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Month: July 2010

Subtle Messaging — Obama is bringing on another Jewish Holocaust

Subtle Messaging

by digby

I saw this on TV during Hardball yesterday afternoon and thought it must have been a parody. It isn’t:

The funny thing is that as far as I can tell this is not a very public campaign. Apparently he’s just sent it to his email list to raise funds for an ad buy in LA. You can’t find it on the regular web-site or YouTube. Odd.

For those who doubt it when I say that the Republicans have retired the concept of hypocrisy, I’ll just link to this:

In one “RNC Research Briefing,” the RNC recycled an attack on MoveOn.org, stating, “Two Ads Comparing President Bush To Adolf Hitler Appeared On MoveOn.org Voter Fund Website,” referring to ads that were submitted for a contest held by MoveOn.org. However, as the non-partisan Columbia Journalism Review’s website The Campaign Desk noted in its “Distortion” column, while “at least one [ad] was posted briefly on the organization’s website … MoveOn quickly removed it and disassociated itself from the offending ads.”

Rush Limbaugh took the RNC assertion about the ad one step further during his May 26 radio show, saying, “MoveOn.org, this is the wacko bunch that is doing ads equating Bush with Hitler.” A May 27 article by David Horowitz (co-written by Ben Johnson and published in Horowitz’s online FrontPage Magazine) contained similar comments: “Gore appeared before the MoveOn.org, a radical group which had already compared Bush to Hitler.”

Yeah, I know.

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Dog Day Journalism

Dog Day Journalism

by digby

I don’t know what to say about this. I am honestly a little bit surprised by these findings because I haven’t felt that this story has been so huge. But maybe I’m reading the wrong papers and watching the wrong shows:

Thirty-seven governorships are up for grabs in November, along with all 435 seats in the House and 37 in the Senate. And only a handful of the more hotly contested races will get significant national media coverage from now through Election Day.

So it’s a little surprising that the national press is now lavishing the most attention on a candidate who cable pundits and political analysts expect to lose big in November: Alvin Greene.

The South Carolina Democrat has been the lead newsmaker in 2010 coverage since coming out of nowhere to win the June 8 Senate primary. Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism crunched the numbers and provided The Upshot with its internal analysis of media coverage across 52 major news outlets, from South Carolina’s primary day through July 18.

South Carolina Republican gubernatorial contender Nikki Haley came in second place, according to the nonpartisan organization. Other candidates near the top: California’s Carly Fiorina and Meg Whitman, Arkansas’ Blanche Lincoln and Nevada’s Sharron Angle.

I don’t know about you, but this just doesn’t seem right, although I have no reason to doubt Pew on this. I spend a lot of time following politics and I just haven’t had the impression that the press was covering Green all that much. Live and learn.

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Randy fanboy thinks he invented Hooverism — and he’s proud of it.

Randy Fanboy Thinks he Invented Hooverism

by digby

Matthews asked Paul Ryan (R-AynRandFanboy) today if we should let the Bush tax cuts expire:

I don’t think it’s a good idea, especially when we’re trying to come out of a jobless recovery and slow growth recovery. We’ve got unemployment at almost 10%, the last thing we should be doing is raising taxes on the economy. The worst thing for deficit reduction is a slow economy. You hit small businesses with these kinds of tax rate increases and you’ll slow down the economy even further…

I would rescind the unspent stimulus funds, I would rescind the all the TARP funds,I would do a federal hiring freeze and spending freeze for the rest of the year and I would go back and cut discretionary spending back to 08 levels and freeze that spending going forward.

Now you and I can get into a debate about Keynesian economics if it worked or didn’t work, I don’t think it did…

I suppose there’s something to be said for consistency, but this perfectly illustrates just how radical Republican “thinking”, such as it is, really is on economics. I suspect that he believes he’s rejecting Keynesianism for Randism and that he’s very cutting edge. But the truth is that this is not new, even by Rand’s stale 50 year old philosophy’s standards:

From before his entry to the presidency, [Hoover] was a proponent of the concept that public-private cooperation was the way to achieve high long-term growth. Hoover feared that too much intervention or coercion by the government would destroy individuality and self-reliance, which he considered to be important American values. Both his ideals and the economy were put to the test with the onset of the Great Depression. At the outset of the Depression, Hoover claims in his memoirs that he rejected Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon’s suggested “leave-it-alone” approach, and called many business leaders to Washington to urge them not to lay off workers or cut wages. ..

Calls for greater government assistance increased as the US economy continued to decline. Hoover rejected direct federal relief payments to individuals, as he believed that a dole would be addictive, and reduce the incentive to work. He was also a firm believer in balanced budgets, and was unwilling to run a budget deficit to fund welfare programs. However, Hoover did pursue many policies in an attempt to pull the country out of depression. In 1929, Hoover authorized the Mexican Repatriation program to combat rampant unemployment, the burden on municipal aid services, and remove people seen as usurpers of American jobs. The program was largely a forced migration of approximately 500,000 Mexicans and Mexican Americans to Mexico, and continued through to 1937…

Hoover in 1931 urged the major banks in the country to form a consortium known as the National Credit Corporation (NCC). The NCC was an example of Hoover’s belief in volunteerism as a mechanism in aiding the economy. Hoover encouraged NCC member banks to provide loans to smaller banks to prevent them from collapsing. The banks within the NCC were often reluctant to provide loans, usually requiring banks to provide their largest assets as collateral. It quickly became apparent that the NCC would be incapable of fixing the problems it was designed to solve, and it was replaced by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation.

By 1932, the Great Depression had spread across the globe. In the U.S., unemployment had reached 24.9%, a drought persisted in the agricultural heartland, businesses and families defaulted on record numbers of loans, and more than 5,000 banks had failed. Tens-of-thousands of Americans who found themselves homeless and began congregating in the numerous Hoovervilles (also known as shanty towns or tent cities) that had begun to appear across the country. The name ‘Hooverville’ was coined by their residents as a sign of their disappointment and frustration with the perceived lack of assistance from the federal government. In response, Hoover and the Congress approved the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, to spur new home construction, and reduce foreclosures. The plan seemed to work, as foreclosures dropped, but it was seen as too little, too late.

Never say that Ryan or Hoover didn’t want to end the economic crises they lived through. But they both believed that government should have balanced budgets with low taxes above all else, and that the people needed “tough love” or they would decline into indolence. They thought that businesses always knew best and they would voluntarily “do the right thing” (although I would argue that Ryan actually believes they cannot possibly do the wrong thing.) Hoover scrambled after it was too late to put some more rational policies in place, but not in time to halt the Great Depression of his own political ignominy.

The difference is that Hoover didn’t know any better and didn’t have the lesson of the Great Depression to fall back on and Ryan does. He apparently missed class that day (or made it up by reading Amity Schlaes puerile garbage for extra credit.) And anyone who knows better can do nothing but scream at the TV — “he’s actually trying to put us into another Great Depression” — when they hear him say these things, as I just did.

He can say that Keynesianism hasn’t worked in the first year of the stimulus, but that is not a repudiation of Keynes. The economy has not gotten worse, it has stayed moribund for a variety of reasons, some of which can be attributed to the restraint of Keynesiansim by neo-liberals and Randian ideologues alike, rather than its application. But on the other side we have a perfect historical example in living color with cherries and whipped cream on top of Ryan’s prescriptions definitely making things worse over a prolonged period of several years. It’s called Hooverism. Anyone who actually goes on TV pushing those prescriptions can never be taken seriously.

BTW: He also claimed that the taxes and the wars have nothing to do with the deficit. He lied:

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The demeaning sexism that faces Democratic female politicians shows its ugly face again in Iowa

It’s Baaack

by digby

Last week-end Blue America candidate Roxanne Conlin (running against Chuck “pull the plug on grandma” Grassley)appeared on a Netroots Nation panel about the unique issues female candidates face and she brought up the fact that a local right wing blogger had done a post recently about her breasts. She didn’t go into details, but I assumed it was one of those prissy “is she inappropriately wearing V-neck blouses in court” sort of thing. But it turns out that it was much more disgusting than that:

Question Two: I knew that Roxanne Conlin was a big D, but is she naturally that big of a D?

Answer: Talk about awkward. I think the only way we will ever know for sure is if we break into Dr. G’s office and see if she has been enhanced. That said seeing the picture of her in the parade is like gawking at a traffic accident. You know what I mean, it grosses you out, makes you sick, but you can’t help but notice. It’s probably a good thing she doesn’t walk the parade route…

I don’t think I need to elaborate on how many ways that is revolting.

But get a load of the update:

Colin shocked the audience when she said, “Last week, as you know I’m a candidate for the U.S. Senate. Last week, a Republican blogger, a very influential blogger in the state of Iowa, wrote a whole blog about my breasts. Complete with pictures, with pictures. (The audience gasped, some even cried out ‘oh nos’) This actually happened, I know, I was there.” Later she went on to say, “Women progressives have to be really tough, really tough, especially if people are looking at your pictures.”

Beep, Beep, Beep, back the truck up Roxanne.

First, the blog post that you are referring to was 689 words long. Of that, I devoted 96 words to the picture of you in the West Des Moines parade. The article also mentioned Governor Chet Culver’s appearance in the same parade, but the bulk of the story dealt with the Des Moines Register’s obsession about people who live in dilapidated trailers.

Second, Roxanne’s comments make it seem like I posed a picture of just her breasts, not a picture of her waving to people in a parade. There is a big difference. Heck, she makes it sound like it was some dirty magazine shoot or something. Gross.

I actually think that Roxanne is glad that I wrote what I did a few weeks back. Her entire campaign is based around either her or women in general being victims. Whether you like it or not, perception and appearance matters in the political arena. Voters and members of the media will always scrutinize candidates of any gender, weight, ethnicity or dialect. If you wear an ugly a$$ tie in a debate, you are probably going to hear about it the next day. Show a little too much skin, like Governor Culver did when he walks a triathlon, you will probably see and hear about it.

What a disingenuous person this fellow “Krusty” is. Conlin did not imply in any way that she had posed topless for this piece of work, so that obnoxious “rationalization” is absurd (and repulsive.) And the fact that he wrote about items other than her breasts in his Q and A does not mitigate the fact that that his only item in the post about her was about her breasts. And that item was insulting, crude and sexist.

Yes, politics is a nasty business and I’m sure that having his tie criticized is very painful for many male candidates. But I hardly think it compares to nasty sexual comments about a woman’s body and immature nasty catcalls about personal appearance in general. Comments like these are meant to injure in a very specific, highly personal way and the perpetrators know that. It’s a primitive method of pigeon-holing powerful, mature women in a highly restrictive traditional sexual role. And sadly, it seems to be something that macho right wing males need to do for reasons about which we can only speculate.

This episode does once again illustrate just how pervasive and common sexism remains, particularly for women in politics. These men just throw the stuff out there without any conscience or decency. And, as always, they profess the same childish wide-eyed innocence when they are caught at it as they did when mommy caught them with their hands in the cookie jar. But it’s just not cute anymore.

Conlin was absolutely right when she said that women have to be very tough. I don’t know how they take this sort of thing without resorting to verbal violence.

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The good guys storm the hill — PCCC sets up progressive lobbying shop

P-Trip On The Hill

by digby

Here’s some welcome news:

The P Street Project is an effort by the Progressive Change Campaign Committee to build upon the progressive movement’s online organizing of the past few years and move into the business of registered lobbying. The lobby has recently advocated on some issues during a trial run, but will be officially launched here at Netroots Nation, a gathering of 2,100 liberal leaders, bloggers and activists.

“We are lobbying,” Shaunna Thomas, director of the P Street Project, said in an interview Friday. “We are living on the Hill. . . . The goal is to move progressive policy and to win progressive policy, but also to move progressive ideas.”

[…]

“Some of these progressive members feel like they’re out in the wilderness and we are able to connect them, give them a community and help them see a path towards accomplishing their goals,” Thomas said.

Groups like the NRA or Americans for Tax Reform have proven the effectiveness of this kind of lobbying. The hope is that if progressives can leverage millions of people they can provide a little bit of ballast to the big money lobbyists who dominate the system.

I know Thomas a little and she’s a terrific progressive organizer so my hopes are high that this experiment in progressive lobbying will grow into something meaningful. You have to cover all the bases in politics and this is one that desperately needs covering. Good for the PCCC for stepping up.

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Big thank you to Batocchio

Major Thanks

by digby

I must give a shout out to my pal Batocchio for guest posting the last few days while I was at Netroots Nation. His stuff is always interesting and he outdid himself this week. Many, many thanks.

You can read Batocchio’s great posts on his own blog Vagabond Scholar, which I highly recommend.

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Steele and Breitbart prove we can all get along

Republican Superstars

by digby

TPM got a copy of a very special invitation that proves the Republicans are all about racial reconciliation:

Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele has a party fundraising event coming up in August that is scheduled to feature a very special guest: Conservative media activist Andrew Breitbart, according to a copy of the invitation exclusively obtained by TPM.

The fundraising event, billed as an “Election Countdown,” will take place from August 12-14 in Beverly Hills, California, and will also feature other politicians such as California Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, and Nevada Republican gubernatorial nominee Brian Sandoval. Steele and Breitbart are scheduled to co-headline a welcome reception on the first evening, August 12.

I find it hard to believe any political party ever would have wanted this malignant nutcase to headline a GOP confab and fundraiser, but it’s slightly surprising to see they haven’t canceled it since his latest antics. They probably figure having Steele there to vouch for him will wipe the racist sheen from his reputation, but it’s far too late for that.

It’s at 6pm pm the 12th at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel.

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We Cheat the Other Guy and Pass the Savings to You

We Cheat the Other Guy and Pass the Savings to You

by batocchio

I’m returning to David Brooks’ January op-ed “The Populist Addiction,” because it’s quintessential Brooks, but also because it provides a useful framework for conflicting political views in America. The full column is here and worth reading for full context (and Brooks’ cute plea not to scapegoat poor Goldman Sachs). However, this is my favorite section:

So it’s easy to see the seductiveness of populism. Nonetheless, it nearly always fails. The history of populism, going back to William Jennings Bryan, is generally a history of defeat.

That’s because voters aren’t as stupid as the populists imagine. Voters are capable of holding two ideas in their heads at one time: First, that the rich and the powerful do rig the game in their own favor; and second, that simply bashing the rich and the powerful will still not solve the country’s problems.

Political populists never get that second point. They can’t seem to grasp that a politics based on punishing the elites won’t produce a better-educated work force, more investment, more innovation or any of the other things required for progress and growth.

In other words, for the lower classes: You’re getting screwed, but it’s really in your best interest. Plus: You populists can’t win – you can’t change the game. There’s also the reverse psychology plea to vanity: The plebes who know their place are much smarter those elitist rabble-rousers. Real Americans don’t want a living wage, after all. Those silly populists mostly want to complain about the wealthy, not, say, tax them more heavily and invest that money in the middle class and poor. (And we’re spunky America the Exceptional, which is why we can’t have nice things, like great social systems and public transportation.)

I’m surprised Brooks admitted the game is rigged. He often uses some planned concession to pivot to some more ridiculous point, something like, ‘Yes, Bush should have worked with the Democrats more, but the Democrats should be better than that…’ (And enact conservative policies.) In this column, I think Brooks overshot on his calculated concession and gave up the game. Still, I’m utterly unsurprised by the other stuff. Almost every column Mr. Applebee’s Salad Bar writes makes one or more of same basic pitches: I’m a man of the people, you’re better off with me and my class/party in charge, know your place, real Americans are center-right, the Democrats are just as bad, who is this Bush fellow you speak of, and have your kissed your aristocrat today?…

Matt Taibbi makes similar points in his great dissection of the same column, “Populism: Just Like Racism!” After ripping into Brooks for his faulty analogies and “Leave Goldman Sachs alone!” shtick, Taibbi also notes:

What’s so ironic about this is that Brooks, in arguing against class warfare, and trying to present himself as someone who is above making class distinctions, is making an argument based entirely on the notion that there is an lower class and an upper class and that the one should go easy on the other because the best hope for collective prosperity is the rich creating wealth for all. This is the same Randian bullshit that we’ve been hearing from people like Brooks for ages and its entire premise is really revolting and insulting — this idea that the way society works is that the productive ” rich” feed the needy “poor,” and that any attempt by the latter to punish the former for “excesses” might inspire Atlas to Shrug his way out of town and leave the helpless poor on their own to starve.

That’s basically Brooks’s entire argument here. Yes, the rich and powerful do rig the game in their own favor, and yes, they are guilty of “excesses” — but fucking deal with it, if you want to eat.

Exactly. What Brooks is shilling here is: The game is rigged for the rich and powerful, but we all benefit from this.

That’s in huge contrast to the liberal view, which normally goes something like: Of course the game is rigged for the rich and powerful, but they benefit from this, other people get screwed, and we can build a better, fairer system for everybody. (Those few “social contract” conservatives buy parts of this, too.)

Members of Congress with a compromised, corporatist bent have a stance closer to: Sure, the game is rigged for the rich and powerful, but we can’t change it that much, so we won’t mention it too often – and let’s try to get in on some of the action.

Further to the right, whether Democrats or Republicans, there’s even less ambivalence. It’s considered a breach of etiquette to speak of the game, let alone acknowledge it’s rigged for the rich and powerful. Behind closed doors, the attitude is: Why would you even want to change the game? Give me my piece!

Some Beltway denizens, especially journalists, really do seem to think: Of course the game isn’t rigged! I got here (and stay here) solely due to my talents!

Other Villagers may or may not think the game’s rigged, but what really gets them angry is if anyone denounces it. (Don’t trash their place!) The Very Serious People are establishmentarians, and like their pal David Brooks, they know their ways are the best ways, and that things are the finest when they’re on top. (How could it be otherwise?)

The Randians are similarly convinced of their superior talents, and have their own ideas about the game, but the defining attitude for them is simply: I got mine, screw you!

The truly callous and evil (the Catfood Commission and Estate Tax Repeal Club come to mind) believe: Sure, the game is rigged, and sure, many people are getting screwed – Now let’s rig this sucker even more!

The teabagger rank and file, the target of the Southern Strategy, believe: The game is rigged, alright – to favor liberals, women and minorities! In many cases, they are being screwed, but they’re blaming the wrong folks and not the people they voted into office for the past 30-40 years. Their ringleaders mostly know better, but they’ve got a good racket going. (And as Pat Buchanan and Lee Atwater might say, “You do not talk about White Club.”)

(Feel free to improve on these breakdowns – I’m not entirely sold on all of them myself.)

A few other points bear mentioning. Generally speaking, liberals are focused on being fair while conservatives (movement conservatives at least) are focused on power. They’re simply not playing the same game. (The same goes for wonks versus hacks.) This can make for some serious misunderstandings and cross-talking, most of all when liberals try to be fair-minded with people seeking their destruction. (Offering the olive branch is fine, Dems, even admirable, but after they smack you in the face with it, wise up.) While reasonable, wonky conservatives do exist, if you can’t tell that Andrew Breitbart, Newt Gingrich and Karl Rove are hacks and extremely dishonorable men, it’s time to recalibrate your bullshit detector.

Liberals generally embrace a cooperative paradigm, while conservatives are more likely to see things as a zero sum game. There’s a huge difference between trying to make the game more fair for everybody and trying just to win it personally (or trying to control it completely and rig it further for your side). Movement conservatives are further likely to see things in terms of dominance, submission and humiliation. It’s one of the reasons that trash talk is so important to them, and why they’re such bullies when in power yet so ridiculously whiny when criticized. Check out Rush Limbaugh or any of the far right for long and you’ll encounter that weird mix of asserted superiority alongside deep victimization. Reagan supposedly regretted calling the Soviet Union “the evil empire,” but the far right loved it, just as they loved Bush saying “axis of evil.” The language might have been juvenile and hurt international relations, but for the far right, insulting one’s opponents is itself a victory. They see diplomacy as the failure of war, not the other way around. (To be fair, some of this is standard imperialist narcissism, and hawks in both parties share much of the same idiocy even if comes in a slightly different flavor.) Remember, Sarah Palin became a right-wing darling overnight, not for any cooperative, inclusive vision for America or command of policy (hahaha), but because she delivered a single attack dog speech at the RNC in 2008.

In contrast, while “foul-mouthed” liberal bloggers may swear and insult their conservative counterparts, they generally don’t seek their destruction. Eliminationist rhetoric is pretty common on the right, and pretty rare on the left. Liberals may say mean things (preferably, true things, whether harshly put or not), but they also want their political opponents to have health care so they and their children, friends and family don’t die unnecessarily. It comes with the bleeding hearts. Policy does matter, and it’s not incidental to someone’s world view.

These world views do clash, and sometimes get revealed in small exchanges. Betsy McCaughey, during her epic dissembling about death panels on The Daily Show, was flailing occasionally, and at one point tried an odd attack on Stewart. If you can stand watching it, it’s in the Extended Interview Part 2 (1:55 in), but here’s a transcript (they talk over each other throughout):

McCaughey: Well, you know, Jon, you’re so rich –

Stewart: That is absolutely –

McCaughey: (to audience) He’s got a great big penthouse –

Stewart: That is absolutely right, I can –

McCaughey: You are so rich, you can provide care for anybody in your family –

Stewart: That’s right.

McCaughey: Whatever they need –

Stewart: That’s right.

McCaughey: (to audience) But you –

Stewart: And that’s why I don’t mind being taxed a little more to help people who are not in as favorable a situation.

(Cheers from the audience.)

Stewart: I don’t mind that. In fact, I welcome it, because it’s a way for me to, to give back to the country that has allowed me to come this far.

Stewart’s remarks completely shut her down. McCaughey clamed she agreed, and tried to move on to her next piece of bullshit. What’s interesting is that she seemed to be trying to depict Stewart as a rich, hypocritical elitist, unconcerned about others, and herself as a populist champion (a classic Rove reversal). This was a planned “out” or trump card for McCaughey, but it didn’t work as intended. She should have known that to Stewart’s audience, those characterizations – especially the one of Stewart – would be laughable. McCaughey had a brief “curses, foiled again” moment of course, but it seems like it was more than that, because it looks as if she really hadn’t anticipated that sort of response. The idea that Stewart would be rich, and would also support higher taxes on himself, and would also support some sort of governmental, universal health care to help everyone else, seemed to genuinely flummox her. (I could be wrong, and reading in a response I’ve seen elsewhere.) Yet while Stewart’s extremely sharp, his stance in the clip is pretty standard for rich liberals: Yes, I want to take care of myself and my family, but after that, of course I’ll tend to a favorite cause, the community, my city, my state, my country.

This strikes a certain breed of conservatives as bizarre, a foreign concept, a violation of the rules. Why the hell would you give up a personal advantage in the game? Occasionally this comes up in political discussions. It did during the 2004 presidential election season – shockingly, wealthy Bush wanted to continue or add to the tax cuts for the wealthy, while wealthy Kerry and Edwards didn’t. It came up with the “Joe the Plumber” circus in 2008 and again with Joe Biden’s remarks about paying taxes being patriotic. The Republican pitch, echoed by some political reporters, is that there’s something awfully suspicious about a rich man who promises he’ll raise his own taxes – never mind if it’s for the good of the country – and something somehow trustworthy about a rich man eager to lower his own taxes and increase his own wealth. Vote for the upfront scumbag, I guess. The idea of being civic-minded has become viewed as utterly foreign and un-American to the party that claims to be more patriotic.

Back in his day, Franklin Delano Roosevelt was denounced as a traitor to his class – he had battled against the code David Brooks still peddles. FDR named his enemies and declared that he “welcomed their hatred.” Obama, whatever his other faults and merits, isn’t as “lucky” as FDR in the hatred he receives from the right. He’s not denounced as a traitor to his class – he’s attacked as wholly alien to America.

It’s been astounding to see the petulant rage that’s erupted from conservative politicians and their far right base in reaction to Obama’s election and presidency. After ignoring or even cheering on all the abuses of the Bush administration, suddenly under Obama they started attacking even those policies more conservative than Eisenhower’s or Nixon’s or of the Republicans of 10-20 years ago as socialist. It may be because Obama broke the biggest unspoken rule of the game they thought they owned: You’re not supposed to win. A similar dynamic drives all the reflexive hippie-punching and “center-right” blather from Beltway reporters. Liberal activists are very familiar with this rule, and have unfortunately seen plenty of it over the years, including during the current administration. Sensible policies have been denounced as too radical or “liberal” over and over again, watered down or completely eliminated. The conservative critique of Obama is that he’s radically changed all the rules and is rigging the game against them – which might be poetic justice, but isn’t true. The liberal critique varies, but it’s generally that Obama has made some changes and improvements, but also has been too timid about changing the rules of the game, too accepting of how badly the game’s rigged. The more sympathetic would argue he simply can’t change things that much with an obstructionist GOP and other obstacles. The more critical think he’s happy with a rigged game, or is making it worse, or is just too establishmentarian by nature (as with his economic team). If so, he’s far from alone in Washington, more’s the pity. But beyond any character assessments, the fact remains that good governance is not encouraged by the current rules of the game. Contrary to Brooks, the present set-up does not benefit us all, or anything remotely resembling a majority of Americans. When the dominant attitude in the Beltway is that liberals must always lose – and more importantly, that sensible, effective policy shouldn’t guide decisions, especially if it’s supported by the wrong sorts of people – it’s time to challenge the rules, or change the game.
 

The Donkey Edge goes to Glenn Beck U (so you don’t have to)

History For Dummies

by digby

Did you know that you can attend Glenn Beck University for the amazing deal of only $9.95 per month? The thing is that most of would probably agree that $9.95 a month is $9.90 more than we would be willing to spend.

The good news is that you don’t even have to waste that nickel. Steve Foster over at The Donkey Edge has gone above and beyond the call of duty to actually “attend” GBU and lived to tell about it.

Here’s a little taste:

[M]y right-wing funhouse soon turned into a house of horrors, as I was treated to an approximately 30-minute lecture (presumably the outer limits of a wing-nut’s attention span) that covered our Founding Fathers and the birth of our nation. I had clearly picked the wrong day to give up drinking.

What unfolded was a “lecture” about the so-called “Black-Robed Regiment” – apparently a band of Evangelical Christian preachers that invoked from the Bible the political and moral underpinnings upon which the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution were based and that single-handedly defeated the British at the battles of Concord, Lexington, and Bunker Hill. Ever heard of the “Black-Robed Regiment”? Me neither. It sounds like an obscure 1990s Steven Seagal film.

That’s just the beginning. Click here for lesson’s two and three.

And lest we think this is just a joke, keep in mind the latest findings on the tea party:

Glenn Beck is the most highly regarded individual among Tea Party supporters of the people we tested. He scores an extraordinarily high 75 percent warm rating, 57 percent very warm.

This affinity for Beck came through very clearly in the focus groups. The only news source that participants said they could trust was Fox. Glenn Beck, Bill O’Reilly, and Sean Hannity were cited as people who “are not afraid to tell it like it is” and support their arguments with solid facts. Beck was undoubtedly the hero in these groups. Participants consider him an “educator” (in contrast to the popular Rush Limbaugh who is an “entertainer”) who teaches people history and puts himself at risk because he exposes the truth. In the words of a woman in Ft. Lauderdale, “I would trust my life in his hands.”

Other comments are just as laudatory:

I like the way he’s trying to get back to the basics of the Constitution of the United States because I think that’s where our government is losing focus. They’re trying to change the Constitution or somehow twist it…

He brings out facts… And he actually shows the people saying the things. It’s not like just sound bites. It’s not chopped and really edited. And he is scary because every time I watch the show, which is pretty much every day, my heart feels…and I feel like I want to do something.

I’m frightened for him… Because of the things that he says. I think that he is stepping on some big toes.

He really does his research and he really lays it out to you well; a good professor.

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