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Month: January 2011

Is he Nuts?

by digby

If you read only one thing today, do yourself a favor and read this fascinating profile of Roger Ailes by Tom Junot in Esquire. It’s so full of interesting insights into the Ego and Id of tea party American that I don’t even know where to start.

Here’s just one little tid-bit and it may not even be the best one:

Is Roger Ailes a cynical man? Not at all. He really believes the things he says. He really believes that he is an average American. He really believes that he is looked down upon by those who admire and fear him. He really believes that he is the only man in America who can be called fat with impunity. He really believes that his power is rooted in his disregard for what people think of him. He really believes that he is the only genuine person in the media business. He really believes that Fox is fair and balanced. He really believes that his success has very little to do with politics and very much to do with television. He really believes — despite his subsequent apologies — that the people who fired poor Juan Williams from NPR are Nazis. He really believes that he seeks out liberal voices as ardently as he seeks out conservative ones. He really believes that until his arthritis immobilized him, he could always have gone back to digging ditches for a living. He really believes that despite being immobilized by arthritis, he could handle himself if someone challenged him to a fight, and that whoever comes to New York to fight him shouldn’t bother buying a plane ticket home.

Okay, then: Is Roger Ailes crazy? Now that’s a good question … because Roger Ailes believes that you are — or, at the very least, that you think you are. It’s his grand theory of human behavior. “Look,” he says, “there isn’t a day that goes by that everybody doesn’t say to themselves, ‘Am I nuts?’ They do it in their heads. People think that they’re nuts.” He has such confidence in the validity of this theory that he created a show for his America’s Talking network called exactly that — Am I Nuts? He’s so confident that he built Fox News as a twenty-four-hour Am I Nuts? for American conservatives. See, what Roger Ailes has done at Fox is find a way to mainstream extremity for fun and, of course, for profit. He’s found out that people need the validating experience of extremity in the same way that he does. And he takes extreme positions and says extreme things because he needs to, because they allow him to make the choice that’s at the heart of his power.

Wow.

The man is an unparalleled media expert who understands more about how it works than anyone in the business. You can’t argue with his success. What that says about American culture is something else again.

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The secret of his success

The Secret Of His Success

by digby

So I’m watching MSNBC and White House stenographer Richard Wolffe tells us how the White House feels about the recent finding that more people feel the economy is improving:

I can tell you that the general feeling is that the upswing according to a bunch of recent polls that put the president’s approval ratings above 50% for the first time in several months, that’s a psychological mark more than anything else. They’re not breaking out the champagne of course, unemployment’s still way too high.

But it does signal that, in particular, the kind of deals he was doing at the end of the last congress, especially on taxes, with Republicans,has fed into a broader, better feeling about the economy.

Wolffe may be a lot of things, but no one can say that he isn’t very well informed about the administration’s thinking.

He went on to say that the White House will be strongly focused on better relationships with business over the next two years to ease the community’s fears about regulations. Not a lot of talk about jobs or home foreclosures or the rest of the economic hardships still being felt by millions of ordinary Americans (or as Wolffe put it, their misconception that the country is still in recession.) I guess they’re going to let the invisible hand take care of that.

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Sarah’s Dutch Uncle

Sarah’s Dutch Uncle

by digby

So Newtie admonished Sarah for her unfortunate habit of putting her foot in her mouth, which must have really hurt coming from the guy who said this:

If combat means living in a ditch, females have biological problems staying in a ditch for thirty days because they get infections and they don’t have upper body strength. I mean, some do, but they’re relatively rare. On the other hand, men are basically little piglets, you drop them in the ditch, they roll around in it, doesn’t matter, you know. These things are very real. On the other hand, if combat means being on an Aegis-class cruiser managing the computer controls for twelve ships and their rockets, a female may be again dramatically better than a male who gets very, very frustrated sitting in a chair all the time because males are biologically driven to go out and hunt giraffes.

In fact, I’m hard pressed to think of a Republican who’s said more stupid things than Newt Gingrich. I guess it takes one to know one.

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Depression

Depression

by digby

There are many depressing findings in this new CNN poll about the shooting. But for me most disheartening is the fact that 66% of people think there’s nothing society or government can do to prevent such things from happening and that even though nearly 70% think it was a result of a failure of the mental health system, 52% think Loughner should be given the death penalty.

This is one cynical country.

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Taunting the nervous nellies

Taunting The Nervous Nellies

by digby

You have to hand it to the right wing. They don’t back down, even in the face of a slaughter. They see it as an opportunity:

Arizona has become a national leader in the gun rights movement in recent years as the state enacted law after law to protect the people’s right to bear arms nearly anywhere, at anytime. The shooting rampage that wounded Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, a former legislative colleague, has done nothing to slow down the Legislature. Gun rights bills were introduced in the days after the shootings last week, and more proposals are to come. “I don’t think it really changes anything,” Republican state Sen. Ron Gould said of the mass shooting. “I don’t see how gun control could have prevented that shooting unless you take guns out of the hands of law-abiding citizens.”[…]Arizona Republicans remain adamant that the shooting will not dissuade them from pushing their pro-gun agenda. They want new laws allowing college and university faculty members to be able to carry concealed weapons on campus, an issue that gained attention after the 2007 shooting at Virginia Tech University. Only Utah has a law allowing concealed weapons on college campuses while 24 states have bans, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. “There are going to be some nervous Nellies, so to speak, but I think that it will be overcome,” said John Wentling, a leader of the Arizona Citizens Defense League, a gun owners advocacy group active at the Capitol. “We still have an obligation to protect constitutional and civil rights.” Bills already introduced this year in Arizona in the Republican-controlled Legislature include barring landlords and homeowner groups from restricting the right to bear arms in self defense, and expanding the current law that allows gun owners to display a weapon in self defense. And Wentling said his group’s priority bill, which he wouldn’t discuss, hasn’t been unveiled yet.

What more do they want? The legal right to shoot first and ask questions later? Immunity from prosecution for killing someone with a gun? Mandatory gun carry laws in all public places? It seems to me that once you’re allowed to carry guns in bars, you’ve pretty much got it covered. Unless they want to change the law to allow you to be armed and plastered. That would certainly be a big blow for freedom — and exactly what the founders had in mind, I’m sure.

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“Is it possible to ignore the future?”

“Is It Possible To Ignore The Future?”

by digby

Here are a great couple of posts by Rick Perlstein from a couple of years ago in which he shared some letters he’d run across in his research from some Chicago residents to their Senator on the new laws against housing discrimination. I urge you to read all of them, but these capture the very essence of right wing backlash argumentation both then and now, I think:

1)Last night there was a show of appreciation for all that has been done to help the colored people. Even those that have been moved from the slums into high rise apartments have seen fit to shoot and wound our policemen. Don’t you think it’s time to have Dr Martin Luther King and other negro leaders start preaching that they should go to work the same as white folks do, if they wish to improve their lot, instead of continuing to promise them more and more in all their talks.
How much longer are we doing to be the suckers, giving away tax payer’s money and in return see what it has got us. Shooting, looting, and additional cost to community in the way of police protection, hospital expenses, replacement of burned and smashed automobiles, etc.

2)I do not understand the Negro riots in our big cities. These negroes have civil rights. They do not suffer from discrimination. Many are supported by our taxes.

3)Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation”–did they have the national Guard fight the Indians for them? No, they had to work hard for their niche in life. Today we have many groups of settlements in America–did they demonstrate for rights as the negro is doing today? No, they made their own way and are greatly respected for so doing….

Am I living in Germany under Hitler’s rule or in America? As I recall the past, it comes to mind that Hitler sent troops to march in te streets of Germany. This display of power frightened the people and they ran to their homes to hide. Isn’t this what we are being told to do today? When Hitler, pardon me, I mean Martin Luther King, decides he and his troops want to harass an area, he calls a march of power and our politicians send the storm troops, correction, Police and National Guard, to help frighten the people of that area. Our churches are doing their bit, by telling us to be: “good, stay in your homes, ignore these racists and maybe they will go away.” Is it possible to ignore the future? When greedy Mr Hitler started taking over other countries, people at first thought ‘give him a little more, then he will be satisfied.’ Give greedy Mr King a little more freedom then he will stop. Isn’t this what we are being told today? …Wake up America! Stop being an ostrich, start realizing that during that period of apathy, after World War II and until today, we have permitted a handful of people to write laws that are putting us in the same deplorable state that the German people were in thirty years ago.


Plus ca change

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Prove It

by digby

Monica Crowley made quite a statement on the McLaughlin report this week-end:

CROWLEY: I think it was a good, well modulated speech and I think the tone was perfectly appropriate. And I do think this was a presidential moment for him because, really for the first time in two years, he spoke on behalf of all of the American people, not just on behalf of his party, not just on behalf of the left, but really spoke on behalf of all of us. So I think it was an important moment.

I do think he missed two opportunities. The first one is, I think he waited too long to deliver the message. Another memorial service was scheduled for Wednesday, but he could have come out on Sunday or Monday with a message to his own side telling them to cut it out when they were drawing this very sort of malicious and vicious lies that somehow conservative talk or our political climate have caused this particular act of violence which even he admitted later did not. He let his side run wild for days with this malicious lie.

The second thing is, I think even though he did give an effective beat down to his own side by saying this does not… there is no direct correlation between this act of violence by a lone psychopath and our political climate. I think he stopped full of a full rebuke of the complete irresponsibility of folks on his own side that still continue to try to link this act or other things with political talk on the conservative side.

Eleanor mentioned Roger Ailes at Fox and Sarah Palin’s web site, but I would like to see the left take the lead in moderating their talk, because for every one example you can give from the right, there were plenty of examples on the left of the most vile, vicious and even violent kind of rhetoric coming out of the left.

As Heather at C&L says:

When Monica Crowley puts up the same kind of list with supposed liberal violence or rhetoric that Digby linked in her post here with what we’ve seen from the right since they’ve lost their damned minds after President Obama got elected, then maybe I’ll take her flame-throwing false equivalencies seriously.

I’m sure she’d just use Hitler and Stalin quotes and call it day, but it’s a nice idea.

Crowley is an interesting case. When she was on MSNBC, she was usually a fairly likeable right winger, often reasonable, rather charming. But since she left there, her approach has been progressively more feral — her performances on Mclaughlin Report are right up there with the worst of the talk show hosts these days. I don’t know if she was faking it before or has just gotten more radical, but she’s now one of those awful people screaming all day about how “Obama is the most radical president evah!” and playing senseless “I know you are but what am I” word games whenever she’s cornered.

I guess there’s just no end to the number of parrots that wingnut welfare can support. But they’d better deliver the boiling vitriol or they won’t survive.

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Curing with leeches

Curing With Leeches

by digby

Well, it looks like we finally got us a consensus. Austerity for all:

The dismal fiscal situation in many states is forcing governors, despite their party affiliation, toward a consensus on what medicine is needed going forward.

The prescription? Slash spending. Avoid tax increases. Tear up regulations that might drive away business and jobs. Shrink government, even if that means tackling the thorny issues of public employees and their pensions.

It should be noted that we have a couple of dissenters (Illinois and Minnesota) who are approaching this from the opposite perspective. So it will be interesting to see how they fare in comparison. Of course, it’s hard to measure human suffering, and most people won’t bother to even try, so it’s not really fair …

May the bloodletting begin.

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Still climbing the mountain

Still climbing the mountain

by digby

History will have to record that the greatest tragedy of this period of social transition was not the strident clamor of the bad people, but the appalling silence of the good people.
Martin Luther King, Jr.

MLK left behind a whole lot of great quotes and I’m always afraid of using them too much for fear of turning him into Hallmark kitsch. But I think that one above is important. In fact, the sentiment is one of the important themes of his writings and seems to me to be especially pertinent today.

The Letter from the Birmingham jail reflects this feeling so well — the frustration and near-contempt for the temporizing and incrementalism of the “white moderates” who insisted that they were on his side but that he needed to be patient. Hurry up and wait, keep you powder dry, don’t be obnoxious with your demands, don’t make trouble. you can feel his frustration at having the wage a battle on two fronts in his words:

I must make two honest confessions to you, my Christian and Jewish brothers. First, I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate. I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Counciler or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate, who is more devoted to “order” than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: “I agree with you in the goal you seek, but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action”; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom; who lives by a mythical concept of time and who constantly advises the Negro to wait for a “more convenient season.” Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.

I had hoped that the white moderate would understand that law and order exist for the purpose of establishing justice and that when they fail in this purpose they become the dangerously structured dams that block the flow of social progress. I had hoped that the white moderate would understand that the present tension in the South is a necessary phase of the transition from an obnoxious negative peace, in which the Negro passively accepted his unjust plight, to a substantive and positive peace, in which all men will respect the dignity and worth of human personality. Actually, we who engage in nonviolent direct action are not the creators of tension. We merely bring to the surface the hidden tension that is already alive. We bring it out in the open, where it can be seen and dealt with. Like a boil that can never be cured so long as it is covered up but must be opened with all its ugliness to the natural medicines of air and light, injustice must be exposed, with all the tension its exposure creates, to the light of human conscience and the air of national opinion before it can be cured.

I’m not sure what could shake loose this complacency at this point. The system is so geared to “both sides do it” and he said/she said that there’s almost no hope of making any kind of clarifying point with anything. I doubt that the non-violent protests of the civil rights movement would be seen in the same light today — there would be sophisticated rapid response “pushback” from the right to prove that it was the white supremacists who were really the victims.

But the problem isn’t just the professionalization of the right wing. It’s the perennial problem that King elucidates so well in his letter: the unwillingness of the so-called moderates (today’s left leaning centrists and Democratic villagers) to put themselves on the line — their constant vigilance in policing the left against any sign of passion or colorful expression, the endless admonishments to calm down, be quiet, don’t paint with a broad brush, don’t speak clearly about what you see before your eyes. And in doing that they validate the idea that there is no right and wrong, that “both sides” are equally culpable, that the answer to irreconcilable principled differences is somewhere in the middle. The main result is a high sense of self-regard among the people who stay above it all and a continuation of a status quo which benefits only the privileged.

So how would MLK feel about all this today? I’m sure he would be thrilled at the progress. There is no doubt that things are far better for black people than they were when he wrote that letter. But the All American problem with race goes on, in different ways, subtle ways, once again exacerbated by the tendency of Very Serious People to ignore the effects of their “reasonable” compromises.

A good example is the recently launched war on the public employee unions and the president’s strange willingness to sign on to a federal pay freeze. As it turns out, as these things so often do, this move has a disproportionate effect on people of color since blacks are 30% more likely to work in the public sector than whites. And that is no accident. Indeed, one of the foundational organizing principles of the right wing is their hostility to government, a hostility which largely arises out of the fact that it is the government which has historically been the institution of last resort to help black people — mostly because black people had no organizing power of their own. Attacks on government, therefore, are part of the ongoing battle over our original sin.

In this new case, the attack on public employee unions is especially worrying. The government has also been one of the prime movers in the last 40 years to bring black Americans into the middle class, providing good wages and benefits, and enabling the next generation to have the kind of social mobility that took someone like Michelle Obama from a lower middle class family all the way to Princeton. The reason this happened was because the public employee unions insisted that the government was not allowed to practice the kind of subtle racism that pervaded the private sector (and still does to some extent) and went out of its way to recruit minorities. And it worked.

I’m not arguing that the assault on public employees unions is only about race. It’s complicated. America’s relationship to unions is as complicated as its relationship with race. But it’s part of it. And it’s being exacerbated once again by well-meaning liberals who fail to see the deeper meaning, namely that the destruction of these unions and the denigration of teachers and other public employees will result in a huge hit to racial minorities.

Read this interesting piece over at DKOS for more about this subject.

But enough of that for today. It’s really a time to celebrate Martin Luther King’s achievements, without which we wouldn’t be talking about black people losing jobs in the public sector because they wouldn’t have any jobs in the public sector.

This is the traditional song for this day and it expresses our feelings about him and what he died for well, I think:

Update: When MLK stood up for the public employee unions.

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No more secrets

No More Secrets

by digby

Elites are going to have to find a new model. The one they use now is falling apart at the seams:

The offshore bank account details of 2,000 “high net worth individuals” and corporations – detailing massive potential tax evasion – will be handed over to the WikiLeaks organisation in London tomorrow by the most important and boldest whistleblower in Swiss banking history, Rudolf Elmer, two days before he goes on trial in his native Switzerland.

British and American individuals and companies are among the offshore clients whose details will be contained on CDs presented to WikiLeaks at the Frontline Club in London. Those involved include, Elmer tells the Observer, “approximately 40 politicians”.

Elmer, who after his press conference will return to Switzerland from exile in Mauritius to face trial, is a former chief operating officer in the Cayman Islands and employee of the powerful Julius Baer bank, which accuses him of stealing the information.

Oh my.

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