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Month: November 2009

Ft. Hood

by digby

I have no idea what happened at Ft Hood. They’ve confirmed that the perpetrators were military. They don’t know the reason for the killings. CNN’s military correspondent Barbara Starr says there an incredible amount of stress and PTSD at the post, the biggest in the Army, although she has no particular information.(And since most soldiers have some level of PTSD after multiple deployments, it’s far too broad of a category to mean anything in this context.)

Regardless of motivation one would certainly hope, above all, that this had nothing to do with it. It’s pretty awful that one’s thoughts would immediately turn in that direction when something like this happens. But after Tim McVeigh, you have to consider it. (If the shooters were civilians, my thoughts would go in a different direction.)

Update: Barbara Starr reports that The Pentagon is begging people not to speculate, that they have no information about motive. That’s correct, and as of now there’s no reason to assume anything one way or the other. Who knows what this is really about?

Update II (2:35pst): Apparently NBC is reporting that the shooter was a Major with an arabic sounding name. Cliff Van Zandt, the professional “profiler” pretty much called this an al Qaeda plot on MSNBC, although he said nothing about the name. I suppose that would explain the intense involvement that’s being reported by the White House and the Pentagon.

ABC reports:

The suspected gunman was identified by ABC News as Major Malik Nadal Hasan.

The shooter was killed and two other suspects, who are also soldiers, have been apprehended, Lt. Gen. Robert W. Cone said.

But again …. this is all rumor and gossip. We really know nothing at this point.

Update III (3:00 pst):

Here’s Atlas Shrugged:

MUSLIM TERROR ATTACK: ‘NINE shot dead’ 12 30 Wounded at Mass Shooting at Fort Hood, US Army Base

UPDATE: Shepard Smith, that silly woman, keeps calling it a tragedy. It is an act of war.

MUSLIM KILLER: The suspected gunman was identified as Major Malik Nadal Hasan. UPDATE: The coverage is beyond stupid. Three men — is a conspiracy. Three men is a terror cell. For the FBI to rule out terrorism in an obvious act of terrorism (by whom, we know not yet) indicates were are worse off tha the UK. Three men, synchronized shoting, M16s, maximum kill ………… you won’t get the real story from the media..Keep in mind what Atlas said just two days ago about the sentencing of the DC sniper:

Muslim John Allen Muhammad is scheduled to be executed next Tuesday, November 10, 2009. We can only hope that he is promptly dispatched to meet his 72 virgins. If this attempt to stay the execution of this bloodthirsty jihadi gets traction, we must march on Washington. He must die. Thirteen people were shot, 10 fatally, when Muhammad and accomplice, Lee Boyd Malvo, went on a random shooting rampage around the Washington region in 2002. Muhammad’s lawyers said in a statement they asked Kaine on Thursday to commute Muhammad’s sentence to life in prison. They said Muhammad’s illness is “illustrated by brain damage, brain dysfunction, neurological deficits as well as his psychotic and delusional behavior.” Read Full Article.He is a Muslim. This was jihad. Is Islam a mental illness? Is that the position of the defense? This was jihad. Kill this depraved jihadi. Meanwhile, our government continues to be completely disingenuous as to the root cause for his actions. Our “government” continues to assert that the murders were related to an “individual’s” (Mohammad’s) aberrant criminal, abnormal behavior… not what it truly is…the fact that he (John AllenMuhammad) is representative of millions who are followers of the tenets of Islam.

I think she’s pretty clear about her feelings on this subject.

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Risk Management

by digby

For some reason people seem to suggest that there’s something wrong with the Goldman Sachs executives getting access to the flu vaccine before everyone else. What’s the problem?

As everyone knows, the Wall Street Masters of the Universe are the most talented, valuable, productive, superior members of our society despite the fact they almost destroyed the economy and thus cannot be asked to give up their obscenely greedy bonuses even as unemployment is at 10%. So it stands to reason that they should be at the front of the line for the H1N1 vaccines. We simply can’t take the chance that the most essential people in our entire nation might get sick.

Sure, they may not technically be in the high risk groups, many of whom are unable to get the vaccines, but we can’t afford to take any risks with our most precious national resources: hedge fund managers and investment bankers. Although they took outrageous, irresponsible risks with the world economy, as if they were drunks putting it all on red at a sleazy Las Vegas casino, that’s no reason for us to do the same thing with their health. Let’s keep our priorities straight here. John Galt always goes first.

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Put It On A Bumper Sticker

by digby

So Andrea Mitchell again spent the morning spinning the election on Tuesday as a terrible defeat for the Democrats that puts their entire agenda in jeopardy. She even went so far as to ask Jim Clyburn:

Let me ask you about the election, though, because Nancy Pelosi was talking about this as a victory. How can you with a straight face, I’ve known you for along time, how can you call the NY 23rd a victory compared to losing New Jersey and Virginia?

Andrea Mitchell is a Stepford reporter. Here’s what Pelosi said:

“From my perspective, we won last night. We had one race that we were engaged in — it was in northern New York. It was a race where a Republican has held a seat since the Civil War, and we won that seat. So from our standpoint, no. We had a candidate that was victorious who supports the health-care reform… So from our standpoint, we picked up votes last night, one in California [CA-10] and one in New York.”

The last I heard, Pelosi is the Speaker of the House, not the Chair of the Democratic Governors Association. As Clyburn patiently pointed out, she got another vote for health care and a more liberal member in John Garamendi. And this is on top of another off-year seat she retained earlier with Scott Murphy’s victory. All three of those seats could have theoretically gone to Republicans and they didn’t. (Even the California seat was the one held by DLC darling Ellen Tauscher — who was replaced by someone far more liberal.) So she’s actually three for three in the off year elections, all of whom ran on health care reform. But I guess that’s actually a losing record for Pelosi.

The fatuous gasbags have settled on the theme that the Democrats suffered a devastating setback to their agenda on Tuesday. This is despite the fact that as Clyburn pointed out, the only candidates who were actually running on the national agenda were those running for congress — and the Democrats won. Nonetheless, the election has been decreed to be a precursor to a Democratic rout in 2010 and, more importantly, the reason for that will be because the Democrats have been far, far too liberal for the country. As usual.

I believe this is because they truly think these teabaggers represent a deep discontent with liberalism among all Real Americans. (They are, after all, white, middle aged folks dressed in red, white and blue, waving flags all around. Just like in Mayberry in 1955. ) They cannot shake the idea that these right wing nutballs represent the silent majority. Therefore, it simply isn’t possible that the Democrats could be winning and losing on issues unrelated to these particular people’s far out, radical ideology. They may think they’re weird, but they have actually been persuaded that it’s because of their liberal bias that they think that.

The idea that Jon Corzine could lose because he’s presided over a great recession and springs from the gilded plutonomy that’s widely believed to have precipitated it is unfathomable to them. It simply must be because Barack Obama is too liberal. It’s impossible for them to believe that Virginia is a true swing state that has no real ideological center and so elects its leadership on the basis of individual issues and personal appeal. It has to be because the Democrats in congress have pushed the country too far to the left. It is the only plot line they know. (And they have been very successfully mau-maued by Roger Ailes and co. into second guessing themselves if they dream of deviating from that path.)
Mitchell went on to laugh and laugh with her colleague Savannah Guthrie over the absolutely ludicrous administration talking point that yesterday wasn’t a total defeat for their agenda.

Guthrie: And every perception I have is that they really believe it! They think that these governors races are off year elections and yes, they lost independents and that has got to be troubling to them, but they say “by the time you get to these off year elections, these are folks that who come out are independents that lean Republican. The independents that lean Democrat by a large margin have become Democrats.” So they have an answer for every argument you give and they’re really not buying into the premise that they’re in trouble here because of the Governor’s races.
(laughing again) They really love to talk about NY 23 though, Andrea, because …Mitchell: NY 23! Guthrie (still laughing): Yeah, NY 23 all the way…. because the Democrat won a seat long held by Republicans.Mitchell: We should bumper sticker it. They probably already are…

This, in case you hadn’t noticed, was on the allegedly liberal cable network’s primary daytime news . Oddly enough (or not) it’s not all that different from what’s being said on Fox. Funny how that works.
Update: The Dean still rules.
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Remember, Remember The Fifth of November

by digby

Ten years ago today, they repealed Glass Steagel. It was a landmark, bipartisan bill. Here’s what the NY Times said about it at the time:

CONGRESS PASSES WIDE-RANGING BILL EASING BANK LAWS
By STEPHEN LABATON
Published: Friday, November 5, 1999

Congress approved landmark legislation today that opens the door for a new era on Wall Street in which commercial banks, securities houses and insurers will find it easier and cheaper to enter one another’s businesses.

The measure, considered by many the most important banking legislation in 66 years, was approved in the Senate by a vote of 90 to 8 and in the House tonight by 362 to 57. The bill will now be sent to the president, who is expected to sign it, aides said. It would become one of the most significant achievements this year by the White House and the Republicans leading the 106th Congress.

”Today Congress voted to update the rules that have governed financial services since the Great Depression and replace them with a system for the 21st century,” Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers said. ”This historic legislation will better enable American companies to compete in the new economy.”

The decision to repeal the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 provoked dire warnings from a handful of dissenters that the deregulation of Wall Street would someday wreak havoc on the nation’s financial system. The original idea behind Glass-Steagall was that separation between bankers and brokers would reduce the potential conflicts of interest that were thought to have contributed to the speculative stock frenzy before the Depression.

Today’s action followed a rich Congressional debate about the history of finance in America in this century, the causes of the banking crisis of the 1930’s, the globalization of banking and the future of the nation’s economy.

Administration officials and many Republicans and Democrats said the measure would save consumers billions of dollars and was necessary to keep up with trends in both domestic and international banking. Some institutions, like Citigroup, already have banking, insurance and securities arms but could have been forced to divest their insurance underwriting under existing law. Many foreign banks already enjoy the ability to enter the securities and insurance industries.

”The world changes, and we have to change with it,” said Senator Phil Gramm of Texas, who wrote the law that will bear his name along with the two other main Republican sponsors, Representative Jim Leach of Iowa and Representative Thomas J. Bliley Jr. of Virginia. ”We have a new century coming, and we have an opportunity to dominate that century the same way we dominated this century. Glass-Steagall, in the midst of the Great Depression, came at a time when the thinking was that the government was the answer. In this era of economic prosperity, we have decided that freedom is the answer.”

In the House debate, Mr. Leach said, ”This is a historic day. The landscape for delivery of financial services will now surely shift.”

But consumer groups and civil rights advocates criticized the legislation for being a sop to the nation’s biggest financial institutions. They say that it fails to protect the privacy interests of consumers and community lending standards for the disadvantaged and that it will create more problems than it solves.

The opponents of the measure gloomily predicted that by unshackling banks and enabling them to move more freely into new kinds of financial activities, the new law could lead to an economic crisis down the road when the marketplace is no longer growing briskly.

”I think we will look back in 10 years’ time and say we should not have done this but we did because we forgot the lessons of the past, and that that which is true in the 1930’s is true in 2010,” said Senator Byron L. Dorgan, Democrat of North Dakota. ”I wasn’t around during the 1930’s or the debate over Glass-Steagall. But I was here in the early 1980’s when it was decided to allow the expansion of savings and loans. We have now decided in the name of modernization to forget the lessons of the past, of safety and of soundness.”

Senator Paul Wellstone, Democrat of Minnesota, said that Congress had ”seemed determined to unlearn the lessons from our past mistakes.”

”Scores of banks failed in the Great Depression as a result of unsound banking practices, and their failure only deepened the crisis,” Mr. Wellstone said. ”Glass-Steagall was intended to protect our financial system by insulating commercial banking from other forms of risk. It was one of several stabilizers designed to keep a similar tragedy from recurring. Now Congress is about to repeal that economic stabilizer without putting any comparable safeguard in its place.”

Supporters of the legislation rejected those arguments. They responded that historians and economists have concluded that the Glass-Steagall Act was not the correct response to the banking crisis because it was the failure of the Federal Reserve in carrying out monetary policy, not speculation in the stock market, that caused the collapse of 11,000 banks. If anything, the supporters said, the new law will give financial companies the ability to diversify and therefore reduce their risks. The new law, they said, will also give regulators new tools to supervise shaky institutions.

”The concerns that we will have a meltdown like 1929 are dramatically overblown,” said Senator Bob Kerrey, Democrat of Nebraska.

Others said the legislation was essential for the future leadership of the American banking system.

”If we don’t pass this bill, we could find London or Frankfurt or years down the road Shanghai becoming the financial capital of the world,” said Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York. ”There are many reasons for this bill, but first and foremost is to ensure that U.S. financial firms remain competitive.”

But other lawmakers criticized the provisions of the legislation aimed at discouraging community groups from pressing banks to make more loans to the disadvantaged. Representative Maxine Waters, Democrat of California, said during the House debate that the legislation was ”mean-spirited in the way it had tried to undermine the Community Reinvestment Act.” And Representative Barney Frank, Democrat of Massachusetts, said it was ironic that while the legislation was deregulating financial services, it had begun a new system of onerous regulation on community advocates.

Many experts predict that, even though the legislation has been trailing market trends that have begun to see the cross-ownership of banks, securities firms and insurers, the new law is certain to lead to a wave of large financial mergers.

The White House has estimated the legislation could save consumers as much as $18 billion a year as new financial conglomerates gain economies of scale and cut costs.

Other experts have disputed those estimates as overly optimistic, and said that the bulk of any profits seen from the deregulation of financial services would be returned not to customers but to shareholders.

These are some of the key provisions of the legislation:

*Banks will be able to affiliate with insurance companies and securities concerns with far fewer restrictions than in the past.

*The legislation preserves the regulatory structure in Washington and gives the Federal Reserve and the Office of Comptroller of the Currency roles in regulating new financial conglomerates. The Securities and Exchange Commission will oversee securities operations at any bank, and the states will continue to regulate insurance.

*It will be more difficult for industrial companies to control a bank. The measure closes a loophole that had permitted a number of commercial enterprises to open savings associations known as unitary thrifts.

One Republican Senator, Richard C. Shelby of Alabama, voted against the legislation. He was joined by seven Democrats: Barbara Boxer of California, Richard H. Bryan of Nevada, Russell D. Feingold of Wisconsin, Tom Harkin of Iowa, Barbara A. Mikulski of Maryland, Mr. Dorgan and Mr. Wellstone.

In the House, 155 Democrats and 207 Republicans voted for the measure, while 51 Democrats, 5 Republicans and 1 independent opposed it. Fifteen members did not vote.

Tucked away in the legislation is a provision that some experts today warned could cost insurance policyholders as much as $50 billion. The provision would allow mutual insurance companies to move to other states to avoid payments they would otherwise owe policyholders as they reorganize their corporate structure. Many states, including New York and New Jersey, do not allow such relocations without the consent of the insurer’s domicile state. But the legislation before Congress would pre-empt the states.

Both the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and the Prudential Life Insurance Company are in the midst of reorganizing into stock-based corporations that are requiring them to pay billions of dollars to policyholders from years of accumulated surplus. In exchange, the policyholders give up their ownership in the mutual insurance company.

The legislation would permit any mutual insurance company to avoid making surplus payments to policyholders by simply moving to states with more permissive laws and setting up a hybrid corporate structure known as a mutual holding company.

The provision was inserted by Representative Bliley at the urging of a trade association. It attracted little opposition because it was attached to a provision that forbids insurers from discriminating against domestic-violence victims.

In a letter sent to Congress this week, Mr. Summers said that the provision ”could allow insurance companies to avoid state law protecting policyholders, enriching insiders at the expense of consumers.”

So, how did all that bipartisan comity work out for us?

Maybe the Senate ought to stop its business for a couple of minutes today and give a round of slow clapping to the six Senators still in office who had the foresight to vote against that hideous piece of garbage. Not that they would ever do it, of course. If there’s one thing that will never be forgiven in Washington is being right about something when almost everyone else was wrong.

Via zerohedge, h/t to js

A Penny For The Guy

by digby

The gasbags are all atwitter about Michelle Bachman’s tea party protest in the congress today, clucking about the anger on the right and how they are emboldened. None of them, not the gasbags, the tea partiers or Michelle Bachman herself apparently have a clue about the significance of the date they chose. Steve Benen reminds us:

Bachmann has already referred to anti-reform activists as “insurgents” and “freedom fighters.” Last night, she went a little further, encouraging conservatives to try to “scare” federal lawmakers.

In a conference call Wednesday night with bloggers and activists for the advocacy group Americans for Prosperity, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) called on protesters to “scare” members of Congress into killing the proposed health care reform bill. If the protesters succeed in scaring lawmakers, Bachmann said that it could cripple efforts to restructure health care for a decade. “Nothing scares members of Congress more than freedom-loving Americans,” Bachmann said.

Referring to herself in third person, Bachmann added, “It is not Michele Bachmann’s fault” if the activists are angry tomorrow — “it is Speaker Pelosi’s.” And when has Bachmann scheduled her Capitol Hill soiree? This afternoon — November 5 — a date widely known as Guy Fawkes Night. (You know, “Remember, remember, the fifth of November.”) In other words, Bachmann wants to rally right-wing activists, label them an “insurgency,” and encourage them to roam the halls of Congress deliberately “scaring” members of Congress, on the infamous date that marks an attempt to blow up the Houses of Parliament.

I know that Americans are historically illiterate, but you’d think somebody in Washington would have said something to Michelle about this in our time of terrorism and heightened security.

Like Steve, I can’t think of anything the Republicans need more than a bunch of “revolutionaries” running around the halls of congress on Guy Fawkes day at the behest of Michelle Bachman to usher in the resurgence of the Party. Very cunning strategy.

By the way, I heard they teabagged Lieberman’s office.

Update: Here’s the agenda for the speakers, in case you were wondering:

11:50 AM – Members congregate off the Crypt in the basement of the U.S. Capitol 11:58 AM – Members descend the West Steps of the U.S. Capitol to Stage Area 12:00 PM – RSC Chairman Price (GA) – Welcoming Remarks, Introduces Pastor Paul Clark 12:03 PM – Pastor Paul Clark – Delivers Prayer 12:05 PM – Rep. Aiken (MO) – Remarks, Leads the Pledge of Allegiance 12:08 PM – National Anthem 12:11 PM – Rep. Bachmann (MN) – Remarks, Introduces John Voight (Actor) 12:14 PM – John Voight (Actor) & John Ratzenberger (Actor) 12:19 PM – Conference Chairman Pence (IN) 12:21 PM – Rep. Garrett (NJ) 12:23 PM – Rep. Bachmann (MN) – Introduces Mark Levin (Radio Commentator) 12:24 PM – Mark Levin (Radio Commentator) 12:29 PM – Rep. Blackburn (TN) 12:31 PM – Rep. King (IA) 12:33 PM – Republican Leader Boehner (OH) 12:35 PM – Rep. Shaddegg (AZ) 12:37 PM – Republican Whip Cantor (VA) 12:39 PM – Tony Perkins (Family Research Council) 12:41 PM – Rep. Hoekstra (MI) 12:43 PM – Rep. Burgess (TX) 12:45 PM – Dr. Betsy McCoy (Commentator) 12:47 PM – Rep. Foxx (NC) 12:49 PM – Rep. Gohmert (TX) 12:51 PM – Rep. Scalise (LA) 12:53 PM – Rep. Broun (GA) 12:55 PM – Tim Phillips (Americans for Prosperity) 12:57 PM – Matt Kibbe (FreedomWorks) 12:59 PM – God Bless America 1:02 PM – Open to Members (:30 – 1:00 intervals)


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Sorry Charlie

by digby

It would appear that they don’t want to get slapped with hot teabags:

On the heels of the NY-23 special House election, in which Conservative Party insurgent Doug Hoffman overtook moderate GOP nominee Dede Scozzafava, only to lose to Democrat Bill Owens, NRSC chairman John Cornyn (R-TX) has announced that the GOP’s national Senate committee will not be spending money in contested primaries. “There’s no incentive for us to weigh in,” Cornyn told ABC News. “We have to look at our resources.” This could have huge ramifications in the Florida Senate race, where moderate Gov. Charlie Crist has been endorsed by the NRSC, and faces the more conservative former state House Speaker Marco Rubio. Crist has already emerged as a new top target for the same right-wing activists who went after Scozzafava. Crist may be the officially endorsed candidate of the national GOP, but this official support won’t count for much if he doesn’t get actual money from the party. At best, he could be able to round up extra fundraising and endorsements, separate from the official party apparatus but thanks to its imprimatur. The campaign of the likely Democratic nominee, Rep. Kendrick Meek, sent out the story in a release today, calling the news a “major development.”

Eric at Red State sez:

For all intents and purposes, NY-23 is a trial run for Florida

Go team go!

I actually think that’s the democratic thing to do. Let the people have their say without the institutions weighing in. And they’re going to try. The teabag leaders are all gathering together to plot strategy:

[T]he Courant is reporting that Armey plans to go to Fairfield, CT on November 11th for a “strategy session” with conservative activists and MacGuffie, the original author of the town hall harassment strategy. An announcement sent out by MacGuffie proclaimed that he, like Armey, has actively supported Doug Hoffman’s bid to rid the NY-23 special election of moderate Assemblywoman Dede Scozzafava (R-NY). Now, both Armey and MacGuffie are planning to purge the Republican Party of more moderate politicians. MacGuffie has declared that Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME) are RINOs (Republicans in name only) who “have routinely abandoned or betrayed us.” Similarly, the next step of Armey’s agenda appears to be an intensified crusade to challenge moderate Republicans in primaries. The Politico reports that Rep. Bob Inglis (R-SC), Gov. Charlie Crist (R-FL), former Rep. Rob Simmons (R-CT) and other Republicans who have strayed from rigid party-line positions face primaries from candidates inspired by the tea parties and town hall disruption type tactics.

The corporate shill Armey, is the tip-off to what’s going on here. Why should the NRSC spend money on races that their contributors can finance through the teabaggers?

Recall what Freedomworks is all about and who it actually serves:

In 2004, Citizens for a Sound Economy (CSE) and Empower America merged to form FreedomWorks. CSE was founded by prominent right-wing funder David Koch in 1984. In the 1990s the group “won plaudits from both the business community and GOP leaders” for its role in mobilizing grassroots opposition against Clinton administration proposals on an energy tax and health care, according to National Journal, which noted that “Even some business lobbyists acknowledged that CSE has at times served as a fig leaf for corporate lobbying efforts.” CSE spent $1 million on a 1993 campaign against the proposed energy tax, including advertising and bringing grassroots pressure on Congress; most of the money came from corporations and trade groups such as the American Petroleum Institute and the National Association of Manufacturers. CSE spent $5 million against Clinton’s health care proposal, dogging the White House’s nationwide bus tour with its own bus and rallies. For a 1997 campaign, CSE spent hundreds of thousands of dollars per week running radio ads in 20 markets against proposed new EPA air standards. An internal CSE document obtained by The Washington Post in 2000 outlined the close correlation between corporate donations and issue advocacy. Empower America was founded in 1993, after Bill Clinton’s election to the presidency, as a kind of “shadow government” of policy advocacy, in the words of co-founder Jack Kemp, a former congressman and Housing secretary and future vice-presidential candidate. Gathering Kemp, Bush “drug czar” William Bennett, former UN Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, and former Minnesota congressman Vin Weber, The Wall Street Journal said the group “illustrates how such tax-exempt nonprofits have become safe harbors for elite figures in the conservative movement.” Leading up to Kemp’s 1996 bid, the group provided a “base” for him “to make $1 million to $2 million a year” giving speeches, and it played a key role in the Dole-Kemp campaign. Its early activities included operating “candidate schools” for Republicans in the 1994 elections, running attack ads against Clinton’s health plan, and opposing from the right an early Republican plan for welfare reform.

This fluff job from the NY Times magazine about Dick Armey actually tells you everything you need to know about what he’s all about:

FreedomWorks and a related organization, the FreedomWorks Foundation, emerged in 2003 from the splintering and merging of several conservative groups and took their names from Armey’s longtime mantra “freedom works.” (The foundation’s board includes Steve Forbes, the former presidential candidate and longtime flat-tax advocate.) The organizations raised about $7 million from donors in 2008, most of it in large donations — including gifts of $1 million and $750,000. The organizations refuse to reveal the sources of their money. They have “not received a dime” from any health insurance or pharmaceutical interests, according to Brandon, but that is impossible to confirm because under I.R.S. rules, while the organizations must list donations of more than $5,000, they are not required to publicly disclose who made those bequests.

As we drove between stops in North Carolina, I asked Armey if it bothered him that he fit the profile of the proverbial Washington fat cat — the pol who steps down from office but stays around to cash in on his connections. “The fact of the matter is when you walk out of Congress, if you’ve been effective and kept your nose clean, you have a market value in D.C. that you don’t have anyplace else,” he said. “You’re a free man on your own hoof, so why not make the best living you can for yourself?”

That’s your grassroots teabag movement that allegedly has the Republican establishment running scared. It is the Republican establishment. They and like minded corporate interests like News Corp are wisely infiltrating and investing in this “grassroots” organization. They don’t leave anything to chance. If Marco Rubio wins in Florida, he’ll know who his daddy is. They all will.

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Finally

by digby

The House of Lords finally decided to give the rubes a break. They passed the unemployment extension. Huzzah. That 700,000 people who lost their benefits at the end of September and all those since, sure could use a check about now.

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Blacksheep

by digby

So typical. Nobody’s talking about the Republicans’ devastating loss last night in NYCs city council race:

Joshua Goldberg — Lucianne’s son and Jonah’s brother — has been trounced. Trounced.


Tbogg analyzes the fallout
:

This was indeed sad news at Goldberg ‘09 campaign headquarters (Lucianne’s basement) as Joshua’s opponent was declared the winner about twenty-two seconds after the polls closed. Soon the victory Bagel Bites grew cold, the Yoohoo on ice started to warm as the ice shed tears of bitter failure. Joshua was left to confront a future that includes a Thanksgiving in a few weeks when brother Jonah pushes himself away from the dinner table after his third pie, looks at his watch, and exclaims,” Whoa. Look at the time! I’ve got an LA Times column to write”. Joshua will be left to push some of his cold mashed potatoes around his plate with his fork as he thinks back to the advice that his campaign manager gave him but he chose not to follow: 1. Don’t run.
2. If you do, change your name to Jeb Palin.

I wouldn’t worry too much about him. There are so many post election opportunities for losing wingnuts these days. (Let’s just hope he doesn’t consult with Levi Johnston’s handlers and start talking to Playgirl.)

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Throwing Up In The Wastebin

by digby

In the wake of Corzine’s loss last night it’s worth musing a little bit about the fates of other Uber-Masters of the Universe — former Goldman Sachs chairmen. Felix Salmon takes a look.

I especially enjoyed his take on Paulson:

Paulson’s post-Goldman career, of course, was spent as the Treasury secretary who oversaw the biggest financial meltdown since the 1929 crash. Reading Andrew Ross Sorkin’s Too Big To Fail, which was clearly written with a lot of help from Paulson, he comes across as a man who was always at least one step behind the curve, someone who could never get ahead of the unfolding crisis, who was prone to inconsistent and ad hoc decisionmaking, and who went out of his way, even before getting a waiver allowing himself to talk to Goldman Sachs, to be as helpful to them as he possibly could. Paulson seems to have spent a large amount of the crisis throwing up in his office bathroom, and even into Nancy Pelosi’s wastebin. Of course, he couldn’t simply go see a doctor, like the rest of us, because he’s a Christian Scientist. Similarly, he hobbled his ability to communicate by refusing to ever touch email: instead, any time he wanted to say anything to anybody he’d have to do so over the phone or in person. No wonder he was semi-permanently hoarse, and his phone records are insane. Paulson’s biggest failure, of course, was that of Lehman Brothers: he set up an emergency weekend confab at the New York Fed in an attempt to save it, but refused steadfastly to ever consider any public help at all, and also failed to keep British regulators in the loop, despite the fact that their assent would be needed in the event that Barclays were to acquire Lehman. In fact, when the fateful phone call to the Brits was made, it was the hapless Christopher Cox who made it, rather than Paulson. In general, Paulson was more of a bully than a leader, and he managed to be equally unpopular both on Capitol Hill and at the White House.

Paulson is exactly the type of guy that all the puerile Randians believe has gotten to the very toppermost of the poppermost with his superior “talent.” He’s the fellow whom the country simply can’t afford to insult or regulate in any fashion lest we risk losing everything we’ve got.

Feeling good about that?

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Warning Signs

by digby

Despite the fact that the Democrats gained two seat in the House last night (the winners both endorsing the public option by the way) — totaling three seats since last November — the following question is being asked over and over again on TV this morning:

Andrea Mitchell: is this going to make it much more difficult for you on the hill to build the coalitions for health care in the immediate future — and there may even be a vote this Saturday —do you think that Blue Dogs and moderates are going to be wary of the White House lead on this because they see these warning signs?

The conventional gasbag wisdom is that all the races were referendums on not only Obama but on health care reform and that, win or lose, the Democrats have been warned that they should not pursue it. I’m not surprised, exactly. This is the narrative that they were all signalling yesterday. But it’s still nauseating to see them fulfill their promise of total conformist pap to the letter.

Here’s Axelrod’s answer:

Well I think as the Blue Dogs welcome their new colleague Congressman Owens and remind themselves that he’s the first Democrat to hold that seat in a hundred and forty years, since Ulysses S grant and that he campaigned on the Obama program, I think they have to say, you know what? We’re on to something if we stick to this, if we do the right things, get this economy moving, get healthcare done, energy, clean energy, education reform,. We’re going to have a heckuva story to tell. There have been so many great things already that we can campaign on. I think that this should be reassuring to Democrats and I think it will.

I don’t know if Owens is an official Blue Dog yet, but there’s every chance he will be invited based on his record. But he did say in this campaign that he backed a public option in health care and he should be held to that.

And I guess that John Garamendi is chopped liver. Here in California we replaced the DLC darling Ellen Tauscher with a crusading, liberal insurance reformer. But he’ll be just another member of the progressive caucus and who cares what they think?

By the way, Charlie Cook is vastly relieved that Hoffman didn’t win, because the Republicans would have had a much more difficult time getting elected in the future. We can’t have that.

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