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Month: February 2010

Basic Decency On Life Support

by digby

I can hardly believe it, but according to this excellent source, the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell is on life support in the congress. Evidently, it doesn’t even matter if the Joint Chiefs and Dick Cheney sign off on it, it’s just too liberal for America.

This is yet another sign that the Democrats have already decided that their best bet for holding on to their seats is to run like frightened rabbits and disavow as many of their most ardent supporters as possible. I guess their focus groups are telling them that the voters really respect people who abandon their principles at the least sign of trouble.

*Sigh*. Joe Sudbay has more, here.

Update: And, again, I hope nobody tries to blame the troops. They are fine with it.

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Republicans By Any Other Name

by digby

Shocker:

Activists in the Tea Party movement tend to be male, rural, upscale, and overwhelmingly conservative, according to a new national poll. According to the survey, roughly 11 percent of all Americans say they have actively supported the Tea Party movement, either by donating money, attending a rally, or taking some other active step to support the movement. Of this core group of Tea Party activists, 6 of 10 are male and half live in rural areas. Nearly three-quarters of Tea Party activists attended college, compared to 54 percent of all Americans, and more than 3 in 4 call themselves conservatives.[…]
“Keep in mind that this is a pretty small sample of Tea Party activists,” Holland said. “But even taking that into account, the demographic gaps that the poll finds between those activists and the general public on gender, education, income, ideology, and voting behavior appear to be significant differences.” The poll indicates that about 24 percent of the public generally favors the Tea Party movement but has not taken any actions such as donating money or attending a rally. Adding in the 11 percent who say they are active, a total of 35 percent could be described as Tea Party supporters. That larger group is also predominantly male, higher-income, and conservative.

And here I thought they represented the great majority cross section of salt ‘o the earth Independent Real Americans who have reluctantly just come to realize that liberalism doesn’t work and it’s actually the same people who worshipped Bush to the bitter end and now insist they never supported anything he did. Imagine my surprise.

This has always just been common sense. Unfortunately, the press has portrayed these people as representatives of mainstream American thought, just as they did during the Bush years. (They are mostly white, middle aged, male conservatives, so naturally they are, at the very least, the most important Americans.) And as Dave Neiwert has painstakingly documented, the result is that their ever more hysterical, fringe ideas are granted mainstream status. But they are nothing new. They are just the same old right wing, which was embarrassed by Bush’s unpopularity and appalled by the illegitimate Obama (all Democratic presidents are, by definition, illegitimate) and the coalition that elected him. They are putting on funny hats and gathering openly with their looniest fringe, but there’s nothing unique about them. They are FOX News, Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh Republicans, bought and paid for by all the usual suspects, even if they don’t know it.

This story suggests that the Republicans are worried that the tea partiers are worrying the Republicans because they may form a third party — and their lips to God’s ears on that one. Unfortunately, I suspect they will all fall in line soon enough. It won’t take much for the GOP to gain their trust. All they have to do is promise to be as wingnutty as possible and with this rump party, that’s not any kind of hardship. As long as unemployment stays at 10%, and the media remains as fickle and stupid as usual, they have an excellent chance to sell their special brand of Randian fascism and get away with it, and they know it.

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PO 2.0

by digby

I haven’t known what to think about HCR prospects for some time, thinking that whatever’s going to happen has probably been decided and that we are simply awaiting the kabuki pageant on the 25th. But this is interesting. It appears that in addition to the Progressive Congress Action Fund’s FixItandPassIt initiative to restore the public option through reconciliation, the Senate has found 10 Senators (and counting) who are also requesting that the PO be part of any agreed upon reconciliation deal.

It would be pretty to think this is really happening. But after what we observed over the past year, I can’t help but suspect that we are seeing it put back in so that it can be dealt away again in another phony compromise with the Senate Princes. That doesn’t mean it isn’t worth doing. These things are often more fluid than we think and circumstances can change even he best laid plans. It’s possible that actions like this can make a difference as well, so I don’t mean to be too cynical.

But I’m inclined to be cautious about getting too excited over anything to do with the Public Option. It’s been used as a political football throughout the entire process and at this moment of heightened fear of the dirty hippies doesn’t exactly make me want to be Charlie Brown again. I just don’t see the Democrats wanting to pass HCR without publicly screwing the liberals once again — we are the sin-eaters, and I think they need to prove now more than ever that they are not in thrall to our radical desire to enact a cost control measure in the health care reform.

But never say never. Dynamics change, possibilities open up, sometimes sanity even wins out. Perhaps the Dems can reboot and finally use the fiscal argument to their advantage. We’ll see.

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With Friends Like This

by digby

I suppose it’s inevitable that everyone in the Village would have an orgasm when Evan Bayh announced that the horrible partisanship is running him out of politics. But as with the other famous quitter, Sarah Palin, it’s very convenient to ignore the most likely reason.

Howard Fineman, who is evidently a good friend of Bayh’s, spells out why he thinks he quit, and I think he also inadvertently spells out exactly what a callow, petulant fellow his good friend actually is. First, he says that he didn’t have the stomach for a tough Senate race and that he doesn’t much like Obama, who he sees as a mushy liberal naif. Then he says that Bayh doesn’t like politics anymore because centrists aren’t popular and that he’s really too lazy to run for president but is pissed that nobody made it easy for him by anointing him Vice President.

Finally he gets to the nub of it, although hints of this are woven throughout the piece. Bayh, like Palin, realizes that this is his chance to cash in and he’s going for it. He’s still young enough to “reinvent himself” (as a millionaire) and he has two young sons who he wants to spend more time with so he wants to “change the mix” and become the major breadwinner.

I suspect this is correct. He doesn’t see himself inheriting the presidency while he’s still relatively young anymore, doesn’t want to run himself because it’s too hard, and so he might as well make the big bucks now. And lord knows there’s no better time to do it. In this age of rank plutocracy, political players are among the most valuable commodities out there. A “Democrat” with a reputation for deficit hawkishness and corporate friendly centrist bonafides is worth his weight in gold.

I would guess that quite a few of our “retiring centrists” are actually simple opportunists. With all the government activity surrounding economics, these people finally have something valuable to sell: themselves.

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Quote ‘O The Morn

by digby

From DougJ at Balloon Juice, discussing David Broder’s “review” of Sarah Palin:

It no longer matters whether or not a politician’s performance (I think that’s the right word here) has any connection with any kind of discernible reality. Movie-goers are pickier about the believability of movies than pundits are about the believability of politicians’ claims. You’re more likely to hear a movie-goer complain “there’s no way a school teacher could afford that penthouse” than to hear David Broder complain “there’s no way `we win, you lose’ can be a serious foreign policy”.

I hadn’t thought of it quite that way before, but it’s true. And it isn’t just Broder. The entire Gasbag mafia spends all their time determining how “believable” politicians appear rather than whether one should believe them.

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Just Because They Can

by digby

There’s no reason to do this but that never stopped a wingnut from pursuing an enemy:

Ever since Barack Obama started running for the White House, he’s been plagued by lawsuits from detractors who claim that he is not a natural-born citizen, and thus is ineligible to serve as president. Now the devoted conspiracy theorists of the so-called “eligibility movement” have a fresh target: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. And there’s a chance that the Supreme Court might hear their challenge. In January 2009, a longtime foreign service officer named David C. Rodearmel sued Hillary Clinton in federal court in DC arguing that an obscure provision of the Constitution blocks her from serving in Obama’s Cabinet because of her previous stint in the US Senate. This argument isn’t as nutty as those used in the numerous lawsuits disputing Obama’s citizenship—in fact, it previously prevented Orrin Hatch from becoming a Supreme Court justice. Rodearmel is relying on what’s known as the Emoluments Clause, which bars members of Congress from taking a federal civil job if Congress raised the salary for that job while they were still in office. The secretary of state’s salary went up in 2008, while Clinton was still in the Senate. The provision, which was designed to combat corruption, has long been a headache for presidents seeking to tap members of Congress for their Cabinets.

And these are the people who rail against frivolous lawsuits …

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History For Dummies

by digby

I wrote about 24 creator Joel Surnow’s smear job of John F. Kennedy last December and unsurprisingly a look at the script proves that Ken Burns’ The Civil War it ain’t.

The NY Times reports:

A new mini-series about John F. Kennedy’s presidency that is being prepared by the History channel does not yet have a cast or a premiere date. Not a frame of footage has been shot. It does, however, have prominent critics who want it brought to a halt.

The critics, including Theodore C. Sorensen, a former Kennedy adviser, say they have read the scripts for the project and that those contain errors of fact and emphasis.

The good news is that unlike The Path To 9/11, when we were all scrambling at the last minute, Brave New Films is on this one early and has begun a campaign to expose the right wing agenda that’s behind it:

Now a documentary filmmaker who makes no secret of his liberal politics is releasing an Internet video in which Kennedy scholars say the scripts offer a portrait of the president and his family that is, at best, inaccurate, and at worst, a hatchet job. “It was political character assassination,” the filmmaker, Robert Greenwald, said of the screenplays in a telephone interview. “It was sexist titillation and pandering, and it was turning everything into a cheap soap opera of the worst kind.” Mr. Greenwald said he is hoping that his 13-minute video and an accompanying petition, at stopkennedysmears.com, will take on lives of their own on the Web. A title card at the film’s conclusion reads: “Tell the History Channel I refuse to watch right-wing character assassination masquerading as ‘history.’ ” The charges come as a surprise to the members of the production team behind “The Kennedys,” who say that the scripts for the eight-part series are still being rewritten, and that criticism of the project is premature.

Right, because Joel Surnow is just another hard working filmmaker who happens to hang out with Rush Limbaugh. Why would anyone assume that the self-serving smears would stay in his script?

Expect the right to have a full blown hissy fit about censorship and rend their garments about losing their God given right to slander Democrats, but they don’t really have a leg to stand on:

But the debate around “The Kennedys” recalls a similar flare-up around the mini-series called “The Reagans” that CBS was to show in 2003. In that case the network canceled its planned broadcast after conservatives criticized the project — before it was shown, and based on scripts and portions of the film. The conservatives complained about depictions of Ronald Reagan as being insensitive to AIDS victims, and that Nancy Reagan was shown as being reliant on a personal astrologer. (“The Reagans” later played on Showtime, the cable channel.)

They will of course claim that was completely different because they were right and we are wrong, but that won’t make it so.

In the age of Citizens United this is going to become an ever bigger problem. The right is going to continue to create explicitly political fiction and sell it as history. (David Bossie alone is showing a whole bunch of films at CPAC this year.) And we are all going to be faced with the awful tension of not wanting to stifle free speech while battling back conservative propaganda.

All you can do in this situation is fight the lies with the truth. And according to this short film by BNF, the truth is that this script is filled with lies. Here’s a sampling of historians who’ve read it:

“If the authors of this travesty had any conscience or any honesty they’d rename it. Call these people Sullivans or Schwartzes or some other name because they certainly aren’t Kennedys as I know them.”

“It struck me that the writer wanted to tell as distorted a story as possible, and find very little in the Kennedy years that possessed any dignity what so ever.” – Rick Perlstein

“I was amazed to find reading those pages that every single conversation with the President in the Oval office or elsewhere in which I according to the script participated, never happened. There were no such conversations… A minimum amount of research could’ve avoided the remarkable number of obvious errors of that kind in this script.”

“The script becomes, historically, ever more loony and juvenile, as the writers invent more and more phony events to give an impression of a President Kennedy out of his depth, and dependent on others for advice.” – Nigel Hamilton

Kennedy smears aren’t anything new, of course, but putting the imprimatur of The History Channel on a work of sleazy right wing propaganda takes it to a new level. If you have the word “history” right there in the logo, you have some responsibility to deliver historical accuracy.

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Narcissistic Centrism

by digby

In the wake of Evan Bayh’s pouty decision to leave Washington because of all the icky partisanship, the already escalating “Obama promised us bipartisanship and has failed to deliver” meme has flown into high gear.

Check out this beauty, from Mark Halperin:

Can Obama Rebuild Bipartisan Trust in Washington?

… Despite the President’s paramount campaign promise to end the bitter recriminations and partisan animus that have defined Washington politics for almost two decades, genuine feelings of friendship across the aisle rarely animate the contours of the debate in Barack Obama’s Washington.

Obama once appeared exceedingly well qualified to change the tone in Washington. He came armed with his résumé of bipartisan efforts in the Illinois state senate and in Congress, his balanced, unflappable temperament and his instinctual and biographical remove from the acidic Washington ethos. And Obama seemed to believe that, fundamentally, the system needed changing. He argued that securing real solutions to the biggest challenges confronting America — health care, energy, global warming, education — required legislators and citizens of all political stripes to contribute to and endorse the programs meant to solve them. Unlike Bill Clinton, Obama didn’t emphasize detailed “third way” policy ideas. Rather, he simply posited that well-meaning people of both parties could work together in good faith to find resolutions in the nation’s interest.

Yet, as a candidate, Obama was never very specific about those policy ideas and was scarcely tested by the media. Once in the White House, faced with a towering heap of problems, cosseted by a Democratic majority and confronted by a hostile Republican crowd, Obama cast his lot with a legislative strategy reliant on getting overwhelming support from Democrats, at the expense of building bipartisan coalitions and forming solid relationships with the opposition.

He goes on to advise the president that all he needs to do now is get the Republican poobahs in a room together and appeal to them to work with him for the good of the country. This solution is always considered common sense among numerous important players and observers, such as George W. Bush:

Blair said Rice has “got to succeed” if she goes to the region. Bush replied: “What they need to do is to get Syria to get Hezbollah to stop doing this shit.


And then there’s John McCain:

“One of the things I would do if I were President would be to sit the Shiites and the Sunnis down and say, ‘Stop the bullshit,'”

Easy as can be.

Actually, it’s possible that if Obama agrees to pass the GOP agenda, preferably without as few Democratic votes as possible, they might even agree to help him (although that’s a long shot too.) But short of that, I think the “stop the bullshit” approach isn’t going to get him very far.

It’s not surprising that Halperin is throwing Obama’s campaign promise back in his face. It’s entirely predictable that they would blame him for failing to magically force the Republicans to become different people. But it’s also Obama’s fault for having promised such a thing in the first place. He handed the Republicans the weapon with which to beat him by promising something that required their cooperation. I’m not sure I ever understood that particular approach except that it was a very nice way to use the symbolism of his historic campaign to give the impression that he had powers to do things that ordinary mortals do not have.

But I have to admit that the “he failed to make us cooperate” theme is even more clever than it seems at first blush. Aside from making Obama look like a failure for being unable to deliver Republican votes, it masks another, more important problem: it isn’t just a lack of bipartisanship that caused the gridlock; it is also a lack of partisanship, particularly in the Senate where “centrist” egomaniacs hold Democrats hostage. And by the way, they have been doing so for a good long time. I wrote this back in 2008 during the embarrassing “Unity 08” boomlet, knowing full well that this was going to be the problem:

David Broder loves David Boren and Bob Kerrey and thinks the country is best served by rabid conservative ideologues and preening Democratic narcissists who lie down for Republicans and fight their own president every step of the way if he wants to enact any kind of progressive legislation. That’s called “getting things done.”

Bayh is complaining about the nastiness of the liberal blogs as his reason for taking his ball and going home, and I think that’s probably a real issue for him. These Democratic Senate egomaniacs are a huge problem and they are being called on it. They see their role in America’s patrician institution as protecting the rightful owners of America from the Democratic rabble that elected them. And so does the elite political and media establishment at large, which in turn protects them. When they are actually held up to scrutiny for playing such a role, they get very angry. How dare anyone, much less the dirty liberal rabble, question their judgment and their integrity. Their response is to leave the field and turn their seats over to a similarly compromised Democrat or a Republican to teach the Democrats a lesson — a lesson which the Dems have so internalized that they reflexively run in fear of offending conservative Democrats without even questioning it.

This isn’t a bipartisan problem, by the way. The owners allow Snowe and Collins off the leash from time to time to provide cover for something that needs to be done to calm the markets. But other than that this band of aristocratic centrists of both parties have but one role to play and that is to thwart the liberal economic agenda and advance conservative initiatives whenever they are needed. The problem is that this game is being publicly discussed and there is now a (small) price to pay — the village media isn’t the only game in town anymore and there are voices that embarrass the poor sensitive darlings when they “follow their conscience” and obstruct progress for ordinary people. This is very upsetting to them.

So, yes, there is a problem with this bipartisan fetish inside the beltway. The parties and the country are ideologically polarized and this means that politics aren’t a genteel pursuit best decided over scotch and cigars among like-minded nobility. But people must also be aware that these “centrists” are false flag conservatives and any discussion of the partisan make-up of the Senate needs to account for their position as de facto Republicans. It’s much better to wage this ideological war with a proper troop count, knowing which side everyone is really on.

Update: Michael Bérubé has obtained an exclusive dispatch from the bizarroworld reality based community on this subject. If only we could all live there.

Update II: Matthews had on a couple of these corporate “centrists” William Cohen and John Breaux, whining and moping about the horrible people on the left and right who are ruining just everything.

Breaux made this boilerplate assertion:

I would say to the people on the far right and the far left, you don’t represent a majority of the people of this country. And this is a government by a majority. If you become the majority, then you can become the majority view. But you’re not in the majority. We’ll listen to you, but we have to govern and you have to govern from the center.

Does this “center” really have a majority in the congress? I don’t think so. “The center” as they define it is, as far as I can tell, no more than a quarter of the congress at most, and far fewer if you want to use the legislation proposed this year to measure it. This is a total fallacy. The majority votes for individual politicians for the House and the Senate, they vote for a party’s political platform and for a president. Every politician has to decide for him or herself how to interpret what that means. Automatically rushing to the “center” (defined, by the way, as equidistant between Barack Obama and Michelle Bachman) is a lazy and stupid way to interpret the majority will (and, not incidentally, a very convenient way to keep conservatives in power.)

If what Breaux says is correct, then the Democrats should a pass Barack Obama’s agenda, period. He and Joe Biden are the only individuals in the government a majority of people in this country voted for. (Now, I actually would call him a centrist too, but I’m guessing that Breaux would have been right beside Nelson in torpedoing even the approved tepid, corporate friendly health care plan that finally emerged from months of coddling the handful of bipartisan “centrists” who worked to defeat it.) But then when these Senate narcissists look in the mirror they see a president too, so it’s natural that they would see the true manifestation of the will of the majority as — themselves.

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Unhappy Decision

by digby

He’s sorrowful:

Ken Starr, whose investigation into the Monica Lewinsky scandal eventually led to President Clinton’s impeachment, said he would “absolutely” tell the former president he was sorry about the “unhappy decision” to impeach.

“Who is not sorrowful for the entire chapter in American history?” Starr told “Good Morning America’s” George Stephanopoulos today. “But the law is the law and no one is above the law.

LOL! Whew. That’s a good one…

Clinton’s mistake was failing to have a minor functionary in the Justice Department issue a secret memo absolving him of all potential crimes. Then this “unhappy decision” could have been avoided altogether.

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Get It Done

by digby

John Aravosis writes:

AMERICAblog joins today with a coalition of gay and straight bloggers in asking our readers to contact the Human Rights Campaign on behalf of the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

OUR MESSAGE TO HRC IS SIMPLE:

Publicly demand that President Obama take the lead in getting DADT repealed this year.

1) That means the President needs to state publicly that he wants Congress to repeal DADT this year; and

2) The President needs to take the lead in working with Congress to make sure the repeal happens.

If you’re a member or donor to HRC, tell them, and ask to speak to Members Services:

HRC Front Desk: (202) 628-4160
TTY: (202) 216-1572
Toll-Free: (800) 777-4723

HRC Web site comment page.
General membership email at hrc: membership@hrc.org

Some may say that there is little the President can do, or that this is up to Congress now. That is simply untrue. The President can send a powerful signal that he wants the repeal done this year. He can include the repeal of DADT in the Defense Budget he sends to Congress in the next few months. If the President is serious about keeping his promises to our community, now is his chance to prove it.

If it seems counterintuitive that the HRC, of all organizations, has to be convinced to do such a thing, be sure to read the rest of John’s post. He’s right. If they lose momentum now, it could be lost for years.

I would guess that over in Afghanistan right now, there’s not one soldier who gives a damn if his fellow on the battlefield is gay. Just get on with it. When even Dick Cheney signs on, there’s no earthly reason to delay.

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