactly the sort of thing the media love because it makes it possible that there will be an “upset” in the Big Game. So when the CBO came out with that testimony last week, they had to know it would set off explosions all over Washington.

Having said, that, the degree of misinformation and bizarre analysis really is amazing. (Amato caught one fairly typical one over the week-end.) Apparently, these people can’t even interpret some fairly simple polling numbers much less something as complicated as the cost or savings of health care reform.

I have written from the beginning that the biggest threat to health care reform was going to be the fiscal scolds, who predictably reared their heads after the Republicans had built up a large debt with tax cuts for the wealthy and useless military spending. Indeed, they work in tandem. Fiscal scolds are front people for greedy and selfish malefactors of wealth who are the best able to afford the taxes necessary to have a decent society and the least willing to do it. And they are considered to be Very Serious People by the babbling press corp who have no interest in anything but “scoring” the Big Game.

From the moment it became clear that the Democrats were going to win a majority they geared up for a long campaign against progressive legislation in general, but the biggest threat they see is any expansion of the safety net. They know that once they are in place, people will never allow them to be taken away. They will fight until their last breath to make sure that average Americans do not get it into their heads that higher taxes on wealthy people (and themselves) is actually a good deal.

Blogs and others can debunk bogus numbers forever, but until the Democrats realize that they have to actually make an argument about what the government should spend taxpayer money on and why the idea of “tax relief” is actually just a way of saying “I refuse to pay my bills,” they will always be at the mercy of the big money boyz who will pull out all the stops to keep the rubes from getting it into their heads that they actually have the power to make their own lives better through democratic government. And until they recognize that feeding the puerile political press corps with silly celebrity pieces and political process stories is counter productive, they will end up with shallow, uninformative coverage.

Meanwhile, if you want to know how more specifically how health care reform will save money in the long run, read Ezra.

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Obama Blogger Call On Health Care

by dday

I had a chance to participate in a conference call with President Barack Obama and some bloggers today about the health care debate. Clearly the very fact of this conference call’s existence shows that the White House is leaving no stone unturned in searching for allies to help sell reform, and that the President is ready to step forward in this debate. That’s a good thing. He still has enough political capital to manage the process where he wants it to go, and if he wants certain elements of the policy included in the final bill, provided that there is a final bill, I wouldn’t bet against them getting in there. And the result of the conference call was interesting.

The President spoke for a few minutes, then took about 15 minutes of direct questions. In his opening remarks, he said that now was a critical time for the bill, and that we’re closer to passage than we’ve been in the last 50 years. Those who are opposing have offered no credible alternative but the status quo, which he termed “unacceptable”. He hoped that the blogs would help him in “debunking myths,” for example the notion that this bill, which is entirely paid for as a package, would spread record deficits. He said that the default position in Washington is one of inertia, and that pressure must be kept on members of Congress – not Republicans, but members of Congress – to move the process forward. He made sure to highlight – as did David Axelrod in a short Q&A afterwards – the words of Sen. Jim DeMint, calling health care Obama’s “Waterloo.” Clearly that will be used by the White Hosue as a badge of honor and a rallying cry in the weeks ahead, because it evokes the same concept as the leader of the GOP Rush Limbaugh saying he hopes Obama fails.

With that, the President took questions, and it was truly unlike most press conferences you’d see by the heavily pancaked White House press corps. Bloggers wanted to know about two things – the tactics for getting a bill through, and the substance of that bill. For example, John Amato from C&L asked if the President would call on Congress to forego the August recess if they didn’t reach a floor vote by the deadline, which the President pretty much dodged. He acknowledged that we cannot delay any further and that we’ve been debating this for 50 years, and that those who are calling for delay are doing so deliberately in order to kill any hope of passage, but he would only commit himself to working as hard as we can to see “serious forward motion” by the recess, and never fully answered what I think could be a good tactic Amato brought up, to ask the Congress to finish their work and keep reform on track. In a similar kind of question about reconciliation, Jonathan Singer from MyDD asked at what point we move to using budget reconciliation if a Senate bill stalls, and the President kept that stick of reconciliation in his back pocket, saying that they expect a bill by mid-October, but failing that, “we’d look at all options including reconciliation.” He admitted that reconciliation wasn’t the preferred option but that the status quo cannot continue. That speaks very well to the probability that something will pass this year.

What I wanted to ask about was something that Robert Reich wrote about today. The White House and Congress have made all these deals with key stakeholders, which do provide for hospitals, drug companies and doctors to give back some profits, but preserve additional costs that could be wrung from the system. And these “legacy costs” are making it very hard to provide the kind of controls that reformers seek and Blue Dogs pay lip service to.

Big Pharma, for example, is in line to get just what it wants. The Senate health panel’s bill protects biotech companies from generic competition for 12 years after their drugs go to market, which is guaranteed to keep prices sky high. Meanwhile, legislation expected from the Senate Finance committee won’t allow cheaper drugs to be imported from Canada and won’t give the federal government the right to negotiate Medicare drug prices directly with pharmaceutical companies. Last month Big Pharma agreed to what the White House touted as $80 billion in givebacks to help pay for expanded health insurance, but so far there’s been no mechanism to force the industry to keep its promise. No wonder Big Pharma is now running “Harry and Louise” ads — the same couple who fifteen years ago scared Americans into thinking the Clinton plan would take away their choice of doctor — now supportive of Obamacare. Private insurers, for their part, have become convinced they’ll make more money with a universal mandate accompanied by generous subsidies for families with earnings up to 400 percent of poverty (in excess of $80,000 of income) than they might stand to lose. Although still strongly opposed to a public option, the insurance industry is lining up behind much of the legislation. The biggest surprise is the AMA, which has also now come out in favor — but only after being assurred that Medicare reimbursements won’t be cut nearly as much as doctors first feared.

But all these industry giveaways are obviously causing the healthcare tab to grow. And as these long-term costs rise, the locus of opposition to universal health care is shifting away from industry and toward Blue Dog and moderate Democrats who are increasingly worried about future deficits.

I asked the President about this tension between these buyoffs to stakeholders and his goal to “bend the cost curve” and make health care cheaper and more effective in this country, and here’s a paraphrased version of his answer.

I cannot expect the hospital association, for example, to sign up for something they don’t think is right for hospitals and exepct them to back reform. So I understand what they’re doing to protect their interests. I think we can negotiate and find a good way to go about this. In theory we could cram down additional savings, but to have the American Medical Association, the American Nurses Association, the drugmakers, the insurance companies, all of them on our team, that does help us move the process forward. Theoretically, there should be enormous savings inside the system. We all know that we pay more for health care than we should, and we shouldn’t need additional revenue. But that’s harder to do in practice, because all these powerful interests block the efforts. What I think is that we can get a framework where reform begins, one with an insurance exchange, and a robust public option, concrete reductions in cost, prevention, health IT, comparative effectiveness research, and it will be possible to achieve greater savings with a more efficient system down the road. And we can revisit the policy 10 years from now and possibly see even more savings than what was scored and anticipated.

I found that to be both a decent and a deeply unsatisfying answer. I understand that you don’t want the stakeholders bringing in the Howitzers and seeding massive attacks against any reform, so keeping them on the same side is important. At the same time, with these groups bought off, and indeed knowing that they will get an ultimately good deal from Washington, the transition from the broken system we have to that theoretical one that Obama discussed gets delayed. I agree about getting a framework in place, something to tweak down the road. But we spend so much time in our politics bowing to powerful interests that it’s very frustrating to concede that as a political reality. Especially when drugmakers and insurance companies are pretty reviled in the populace (though doctors really are not). Obama seems to know that there’s an easy path for real reform, but it’s complicated by a real control from special interests of the levers of the political debate. So we keep the dogs at bay, but in the process, we don’t reform health care to the extent that we could. That animates the “if you like what you have, you can keep it” mantra (even if what you have is ultimately inefficient), and these deals with stakeholders. Then the fiscal scolds can talk about how the bill costs too much even while resisting those cost control methods because they would hurt these same stakeholders! It’s maddening.

There is a bright spot, however. Obama went pretty far in support of a public option, a fairly tangible reform effort, on the call. He doubted the evidence that a co-op plan like that pushed by Kent Conrad would work, citing past experience that showed them having trouble getting off the ground. And he then said that the House and Senate bills would not be identical, that a conference committee would certainly be required. And at that point, the White House would engage in serious negotiations, with the President’s fundamental principles and benchmarks in place. The House and Senate bills would not match up exactly, but that would not mean that the final bill wouldn’t include certain elements, he essentially said. The President was basically saying: get it to conference, and we’ll straighten it out. That probably doesn’t mean that the President gets everything he wants, but it means that the big issues will be at his determination and discretion, almost certainly.

I think that’s an important reminder. Past White Houses have used the conference committee very effectively to make sure bills matched preferences. Obama signaled his willingness to do that. Which means that, while we can have a role in getting this bill through each chamber, the White House will be able to make their presence felt to a degree at the finish line. In effect, he will take ownership of the policy and ensure it beats the status quo.

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Wrecking Ball

by digby

What with doomsday now upon us here in California, I think it’s a good moment to look back just a few short years ago to see what the effects of turning our politics into circus sideshow really are.

Back in 2003, when everyone in the country was pretending that Junior was Winston Churchill and the nation was in full blown worship of phony macho posturing, here in California we were bored and decided to see what would happen if we simply deposed a guy who seemed kind of pansyish in favor of a Hollywood movie star who would entertain us with his colorful slogans and fancy family.

The “issue” that supposedly precipitated this little tantrum was the required restoration to earlier higher rates for car registration, brought about by a weakening of the economy. The media went wild, even friends of mine who know absolutely nothing about politics pretended to be enraged that they would be forced to pay $30.00 more a year and they all went out and voted to recall the Governor and replace him with The Terminator.

That recall was a political sideshow of epic proportions, featuring porn stars, Gary Coleman and even Arianna. It was great fun. Standing in line to vote that day — the longest line I’d ever experienced at the ballot box — was like being at an American Idol party.

But check it out. In an otherwise terrible George Skelton column, he does make one interesting observation:

Schwarzenegger had campaigned full throttle against Gov. Gray Davis’ “outrageous” raising of the vehicle license fee. His favorite stunt was using a wrecking ball to smash an old jalopy that symbolized the tax.

Davis really had only bumped the fee back to its historic level: to 2% of a vehicle’s value, rather than a recently enacted 0.65%.

Schwarzenegger’s canceling of the fee hike actually amounted to the single biggest spending increase of his reign. That’s because all the revenue from the vehicle license fee had gone to local governments, and Schwarzenegger generously agreed to make up their losses by shipping them money from the state general fund.

The annual drain on the state treasury was $6.3 billion until February. Then the governor and Legislature raised the fee to 1.15% of vehicle value, saving the state $1.7 billion. But it will revert to its lower level in two years.

Cutting the car tax plunged the state deeper into debt just as Schwarzenegger was taking the wheel. To cover it — at least temporarily — the new governor went on a borrowing binge. It didn’t take much to persuade the Legislature and voters to authorize $15 billion in “economic recovery bonds.”

Passing those bonds and a companion spending “reform,” the governor promised, would mean “no more deficit financing.” They’d live within their means. Sacramento would “tear up the credit card and throw it away.”

The only thing thrown away was all the bond money, spent long ago on daily expenses — the equivalent of borrowing to buy groceries.

Schwarzenneger’s “car tax” plan was totally incoherent. Here’s dday at Calitics talking about the “deal” made today:

Particularly galling is the targeting of city and county budgets to cover the state gap. By siphoning off almost $1 billion in gas tax funds slated for cities and counties, not one pothole in California will get filled this year. With the loss of $1.7 billion in redevlopment funds, not one project like affordable housing will get initiated. And by taking $1.3 billion in local property taxes, lots of city and county employees, particularly in public safety, will end up out of work. It’s really robbery on a pretty grand scale, and it will offset any economic recovery through stimulus funding throughout the state.

And Jon and Ken and other right wing freaks will say it proves that government doesn’t work.

I’m not saying the car fee issue is the reason the state is currently in chaos. It’s far deeper and more complicated than that. But I do believe that the simplistic, downright silly approach Americans take to politics is largely to blame. It long ago became more about marketing and entertainment — and preening, shallow self-gratification — than serious consideration of responsible governance.

Arnold Schwarzenneger was as much of a clown as Gary Coleman was during that election. But he was big box office and very wealthy so nobody cared. Indeed, the fact that he spoke in nothing but stale cliches and stupid bumper stickers made people like him all the more.

The single most important thing that Schwarzenneger has done is keep the state from raising taxes on the wealthy and corporations. That’s what he was sent to do and he did it. And look where we are today. I’m not saying that Gray Davis could have saved the state. The system is broken and nobody couldn’t have headed this off entirely. But I’m afraid that we are going to have to reform more than the state constitution to fix things. We need to reform politics itself somehow, convince people that it isn’t American Idol or the World Series, or the ruling class will always be able to afford to put on a show whenever they need to manipulate the folks and the folks will probably fall for it.

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Beyond The Public Option

by dday

Take a look at this ad from America’s Health Insurance Plans, the insurance industry lobby.

See what’s missing? The words “public option.” Or really, any attack on the current plan in Congress at all. The spot associates AHIP with a reform banning denial of coverage for pre-existing condition in exchange for getting every American covered, gently asks for the final bill to be bipartisan, and… that’s it.

Similarly, Olympia Snowe, who signed on to the letter calling for a delay in the deadline for reporting a health care bill out of the Senate, positively called for a public option on day one in a speech this weekend in Maine.

What this shows me is that we have now moved beyond the public option as the fulcrum point for the health care debate. We don’t know what form it will take or how accessible it will be to all Americans, but if there’s a bill signed by the President, it will include a public option. The major players have given up on that score and moved on to other issues to try and derail health care, particularly costs. We’ve seen much more criticism about cost controls and surtaxes on the wealthy over the last week than any discussion of the public option.

That’s because those other facets of the policy don’t poll very well, certainly not as well as a public option does. And the forces defending the status quo have found a much easier path by arguing for more delay, raising questions about costs, claiming that Democrats are engaging in class warfare, raising specters about rationing, and generally using that fiscal scold pose, saying we cannot pay for health care reform while protecting federal health care funding for their districts and localities. On the far right fringe you have lies about how the bill “outlaws private insurance,” but in general, the status quo forces think they can trap the bill with a discussion about its cost, not its function.

Of course, the larger effort here is to destroy the Democratic agenda and basically ensure a first term without substantive accomplishments. And Obama is right to use Jim DeMint’s “Waterloo” line against him, make it famous, and condemn those who would turn an urgent need for tens of millions of Americans into a game of political hardball:

Just the other day, one Republican Senator said, and I’m quoting him now, “if we’re able to stop Obama on this, it will be his Waterloo. It will break him.” Think about that. This isn’t about me. This isn’t about politics. This about a health care system that is breaking America’s families, breaking America’s businesses and breaking America’s economy. And we can’t afford the politics of delay and defeat when it comes to health care. Not this time, not now. There are too many lives and livelihoods at stake.

What we may see is a brief scaling back on the deadline, which should still leave enough time to report a bill out of both houses in September and reconcile them by October. But the fights ahead for health care appear to be playing out over cost and who pays. The public option is in the bill, as long as it gets dragged over the line.

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The Magic Calculator

by dday

David Brooks has a new calculator where he adds state and local taxes to income taxes and comes up with a super duper number to show the burden on the henpecked rich:

BROOKS: You know, they made some progress on the Hill, they got a House bill out, they got a Senate bill moving forward. They’re scaring the dickens out of the moderates in their own party, let alone the Republicans. They’re scaring the dickens out of them because the House bill calls for raising the top tax rate to 52 or in some cities, 57%. That’s higher than in France, Spain, Italy…

Magically, Brooks neglects that other little line item on the tax form – the part with all the deductions. In many states, you can deduct your federal taxes on your state taxes. And then there’s the deductions for mortgage interest, and charity, and every phone call you have with someone in your business, and every dinner, and all of the other hundreds if not thousands of deductions and credits and givebacks available to those in the top tax rate, not to mention tax shelters and numbered Swiss bank accounts and the like.

There’s only one tax rate that matters, and that’s the effective tax rate, measuring the amount of money individuals actually pay to the federal government. The effective tax rate for the top 1% was down to 31.2% in 2006, down measurably from the previous year and at an almost historical low.

Now, maybe some of those Democrats in wealthy districts could get out their calculators and explain this to their constituents, but I think they all have David Brooks’ calculator model.

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What Defines A Democrat?

by digby

I know that the Democratic Party wants to be a big tent for pretty much everybody in the whole wide world, but this seems to me to be a disqualifier:

A group of Democrats elected in recent years from some of the country’s richest congressional districts have emerged as a stumbling block to raising taxes on the wealthy to pay for President Barack Obama’s ambitious health-care overhaul just as the plan has begun to meet increasing resistance over its cost.

Friday, two freshmen representatives — Dina Titus, from suburban Las Vegas, and Colorado’s Jared Polis, representing Boulder, Vail and some of the tonier suburbs of Denver — joined Republicans to vote against Mr. Obama’s top-priority health-care overhaul when it faced a vote in their House Education and Labor Committee. One reason was a one-percentage point-surtax on couples earning between $350,000 and $500,000 — gradually increasing to 5.4 percentage points on earnings more than $1 million — to pay for it.

I know that many Dems are corporate lackeys who look out for big business. I find it hard to believe they can call themselves anything but conservative Republicans, but somehow they have convinced their constituents that helping business helps save jobs, so its a progressive ideal. It’s something we need to work on.

But as far as I’m concerned, if you don’t believe in the progressive income tax you’ve talked yourself out of the Democratic party, period. There is no more fundamental tenet of the progressive philosophy. It’s like being a socialist Republican — philosophically incoherent. (And you’ll notice, there aren’t any such things.) Protecting people who make more than $350,000 dollars a year from being taxed beyond their currently historically low level — the vaunted top 1% — simply cannot be a Democratic value. It’s absurd on its face.

This is concern trolling by the Wall Street Journal, to be sure. But they didn’t make up Jared Polis’ position. If Polis can’t explain to his wealthy Democratic constituents why they have an obligation to give back to ensure that our society is stable and secure and our economy is strong, then he needs to go into another line of work.

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The Song Remains The Shame

by digby

You know those reunion tours where paunchy, middle aged one hit wonders of a couple of decades ago hit the summer fair circuit? This is a lot like that:

Kristol: Kill It, and Start Over

With Obamacare on the ropes, there will be a temptation for opponents to let up on their criticism, and to try to appear constructive, or at least responsible. There will be a tendency to want to let the Democrats’ plans sink of their own weight, to emphasize that the critics have been pushing sound reform ideas all along and suggest it’s not too late for a bipartisan compromise over the next couple of weeks or months.

My advice, for what it’s worth: Resist the temptation. This is no time to pull punches. Go for the kill.

This time he embellishes his tired arrangement with the argument that they can come back to the drawing board (the original version admitted that health care would empower the Democrats for a generation) but it’s the same old song. Jim DeMint is also on the bill singing a bizarre country version of ABBA’s “Waterloo” and he’s joined by Newtie and the Blowhards all singing the Frank Luntz repertoire.

Obstructionism always has power. Lot’s of people are afraid of change, and right now there may even be more than usual. Despite the election mantra, insecurity often makes people retreat into the familiar. These songs would be far more appealing, however, if these guys hadn’t been so incredibly over-exposed for so many decades. There are some songs that no matter how much you may have liked it when it first came out, put your teeth on edge even decades later when they come on the radio. “Kill Health Reform” was a big hit back in the 90s. Nobody but the die hard fans want to hear it again.

Update: Here’s a new song just hitting the charts today by that old fashioned Republican folk artist Olympia Snowe, called “I Support The Public Plan”:

“I believe that the reforms we are creating will result in more
competitive, affordable and innovative options for Mainers, yet we can
all agree that we must not leave universal access to chance. That is
why I also support a public plan which must be available from day
one.”

It’s got a good beat and you can dance to it.

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