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Month: August 2010

Intellectual libertarians want to privatize the military and then fire everyone in it. Or something.

Libertarian Intellectuals

by digby

We all know that John Stossel has always been a putz, but this has to be embarrassing, even for him:

Glenn Beck: I wasn’t always a libertarian. I leaned libertarian. But I can’t think of a darned thing the government does … and people will always say the military…

Stossel: that the government does well

Beck: but I’m not convinced the government needs to do the military, I don’t think so. Did you know that there are now more admirals than there are ships? That’s amazing. Why? Why do we have that? …

Stossel: So you’re someone who was not a libertarian before, but you’ve become more libertarian as you’ve gotten older and smarter.. Even the military, you’d be comfortable because you’d have private contractors …

Beck: you fire them.You investigate them and you fire them.I just had dinner with one of the guys from Blackwater and I said, you know, my concern is that all of this power, all these weapons in the hands of a private corporation, what’s to say that the private corporation doesn’t take it over.

Stossel: for profit!

Beck: for profit, for evil profit. The follow up question is, if you are a liberal were you comfortable with all that power in the hands of Dick Cheney and George Bush. He was Darth Vader. He was doing it just for profit in the oil companies. Now are you comfortable with Barack Obama having it.

If you can make sense out of that you need to sober up.

But the fact that Beck is having dinner with Blackwater guys freaks me out.

*Keep in mind that Beck is the most popular leader of the Tea Party (because he’s so smart.)

The Audacity Of Dopes

The Audacity Of Dopes

by digby

I am definitely naming my next cat after Paul Krugman. And the first mouse he brings in will be named Paul Ryan.

Mr. Ryan has become the Republican Party’s poster child for new ideas thanks to his “Roadmap for America’s Future,” a plan for a major overhaul of federal spending and taxes. News media coverage has been overwhelmingly favorable; on Monday, The Washington Post put a glowing profile of Mr. Ryan on its front page, portraying him as the G.O.P.’s fiscal conscience. He’s often described with phrases like “intellectually audacious.”

But it’s the audacity of dopes. Mr. Ryan isn’t offering fresh food for thought; he’s serving up leftovers from the 1990s, drenched in flimflam sauce.

Needless to say he goes on to dispatch Ryan’s Randian Austerity wet dream in a few short paragraphs. It’s a beautiful sight to see.

And in case anyone’s looking for some real world examples of what will happen if this flimflam man get his way, I’ve got one for you right here:

It was the first country in Europe to hack away at spending to wrestle a raging budget deficit under control, winning praise as a trailblazer whose decisive austerity program showed the way for the rest of the continent.

But nearly two years into its shock treatment, Ireland is faced with rising public debt, dwindling private investment and record numbers of people out of work, and some are asking whether the Emerald Isle is indeed a role model, or a cautionary tale instead.

The answer has implications for nations across the continent as governments that only months earlier had argued for stimulus packages to keep their recession-hit economies afloat are scrambling to tighten their purse strings. And it has resonance across the Atlantic, as Republican lawmakers raise questions about the cost of President Obama’s stimulus initiatives.

Officials in Ireland say the payoffs from their austerity plan are gradual, designed to put the country of 4.5 million people on more sound financial footing and set the stage for sustained growth through structural reforms.

But with the unemployment rate exceeding 13% and consumer demand crippled, a number of economists and analysts are expressing concern that Ireland has been sucked into a downward spiral from which escape grows more difficult by the day.

“The key question is … has the medicine worked? Has what the government said would happen happened in terms of reviving economic growth?” said Michael Burke, an economist based in London. “The resounding answer is: Absolutely not.”

But don’t let that stop us from doing the same thing. America is exceptional, you see, and things that don’t work elsewhere will certainly work here. We just need to clap a whole lot louder.

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“They’re not fighting special interests, they’re fighting us”

“They’re Not Fighting Special Interests, They’re Fighting Us

by digby

I’ve written a number of posts about how the right is successfully framing all government action as a “bailout,” the new bill to provide funds for teachers, cops and firefighters being no exception. Here’s Bachman:

(I don’t know if that’s a grammatical mistake or an Amos and Andy parody. With Bachman and Brietbart, it’s plausible either way.)

Typical right wing bloggers characterize it like this:

Yet another bailout from productive private sector taxpayers, for yet another unproductive Democrat special interest group.

Oh well, at least the teacher unions are happy with their bailout. And the Wall Street bankers are happy with their bailout. And the auto unions are happy with their bailout. And the public sector unions are happy with their bailout. And so on, and so on, and so on.

I would expect that the left-wing media will getting a bailout soon. And then the left-wing trial lawyers. And then the left-wing illegal immigrants. And then the left-wing prisoners. That should about cover it, I guess.

The minute I heard the right wingers railing about “bailouts” I knew it was going to go this way. But they may have made a mistake this time. In 2005, Arnold Schwarzenegger called a special election to dramatically cut funding for teachers, firefighters and nurses. He campaigned by calling them “special interests.” They fought back hard with a series of ads that reminded Americans that he was talking about them and their neighbors. He tanked in the polls, his initiatives were soundly defeated and at the time people wondered if he could win reelection.

Here’s one of them:

Democrats should study that campaign. “He’s not fighting special interests. He’s fighting us” is a hell of good message.

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Should Justice Thomas recuse himself from all cases his activist wife takes up?

Recusal?

by digby

Clarence Thomas’ wife Ginny has joined the political fray in a big way, lately flogging her new front group as a liaison between DC and the Tea Party. But she’s asking for trouble — or would be in any sane world:

Like Cavuto, I don’t think she’s being very clear here at all, but I think she’s trying to say that “policy” relates to activism, while legal work is separate. Even granting her that, the problem is that the people she works with are very often doing legal work, agitating for judges and taking strong stands for and against various legal rulings. It’s not really possible to separate these things in American political life.

I’m sure nobody in the village will dare say a thing about this because the Thomases are untouchable members of the social elite. But I do have to wonder if Justice Sotomayor married someone who started a progressive PAC devoted to open borders whether it would be accepted with such equanimity.

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Cultured Tea Party

Cultured Tea Party

by digby

Wolf Blitzer just interviewed Lindsay Graham about his absurd 14th amendment position. He explained that when he talks about “them coming over the border to drop babies” he’s really referring to wealthy Chinese industrialists who come over to birthing resorts. He danced around it quite nicely saying that he just wants make sure we don’t ever have this problem again. (I’m fairly well convinced that the only way to truly solve this problem once and for all is that instead of full body scans, all women must be required to take a gynecological exam and pregnancy test as part of TSA screening. Look for it in the 2012 GOP platform.)

I don’t know why Huckleberry thinks that delivering a big, slurpy wet kiss to the Teabaggers with his “baby dropping” rhetoric is going to do him any good, but he’s deluded if he thinks so:

In recent months, Graham has been censured by GOP party committees in Lexington and Charleston counties. On Monday, the Greenville GOP Executive Committee passed a censure resolution by a vote of 61-2.

“THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, the Greenville County Republican Party hereby issues this formal rebuke of Senator Graham for his cooperation and support of President Obama and the Democratic Party’s liberal agenda for the United States,” the resolution reads.

The resolution says Graham will no longer be invited to participate in meetings or other events sponsored by the Greenville County Republican Party, and alleges Graham has “abandoned the Republican platform.”

He seems to think he can turn this back with some down home racist rhetoric implying that immigrants are farm animals. But there’s no guarantee. After all, his alleged abandonment of the Republican platform is likely less political than it is “cultural” if you know what I mean.

Meanwhile over on Hardball, Matthews had both David Gregory and Chuck Todd shaking their heads over why the Republicans would be doing this sort of thing. After all, they agreed, the Tea Party doesn’t care about issues like gay rights or race or any of these unpleasant culture war issues — they care about economics. So why on earth would the GOP think it’s a good idea to talk about these divisive culture war issues at a time like this?

They really are clueless aren’t they?

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We Shall Overcome — Breitbart’s Bizarroworld Martin Luther King

We Shall Overcome

by digby

I suspect most of you have probably already read the amusing media matters expose of the person Andrew Breitbart personally recruited to write about Shirley Sherrod. It’s amazing and you have to read the whole thing to get the full picture.

It made me go look at the articles he published at Breitbart’s Big Government and they are fairly amazing too. This passage made me laugh out loud:

If Sherrod fully repudiated racism, why would she smile at the times she did? Her smug smiles indicated that she clearly enjoyed having the upper hand over a white man. That’s racism. Furthermore, the reaction of the audience manifested their pleasure at how Sherrod discriminated against the white farmer. If Sherrod were not a racist, the comments from the audience and applause would have prompted her to immediately address those reactions that clearly indicated support of racial discrimination.

Imagine if a white doctor gave a speech in which he smiled while recounting how he’d done less than he could to save the life of a black patient. Imagine if the all-white audience erupted in applause and the doctor didn’t say something such as, “Now hold on just a minute—discriminating against a black patient is something you should condemn, not applaud!” Would you think that doctor wasn’t racist?…

Without Sherrod’s help, I could not imagine even thinking about taking a black patient to see a black doctor. After years of treating black patients, I continued to be amazed by how much they appreciated the way I treated them: the same as anyone else. I never expected that equal treatment was worthy of such appreciation, which led me to believe that others hadn’t treated them properly.

How do people like this get licensed to drive a car much less to practice medicine? (Of course it’s entirely possible that this fellow has no license to practice medicine, considering all the frauds he’s perpetrated.)

The rest of the article isn’t any more coherent. He further elaborates on his color blindness here, where he again excoriates blacks for being racists. After all, he has said more than once that he knows “several blacks who, in my opinion, are smarter than John McCain and Barack Obama combined, and hence much better suited to be President.” Can all those black racists admit to such open mindedness? I think not.

His belief in his own color-blindness is so thorough that he even believes it’s perfectly ok to casually use racial epithets in print. After being questioned for referring to the Chinese as “the Chinks” he explains:

You seem to be a highly intelligent person yourself, so I am a bit surprised by how offended you were. Let me try to make a distinction:

From your message: “”Chinks” is a highly offensive, racist term used predominantly by non-Asian Americans to describe the Chinese . . . in a demeaning, derogatory, condescending manner.”

I think highly of many Chinese — probably you, too! 🙂 — so I never intended that as a global denunciation of all Chinese people. I DID intend it as a way to verbally lambaste the Chinese who commit the atrocities I mentioned. Anyone who intentionally poisons millions of people over a period of decades deserves to be called something far harsher than “Chink,” but I usually don’t use profanity.

So, there’s a distinction here. I was clearly referring to the “bad Chinese,” not ALL Chinese. If you’ve written much, you know that authors often relax their standards of proper English usage in an attempt to spice up their writings and to more effectively communicate their feelings. A few weeks ago, the publisher of Forbes magazine used the word “ain’t” in an editorial . . . amazing! I’ve heard others use more contentious language, such as the famous “N-word.” Since I am probably one of the few people who truly loathes racial discrimination AND has a viable plan to help eliminate it, I do not want to contribute to the problem by using epithets that stereotype people — but, in fairness to myself, I don’t believe I did that. As I mentioned above, I think it was obvious that I had my finger pointed directly at one subset of Chinese: the ones who evidently don’t give a hoot about their fellow human beings.

He goes on to point out that there are many “good Chinese” like the hard working students who don’t drink and such. Then he let’s fly with this:

So, when the hicks I hang around with aren’t busy making moonshine or keeping up with world events by reading The National Enquirer in our outhouses, we don’t bash Chinese people by calling them “Chinks” — except when they poison us . . . again, and again, and again. It’s called righteous indignation.

You can surely see that there’s no racism involved at all. When he calls Chinese people “Chinks” only referring to the bad ones. I’m sure he can even personally name “several” who are just as smart as Barack Obama and John McCain combined who would make a good president. And anyone who suggests that he is anything but purely color blind is saying that he’s a moonshine swilling hick who uses an outhouse. And that my friends, is the discrimination that decent white people have to contend with every day. In fact, it’s institutional:

For every vestige of anti-black racism in USA at present, I could mention two ways in which whites are racially victimized by blacks or people favoring blacks, such as when I discovered years ago that black students at Michigan State University could pass courses even if they got every question wrong on every test.

I can see why Breitbart liked this fellow’s writing so much that he hired him for his site. They share the same belief that the only problem with race in this country is the unfair way that majority whites are treated. And they have both dedicated themselves to ending that horrible disparity. In their minds, they are the true heirs to Martin Luther King.

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BP’s attitude to Gulf residents who have lost their way of life — Snap Out Of It!

Snap Out Of It

by digby

The Donkey Edge, which is following the story of illness in the Gulf, reports that BP is so far completely unwilling to deal with the mental health effects of the massive catastrophe they created.

J. Steven Picou peers into the future. The environmental sociologist has spent decades studying the human impact of man-made or technological disasters. For 21 years, he’s tracked the residents of Cordova, Alaska, whose community was deeply wounded by the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill. And while every disaster and every community is different, he can’t ignore the signs of what’s to come. “It’s like the table is set,” he says. “And now we’re going to be served with this 15- to 20-year-course meal of problems.” Among the woes to be dished out: depression, marital problems, family violence, crime, substance abuse and suicides.

But CNN reported that “the oil has gone bye-bye.” What’s the problem?

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Boehner gets a headache from excessive golfing

Boehner Gets A Headache

by digby

Howie says

It’s a miracle I got any blogging done at all in the last few days. It’s like non-stop phone calls and e-mails from all these media folks in John Boehner’s district wanting to know why we’re picking on him, where’d we get the money for the billboards, why is the billboard not inside the district, and how, exactly, do we know he played 119 rounds of golf in 2009. I mean, those calls haven’t stopped in 3 days. Everyone has been pretty nice and polite though. And I think they appreciate the transparency with which we handle all the questions, rather than the way the Boehner folks weave and dodge and never seem to manage to give a straight answer to any questions. The big Cincinnati Enquirer website kicked off the fetsivities even before the first of our BeatBoehner billboards went up. The video up top was the report that ran yesterday at News 5, WLWT, the powerhouse NBC affiliate for southwest Ohio.

Boehner’s spokesman rushed to point out that they had only held 7 golf events last year. That’s very slick. Nobody cares how many golf events he hosted. It’s how many times he played, and by all accounts he plays a lot. A whole lot:

Despite all of the problems facing Ohio families, according to Golf Digest Magazine, Congressman Boehner finds time to play about 100 rounds of golf a year – most with special interest lobbyists. He says he pays special attention to the lobbyists he meets on the golf course, bragging “…if someone I’ve gotten to know on the golf course comes into my office with a good argument, I tend to want to listen,”

If there’s any confusion as to how many specific times he played, it’s because in http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1109/29881.html“>this article in the Dayton Daily News about his excessive golfing habits his staff said he had 119 “events.” But perhaps they were purposefully under-representing the number of times he was on the course. After all, since the Republicans refuse to do anything at all for the American people, he has even more time these days to gladhand lobbyists and work on his swing. (In fact, he’s whining like a teenager because Nancy Pelosi is dragging him off his golf cart during his sacred month long August junket and forcing the congress back to vote to keep teachers in the classrooms and police on the street.)

This page has pictures of all six billboards, where you can donate to this campaign if you’ve a mind to. The contest is over but we’re using it to collect money to spread some more pointed messages designed to give Boehner some heartburn.

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One of Alan Grayson’s opponents unveils the GOP economic plan

The Republican Economic Plan

by digby

Alan Grayson is at the top of the GOP hit list, so you can imagine they are pulling out the big, big guns to defeat him. Here’s one of them:

He doesn’t say how he would cut the deficit, spending and taxes, but he is a true outside the box thinker and it looks like he has a bold and daring plan: tax evasion.

Republican Bruce O’Donoghue owes the IRS more than $300,000 after he failed to pay his payroll taxes for last year.

“It’s a sad set of circumstances, and of course timing couldn’t have been worse,” O’Donoghue says.

The candidate told WDBO he’s the victim of a former employee that stole from him, but would not name that employee, and did not file charges against anyone.

Control Specialists Company faces a lien of $306,975. The company installs traffic signals in crosswalks.

O’Donoghue says he’s trying to negotiate a settlement and promises to pay the taxes and the interest once the penalty’s waived.

As Leona Helmsly famously said, “taxes are for the little people.” So are penalties, apparently. (Do you get to have yours waived if you fail to pay your taxes? I doubt it.)

But perhaps he’s just trying to “starve the beast,” an old tried and true right wing approach to governance. As we all know, we will only be able to reduce the deficit if we lower taxes, so this fellow is just doing his part as an individual. Indeed, he’s showing everyone the way to reduce spending — just don’t pay the bills.

When you think about it, his plan is better than Paul Ryan’s actually. Maybe this is the one Mitch McConnell is waiting to unveil at the opportune moment.

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A Good Day

A Good Day

by digby

A picture’s worth a thousand words:


Shelly Bailes, left, hugs her wife Ellen Pontac outside of the Phillip Burton Federal Building in San Francisco, Wednesday, Aug. 4, 2010. A federal judge overturned California’s same-sex marriage ban Wednesday in a landmark case…(AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

Here’s another one of those pictures that’s worth a thousand words, from Free Republic (via Joe My God):

I’m not sure who they want to shoot, but I’m guessing they’re not particular.

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