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Month: January 2011

The Teatea Macoute? — Bob Barr draws an inconvenient comparison

The Teatea Macoute?

by digby

You all remember Baby Doc Duvalier, right?

After assuming power, he introduced cosmetic changes to his father’s regime and delegated much authority to his advisors, though thousands of Haitians were killed or tortured, and hundreds of thousands fled the country. He maintained a notoriously lavish lifestyle (including a state-sponsored US$3 million wedding in 1980), and made millions from involvement in the drug trade and from selling body parts from dead Haitians while poverty among his people remained the most widespread for any country in the Americas.

Relations with the United States improved after his ascension to the presidency, and then deteriorated under the Carter administration, only to again improve under Ronald Reagan due to the strong anti-communist stance of the Duvaliers.

Following a quarter of a century in self-imposed exile due to a popular uprising in 1986, Duvalier returned to Haiti on January 16, 2011. The following day he was arrested by Haitian police, facing possible charges for theft due to the profiting lifestyle enjoyed by him and the bulk of his regime.

On 18 January 2011, Duvalier was charged with corruption, and will be held before a judge in Port-au-Prince for trial.

You also remember Bob Barr, I assume. Well, Baby Doc has hired him and a partner to help him with his image:

Another Duvalier adviser, Barr, a former CIA agent who worked in Haiti in the 1970s, said they are hoping to tap into the base Duvalier has energized with his presence in Haiti. Although Barr said that Duvalier has no political ambitions, he drew a parallel between the pro-Duvalier momentum and that of the Tea Party movement in the U.S. He added that the downward course of the country has caused people to look to Duvalier for positive change. “He’s not an organization,” said Barr. “But from what I sense it’s a lot of grass-roots support.”

Hmmmm. He said it, I didn’t.

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Money, Power and Triangulation

Money, Power, Triangulation

by digby

Greg Sargent has a good piece up about Obama redefining the center on his own terms. I understand what he’s saying, and I would guess that Obama even believes he’s doing this. But I don’t think they are liberal terms even if Obama thinks they are.

Robert Kuttner explains this better than I can in this post on the topic that I think gets it right:

If you liked Bill Clinton as Triangulator, you will love the era of Triangulation II. The danger, of course, is that the man at the apex of the triangle fares better than his party.

He is now Mr. Reasonable Centrist — except that in substance there is no reasonable center to be had.

A well funded and tightly organized right wing has been pulling American politics to the right for three decades now. And with a few instructive exceptions, Democrats who respond by calling for a new centrism are just acting as the right’s enablers.

What exactly is the beneficial substance of this centrism? Just how far right do we have to go for Republicans to cut any kind of deal? Isn’t the mirage of a Third Way a series of moving targets — where every compromise begets a further compromise?

Democrats once played this game well, in reverse. In the period when Democrats dominated and set the national agenda, it was Republicans who moved to the center.

[…]

In Sunday’s New York Times, there is a full page, characteristically fatuous ad by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, with the coy headline, “There is no ‘D’ or ‘R’ in ‘Solutions.'” Get it? Partisanship just stands in the way of technical solutions that should be obvious to all people of good will. It just happens that the Peterson Foundation’s “apolitical” solutions are deeply conservative, whether on cutting Social Security and Medicare, or tying government’s hands when it comes to recovery spending.

In case you missed it, there is a fierce debate going on. One side, which now controls the House and effectively can block legislation in the Senate, disparages science, wants America to be close to a theocracy, craves a return to Wild West gun-slinging, would gut social insurance, and repeal most of the affirmative gains of social investment and public-interest regulation since the New Deal.

The other side recognizes the value of public spending in a deep recession and beyond, wants a progressive tax code, defends Social Security, Medicare and the new health reform, wants the financial economy to be servant of the real economy, supports regulation that benefits workers and consumers, and accepts evidence-based science when it comes to climate change and other issues.

Unfortunately, this other side describes only about half the Democratic Party

Give the Republicans this: they know what they stand for. A good chunk of the Democratic Party today doesn’t quite.

But where exactly is the middle ground, except in pundit-pleasing gestures like lions sitting together with lambs? How do you compromise with True Believers?

Based on early reports, the President’s State of the Union Address will be better than some progressives feared. They can take some credit for warning him off Social Security cuts. And good for Obama for calling for more public investment and letting Republicans jeer, revealing the emptiness of the Republican recovery program.

When he finishes, Rep. Paul Ryan, chair of the House Budget Committee, will give the Republican response. Let’s hope we don’t feel that someone should get equal time to give a Democratic response.

Read the whole piece. It’s great.

Now, Greg doesn’t accept this definition of “triangulation”, instead seeing it as a design to specifically anger the left in order to appear to be more moderate. (The “hippie punching” thesis.) I agree with him that Obama is probably not interested in doing that as a full blown strategy (although it might be useful at certain times — getting Lieberman’s vote, for instance.) But I think he is triangulating in the more common definition of the term, which is (according to Wikipedia):

Triangulation is the name given to the act of a political candidate presenting his or her ideology as being above and between the left and right sides (or “wings”) of a traditional (e.g. UK or US) democratic political spectrum. It involves adopting for oneself some of the ideas of one’s political opponent (or apparent opponent). The logic behind it is that it both takes credit for the opponent’s ideas, and insulates the triangulator from attacks on that particular issue.

Obama’s version of this is to take the ideas of the opposition but couch it in the language of pragmatism. But it really doesn’t matter because whether he’s just sounding like he’s adopting the right’s ideas or actually doing it, the truth is as Kuttner says; the political playing field is all on the right at this point. It’s just a matter of degree. And by playing to the “center” of that right field it moves the play that much further.

However, it’s not some shocking betrayal on Obama’s part. It’s the thoroughly predictable move for any president who’s been accused of being a socialist for two years and suffered a bad mid-term. They always “run to the center” in the second half in order to get re-elected. And if the economy cooperates, it might just work. But it is at the expense of liberalism and the Party whether or not it’s a conscious strategic decision to distance themselves from the left or not. At the end of the cycle, Obama will have run on a set of issues and solutions marginally to the right of those which he ran on in 2008. And those were marginally to the right of those which Kerry ran on in 2004 or Gore ran on in 2000. This is how we find ourselves looking back at Richard Nixon’s agenda and thinking that even Dennis Kucinich wouldn’t be so bold as to propose much of it.

Much of this is about money and power, of course. The vast sums required to run for office require politicians, particularly presidential candidates who have to run billion dollar campaigns now, to be subservient to those who have it. And as policies become more and more tilted to the wealthy, the more power they have to shape them and bend politicians to their will.

Kevin Drum has a great post up today on that subject:

The problem is that a system that generates enormous income inequality also generates enormous power inequality — and if corporations and the rich are allowed to amass huge amounts of economic power, they’ll always use that power to keep their own tax rates low. It’s nearly impossible to create a high-tax/high-service state if your starting point is a near oligarchy where the rich control the levers of political power.

I am, fundamentally, old fashioned about this stuff: I think of the world as largely a set of competing power centers. Economics matters, but power matters at least as much, and I think that students of political economy these days spend way too much time on the economy and way too little time on the political.

Yes and yes.

In these circumstances, the political incentives in a democratic society becomes how to package the policies in a way that appeals to the people but benefits the wealthy. The Republicans know how to do that. The Democrats not so much, although on the presidential level, they may have found a formula. But again, it’s at the expense of liberalism in general which, if the president decides to engage on “entitlements”, may also end any serious rationale for the Democratic party at all.

Kuttner is right that there is a huge debate to be had. But I’m not sure it’s between the two political parties. I guess the question is, if an American political argument happens outside the two party system, does it happen at all?

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Limbaugh jumps on the crazy train

Jumping on the crazy train

by digby

This is interesting. According to Media Matters, Limbaugh is starting to ape Beck and Alex Jones with some fairly kooky conspiracy theorizing:

His mockery of Chinese President Hu Jintao’s speech — mockery that he later defended — earned the condemnation of Rep. Judy Chu (D-CA), who blasted his “childish and offensive tactic.” He falsely labeled Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie (D) a “well-known socialist” during his return to flirting with birtherism. And he devoted several segments on his Friday show to demanding a congressional investigation of a conspiracy theory that he ginned up about the Obama administration bailing out GE with TARP money. (That’s wrong on many, many fronts.) It seems that Limbaugh is trying to regain his title as the most irresponsible voice in the conservative media, a position that is now clearly occupied by Glenn Beck, and it seems that he’s doing it by using the exact same formula Beck has employed. Inflammatory ethnic rhetoric, similar to Limbaugh’s open mockery of the Chinese culture? Beck has already been there. His smearing of Jewish philanthropist George Soros as a Holocaust collaborator was condemned by Jewish leaders and Holocaust survivors. He’s also said India’s Ganges River “sounds like a disease” and was forced to apologize for mocking an Asian caller back in 1995. Red-baiting, similar to Limbaugh’s attack on Abercrombie? Beck introduced the modern right-wing renaissance of red-baiting. Insane, complex conspiracy theories, like Limbaugh’s flimsy attempt to reveal “serious insider dealing” between President Obama and GE? One of the websites run by notorious conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has said that Beck “now sounds almost identical” to Jones. Limbaugh’s Obama-GE theory bears a similarity to the conspiracy theory that Beck has promoted about the Obama administration, Soros, and a loan to a Brazilian oil company, in that both involve blaming the Obama for events that took place before he ever became president.

This is something to watch. Limbaugh has always gone there in small ways, but it was usually of the personal, tabloid type. (Recall the “Hillary Clinton killed Vince Foster in their Washington love nest” story.) This grand theorizing about world events isn’t usually his thing. But he’s nothing if not tuned in to the wingnut zeitgeist, so it’s not too surprising to see him going there. It’s permeating conservative circles nowadays.

But hey, he’s only got 25 million listeners, so what harm can it do? He’s just an entertainer after all.

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The agenda — a tight knit group of Senators and White House negotiators will fix everything

The Agenda

by digby

The rumors keep on rolling:

The White House and a bipartisan group of senators are focusing on restructuring the tax code and entitlement programs such as Social Security, which could have more dramatic impacts on the deficit in the long run but would do little in the short term. White House officials say Republican calls for $100 billion in spending cuts this year would choke off the economic recovery while doing little in the long run to tame the deficit. “The American people say, don’t touch Social Security, don’t touch Medicare, don’t cut defense. That’s 84% of the federal budget,” Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D., N.D.). who is retiring when his term ends in 2012, said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.” “If you can’t touch 84% of the federal budget…you’re down to 16% of the budget at a time we’re borrowing 40 cents of every dollar we spend.”

If this is true — which is unknown at this point — in order to appease teabagging nihilists who want to end all programs (that help people)and petulant Masters of the Universe who want to abolish taxes (for rich people), the White house and small bipartisan group of millionaire politicians are seeking ways to destroy the Democratic Party and dismantle vital pieces of the safety net. Sounds awesome.

Then there’s this, about the SOTU:

The president will try to keep the deficit conversation in broad terms, fearing that detailed proposals would put Republicans, Democrats and Washington interest groups into a defensive crouch before real negotiations can take place, according to those officials. White House officials, for instance, have assured Democratic lawmakers that the president will not explicitly call for cuts in Social Security benefits, though he will say changes are needed to put the program on a solid fiscal footing. At the same time, Mr. Obama will call on both parties to be prepared to put everything on the table. That means Democrats have to be ready to look at changes to Social Security, and Republicans to consider tax-code changes to increase revenue.

Good to know. Why they leaked their real intentions is unknown, but whatever.

Meanwhile, in other news, the Republicans are taking credit for the latest cautiously upbeat economic news.

Steve Benen writes:

Time will tell whether this optimism is warranted; we can all certainly hope that it is. The recovery is clearly fragile, but there are signs that point to more robust growth. And that seems to make Republicans a little nervous.

It took less than three weeks for the new Republican Congressional leadership to claim credit for an apparent economic upturn. An aide to House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, Brian Patrick, emailed reporters this morning: THERE ARE THE JOBS: Republicans Prevent Massive Tax Increase, Economy Begins to Improve….

Even by the standards of the most shameless hack, this is farcical. Worse, it’s part of a growing pattern. Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.), for example, argued two weeks ago, for example, that the recent good news — private-sector job growth, big corporate profits, major gains in the major Wall Street indexes — that occurred throughout 2010 were the result of Republican tax policies. As Kyl sees it, business leaders in early 2010 predicted the tax policy agreement crafted in late 2010, and started growing the economy based on their future-predicting abilities.

Read on for more examples.

Here’s the thing. Yes, it’s absurd and ridiculous considering the fact that they tried to obstruct every program that might have helped the economy over the past two years. And the fact that their sick economic policies helped create the disaster in the first place makes it especially galling. But let’s face facts. When the administration touted their lame duck Bipartisan “tax deal” as being a great boost to the economy they validated this line.

When you adopt the economic policies of your rivals for political gain, you have to accept that they’re going to reap the political gain as well. And this one was big. Tax cuts uber alles. Considering the 35 years the GOP spent hammering that point home, I’d expect that they will reap most of the reward. It will take a while before Americans fully understand that the Democratic party has adopted the GOP’s economic philosophy as well.

I have a feeling this is going to be one of those weeks …

Wall Street Journal funhouse mirror

Mirror, Mirror

by digby

These right wingers must be on acid. Their lack of self-awareness is so overwhelming that they are now intellectually inside-out. Susie Madrak found the perfect example with this observation from super conservative Dorothy Rabinowitz of the Wall Street Journal talking about a new television show:

“You have major criminality, excused as nothing. You can do anything you want, as long as you’re poor.”

That’s absolutely right, of course. Except for one word.

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Demagogic pandering and technocratic dreams: the beltway muses about social welfare

Demagogic Pandering And Technocratic Dreams

by digby

In a wide ranging discussion on Fareed Zakaria’s show today of various “deals” that are to be made between the President and the Republicans in the next two years, David Frumn let the cat out of the bag:

Frum: As Republicans become the party of the elderly,you reflect the interest of your constituency. The elderly are the greatest beneficiaries of the American social welfare state

Zakaria: Are you saying that Republicans have become … are the demographics clear?

Frum: If you look back at the middle of 1980’s the election of 1988, which is a good baseline. Your not going to remember all these numbers exactly, but the Democrats dominated among over 65s. In this past congressional election, which is a smaller electorate and the presidential one the Republicans dominated among people over 65. Well that has been in the 1980s Republicans were dominant among people under 30 and the Democrats are now dominant among people under 30.

Zakaria: This is fascinating so the Republicans now have their base and their ideology in two different places. The base wants all these benefits for the elderly and their ideology says we have to cut them.

Frum: And that is why, you know, the two worst things about the president’s health care plan were that it increases the deficit and number two that restricts Medicare. And you will hear people on the floor of the House say that and, they’re not completely irrational because … I hope the technocratic path you predict is the right one. It really is possible to get 17 wise people in a room with a good flow of hydration and have them work out a technical deal that will put us over a period of years on a path to sustainability and economic growth.

Frum doesn’t really explain why they are not completely irrational, but I will: they know that sounding irrational doesn’t matter. They know they can easily demagogue “entitlements” one day and be the staunch defenders of Medicare the next because they just won over 60 seats doing just that.

The Republicans are not going to abandon their ideology. But they will certainly pander to their base of elderly citizens by accusing the Democrats of destroying social security and medicare even as they destroy them. We know this. It already happened. Now perhaps that wouldn’t be a problem if the elderly were not the most reliable voters in the nation (and younger voters the least) or that Democratic ideology is completely bankrupt and empty if they do weaken the safety net out of some short term desire to appease a bunch of spoiled Wall Street princes.But if you actually care about the programs this is a recipe for disaster.

And yes, it would be much tidier if we could get some super-duper politicians and elite insiders in a room to map out a bipartisan plan for peace and prosperity, but sadly, the super-duper people don’t have much of a track record recently. I think I’d rather trust my future to David Frum’s apocalyptic scenario:

What is more likely is this: we have a huge burden of adjustment that is coming. It has arrived at a state and local level and it going to arrive at the national level. There are going to be losers. We’re all going to be losers, some will lose less. Who should the bigger losers be and who should the smaller losers be and that will be resolved in a furious episode of intense politics.

That doesn’t bode very well for the 95% of the people who aren’t vastly wealthy, as we know. But I can guarantee you that if it’s left up to the technocrats of both parties going into a back room and “making a deal” that 95% is well and truly screwed.

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ACORN vendetta: there’s a reason they can’t stop

ACORN vendetta

by digby

I’m getting a lot of wingnut email these days. As per usual, when they win they get even more aggressive because they can’t believe that the other side hasn’t completely capitulated in the face of their victory. (Democracy isn’t something they are entirely comfortable with.)

Anyway, here’s just a taste of the chainmail I’ve been forwarded this week:

Dear Speaker Boehner:

Please do not allow this to happen. America is counting on you and the GOP to STOP the Commies, Traitor to Freedom and the Socialists.

It seems like almost everyday Obama and The Democrats find new ways to destroy our America.

Could the party of treason turn any further to the left?

* Posted by Judson Phillips on January 23, 2011 at 7:27am in Tea Party Nation Forum

Some in the Tea Party movement argue there is not a dime’s worth of difference between the Republican and Democrat parties. Those who argue this point need to take a look at what is going on in the party of treason.

The GOP is certainly not perfect. Although, at Tea Party Nation, we generally advocate allying with conservative Republicans, the Democrats have jump whole-heartedly into the lap of socialism. There is not even a pretense anymore.

The new executive director of the Democratic National Committee is one Patrick Gaspard. Most people have never heard of Patrick Gaspard.

Currently Gaspard does for Obama what Karl Rove did for George W. Bush. Becoming executive director of the DNC means that he will run the day-to-day operations of the DNC. He will control the DNC machinery.

And he is a total and committed socialist.

Gaspard joined the White House with a confusing resume that includes stints at ACORN, the SEIU and the Working Families Party. In Acorn, he was the political director for New York. In 2007, Gaspard became a registered lobbyist for SEIU. (Say, didn’t Obama say something about no lobbyists working for him?).

In 2001, Gaspard sent a letter saying that he was working for the Working Families Party in New York. The WFP is a small 3rd party in New York that is a socialist party. The WFP was also the political party for ACORN.

The ACORN tree is kept deliberately vague. Something like a mafia family trying to hide from the Feds. But there is no doubt that Gaspard is up to his ears in it. Gaspard is a student of Alinisky and like Obama grew up idolizing radical communists who hated this country and wanted to see this country turned into a socialist hellhole.

And this man is now running the DNC.

The conservative wing of the Democratic Party can forget about anything now. Oh, wait; the party of treason no longer has a conservative wing. The socialists in the Democratic Party have done a good job of purging conservatives from the party, at least at the national level. Can anyone name a conservative Democrat in the House or Senate? Not a moderate, a conservative. Someone who is branded a conservative by a conservative rating, such as the American Conservative Union’s ratings?

Gaspard’s ties to ACORN should trouble anyone, other than committed socialists, which is why you will hear no complaints from the Democratic Party. Recently in Las Vegas, a former Executive with ACORN, Amy Busefink, was convicted of voter fraud. ACORN itself will go on trial in April for voter fraud. In 2008, ACORN tried to register over 400,000 fake voters in Nevada, a state of only 2.6 million. Busefink also worked with Project Vote. Another distinguished alumni of Project Vote, a subsidiary of ACORN, is Barack Obama.

Socialism is the enemy of freedom and the Democratic Party should probably now be called the Socialist Party. Almost everyone in the leadership of the party of treason at one time or another was a member of a socialist party, from the Democratic Socialists of America, to the New Party to the Working Families Party.

When Ronald Reagan went to the White House thirty years ago this month, he set a goal of destroying Soviet Communism. He succeeded. We must set a goal of destroying socialism in this country before it is too late.

The Tea Party already signaled that they are going to turn their sights on “voter fraud” also known as minority vote suppression.

Here’s Patrick Gaspard:

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The “L” Word: there are no words to describe Michelle Bachman

The “L” Word

by digby

In an interview with Newsmax TV’s Ashley Martella yesterday, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) claimed that President Obama’s health reform law — which she called the “crown jewel of socialism” — is unpopular with voters, and that they want it repealed. “The American people have said overwhelmingly that they want this bill repealed,” she said…

Bachmann has never received anything better than a rating of “false” from the Pulitzer Prize-winnning fact-checking website PolitiFact — “We have checked her 13 times, and seven of her claims to be false and six have been found to be ridiculously false,” PolitiFact editor Bill Adair said — and she won’t break the truth barrier with this statement.

Since it’s uncivil for liberals to call someone like this what she is, what should we say about this? The woman has a very serious problem with … honesty. But there’s no language available to properly describe it.

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Judicial Vapors: pep rallies for Supreme Court justices are fine as long as they’re not bipartisan

Judicial Vapors

by digby

George Will doesn’t think the judiciary should attend the State of the Union address. Here he is on This Week:

We’ve turned it into this panorama with an interminable speech in which every president, regardless of party,tries to stroke every erogenous zone in the electorate and it becomes a political pep rally, to use the phrase of Chief Justice Roberts last year. If it’s going to be a pep rally, with the president’s supporters standing up and braying approval and histrionic pouting on the other then it’s no place for the judiciary and it’s no place for the uniformed military and it’s no place for non-adolescent legislators.

Then he put on his apron and joined the Beltway Quilting Bee and Ladies Temperence League for their annual bake sale.

Interestingly, Auntie George and Chief Justice Miss Manners don’t seem to have a problem with this:

Scalia is the first real celebrity justice. When he appears at conservative events, supporters line up to greet a man who seems more oracle than orator. They are drawn not just to his originalist views but to the sense that he is a purist on a court of relativists. And his fans are often rewarded with a zinger from the justice that would set the hair of every liberal on fire. For example, in a 2006 talk to students in Switzerland, Scalia denounced the idea of giving Guantanamo detainees rights in federal courts, with a disturbingly personal take on the matter: “Give me a break. . . . If he was captured by my army on a battlefield, [Guantanamo] is where he belongs. I had a son on that battlefield, and they were shooting at my son, and I’m not about to give this man who was captured in a war a full jury trial. I mean, it’s crazy.” Other justices, particularly those on the right, appear to be following Scalia’s lead and presenting their politics publicly. This includes Justice Clarence Thomas, who is known for his utter silence during oral arguments. Outside the court, though, he has denounced our society’s “focus on our rights” and the “proliferation of rights” protecting citizens. And the whole world saw Justice Samuel Alito shake his head and mouth “not true” as the president criticized the recent Citizens United decision on campaign finance at the State of the Union address last year. Justices who flaunt their politics publicly do more than just lecture – they also can raise cash for ideological allies. Scalia and Thomas have reportedly attended events funded by conservative billionaires David and Charles Koch. Last week, Thomas admitted through a spokesman that he “dropped by” a Koch session in 2008. Both justices were even featured in Koch promotional material with Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh.

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Come The Revolution, The Second Thing We’ll Do Is Fire All The Advisers

by tristero

This morning the New York Times has an article previewing Obama’s SOTU entitled, “Obama to Press Centrist Agenda in His Address” in which we read:

…his speech would be geared more broadly toward the political center, to independent voters and business owners and executives alienated by the expansion of government and the partisan legislative fights of the past two years…

In his speeches, policy choices and personnel appointments, Mr. Obama has signaled that after two years in which his response to the economic crisis and his push for passage of the health care bill defined him to many voters as a big-government liberal, he is seeking to recast himself as a more business-friendly, pragmatic progressive.

Wow! Can you imagine any better way for Obama to rally the country, especially his base? Well, actually… if instead of his speech Obama read this in its entirety, he would stand a better chance of rallying the country, especially his base.

But, trust me, the speech won’t be a snoozefest… okay, it might be, I have no idea, but! You can bet your bippy that the reaction to the speech certainly won’t be. Why? Read on:

Advisers said the president would describe five “pillars” for ensuring America’s competitiveness and economic growth: innovation, education, infrastructure, deficit reduction and reforming government.

Now there’s a deeply arresting image. Pillars! Five pillars! Five pillars… Where have I heard about Five Pillars before? Hmmm…oh, yeah, now I remember!

Well… I suppose you can make the case that since neither Obama nor the fucking morons he’s hired as political consultants ever heard of the Five Pillars of Islam, that’s proof positive that Obama really is not a Muslim but instead [sarcasm] As Christian As Every Other American [/sarcasm] .

Now while you can make that case ’til you’re as blue in the face as a creature in a bad 3-D summer movie – that Obama really wasn’t dog whistling his Muslim socialist nazi terrorist pals – no one’s gonna listen.

Oh, America…