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Month: August 2010

Holy Scott Ritter, Batman!

by tristero

What a surprise. Of course it’s true. Why would governments trump up a charge like that?

Special note: of course, I have no idea if the accusation is legit. Regardless, the accusation is a cynically timed ad hominem attack intended to make it difficult for WikiLeaks to again focus the world’s attention on the disgraceful behavior of the United States during the multiple misbegotten and criminal wars begun by the sociopathic George W. Bush and his administration. Bush and his thugs not only have evaded any legal responsibility for their crimes, they will continue to evade it.

We should never forget that, despite any and all attempts to distract.

UPDATE: Well whaddaya know? Didn’t see that coming.

Feline Stoners

Stoners

by digby

Housecats are astonishingly like their bigger relatives in almost all ways. They are the king of beasts, whether in the garden on on the veldt.

And they really like to get high.

h/t to@AmandaMarcotte

Revolutionary Subsidies — How the oligarchs buy their troops

Revolutionary Subsidies

by digby

Adele Stan has a fascinating piece up today at Alternet about the entrepreneurial organizing being done on behalf of the Glenn Beck Lincoln Memorial rage-a-thon schedule for the end of the month. (She calls Beck Rupert Murdoch’s community organizer.) It just shows to go you how nice it is to have the extremely wealthy bankrolling and organizing your “grassroots” events:

Tim Phillips, president of the Americans for Prosperity Foundation, flatly denies that his organization has any partnership with Rupert Murdoch, CEO of Fox News’ parent company, News Corporation. Still, the coincidental evidence keeps piling up.

Take, for instance, the cheapy-cheap deals available through the AFPF Web site for those wishing to travel to Washington, D.C., for the big Glenn Beck event, Restoring Honor — which happens to take place at the Lincoln Memorial on the 47th anniversary of Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech, which took place in the same hallowed location.

Okay, so AFPF doesn’t advertise the deals as being for the Beck event; they just happen to be wrapping their own annual D.C. conference around the Beck event, and will be ferrying attendees to their Defending the American Dream confab to the Beck event. And the buses will conveniently not leave D.C. until the Beck event concludes. (Coincidentally, FreedomWorks, which is using Glenn Beck’s image and endorsement to peddle membership in its Take America Back election campaign, is also hosting a conference the same weekend.)

Just how good are the deals? Well, check this out.

Read on. You won’t believe it. I’m tempted to sign up just so I can get the deal — I’ll go to the Smithsonian and see all my friends. (I just don’t know if I can stand the hotel elevator rides with lots of people who look like me swooning over Glenn Beck and Sarah Palin.)

It occurs to me reading this that if the Democrats could ever master the art of the hissy fit, they could follow the sage guidance of Greta Van Susteran and turn the national case of the vapors over the alleged mosque to their own advantage by condemning Beck for using the hallowed ground of the Lincoln memorial on the anniversary of MLKs spech to spread hate and lies about American history and African Americans. It happens to be true, but even it weren’t, the wingnuts have proven that truth doesn’t matter. They should use exactly the same language (“sensitivity” and “hallowed ground” and “sure he has a right to do it, but should he exercise that right?”)and get all maudlin about the sacredness of America’s monuments.

Sadly, it will not happen. Liberals have never mastered the talent for turning the other sides’ propaganda back on them. It’s too bad. They spend so much money brainwashing people with it, it would be nice to put some of it to good use.

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Wisconsin Teabagger strokes his geologic sweet spot

Stroking the Geologic Sweet Spot

by digby

It’s almost impossible to think that ignorant Tea Party candidate Ron Johnson has a chance to beat Russ Feingold, but as Greg Sargeant points out, he does:

Here’s what he says about climate change:

If you take a look at geologic time, we’ve had huge climate swings. We’re sitting here in Wisconsin. Had it not been for climate swings, we’d be sitting on a two or three hundred foot thick glacier. Man wasn’t around back then. So no, I absolutely do not believe that the science of man-caused climate change is proven. Not by any stretch of the imagination. I think it’s far more likely that it’s just sunspot activity, or something just in the geologic eons of time where we have changes in the climate.

The Middle Ages was an extremely warm period of time, too. It wasn’t like there were tons of cars on the road. So it always strikes me as a little absurd for anybody to think, okay, this is the sweet spot in geologic time for climate. And it’s such a good place, that we have spent trillions of dollars, and do great harm to our economy, on a fool’s errand. I don’t think we can do anything about controlling what the climate is.

And people complained when I riffed on Krugman’s column this morning with my digression about the Aztec human sacrifice rituals. I wasn’t proposing that they actually made sense.

The country really needs more people like him in the congress. And maybe we’ll get them — Angle, Paul, Rubio and who knows how many freakshow House candidates are very possibly going to be winners. And they will pull out all the stops from that point forward to run an equally idiotic freakshow for president in 2012. Newtie/Palin? Barbour/Bachman? Inhofe/Gellar?

I don’t know why Democrats take so much heart in the prospect of that. The way things are going, these teabaggers might just win the trifecta. Then what?

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Wingnut Jiujitsu — Ramesh the strategist

Oooooh, Jiujitsu

by digby

This, from Ramesh Ponnuru is funny:

President Obama’s interventions in this debate have been gifts to the Republican party–but it may be that what Republicans should do now is take the gift to the bank. In other words, make your point and move back to talking about the economy, the health-care law, and the size of government.

A lot of voters, maybe most of them, think that Obama has spent too much time on issues they don’t care about: Cambridge police procedures, the siting of the Olympics, etc. A Republican candidate could make a fairly effective stump speech out of that perception. Republicans should want the public to view Obama as the guy who has made the mosque an issue when what voters care about is the economy. If they spend more time talking about it themselves, that won’t happen.

I’m sure he’s correct that Republicans would be willing to believe that Obama is the one who made the “mosque” an issue when the GOP just wanted to do the people’s business. After all, they have shown they are willing to believe anything. But I have a sneaking suspicion that the neanderthals have their blood up and aren’t going to be easily aroused by dry speeches about Austrian economics and Ayn Rand now that they’ve been unleashed.

But hey, nobody ever lost a bet that you could win by turning Democrats into sputtering fools screaming “No, no, no, no — YOU guys are the ones who ….!!?$%$#!!” If the right wing plays its cards right, the Democratic congress will end up passing a resolution declaring Obama a Muslim and outlawing mosques within a hundred miles of a military base, after which the Republicans will take to the airwaves protesting that the government wasted taxpayers money while desperate Americans are denied unemployment insurance.

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Sociological Overthink — the reason why the right calls Obama a Muslim

Let’s Not Overthink This

by digby

Adam Serwer writes:

This sheds a bit of light on why Republicans express their disapproval of Obama by identifing him as a “Muslim,” and why conservative elites fan the perception. People don’t like Muslims very much, and if you can associate Obama with Muslims, people will like him less as well. It also reinforces what I said earlier, which is that Republicans don’t think constitutional rights apply to Muslims because they don’t see Muslims as American.

I’m sure that’s true. But I think it also misses the point. Serwer had it right yesterday when he said:

In a less politically correct time they probably would have used a different word.

They call him a Muslim — and are quite suddenly lashing out at “his people” almost a decade after 9/11— simply because they aren’t allowed to call him what they want to call him. Sure, they don’t think Muslims are American. They also don’t think liberals are American, blacks are American, Mexicans are America, gays are American, atheists are American or anyone else who doesn’t identify themselves explicitly with them are American. They are, you see, Real America. Everyone else is not.

This stuff is like water — it always finds a way to seep out. Calling Obama a Muslim is just a convenient way of justifying their existing bigotry toward everything he actually is. It’s not really all that comploicated.

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Another Taser Casualty

Another Taser Casualty

by digby

Don’t go crazy:

An inmate at Santa Rita Jail in Dublin died after he charged at Alameda County sheriff’s deputies and was subdued with the help of Taser shock weapons, authorities said Thursday.

Martin Harrison, 50, of Oakland died at a hospital early Wednesday, two days after the jail incident, sheriff’s Sgt. J.D. Nelson said.

Harrison had been arrested by Oakland police Friday for allegedly driving while intoxicated.

At about 7 p.m. Monday, Harrison began acting erratically, breaking a food tray and flooding his cell by overflowing his toilet, Nelson said. Deputies found Harrison hiding behind a mattress, and the inmate told them that someone was trying to kill him, authorities said.

Harrison charged at deputies when they tried to handcuff him to move him to another cell so his could be cleaned, Nelson said.

Two deputies shocked Harrison with Tasers. Harrison was taken to the jail’s medical center, where he collapsed that night, Nelson said.

The deputies who used their Tasers have been placed on routine paid administrative leave pending an investigation into Harrison’s death.

The Alameda County coroner’s office said it is awaiting the results of toxicology tests, which could take two months, before determining a cause of death.

Right. You wouldn’t want to jump to any conclusions based on the fact that he was shot with electricity and died in the hospital within days. For all we know, he had cancer and his number was up. In any case, we know that tasers can’t kill — it’s just a coincidence that so many people die after they’ve been shot with them.

The use of tasers against the mentally ill is one of the cruelest aspects of this whole horrible experiment in authoritarian coercion. They are deluded and therefore can’t comply with police officers’ orders. It’s second only to the tasering of children and seizing epileptics for sheer barbarity.

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h/t to tl and c

Austerian Sacrifice

Austerian Sacrifice

by digby

Krugman’s column today is about the new faith based economics in which central bankers and politicians are the High Priests calling for human sacrifice. I think that’s a very apt metaphor. I have a passing interest in ancient Mesoamerican history (admittedly, mostly confined to insomnia fueled wee hours viewing of the Discovery Channel) and have learned that the human sacrifice rituals were very stylized political pageants. Here’s an example from the Aztec, who made a virtual industry out of it:

Not all inhabitants of Mesoamerica were candidates for human sacrifice. The main victims for human sacrifice had to be captive warriors who were from a Nahuatl culture.

In order to acquire captives in time of peace, the Aztec resorted to a form of “ritual warfare”, or flower war. The “flower wars” were originally a treaty made between the cities of Texcoco, Tenochtitlan, Tlaxcala and Huexotzingo. The treaty was motivated by a famine in Mesoamerica in 1450. The Aztecs believed that sacred wars were needed to end the famine. By 1455, there was again prosperity in the region, so the sacred wars (xochiyáoyotl) were continued.

The Cihuacoatl (Grand Vizier) Tlacaelel is credited with originating the idea of the flower wars in order to ensure a supply of captives in times of peace. The capture of prisoners for sacrifices was called nextlaualli (“debt payment to the gods”) so that the sun could survive each cycle of 52 years. The flower wars not only gave the Aztecs a constant supply of prisoners even in what were otherwise times of peace, but became an important part of their religion. Smaller numbers of Aztec prisoners were also sacrificed in Tlaxcala and Huexotzingo.

The Aztec eventually took over Texcoco and Tlacopan so that they became Aztec cities. As a founding member of the alliance, Texcoco had a lot of privileges, since it provided the Aztec with their most cultivated citizens. Eventually Texcoco was exempted from the ritual war. The Aztecs began to conquer the territories around Tlaxcala and Huexotzingo.

Tlaxcala was a Nahuatl culture that was never conquered by the Aztecs. As a condition of remaining independent, the Tlaxcalteca agreed to continue provide victims for human sacrifice by means of the “flower wars”. The high price of their freedom, paid perennially in human lives, was a major reason why the Tlaxcalteca became allies of the Spaniards. By the time of the conquest, this ritual war had escalated to the level of a real war, and it was accepted that it was only a matter of time until the Aztecs would try to conquer Tlaxcala. Almost a hundred years of conflict had led to a lot of hate and bitterness between the rival cities with related cultures…

Human sacrifice was nothing new, nor was it something unique to the Mexica. Previous Mesoamerican empires, such as those of the Toltecs and Olmecs, sacrificed their enemies, as did ancient European cultures such as the Greeks and Romans. What distinguished Mexica human sacrifice from these was the sheer scale of the carnage, the importance with which it was embedded in everyday life, and the political function it served.

The high-profile nature of the sacrificial ceremonies indicates that human sacrifice played an important political function. The Mexica used a sophisticated package of psychological weaponry to maintain their empire, aimed at overawing and instilling a sense of fear into local tlatoque. Whereas European empires were typically secured through the creation of garrisons and installation of puppet governments in conquered towns or settlements, in Mesoamerica such methods would be prohibitively expensive and largely impractical. The part-time Mexica army was needed to expand the frontier and was, in any event, disbanded during the rainy crop-growing seasons. The Mexica honed human sacrifice as a weapon of terror, using it even against the Spanish. Tlatoque from across the empire even those of enemy towns were invited – or in the case of tributary towns, obliged – to attend sacrificial ceremonies in Tenochtitlan. The refusal of a tlatoani would be considered an act of defiance against the Mexica and result in serious consequences, perhaps even war.

This psychological weapon was also a means of discouraging internal unrest. Commoners participated in the maintenance of a temple according to a rotating monthly schedule, and assisted the priests in sacrificial rituals. A commoner would have been lucidly aware of the fate that awaited those who opposed the Mexica leadership. Safety was to be found inside the Mexica polity rather than risk death outside it. Human sacrifice perpetuated the myth of invincibility that surrounded the Mexica army.

Just pointing out that the concept, if not the violent execution, isn’t exactly new to human experience. One might have thought we’d moved beyond organizing civilization by superstition and fear, but it’s fairly clear that on a number of levels that’s exactly what we’re doing right now. It is undoubtedly good news, however, that we haven’t regressed to literal ritual human sacrifice. Yet.

Anyway, Krugman’s point about none of the calls for austerity making any rational sense is correct. It doesn’t even make any sense in terms of psychology or behavior. But it’s happening anyway. And what it speaks to is either a rather frightening retreat into primitivism or a full scale advance into shock doctrine theology.

BTW: I thought economists weren’t supposed to be funny:

But the apostles of austerity — sometimes referred to as “austerians” — brushed aside all attempts to do the math.

Lest you think that’s just an obscure inside economics joke, consider that the teabaggers are actually putting this in GOP state platforms:

To Promote the General Welfare: a. Return to the principles of Austrian Economics, and redirect the economy back to one of incentives to save and invest. b. Cut spending, balance the budget, and institute a plan for paying down debt. Proclaim that generational debt shifting is immoral and unconscionable and will not be tolerated! c. Pass and implement Fed bill #1207 (Introduced by Ron Paul), to Audit the Federal Reserve, as the first step in Ending the Fed. d. Return to transparent and honest reporting of economic statistics free of gimmicks and distortions. e. Require the government and all its agencies adhere to the same GAAP accounting rules that businesses must follow. f. Restore the provisions of welfare reform removed with the stimulus bill. g. Defeat Cap and Trade, investigate collusion between government and industry in the global warming myth, and prosecute any illegal collusion. h. Freeze current stimulus funds, prohibit any further stimulus bills, and apply all unspent funds towards the debt they created. i. Promote energy independence aggressively by removing the obstacles created by government to allow private development of our resources; natural gas, oil, coal, and nuclear power. j. Institute Zero based budgeting on all programs. k. Espouse and follow the principle: It is immoral to steal the property rightfully earned by one person, and give it to another who has no claim or right to its benefits.The sad thing is that Krugman isn’t even talking about teabaggers. He’s talking about mainstream Republicans, Democrats and formerly respectable economists and bankers. They’re all smoking the same shit. As he says this isn’t about reason or science — the economy is now faith based in every sense of the term. And average citizens are the human sacrifices.

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Flooding The Zone — an epic disaster in Pakistan

Flooding The Zone

by diogby

Meanwhile, as America decides to stage a live national re-enactment of Birth Of A Nation there this:

With monsoon rains continuing in Pakistan on Wednesday and water-borne diseases reported spreading, international relief officials said the pace of aid donations was still not sufficient to deal with what might be the nation’s worst disaster. “The scale of the response is still not commensurate with the scale of the disaster of almost unprecedented magnitude,” said Martin Nesirky, the spokesman for the United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, reading a statement from the humanitarian affairs office. “This is a catastrophe that continues to unfold.” The United Nations, which had been saying that as many as six million people needed some manner of emergency assistance — shelter, food, drinking water or medical care — estimated that figure could reach eight million. Since the weekend the pace of pledges to the United Nations’ $460 million appeal has accelerated, Mr. Nesirky said, but it remains short of its target. “The funding response to the floods is improving, but much more is needed,” he said. “The effort must be sustained in the days and weeks ahead in order to have the resources to reach the people who desperately need help.” Shortages of the most basic supplies presented the biggest challenge for aid workers in Pakistan, along with the logistics of how to deliver them across a vast part of the country lacking infrastructure.

Which leads to this:

The floods in Pakistan have upended the Obama administration’s carefully honed strategy there, confronting the United States with a vast humanitarian crisis and militant groups determined to exploit the misery, in a country that was already one of its thorniest problems. While the administration has kept its public emphasis on the relief effort, senior officials are busy assessing the longer-term strategic impact. One official said the disaster would affect virtually every aspect of the relationship between the United States and Pakistan, and could have ripple effects on the war in Afghanistan and the broader American battle against Al Qaeda. With Pakistan’s economy suffering a grievous blow, the administration could be forced to redirect parts of its $7.5 billion economic aid package for Pakistan to urgent needs like rebuilding bridges, rather than more ambitious goals like upgrading the rickety electricity grid. Beyond that, the United States will be dealing with a crippled Pakistani government and a military that, for now, has switched its focus from rooting out insurgents to plucking people from the floodwaters. The Pakistani authorities, a senior American official said, have been “stretched to the breaking point” by the crisis. Their ragged response has fueled fears that the Taliban will make gains by stepping in to provide emergency meals and shelter. “It certainly has security implications,” said another official who, like others interviewed for this article, spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss internal policy deliberations. “An army that is consumed by flood relief is not conducting counterinsurgency operations.” On Thursday, the United Nations will convene a special meeting devoted to the floods, hoping to galvanize what has been a lackluster global response. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is expected to announce that American public aid has surpassed $100 million, an official said. “We’re obviously not oblivious to the political and strategic implications of this catastrophe, but right now, we are fully focused on the emergency relief effort and trying to get a good assessment of the needs,” said the administration’s special representative to the region, Richard C. Holbrooke. Noting that several weeks remain in the monsoon season, Mr. Holbrooke said, “Worse may be yet to come.”

So that’s good. If we play our cards right we might just get us that Holy War Pamela Atlas is angling for.

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